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Walking home with her treasure. Blogfinger photo.

BRUNO MARS:

 

Paul Goldfinger photo.  Abstract Woman. 2026. From Netflix:    “The Mystery of Marilyn—The Unheard Tapes.

 

 

JOHN COLTRANE:   Ballads.

 

Eileen Goldfinger and Paul are sponsoring the 15 Annual Ocean Grove  2026 Town-Wide Yard Sale. Above is she.    Click once.     This photo is from June 7, 2025.

 

 

Eileen and Paul in a land and time  far, far away.

 

OKLAHOMA—Gloria Graham.

 

 

This is a preliminary notice.  June looks like a quiet month for our 15th annual Town-Wide Yard Sale:   Saturday  June  27, 2016. 9 am-3 pm.   More details will be forthcoming.  We welcome any suggestions, but here is a list of some of what we plan:

 

We will maintain a post on our home page where visitors or yard  sailers can obtain information.   As the date approaches we will , as before, post a list of all sales including what items are for sale at each location.

We hope that participants will help us. We will appreciate efforts to promote the event.  Flyers will be available to use for that purpose.  Or sailers can create  flyers, banners or lawn signs.  Social media promotions will help. Bring kids to the sales which  are social events which visitors and Grovers will enjoy. Play music at your sale.  And come up with unique sale promotions. We will advertise in town and out. And if you have a clever flyer we may post it online.

Yard sailers  can sign up until June 26, 2026.   Just email us at Blogfinger@verizon.net.  We will not post the items for sale until a few weeks before the sales.  Please send us your name, address, email and  nearest cross street. Encourage neighbors and friends to join you in combining sales.

You can design your own sale, such as the hours.  Just let us know.

There will be no rain date.

You will need a Neptune permit obtained at the Mother Ship for $5.00. Tell them that you are with the Town-Wide Yard Sale.

—This June there will be no “Art on the Porch” so we invite artists to show and sell their work as part of our Town-Wide Yard-Sales.   Artists do not have to compete or pay  to join in.  They can sell art as part of a  yard sales or at a personal sale,  alone on that date. Just tell us your plans.

We welcome all art forms. I will be showing signed black and white photographs. See photo above .

—We invite  participants to sell Ocean Grove memorabilia, art,  photos, historic valuables, and ephemera like books, Camp Meeting stuff like annual CMA booklets,   and postcards.  There are OG collectors in town.  OG beach badges are also collectibles.  I met a lady in Florida who wanted to buy by OG badge right off my hat.  And artists who sell OG scenics.

–If you are into crafts, try selling them.

–Consider selling plant cuttings and plants.; after all, this is the “Garden State.”

–You can sell vinyl records, CD’s and DVD’s, and there are many people who still use these formats;  Just keep prices low or research the values; especially of vinyl! Beware of  scams for vinyl. CD players are a good venue for kids

–Look for vintage anythings:  such as childrens’ books–there are collectors.  Antiques of all kinds are not so much in demand, but if you plan to sell some, be sure to get an idea of market prices. Some collect old cameras.

–Downsizing?    Consider ridding yourself of stuff including cheap items or even free items to help neighbors. And if you have leftovers, just load up you vehicle after hour sale and go to any of the many  charities near us.

–You can sell silver, especially sterling, but you are better off selling yours at specialty stores such as Belmar and Bradley jewelers.

–Get the kids  into photography..there are digital cameras for children, and it is a good entry into a new way to communicate, be artistic and creative.   Look for unused albums at our sales.

–Musical  instruments, especially old ones. You could sell a French horn, but don’t hurt yourself.

NOTE:   Blogfinger will not request a commission  of any earnings made at our sales.  The seller has to back up whatever they sell.

—Street musicians can set up at various sales.  We envision solo or small ensembles . Let us know if you want to perform. You can put out a hat like they do in New Orleans.

—Bring your dogs, cats,  and kids.

It will be a good chance to visit OG sites including the newly opened (scheduled for April)  Nagle’s  on Main Avenue, the newly restored Fitzgerald Fountain at Founders’ Park,  Tent Village near the Great Auditorium,  and our beachfront/boardwalk  where revealing bathing suits are forbidden.  (see photo below and see town beach rules.)

 

Seeing the sights on the Ocean Grove beach. Paul Goldfinger photo taken from the pier.  Click once  and see who’s watching this photo-shoot.

 

“Fad0 Lisboa-Paris”.  For Brigette Bardot who just died.

 

 

If you want to contact us, try email:      Blogfinger@verizon.net

 

Paul Goldfinger photo. A happy camper at our sale..

