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The Milky Way. Photo from the Internet

 

Re-post from 2012.  Charles Layton was a member of the Blogfinger staff when he wrote this marvelous piece. Charles now lives in Philadelphia.  He is a professional editor from the Philadelphia Inquirer, now retired.

 

By Charles Layton

A few years ago we lived for three weeks in Nicaragua, in a house at the edge of a small, very remote fishing village called Casares. It was a spectacular place. Instead of shooshing and murmuring, as they mostly do in Ocean Grove, the waves on that shore towered and crashed and sucked and splattered and spat. They were never subdued.

From our porch, looking out on the Pacific Ocean, we watched pelicans dive bombing for fish. Each afternoon huge flocks – a hundred or more at a time – would fly right past us, headed for their nesting grounds.

But even better was the sky at night. After all the meager lights in that little town went dark, the sky became a light show of blazing stars and star clusters, plunging meteors, wandering planets. Sometimes, very late, when the call of nature roused me from bed, I would walk out on the patio alone and stare and stare at the universe, and especially at the Milky Way, wheeling above me. Stars by the thousands, unbelievably distinct and clear.

In Ocean Grove, on most nights, you can actually count the number of visible stars. Often it’s no more than a dozen. Sometimes it’s none. Living under a permanent scrim of light pollution, we forget how many stars are out there. Many of us have never actually seen the night sky in its true state – as I saw it on the coast of Nicaragua, and as our ancestors knew it.

In a couple of weeks we’ll hear jokes about the Mayan calendar coming to an end, and how that will be the destruction of the earth and all mankind. No need to do your Christmas shopping or pay your taxes now, our doom is written in the stars; har har. What idiots, those Mayans.

But really, the Mayans and all ancient peoples lived their lives in constant communion with the teeming, moving lights in the natural sky. The ancient peoples had no idea what those lights were. They noted that the lights moved in strange ways. Sometimes one could be seen to streak and fall out of the sky. Sometimes a comet would appear, ominously hovering. (What did that portent? Something important, right?) The night sky was those people’s television, fraught with drama and bad news.

The constellation Orion. The three middle stars are his belt

Religions arose to explain all those moving lights. Stories were told. People saw pictures in the sky – a lion, a crab, a hunter named Orion holding a bow in one hand and a club in the other. Because the planets moved independently of the rest of the turning firmament, the ancients associated those special lights with gods – Venus, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn.

But because the sky was so brilliant, prominent, ever-present and mysterious, ancient people studied it methodically. They built observatories and took and recorded measurements. They found that the heavenly bodies displayed repeating patterns which, when plotted, yielded information useful to hunters, farmers, nomads and sailors. Astrologers tried to discern when “the stars were right” for planting or marrying or doing business or giving birth.

The Bible says the “wise men” (men who understood signs in the sky) were guided to Bethlehem by a star. If such a beckoning star rose in the sky now, I doubt we’d even see it — unless JCP&L suffered a major blackout.

Hurricane Sandy taught us the value of electricity, and I’m happy to have the power back on; I would never want to do without it. Still, it’s not a trivial thing, our loss of that ancient awareness of the richness of the sky.

 

 

BILLIE HOLIDAY  (this song added on 4/23/21):

 

Seaside Heights. October, 2015. Paul Goldfinger photo.  Blogfinger.net

 

Below a scene from Mighty Aphrodite.   Paul Desmond’s music was featured.   And speaking of the Greek Goddess of Love, today is Eileen Goldfinger’s birthday.  Happy Birthday kid!

 

 

When I was a high school and college musician, I played a French made Selmer alto sax, as did Desmond.

Paul Desmond was my musical hero. I always tried to emulate  his “cool” style.  It was a sweet sound which touched me for its floating-in-air quality.

 

Paul Desmond. The search for a perfect reed is the bane of a sax man’s life. Internet photo. Reed sentiment is mine: PG

He was not only a performer with the Dave  Brubeck group, but he was a jazz composer  as well, and his “Take Five” was the first jazz song to sell a million copies.  Paul Desmond’s sound   provided a special flavor for the Dave Brubeck Quartet and was widely emulated  by jazz musicians like me as a member of the Fairleigh Dickinson University  Jazz Band and leader of the Paul Gary Quartet. (seen below on a Selmer tenor sax)

 

Bunny, I, Charlie (bass) and Frank (drums) warming up in Frank’s basement in Rutherford. We were college kids. Bunny and I were from FDU while Frank went to Seton Hall. Charlie was a precocious high school senior whose girlfriend was our groupie. Bunny rarely sang, but when she did, it was “Willow Weep for Me.” (We weeped for her singing.) Bunny was so slim that she could play between the white keys. Wallpaper compliments of Frank’s Mom. There are no recordings of our group.

