bobgarlitz

Entries from June 2008

Pagan Babies nostalgia

June 29, 2008 · Leave a Comment

found this website with the Great name & social mission—–

http://www.warbabynotaboomer.blogspot.com/

“Pagan Babies”

Any one go to Catholic Grade Schools in the 50’s and 60’s? Remember the “Pagan Babies“?

In order to raise money for the missions, the grade school students were asked to bring in pennies and nickels to save a Pagan Baby. It took $10.00 to save a baby. For every $10.00 collected you got name the baby.

In most classrooms to encourage donations, the nuns pitted the boys against the girls. Least we forget, the donations were collected daily and tallied on the blackboard. I am not sure when this practice ended.

Did you ever wonder what happened to all of the “Pagan Babies“?

This Sunday at Mass a missionary priest had an answer. The missionary work by Catholic priests and nuns is allowing Catholic priests from foreign countries to pastor the priest empty parishes in America.

The work of the missionaries converted the native peoples to the Catholic Religion.

Now I had not given the “Pagan Babies” a thought in years. It is an amazing to think all of those pennies and nickels really helped the children in need. And now they are helping us!

Categories: Blogroll · Current Affairs

the Pope does NOT wear Prada

June 29, 2008 · 1 Comment

Stole this from Nicolas Colloff’s website—-

The Pope does not wear Prada but…

Jun. 27th, 2008 | 09:31 am
location: Moscow
mood: amused amused

As reported (see below) in today’s Guardian, the official Vatican newspaper has scotched the wicked, frivolous rumour that the Pope shops at Prada. In doing so it declared that, ‘The Pope is not dressed by Prada but by Christ’!

This rather frivolously gave me the image of the Pope wandering around attired in a wooden box given that our Lord was a carpenter.

Nevertheless the newspaper’s image of the Pope as a ’simple and sober’ man is rather undone by the subsequent report in Corriere della Sera that the much admired scarlet footwear were, in fact, hand crafted by an Italian shoemaker and that the Pope possesses three pairs including a ‘nappa leather pair for hot Rome summers’!

This reminds me of Tolstoy’s peasant frocks – hand tailored in Moscow from the finest linen!

Both interesting definitions of simplicity and sobriety! But what interests me most is why we cannot allow the Pope to be human with a streak of fondness for fine footwear and the sheer pomposity of the denial.

Here is the text of The Guardian article:

“The devil may wear Prada, but following months of speculation the Vatican has put paid to the idea that the Pope is also a fan of the top-end Italian designer.

Benedict XVI’s reputation as an bookish theologian with austere tastes took a knock shortly after his election when pictures of him wearing a pair of simple but elegant red slip-on shoes fuelled speculation among Vatican-watchers that the pontiff was hiding a penchant for high fashion.

In recent months Benedict has fanned the flames by donning sunglasses that would not look out of place on Keanu Reeves and stepping out in an array of eye-catching headwear, including a red velvet cap with white ermine trim and a red panama hat.

But a strongly worded article in the Vatican daily L’Osservatore Romano has struck back at the gossip, calling Benedict a “simple and sober man” who does not – regardless of the sleek appearance of his shoes – shop at Prada.

Italian daily Corriere della Sera confirmed that Benedict’s scarlet footwear was in fact made by Italian shoemaker Adriano Stefanelli, who has also supplied calfskin versions for winter wear and a nappa leather pair for hot Rome summers.

As for his hats, Benedict is simply staying true to his traditionalist take on the papacy by wearing clothes used by past popes, wrote the Vatican daily. “The Pope is not dressed by Prada but by Christ,” it stated, adding that anyone insisting he is a fashion clotheshorse is indulging “in a frivolousness which is extremely characteristic of an epoch which renders banal everything it doesn’t understand”.


Categories: Current Affairs · Travel

entry # 1 (not iPhoto enhanced)

June 27, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Categories: Blogroll

entry # 2 for AVA

June 27, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Categories: Blogroll

AVA entry #1

June 27, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Next week I’ll take two paintings over to AVA gallery in Lebanon to try to get into the 15th Annual Juried Summer Exhibition.  Virginia and I looked at some paintings from the studio today and chose these two.

Have no idea what the show is like, what my chances are, but what the heck.

Categories: Painting

Watt’s happened?