 

 

 

Marilyn Monroe. Netflix still image by Paul Goldfinger.1/26

 

 

NATASHA RICHARDSON    “Maybe This Time.”   From Cabaret

 

Paul Goldfinger still photograph  from Netflix. “The Mystery of Marilyn—The Unheard Tapes.”   1/18/26

 

‘MARILYN’S THEME”.   Music from the movie My Week With Marilyn.   Lang Lang on piano.

 

Kirsten Luce of the New York Times. January 21, 2014.

Kirsten Luce of the New York Times. January 21, 2014.

The New York Times photo staff are excellent, and today they seemed to set their team loose for snow photos. I wish I could join them on their photo shoot. I especially liked this shot by Kirsten Luce, but if you go to NYTimes.com, you can see other fine images.

Snow photography has some unique challenges because of the brightness of the snow.  You can have exposure problems such as dark faces if you don’t make allowances for that.  Note that the small size of images obtained from that paper and other on line publications are done that way purposely so that no one can use their images for commercial purposes.

Paul Goldfinger,  Editor Blogfinger

 

JAMES NEWTON HOWARD.    From the soundtrack of  Snow Falling on Cedars:

“Snowstorm”

 

 

New York Times. Dec, 2022.

 

Paul Goldfinger. MD,  FACC.  Blogfinger.net. Re-Post 2026 but still applicable.

The New York Times (12/15, Abelson) reports the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality released study results that discovered “as many as 250,000 people die every year because they are misdiagnosed in the emergency room.” The study “estimates roughly 7.4 million people are inaccurately diagnosed of the 130 million annual visits to hospital emergency departments in the United States,” and “some 370,000 patients may suffer serious harm as a result.”

However, “the researchers largely relied on studies conducted outside the United States, in countries like Canada, Spain and Switzerland, to come with up with their overall estimate of error and harm rates.

 

I am worried about ER care.  Not only are they understaffed,  but they are making fatal mistakes as described above. Whenever I go to an ER for myself or for family, I find  that quality is being compromised in one way or another.  I dread having to go to an ER.

I don’t like anecdotes, but they can be instructive.  Years ago medical journals would publish case reports, and I had a few accepted myself.

So I took a relative to a local ER a few years ago with a painful knee. She was seen by a nurse practitioner who barely explained who he was.  I asked if a doctor would see her, and he said, “I can do what a doctor can.”

But he couldn’t….his history taking skills were superficial and ill informed, and his physical examination skills were poor.  He failed to review her medications and he ordered the wrong test. In the end he missed  the  correct diagnosis which was not obvious, and  the correct diagnosis and treatment were discovered by chance and thanks partly to my unmasking my identity and pushing for an accurate ending.

Such “doctors” don’t know how to dig deep and have high indices of suspicion when evaluating patients with complex situations.

There is good reason why doctors are in training and school for much longer than “physician extenders” who are utilized wrong and are part of a bottom line oriented healthcare industry where efficiency and shortcuts prevail as top priorities.  Thus mistakes are made.

Too many doctors are employees rather than the architects of their practices.  This is part of the problem where errors are made.  Many doctors are leaving practice or looking for new ways out, such as working as concierge physicians.   Burnout, early retirement,  and suicide are  common.

Give physicians the driver’s seat again. America can afford high quality medical care for all, but that goal is sinking now.

There is a link above to the Times piece, with hundreds of comments, many are very good.

Here is a portion of one:  “And for a final answer to what is wrong with the patient, I live by the mantra that the patient will always tell you what is wrong. But that requires time to ask questions and talk to the patient, something else that is a disappearing art. The doctor patient relationship is essential to good care, but is a vanishing species, being replaced with batteries of tests that may add confusion rather than clarity. On the other hand, hospitals get paid well for testing and less for letting doctors do their jobs.”

 

MILT JACKSON.   “Emily”

 

 

Paul Goldfinger MD, Blogfinger.net.  1/17/26.

More Americans diagnosed with cancer are now surviving the disease, data show

The  Washington Post, 1/13/26,  reports that  new data released Tuesday by the American Cancer Society (ACS) reveal that “more Americans diagnosed with cancer are now surviving the disease – marking a positive trend that experts say reflects the effectiveness of early prevention and detection strategies, and advancements in treatment and care.”

Results from the ACS’s annual report “show for the first time that the five-year survival rate for all cancers has reached 70%, with the most notable survival gains occurring among people diagnosed with more fatal cancers such as myeloma (a blood cancer), liver cancer and lung cancer.” According to the report, “the cancer mortality rate has continued to decline through 2023, averting 4.8 million deaths since 1991.” The data were published in CA: A Cancer Journal for Clinicians.

