Re-awakening

I slept most of the day on Sunday, just catching up after two whirlwind days.

Friday night I was invited back to the 25th anniversary of an Asian fashion/culture show that I ran back in college. There was about 50 alums from ranging from the beginning in the late 80s to today. I actually ended up in a photo that ran with an article in the World Journal. Many things were still the same as they were 15 years ago, but the show has also matured and is so much more professional than we ever could imagine.

Saturday spent 3 hours with P’s friends from high school at vegetarian Kosher restaurant Buddha Bodai. Dim sum choices very good. Later, was invited to a dinner buffet at Tavern on the Green, and then a birthday party at the Gatehouse.

Plenty of stuff to do this week…

Sunday in April

Saturday: my sister and I popped over to the Brooklyn Museum, as it was First Saturday. Crowded crowd – guess they were out for the Murakami exhibit, which opened this weekend to a positive review (so far as I can tell anyway). The line looked long and you had to have a ticket (a long line to get that!) and a wristband – so I wasn’t eager to check out the Murakami stuff; just saw what they had in the lobby – the simultaneously ugly, cute, sexy and scary all at once – that’s Murakami for you (or a derivation of anime, even). Maybe I’ll check it out another time.

Perhaps not entirely a coincidence: in addition to the Murakami (which was contemporary Japanese art), the Brooklyn Museum had “Utagawa: Masters of Japanese Print, 1777-1900,” exhibiting the works of three or four generations of the Utagawa workshop, as they went from traditional to more modern print work. Prints of traditional folk stories, kabuki actors, contemporary Japanese life, and the rise of Western influence – with single point perspective – it was easy to see why the Japanese prints influenced the Impressionists in the West and how Western art influenced Eastern art.

West Point course educating the cadets on cultural diversity… in Jersey City.

In the NY Times’ City section: words from Mr. Sahadi, of Sahadi’s in Brooklyn.

Sooo… as Jennifer 8. Lee so succinclty summarizes in the NY Times’ City Room blog: for the longest time, the Beatles, on behalf of their Apple, Apple (the Steve Jobs’ Apple) in a trademark dispute, and now Steve Jobs’ Apple is engaging in a trademark dispute with NYC regarding the GreeNYC campaign because the latter is using a green apple symbol (’cause, I don’t know, NYC’s been called “The Big Apple” for a real longtime and NYC wants to, I don’t know, go green?). Do we not realize that “apple” isn’t exactly the most unique thing in the world? Flashes from Trademarks class from law school are actually coming to mind.

The passing of Charlton Heston.

First Weekend of April 2008

We don’t need to drink approximately 8 glasses of water a day after all; Slate’s Explainer explains where the idea ever even came from.

NY Times’ Clyde Haberman on the madness of weekend subway changes.

April is National Poetry Month; April 17 is Poem in Your Pocket Day.
Joe Klein posts his thoughts on the 40th anniversary of Martin Luther King, Jr.’s death on the Time.com blog, Swampland. He links to Robert F. Kennedy’s moving speech about America’s need to reconcile for the future in the face of the tragedies. These are things we still think about today and in the future, as noted here by Ron Klain on NYTimes.com and here in Newsweek’s interview with sociologist Michael Eric Dyson. Although there has been much changed in the past 40 years, we still have ways to go, but at least we keep striving.