Kevin Earl Dayhoff Art One-half Banana Stems

Kevin Earl Dayhoff Art One-half Banana Stems - www.kevindayhoff.com Address: PO Box 124, Westminster MD 21158 410-259-6403 kevindayhoff@gmail.com Runner, writer, artist, fire & police chaplain Mindless ramblings of a runner, journalist & artist: Travel, art, artists, authors, books, newspapers, media, writers and writing, journalists and journalism, reporters and reporting, technology, music, culture, opera... National & International politics www.kevindayhoff.net For community: www.kevindayhoff.org For art, technology, writing, & travel: www.kevindayhoff.com

Saturday, October 29, 2011

October snow in merryland Maryland

Kevin Dayhoff - Soundtrack: Welcome to the THIS DAY IN HISTORY from History.co...

Kevin Dayhoff - Soundtrack: Welcome to the THIS DAY IN HISTORY from History.co...: Welcome to the THIS DAY IN HISTORY from History.com ------------------------------ ------------------------------ --------------------...

Kevin Dayhoff - Soundtrack: Florida Keys Net - Weekly Newsletter

Kevin Dayhoff - Soundtrack: Florida Keys Net - Weekly Newsletter: Home News Sports Entertainment Business Weather News Police identify homicide victim ...

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Kevin Dayhoff Soundtrack: http://www.kevindayhoff.net/ Kevin Dayhoff Art: http://www.kevindayhoffart.com/
My http://www.explorecarroll.com/ columns appear in the copy of the Baltimore Sunday Sun that is distributed in Carroll County: https://subscribe.baltsun.com/Circulation/

Westminster Maryland Online: BIO.com: On This Day - Remembering Joseph Pulitzer...

Westminster Maryland Online: BIO.com: On This Day - Remembering Joseph Pulitzer...: ON THIS DAY October 29 1881 130 years ago Henry James publishes The Portrait of a Lady . http://www.biography.com/ people/henry-...

Westminster Maryland Online: Liberty Sophomore Vies For Miss Maryland Teen USA ...

Westminster Maryland Online: Liberty Sophomore Vies For Miss Maryland Teen USA ...: Today 36° 28° Tomorrow 45° 29° October 29, 2011 Your News October 29, 2011 Liberty Sophomore...

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Friday, October 28, 2011

Art carts lined-up at Carroll Co office building. Pic 2 of 2



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Art carts lined-up at the Carroll Co office building. Pic 1 of 2

Art Cart '1938' by Kevin Dayhoff for Carroll Co Dept of PW community art project

Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Eileen Weiner Book review: 'The Stranger's Child,' by Alan Hollinghurst. Alfred A. Knopf


Spanning the centuries with 'The Stranger's Child'
Book review: 'The Stranger's Child,' by Alan Hollinghurst. Alfred A. Knopf, $27.95.
http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/11296/1183871-148-0.stm?cmpid=newspanel0
Sunday, October 23, 2011
Over the past century the British fixation with the houses of the upper class has provided an almost too-familiar setting and literary device for narratives about class, English decline and, not infrequently, the undercurrent of homosexuality in the chronicle of English social, political and artistic life.


In "The Stranger's Child," Alan Hollinghurst's first novel since winning the 2004 Man Booker Prize for "The Line of Beauty," the author readily acknowledges the numerous English country-house novels that serve as touchstones for the first two of five sections of this intricate, century-spanning book.


The resulting literary pastiche is amusing, one allusion leading to another: the most overt nods are to "Brideshead Revisited," "Maurice" and "Howards End," with echoes of more modern examples of the genre, especially "Atonement" and "The Remains of the Day."


However, after a while all the nodding and winking begin to wear thin, especially as these long sections are written in period, Jamesian style, with an overabundance of smirks, sly glances and veiled remarks. I was glad that the third section leaped from 1926 to 1967, where the language lightens perceptibly while remaining drenched in irony....

Read more: 
http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/11296/1183871-148-0.stm?cmpid=newspanel0



Eileen Weiner Book review: 'The Stranger's Child,' by Alan Hollinghurst. Alfred A. Knopf
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette


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Ginger surveys the customers at Dutterer Florists to see if any look good to eat

The Westminster Halloween parade was attended.