 

Blogfinger comment:   Towards the end of my career, I began to notice improved survival rates in patients with coronary heart disease and with cancer.  With respect to cancer, we used to speak of 5 year survival rates as a touchstone for possible cures.   It became clearer that many cases with cancer were looking like chronic diseases instead of fatal ones. The same is  true with HIV infections.

As noted above, successes were related to new drugs and to new prevention strategies.  And also new technologies such as coronary stents.

That is why Eileen published our book “Prevention Does Work, a Guide to  Healthy Heart.”  We emphasized nutrition and we knew that physicians didn’t have time and knowledge .

But now we are enthused about the new US Department of Health pyramid guidelines released with the new year.   It focuses on important nutritional recommendations.

Many trials have confirmed the importance of nutrition in prevention of cancer and cardiovascular diseases. Even mental illness such as depression can be helped with good nutrition.

The press release above does not mention the word “nutrition” so, coming from the AMA, that is disappointing, although the quote does mention “early prevention .”

The new “Food Pyramid” was announced by the government:

Why was the food pyramid changed?

“At a White House briefing, Health Secretary Robert Kennedy, Jr.  said he wanted Americans to eat “real food,” saying that the pyramid and guidelines it represents prioritize high quality protein, healthy fats, fruits and vegetables.

It’s in line with the “Make America Healthy Again” plan, which Kennedy has been attempting to implement across the federal government’s guidelines on everything from food to vaccines. ”

 

 

We are waiting to hear the details of  this cancer  “positive trend” especially in the nutrition aspects.

We continue to look favorably on Mediterranean diets.  Meanwhile take a look at the  new inverse pyramid. We will post more specifics especially in the dietary areas:   “Whole Foods,” whole grains, vegetables, fruits,  sugar,  proteins, meats, saturated fats, dairy, eggs,  cheese,  “good fats” and food supplement  recommendations currently coming  to the surface.

The idea of “evidence based” results still holds.  Don’t fall for online or radio quacks. If your doctor never uses the words “prevention” or ” nutrition” then ask him/her about your diet.  If necessary ask for a dietary referral to help you implement the latest pyramid.

Watch for more details including books and educational sources from the government,, and go online also, but stick to reliable  sources such as Mayo Clinic, NIH, Johns Hopkins, and New York City University Hospitals as well as authorities from highly regarded medical schools.

 

Vernazza, Italy. Silver gelatin print. By Paul Goldfinger © Click left for full view

Vernazza, Italy. Silver gelatin print by Paul Goldfinger.  Click once  for full view

 

 

RONALD NALDI  (Tenor from Ocean Grove and the Metropolitan Opera).     “Mattinata”.   From his album of Neapolitan songs and romances.  Torna a Surriento

 

Paul Goldfinger photo. 1/17/26. 8:30 am.   Ocean Grove, NJ, USA.  Blogfinger.net.

 

FATS WALLER:  Staying warm.

 

Ocean Grove beach. Morning. 8/19/20 Paul Goldfinger photograph

 

 

Paul Goldfinger,  Editor@Blogfinger.net

It was a beautiful August morning at the Ocean Grove beach, right before the crowds would begin.  The sky still had faint pink remnants of the sunrise colors, and some clouds foretold the rainstorm which would appear a few hours later. The light was excellent for photography.

I went down to the beach near the waters edge.    I was shooting with my phone  (see photo above), and my  lens was taking in surf walkers, clumps of relaxers, beach and sky, and the lifeguards who were setting up at bench #3.

I was unaware of the  lifeguard who was walking near me, between me and the #3 bench.

Then he spoke to me, and I looked his way:

He:  “Is there a problem?”

Me:  “What?”

He:  “Is there a problem?”

Me:  Sensing that he was suspicious of me and that his questions were a form of interrogation, I  knew that he had no right or reason to question me, so I said, “Is there a problem?  It’s none of your business.”   That ended the conversation.

I was offended by his persistent badgering.  Even if I were not a journalist, I would have every right to photograph out in the open at the beach.  I did not need anyone’s consent in this situation.   But even more worrisome, he thought that he had the right and the authority to question me about it.

We do have a free press in America and we have freedom of expression.  I hope my retort awakened him to be careful with the rights of others.

And I wondered also if the COVID-19 stresses and the horrible current political unease might have created a certain paranoia in our society.

All of us should be wary of creeping infringement on our rights.

See anybody you know?    Dec 24, 2017. Ocean Grove, NJ. Paul Goldfinger ©

 

RAY WATERS AND HIS ORCHESTRA:

 

 

Mail from New York

 

Paul Goldfinger photograph. Movie still.    Blogfinger.net

 

HARRY NILSSON