Happy Happy

I’m off by a couple of hours/a day, but…

Best wishes to FC and P on one month since the arrival of Baby A!

For your pleasure, consider this photo below that I had taken while off the Highline and near Chelsea Market, from a couple of years ago.  I’m not sure if Oscar is still there, but he looks strangely cheerful in this photo.

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And, I think Sesame Street is appropriate for kids of all ages… And then there is this:

 

 

 

 

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I had taken that photo of the sign on the City Store, when they were selling like hotcakes awhile back (and properly licensed for such) (I think the time stamp on the photo is right; I never quite get it correct on my digital camera). Cookie Monster Cop is cute.  And funny that Big Bird is the cabbie, when Oscar was the one with a cab (and, according to his performer, Caroll Spinney, Oscar’s voice was inspired by a NYC cabbie who drove Spinney to the very day he first does Oscar).  And Oscar used to be carried around by Bruno, a sanitation guy.  Hmmm….

Welcome to the world, Baby A!

Happy Independence Day 2013!

Happy 4th of July! Take a moment to remember what the American version of democracy and representative gov’t means, and those who serve since 1776. And then figure out if you’re really going to overeat, or watch what tv marathon is on (Walking Dead marathon? Star Trek: TNG marathon over at BBC America? Oh, yeah, fireworks).

From an e-mail of the Brooklyn Historical Society: July 4, 1827 is also Emancipation Day for NYS, as the day that slavery was finally abolished in NYS. Lots of cool things happened on 7/4.

The complicated history and implications of Irving Berlin’s “God Bless America,” over at Slate (excerpt of God Bless America: The Surprising History of an Iconic Song by Sheryl Kaskowitz).

This year, the US Supreme Court really packed it in at the end of the 2012-2013 term, with decisions that I still have to read already.  But, I got a kick out of the Breakfast Table at Slate, where Emily Bazelon facilitates the posted discussion with the crackling minds of Walter Dellinger and the Posners, Judge Richard Posner – such a great read as ever – and Eric Posner (son of Judge Posner and no slouch on his own as a legal mind as a Prof. of U of Chicago Law).  Starting with the first entry to the last – this was a good start of the coverage of the US Supreme Court.

Not that I had timed this at all, but I finished reading this week The Americanization of Benjamin Franklin by Gordon S. Wood.  An exploration of Franklin’s evolution (arguably revolution) from British patriot to American revolutionary, Wood’s smooth writing made this a terrific read.  I enjoyed it.

Currently reading: E.E. Cummings poetry, from this nifty little Selected Poems edition edited by Cummings biographer Richard S. Kennedy.

Well, every year, TCM on cable shows 1776 the Musical. (for whatever reason, they scheduled it at 1:30am – when it’s 7/5… sigh).   At any rate, it’s a great musical, really awesome, and felt pretty accurate, putting aside the whole movie-version-of-Broadway-show element. John Adams just pisses everybody off and we keep trying to fight a good fight. In the middle of an icky summer too. Yep. (N.B. – John Adams here was played by the awesome William Daniels, well before he did St. Elsewhere, Knight Rider, and Boy Meets World on tv)

May Day

It’s May 1st!  And, it has been a cool spring. The flowers look nice though.

May 1 isn’t just May Day, it’s also Law Day (umm, something to do with Eisenhower and the ABA’s way to tackle the Cold War and how the USA wasn’t like other places, if I remember correctly? Never quite sure!). Rule of law, if we can just remember that, not about crazy people shtick.

So, feel free to check out the Presidential Proclamation for Law Day 2013.

And the ABA Law Day website, with all kinds of fascinating materials.  Some bar associations even make it a Law Week, or designate a different day. NYCLA, for example, or NYSBA (check out the press release statement from NYSBA President Seymour James). Brooklyn also has an event, fitting this year’s theme of “Realizing the Dream: Equality for All” (pdf).

Meanwhile, it’s also the start of APA Heritage Month. And there’s a Presidential Proclamation for that too and stuff from the White House Initiative on AAPI’s (Asian American and Pacific Islanders) (h/t: Angry Asian Man blog).

Combining both Law Day and APA Heritage Month is this nifty item in the NY Law Journal by Mike Huang, current President of our very own AABANY.  (h/t: NAPABA’s Facebook page and AABANY’s Facebook page).

So many events out there!  Keep hope alive! (or so goes the spirit of spring anyway).