Desmond’s remarkable tempo style  was featured in Woody’s 1995 film “Mighty Aphrodite.”

The song below, “Romance de Amor,”  is a Brazilian composition by Paul. It is from the album Skylark.

Paul Desmond drank and smoked heavily.  He died at 52 of cancer.

 

Romance de Amor. (Love Song). Written by Paul Desmond.

 

A churchyard in France—the last rose of summer. “Gather ye rosebuds while ye may.” Paul Goldfinger photo. Click once to enlarge.

 

By Charles Layton,  Editor   (former) @Blogfinger. net.      Re-post 

 

Good morning, class. Today we’ll study the poetic tradition known as carpe diem, which means “seize the day.”  It’s a phrase from the Roman poet Horace, who felt that life is short and unpredictable so let’s bring and make love and party on.

The poet Robert Herrick was in this tradition when he wrote his poem “To the Virgins, to Make much of Time.”  Its most famous line is  Gather ye rosebuds while ye may. But it’s not about gardening.

Here is an American popular song in the carpe diem tradition. It’s been recorded by Billie Holiday, Nat King Cole, Dinah Washington, Nina Simone, Aretha Franklin, Roberta Flack and Wynton Marsalis. Johnny Hartman sang it on the soundtrack to the movie The Bridges of Madison County. I especially like the concluding lines:

For all we know this may only be a dream.
We come and go like the ripples in a stream.
So love me tonight tomorrow was made for some,
Tomorrow may never come for all we know.

JOHNNY HARTMAN.   From The Bridges of Madison County

 

Wesley Lake: 1905

Wesley Lake postcard 1905.    Blogfinger.net post.   Click to enlarge.

 

K.D. LANG:

Kelly Lynch, Master Distiller. Paul Goldfinger photo  4/11/24. Asbury Park, NJ, USA. Click once to enlarge.  Blogfinger.net. Ocean Grove NJ

 

By Paul Goldfinger, MD.  Blogfinger.net.  Ocean Grove, NJ, USA.  We are sister cities with A. Park,  despite what the Tri-City News says.

 

I was over in A. Park, across the Jersey Avenue bridge in Ocean Grove, to make sure the Bierhalle* was still intact after recent flooding 2024.

While I was there, I  noticed a young woman near some large doors pushing a heavy cart filled with wooden barrels.  I walked over and when I peeked inside the doors, I saw a fascinating place: the Asbury Park Distilling Co.  It looked like the home of a mad scientist.

She invited me in to take a photo (see above).   It turns out that she is no ordinary shlepper:  She is Kelly Lynch, Master Distiller.

The Asbury Park Distilling Co. is the first and only distillery in Asbury, since Prohibition.  They make high class beverages:  bourbon, gin, and vodka, as well as other products.

Tours are available.

Their icon is a mermaid.

 

*ADDENDUM:  The” Bierhalle,” a familiar landmark when coming across the Jersey Ave. bridge, and next door to the Asbury Distillery, has been closed for sometime.  It is expected that it will reopen, but there are issues having to do with structural concerns and subterranean integrity.  Work is currently being done and difficulty acquiring insurance due to recurrent flooding.  It is very popular in-season, especially up at the roof bar where they have had  live music.

Here is a Blogfinger Bierhalle link 2015:

 

Asbury BIERHALLE report from Blogfinger 2015

 

Bierhalle. Paul Goldfinger photo. 4/11/24. Click to enlarge.

 

2025 update:  The Bierhalle is now permanently closed.  The Asbury Distillery is open and has live music on Sundays.

2026 update a flood hits 7/6/26.  SEE VIDEO BELOW:

 

7/9/2026.  An Asbury source sent us this 7/6/26 video, undoubtedly by a drone.   The tell us that the flood of Wesley Lake receded quickly oh both sides.  On the Grovarian side, we were left with a swamp of plastic bottles and garbage dredged up from the bottom. No surprise to Grovers.  Our Asburian friends point to the Grove and wonder why lakeside home owners don’t do a better job policing our shores

Interestingly the Bierhalle property which was considered to be hopelessly vulnerable to flood damage has been bought by owners who plan a steak house at the site and who have placed a metal barrier to protect the lower structural areas from flood damage, and it did that during the major flooding two days ago.