June 26, 2008 · Leave a Comment

26 June About 40 pages into Watt you can see Beckett finally becoming Beckett. Now I’m really glad I took the trouble to read his prose fiction from chronological beginning to this point.

The previous novel, Murphy, now suddenly recedes fast into the past, into the “beginnings” phase of the development of this writer.

In Watt the narrative voice starts a paragraph with “Haw!” twenty-eight pages into the book (I’m using the new Grove collected so it is page 199 of volume I). And with that Beckett as we now know him has emerged. And he has his narrator even mark, remark, upon the shift by talking at ridiculous length about a shift, a change.

We could be super dramatic in lit crit fashion and say Here, here it is, the precise moment when Modernism shifts into Post-Modernism. I’m late to Beckett so I’m sure plenty of critics have already opined thusly about this long passage.

But in what did the change consist? What was changed, and how? What was changed if my information is correct, was the sentiment that a change, other than a change of degree, had taken place. What was changed was existence off the ladder. Do not come down the ladder, Ifor, I haf taken it away. This I am happy to inform you is the reversed metamorphosis. The Laurel into Daphne. The old thing where it always was, back again. As when a man, having found at last what he sought, a woman for example, or a friend, loses it, or realizes what it is. And yet it is useless not to seek, not to want, for when you cease to seek you start to find, and when you cease to want, then life begins to ram her fish and chips down your gullet until you puke, and then the puke down your gullet until you puke the puke, and then the puked puke until you begin to like it. The glutton castaway, the drunkard in the desert, the lecher in prison, they are the happy ones. To hunger, thirst, lust, every day afresh and every day in vain, after the old prog, the old booze, the old whores, that’s the nearest we’ll ever get to felicity, the new porch and the very latest garden. (203/204).

Watt says he once nodded to Mr Ash in the midst of a snowstorm on Westminster Bridge, a man he merely knew only enough to nod to. Ash digs his watch out of layers and layers of clothing and says “Seventeen minutes past five exactly, as God is my witness, remember me to your wife (I never had one), . . . A moment later Big Ben (is that the name?) struck six. This in my opinion is the type of all information whatsoever, be it voluntary or solicited. If you want a stone, ask a turnover. If you want a turnover, ask a plumpudding.” (205)

Cheery advice these days as we listen to too much news about oil prices and the economy and the bombing of Iran between the election and the inauguration. Etc.

Categories: Books

June 25, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Categories: Blogroll

Pat G’s winning entry

June 25, 2008 · Leave a Comment

“Winning” is not quite exact.  I just mean that this painting got chosen to be in the Summer Invitational Exhibition at the Salmagundi Art Club in Manhatten.  Pat Giebutowski takes it down on Saturday.  She works in egg tempera now.  We went to see it at her house last night and I tried out the new camera, Canon A650IS.

“Trillium” is the title, I think.  That’s the flower.  Size of the painting?  hmmm I would guess 14″x14″—I should have asked and made sure.  Another photo will include things that will show scale better.

Categories: Current Affairs · Painting · Photos · Travel

Chicago visitors

June 25, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Dick Mertens, Clemens, 3, and Joana, 11, visited Sunday.  Dick came in for the parties in honor of retiring Concord Monitor editor, Mike Pride.  Dick’s first job after college (Carleton) was at the Monitor.  He perfected his journalistic practice there for 10-15 years.  Then he was a freelance reporter in Macedonia for a few years.  Now he is a grad student with the Committee On Social Thought at the University of Chicago.  He married his Macedonian wife, Afrodita, about seven? years ago.  Her first daughter is Joana.  She is from a Romany family in Skopje, popularly known as Gypsies.  Dick says there is a small Romany community in Chicago.  He still writes frequently for the Christian Science Monitor and was filing a story on the floods in Iowa as soon as he arrived and found our house had wi fi.  After we had dinner downtown at the Lucky Dog they wanted to see the studio.  I gave Joana a small painting she liked and Dick bought a big one.  They left the next morning, Dick planning to stop in New York state to interview the poet Hayden Carruth.  He interviewed him about ten years ago.  Dick was thrilled that on a trip down South last year?, while in Kentucky,  he and Joana chanced into a meeting with Wendell Berry’s brother, John.

Categories: Current Affairs · Photos · Travel

Just can’t decide

June 25, 2008 · 2 Comments

whether I like the site to be white or black Themed.

Cast your vote.  State your preference.  Opinions abound, send one out.

Categories: Blogroll