Monthly Archives: August 2009

Paris Memorial Plaques

Paris Plaques

I was afraid such plaques were being removed; I seemed to see fewer over the years. This year, marking the 65th anniversary of the end of Nazi occupation, a website has been established to record them.

http://www.plaques-commemoratives.org/

Ted Kennedy Sailing, Sailing, Beyond the Horizon

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A complex, difficult, indeed fully human, life. In the end it is a fine thing to be remembered as The Liberal Lion of The United States Senate.

He worked for:
Civil Rights Act
Voting Rights Act
Immigration Act
Occupational Health and Safety Act
Women, Infants and Children Nutrition Program
Americans With Disabilities Act
Title IX
Minimum Wage
Same Sex Marriage
SChip Children’s Medical Insurance
Equal Rights Amendment
Education Acts
Head Start
Student Loans
Meals On Wheels
. . . and so much more, over 2,500 pieces of legislation which he sponsored or co-sponsored, along with countless thousands of  acts of help, great and small, on behalf of his constituents.

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HEALTHCARE, HISTORY AND KENNEDY

posted by Katrina Vanden Heuvel on 08/26/2009 @ 4:55pm

I was writing this column when I heard of Senator Kennedy’s death.

I am heartbroken.

For more than five decades, my father William vanden Heuvel was a close friend and political ally of Kennedy’s. When I called him this morning he had been weeping. He’d just seen the footage on CNN of Kennedy’s extraordinarily emotional visit to Ireland, one year after his brother John’s assassination. My father traveled with Kennedy on that trip, as he would on many others in the years to follow. He also shared memories of sailing trips on the coast of Maine, and the good times, and tough times, and the campaigns waged and won.

My father told me he was supposed to be on the small plane that crashed and nearly killed Kennedy in 1964; but what with Bobby running for the New York Senate that year, my father went to campaign for Teddy’s older brother. He spent the next year shuttling to the Massachusetts hospital to visit Teddy, who was strapped down on a gurney to avoid paralysis.

My father wrote many speeches for Kennedy, and informed many others, including the eloquent and impassioned statements Kennedy made opposing the war in Iraq. Vietnam was never far from Kennedy’s mind or the memories of those — like my father — who had served in President Kennedy’s administration and watched Lyndon Johnson’s Great Society destroyed.

When Kennedy was deciding whether to endorse Senator Barack Obama for president, he took counsel with friends and advisers, including my father.

Senator Kennedy was a fighting liberal; a passionate and exuberant lion to the very end — often among timid cubs. He will be remembered as the best and most effective Senator of the last century. Kennedy helped shape every major piece of legislation, with his powerful commitment to civil rights, labor rights, and women’s rights — always fighting for equality, always standing with the underdog, the poor, the most vulnerable, who he believed deserved lives of dignity.

Kennedy’s final fight was for quality, affordable healthcare for all. As recently as July, he called that fight “the cause of my life.” In the coming months, President Obama and a Democratic Congress will determine whether that cause is realized.

Whatever one thinks of President Obama’s presidency so far, he is one of the few reform presidents in modern history — a potential Senator Kennedy recognized when he endorsed his candidacy. A reform President takes on the status quo in order to improve the lives of the majority and ensure that America lives up to it’s potential and promise. Franklin Roosevelt was the very model of a reform President. Lyndon Johnson, in a sense, was pushed to become a reformer by the turbulence of the times.

When a reform President takes on the status quo he confronts a ferocious, well-organized, reactionary opposition. What we’re seeing today — with rightwing groups comparing Obama to Hitler and healthcare reform to socialism–Roosevelt faced with the American Liberty League calling him a socialist or a fascist (ironic, since it was Roosevelt who led the US into war against fascism). Like Obama, Roosevelt also confronted well-funded business lobbies. And in the Catholic demagogue Father Coughlin, Roosevelt had his Rush Limbaugh or Glenn Beck in a Roman collar.

As Congressman Keith Ellison — Vice Chair of the Progressive Caucus — notes in a recent post, “The special interests and protectors of the status quo acted worse when America was on the brink of passing Civil Rights and Voting Rights legislation. They spread lies and fear when America was contemplating women’s suffrage too.”

The rabid protestors opposing Obama are representatives of a long national tradition: an irrational fear of a strong central government. Obama has found it more difficult to turn away from the contemporary edition of the fanatical right than his reform predecessors, partly because conservative ideology has been in the saddle for three decades and the recession began too late in the Bush administration to sufficiently discredit its free-market fundamentalism and those who still speak on its behalf.

Obama himself acknowledged parallels between now and previous battles for reform when speaking to a coalition of religious leaders on August 20. He said, “These struggles always boil down to a contest between hope and fear. That was true in the debate over social security, when FDR was accused of being a socialist. That was true when LBJ tried to pass Medicare. And it’s true in this debate today.”