 

 

 

BEE GEES

 

 

 

Editorial:  Paul Goldfinger MD. Blogfinger.net.    Ocean Grove, NJ, USA

Firemen’s Park in Ocean Grove. July, 2020. Blogfinger photo. ©

 

A fence at Dachau. It means “Work makes you free.”

 

 

In Philadelphia, children can get closer to the Liberty Bell than those in Firemen’s Park can. Internet photo

 

We live in an age of being offended.  If someone is offended by anything in the public sphere, then authorities often have to fix it.  An example is taking down a statue of a Confederate hero because it might offend someone who doesn’t want to be reminded of slavery 150 years ago.

Or changing the name of a city such as New York, because York was an Englishman who had slaves.   And Stokes, who would not allow blacks, Jews and Catholics into town, could be viewed as being biased, and thus some might be offended by his statue on Ocean Pathway.

Sometimes responding to such a complaint seems justified, while others seem unreasonable and even harmful.

In OG’s Firemen’s Park is a symbol of liberty: It is a bell with an eagle on top. For some in the Grove it is a symbol of departed firemen. But whichever definition is embraced by Grovers,  neither meaning would likely offend anyone, and the bell would remain.

But the placement of the bell imprisoned  by an ominous black fence with sharp points facing upward and dangerous shrubs with needles protruding might remind some of being in captivity. It might even intimidate and frighten children.

The Nazis imprisoned innocent people  behind ominous black fences, and that included gypsies, Jews, gays, Adventists, mentally ill, Soviet POW’s and sick Poles. Those prisoners wound up being murdered.

So I find that fence to be offensive.  We should not celebrate public displays that might remind some of our friends and neighbors of such horrors.

Please Mr. Mayor—take it and those horrid bushes away, and open access to that liberty bell for all to enjoy and interpret in a positive way.  And surround it with flowers turning it into a welcoming happy  setting —an inoffensive symbol of liberty.

Paul Goldfinger, MD,  Editor@Blogfinger.net

 

BIRDY  “Not About Angels”  From a movie  The Fault in Our Stars

Eileen is the Mad Hatter at the Bubble Room on Captiva Island, Florida. If you love music , you can order "Duck Ellington"

Eileen is the Mad Hatter at the Bubble Room on Captiva Island, Florida. If you love music, you can order “Duck Ellington” at that restaurant.  Paul Goldfinger photograph.

 

After this photo, Eileen ran around saying to everyone, “What a regrettably large head you have.”

 

KATHRYN BEAUMONT  From the original soundtrack of Alice in Wonderland:

 

OG boards. It may be September, but it is 90 degrees today. in Ocean Grove.    9/20/22. Paul Goldfinger photo. See comment regarding this photo challenge.   Click once to see her face–lovely to look at!

 

BARRY WHITE:

 

Paul Goldfnger photo. Main Avenue, Ocean Grove.     7/4/26.   Blogfinger.net

 

RAY CHARLES:

 

Paul Goldfinger photo as bagel family strolls across Main Street to Bagel Talk in W. Park Mall in Neptune, NJ. 7/5/26. They stopped traffic as this unusual family procession waddled along.    Then they made a U turn to head back to Main Avenue in the Grove.       Blogfinger.net. Click once to enlarge.

 

They must have come out from Wesley Lake.   Last year a swan was abandoned by its parents,  but it survived with tender care from bird lovers. Now it seems that orphan has returned to have its own family here on WL.

“Feed the Birds” from Mary Poppins,   Julie Andrews

 

Tuscany, Italy. 1996. By Paul Goldfinger.

Tuscany, Italy.  1996. By Paul Goldfinger. Villa Antinori, near Florence.   Tri-X film. Leica M camera. My darkroom print.  Photo cards like this one are available, signed, for $10,00.   Contact Blogfinger@verizon.net.

 

 

By Paul Goldfinger,  MD, Editor  Blogfinger.net

It is very difficult for one swan to do a pas de deux,  but this Italian swan is capable.  After all, he (or she?) is the only component in this photo which is in sharp focus.   Recently we posted a photograph of a seagull in a boat, misidentified as a duck. But a swan?—–never mistaken for a duck.