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Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Haaretz: Shostakovich's muse By Noam Ben Zeev

Published 02.04.07

Shostakovich's muse


In March 1953, a sigh of collective relief swept over the streets of the Soviet Union: Joseph Stalin was dead. Among the millions of people who felt that their lives were returned to them was the man who had been considered the Russian national composer until he fell out of favor with the regime, eight years earlier, Dmitri Shostakovich (1906-1975).

His Ninth Symphony, which he wrote to celebrate the USSR's victory in World War II, was radiant, full of life, almost "light," but it infuriated Stalin. The Party committees declared it to go against the will of the Soviet people, and denunciated the composer with the label that was a death sentence for any artist: "formalistic."

Shostakovich was boycotted. The eight years during which the commissions dried up and the performances of his work ceased, and in which he was dismissed from his position as professor of composition at the Moscow Conservatory, brought him to the brink of poverty and to thoughts of suicide. It seems that he was not immune to the curse: Beethoven had been the last to write nine symphonies, and in the 130 years since his death, no major composer had succeeded in completing a 10th one.

In December of 1953, however, the curse was lifted. The conservatory's huge Bolshoi Auditorium, sparkling with thousands of lights and overflowing with colorful bouquets, was packed with an audience that had come to celebrate the composer's return to his hometown, with his new symphony, his 10th. The enormous, excited crowd applauded the Leningrad Philharmonic, under the baton of one of the period's great conductors, Evgeny Mravinsky. And Shostakovich, bursting with pride, took his seat of honor…


[20070204 Shostakovichs muse By Noam Ben Zeev]

Haaretz: Shostakovich's muse By Noam Ben Zeev


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Scott S Bair football stadium at McDaniel College Westminster Maryland

The coffee monster greeted the other morning

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Art in the park well all right; art in the backyard

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Judy one the partners in our artists' co-op repainted our door - Off Track Art

Dmitri Shostakovich in 1935



Dmitri Shostakovich in 1935.


A 1935 photograph of Russian composer Dmitrij Dmitrijevič Šostakovič (Дми́трий Дми́триевич Шостако́вич,) September 25, 1906 – August 9, 1975.

I’ll be happy to have a copy of Symphony No. 10 in E minor, from 1953, for Christmas. I’m just saying…

Also see: “The Teresa Carreño Youth Orchestra contains the best high school musicians from Venezuela's life-changing music program, El Sistema. Led here by Gustavo Dudamel, they play Shostakovich's Symphony No. 10, 2nd movement, and Arturo Márquez' Danzón No. 2.” http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=amSqQ5XNaGE





http://kevindayhoffart.blogspot.com/search/label/Music%20Shostakovich

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Monday, October 24, 2011

Fountain

Welcome home

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

QuoteInvestigator.com looks into: Be Kind Everyone You Meet is Fighting a Hard Battle

The Quote Investigator looks into: Be Kind Everyone You Meet is Fighting a Hard Battle

Tuesday, June 29th, 2010


Be Kind; Everyone You Meet is Fighting a Hard Battle

Plato? Philo of Alexandria? Ian MacLaren? John Watson?

 This blog post is based on a question that was posed at the wonderful blog used by the quotation expert Fred Shapiro who is the editor of one of the best reference works in this area: The Yale Book of Quotations. Fred Shapiro’s posts appear on the Freakonomics blog.

Question: This question is from Glossolalia Black.

Be kind, for everyone you meet is fighting a hard battle.

It is attributed to Plato on this little thing I have up in my office, but I was told by a friend that it wasn’t him.

Fred Shapiro replied “this sounds anachronistic for Plato by almost 2500 years” and then invited readers to attempt to trace the quotation.

Quote Investigator: The websites ThinkExist, Quotations Page, and Brainy Quote do have this quotation listed under the august name of Plato.

Philo of Alexandria is another popular choice when assigning attribution, e.g., QuotationsBook credits Philo. Sometimes Anonymous gets the nod. QI was able to trace the saying back more than one-hundred years to its likely origin. The original aphorism did not use the word “kind”. Instead, another surprising word was used.


[20100629 Be Kind Everyone You Meet is Fighting a Hard Battle]

Tuesday, June 29th, 2010


Context: Kevin E. Dayhoff - TheTentacle.com: Bank Transfer Day

“Fish Fish” by Kevin Dayhoff





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Mrs. Tractor by Kevin Dayhoff



Mrs. Tractor by Kevin Dayhoff


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