Indeed those words might be a valuable frame for a presidential speech after Labor Day, as Obama returns to presenting and–one hopes– truly fighting for his healthcare agenda. Obama would be wise to place his agenda in the tradition of reform in US history — especially the two most popular programs in modern history, Social Security and Medicare — which were staunchly opposed by the GOP.

The President, his congressional allies, and millions of Americans should also be inspired to honor and fight for the cause of Senator Kennedy’s life. Surely the President recognizes that the Senate’s fighting liberal would not place the fate of affordable health insurance back in the hands of the private sector without a viable public alternative that isn’t driven by profit or greed.

This country now has the best opportunity since 1912 — when Theodore Roosevelt included universal healthcare in his progressive party platform — to pass real healthcare reform and fulfill a moral imperative. A bill with a strong public option would be a victory not only for progressives but for all those who seek a healthier, more humane country where healthcare is a right not a commodity.

One has to question the value of bipartisanship at this moment. This is not a Republican Party out to criticize or modify healthcare reform. This is a party out to cripple or kill reform, and with it the future of Obama’s presidency. It’s high time to part ways with the Party of No– which once opposed Medicare and Social Security and is now committed to fearmongering about government takeovers and socialism coming to America.

Democrats must pass a strong reform bill by any means necessary (and Congressman Ellison makes a strong case here for using reconciliation to avoid a GOP filibuster). If the Republicans defeat it, let them explain themselves in the 2010 midterm elections to voters who remain at the mercy of insurance companies. If, on the other hand, Dems choose to enact a bipartisan sham reform bill instead of seizing this moment when they are in charge, they will shoulder the blame and see ugly results come 2010.

Every President, no matter how popular at the outset, has only so much political capital and must use it wisely and strategically. And if one looks at American political history–as Mike Lux explains in his valuable book The Progressive Revolution: How the Best in America Came to Be — every so often a window to change opens and the combination of crisis, leadership, and political movement makes big, positive reforms possible.

“That window is open right now,” Lux writes, “and President Obama, to his credit, is trying to keep it open” to make changes that will make our nation immeasurably stronger. But if he gives up this fight and caves to lobbyists — or either the Congressional Democrats or the grassroots fails to deliver the support he needs — then that window will slam shut, and the next opportunity for reform might not come for another generation.

That would be a real tragedy — and also no way to honor the Lion of the Senate. Today President Obama said, “The Kennedy name is synonymous with the Democratic Party.” Now, for this fight, the Democratic Party must become synonymous with Kennedy.

Copyright © 2009 The Nation


The Great Les Paul (1915-2009)

Goodbye to Les Paul who had a long, creative life and career. I am so glad we were able to go with our son, Cliff, to see him at Iridium two years ago. We had fabulous seats, just below the stage, but set far enough back that Cliff could see all of L.P.’s fingering and his use of the electronic gear he invented which changed the world of performing and recording with electric instruments.

For myself, How High The Moon, performed with his wife, Mary Ford,  will always be one of those songs that resides in its entirety – – complex harmonies, chord changes and all the lyrics — in that part of the brain where once a song gets going it’s hard to get it out of  your mind. Clear, beautiful, and brightly swingin’

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Sotomayor and Obama

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The newest Supreme Court Justice welcomed by the President of the United States. As President Obama said, it was “an extraordinary moment for our nation.”

18 rue Soufflot

Once upon a time I lived for a year at 18 rue Soufflot in Paris.

A few details:

18 rue Soufflot

 


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Once a week we took the bus to Nadia Boulanger’s apartment in the rue Ballou. There Mademoiselle gave a group lesson for music teachers and other less advanced students.

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There’s an old music biz wisecrack that in every small town in America there are two characters you can count on finding – – the village idiot and the person who studied with Nadia Boulanger. I was not a private student in the way the greats were – – I was part of a Wednesday afternoon group that met at her apartment. We were assigned a piece and volunteered to perform and be critiqued by her. Two or three people got to play each week. She took both their playing and the score apart in profound detail discussing composer, composition, performance options, and demonstrating passages herself. Most of the students were piano teachers, music directors of various sorts, and a few of us rank amateurs privileged to join in. I had a grand piano where I lived, so some of us would gather there to practice.

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And on another day we gathered each week at the Louvre for Mlle. Salmon’s art history class.

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Two weeks of exams at the Sorbonne. I had a brain freeze and had to take the oral twice. Decades later I returned and gave a lecture (with slides) in the same building.

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Cafritz Collection of African American Art Destroyed by Fire

 

The New York Times

ARTS / ART & DESIGN | August 08, 2009

In Collection’s Ashes, a Heritage’s Seeds
By Rachel L. Swarns
Much of Peggy Cooper Cafritz’s art collection, one of the largest private collections of African-American and African art in the country, was destroyed by a house fire in July.

Louvre Museum English Database

The Louvre Museum now has an excellent English version of its extensive database

http://bit.ly/e6Kzg

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