Has professional ballet ever been presented  in Ocean Grove?  I’ve never seen it mentioned in the OG history books. We certainly had a lot of opera, instrumental, and choral music, but  classical vocalizing was always emphasized here thanks to Tali Essen Morgan who’s buddy was Caruso.  There is no mention of Tali hanging out in the Grove with prima ballerinas.

Swan Lake made its debut in Moscow in 1877 by the Bolshoi. Tchaikovsky wrote it, and it  has been almost constantly on tour ever since.

Maybe someday we will have Swan Lake on the stage in the magnificent Great Auditorium of Ocean Grove, New Jersey.

But we can dream.

Here is a pas de deux from Swan Lake Act II,  It is called the” Love Duet,”  and the star is Ulyana Lopatkina.  Can you imagine these two going to Days after the show for hot fudge sundaes?

Tchaikovsky must be kvelling wherever he is.

Video below:   Click on the full screen or picture in picture mode to enlarge all these ballerinas hopping on one leg.

 

 

 

All photos by Paul Goldfinger, taken from the YOU TUBE video 3/17/23

 

 

 

 

Paul Goldfinger.  Editor Blogfinger.net; and graduate of Fairleigh Dickinson U.

This is a remarkable sports story, and the FDU Knights can bask in this amazing victory: a 16 seed beats a 1 seed.    I found this on the Net:

POLITI:     “Fairleigh Dickinson’s first-round victory over No. 1 seeded Purdue is the biggest upset in NCAA Tournament history and maybe college basketball history. Go ahead and comb through the record books, if you must. What happened last night in Columbus, Ohio, between the tiny commuter school from Teaneck and the Big Ten powerhouse from Indiana is basically unparalleled.”

But for most colleges and universities, sports  is not the major preoccupation in students’  lives.  I was a student at FDU Teaneck in the 1960’s. I was a commuter as were most of the students. They had no football team, but there was a basketball team.

The undergrads tended to be older than most, and many were attending the business school which was quite eminent.     My OG neighbor graduated Harvard, took a corporate job and obtained his MBA at night from FDU.  He was impressed.

Many students had jobs and college classes.  College life wasn’t much, although I did belong to a secret frat.  Do you see the swan in the logo above?  Well my frat brothers stole a swan, temporarily from the pond on campus in Teaneck and created a minor incident.

And I had a part in Antigone and a girlfriend who was learning to speak Russian.   Music was my main interest there, playing sax  in a number of groups.  My own quintet played for the Spring Weekend, and on the bill were Carmen McCrea and Gene Krupa.

Here is link regarding that era:

https://wp.me/pqmj2-wd2

 

In Rutherford , NJ  they had no July 4 parade, but they did have a big Memorial Day parade, and the University recruited me to ride the float. The school originated in 1942 in Rutherford.

 

I’m in front with the crew cut and white mouthpiece.

 

Anyhow, basketball was an obscure preoccupation.  The team mostly played at the Rutherford Campus, so I paid little attention to it. It was, as far as I was concerned, small potatoes.

But then, I saw a headline in the campus newspaper about how the basketball coach was complaining that he needed more money for scholarships. I thought this was obnoxious because the school had a weak academic scholarship program, and not even the valedictorian at Teaneck High could get a full ride to attend school at FDU.  So I wrote a letter to the editor suggesting that they take the basketball money and do some academic recruitment for the school .I even suggested that they buy a few more famous professors to populate the library.

My letter created a minor uproar.  My frat buddies kidded me endlessly about how my “library professors” were doing.  And my English professor stopped me on campus to complement my writing and then suggesting that the basketball players should be paid to play for the school.

But it was a tempest in a teapot then, but now–wow!   FDU  broke a record for the NCAA tournament which has been run since 1939.

And boy, was I wrong about FDU sports.  I enjoyed watching the FDU coach be interviewed post game, and they played a video of his speech to the team before the Purdue game was to start, and he said that he sincerely believed that they could win the game. Impressive.

But, then again, the idea of paying college athletes is still a good one and an honest one. There still those who advocate that.

So Go Knights,    Could they win in Round Two?   Why not?  I am a fan now–better late than never.

The school cheer or school song?  I have no idea.

But here’s a song; I have no responsibility for the lyrics, but it’s called “The Girls of Fairleigh Dickinson”  by the Down Cows.

 

 

 

ADDENDUM:  I have just learned that college athletes will be able, starting soon, to make money capitalizing on their names, autographs and other means.  You can Google The NY Times article on this.

 

Amish together.

Kutztown,  Pa.  Click once.  Paul Goldfinger.

 

Connie Francis: