Thursday, April 23, 2015

Saint George's Day

St. George's Day
23 April  Two Thousand and Fifteen

In England and Jerusalem from the days of the Crusades.



Composed by William H. How in 1864 and set to music by Ralph Vaughan Williams in 1906
for the Church of England and the Presbyterian Church of Scotland, it has been and remains today to be my most favorite hymn.
     FOR ALL THE SAINTS


    For all the saints who from their labors rest, Who Thee by faith be
    fore the world con-fessed, Thy name, O Jesus, be for-ev-er blessed,
    Al-le-lu-ia! Al-le-lu-ia!

    Thou wast their rock, their fort-ress and their might; Thou, Lord, their cap-tain
    in the well-fought fight;  Thou in the dark-ness drear, their one true light.
    Al-le-lu-ia! Al-le-lu-ia!

    O blest com-mun-ion, fel-low-ship divine! We fee-bly strug-gle;
    they in glory shine. Yet all are one in Thee for all are Thine.

    And when the strife is fierce, the war-fare long, Steals on the ear the
    dis-tant tri-umph song, And hearts are brave a-agin and arms are stong,

    The gold-en eve-ning bright-ens in the west; Soon, soon to faith-ful
    warriors com-eth rest; And sweet the calm of Par-a-dise, the blest.

    From earth's wide bounds and o-cean's far-thest coast, Thro' gates of pearl stream
    in the count-less host, Sing-ing to Fa-ther,Son, and Ho-ly Ghost.
    Al-le-lu-ia! Al-le-lu-ia!

    A-men.

    Happy St. George's Day yea 'ole Presbyterians


    Credits: The English Hymnal by permission of Oxford University Press, London, Hope Publishing Company ISBN:0-916642-01-1 YouTube and Fort Street Presbyterian Church, Detroit, Michigan.

    Tuesday, April 21, 2015

    Friday, April 17, 2015

    Welcome Back To Dallas Streetcar

    It has been some 60 years give-or-take since street cars were part of the urban and interurban network. Sure, the old green trolley car called the "M Line" still makes its way through Uptown to  City Place, but that is more historic and nostalgia than anything else. True, it was and still is a street car but not like the 21st century ones run in eastern Europe and Scandinavian countries. But on Monday, April 13, 2015, Dallas, came back from the past to the future!

    While the first part of the line is from outside Union Station at the beginning of the Houston Street Viaduct, it runs over the viaduct making four stops, the last two of which are at Zang Triangle and Colorado Boulevard at Methodist Hospital in Oak Cliff.  DART says that it will be expanded into the Bishop Arts District.  I was hoping that it would go there originally, since there is limited or no parking to speak of in the district anyway. The other extension is slated to be around the corner from its  Union Station terminus to the Kay Bailey Hutchinson Convention Center and the connected  Omni Hotel.

    Never-the-less, it is just good to see the streetcar line back in operations. Good job, DART.
    How sweet it is! Coming into the Zang Triangle stop on its way up the hill .

    Wednesday, April 15, 2015

    Happy 37th Reunion Tower

    The Tower- April 15,1978
    The Sign- The chicken or the egg?


    The Reunion Tower has been  a beacon on downtown Dallas that long! Every day I find new things that remind me how old I have become.

    Friday, April 10, 2015

    Mr. Owl, The 7-Year Search Is Over.

    I've heard about the big owl at White Rock for years. While people tried to describe where he was hanging out, I never saw anyone actually looking for him. In fact, those that tried to explain the area of trees where it was thought he lived, either could not or did not want to reveal the actual location. People sometimes show their own insecurity in such matters because they want a certain location as their own. Find a photographer with a 400 or 600 MM lens on their camera and observe! It's more interesting than watching the duck races at Eddie Gossage's little camp ground north of Dallas International this weekend (alright, I like Eddie, so his little camp ground is formally named Texas International Speedway and the office race is the Duck Commander 500).

    Any who (pardon the owl pun), it has just been one of those weeks. I had three fires burning, so Monday was the day to work on putting them out. First, came the battle with Time Warner Cable. For weeks they have advertised that on April 7th that they would be going digital and you needed to pick up an adapter. I did that last week-end, standing in line for the better part of two hours. The adapter set on the  floor in front of my TV until the day before. I put on the adapter and called the number given to me by the TWC lady when I picked up the adapter. An activation number. It was then, that I found out that I was loosing channels. No where had the advertisement advertised that the change to digital would do that. The first call on Monday netted a goose egg. Cable 1, me nothing

    By Tuesday, I had regained some strength and it was fire number 2 with Aetna insurance. It appears that Aetna, has a very messed up formulary for medications that they pay for under their coverage. The one drug that has worked better in treatment happens to be one that they have decided not to pay for. It was time to take on Aetna. I filed the appeal. My doctor didn't want to put his neck on the line but didn't like the fact that I was probably going to have to change up the med because Aetna didn't want to pay for it. 72-hours of e-mails and wait, e-mails and more info and wait, Bingo! Aetna called to say that they were going to pay for the drug anyway. Second call on Tuesday netted a win for me and the doc. Big Companies 1; me 1.

    Wednesday, fire number 3 was a "life-time guarantee" on a 5.5 Qt glass-covered skillet purchased at Sam's Club 6-years ago.  Normally, I would not even fight something like this, but I know that the vendor had problems with this pan in the past and Sam's  Club, though reluctantly, honored the life-time guarantee. Now, as luck would have it, Sam's is letting their vendor duke it out with past customers. At this point in time, the vendor is sending me a pre-paid label to return the pan for inspection. This fire still smolders in the debate world currently.

    Thursday, it was a battle with Walgreen's. I had two refills at the pharmacy. I go in to pick up the one refill that was a partial (Walgreen's didn't have enough stock to fill) The Aetna decision had come down and was now in the system so I submitted the refill on line.While at the pharmacy picking up the partial that was now filled and ready, the pharmacist said that I would have to come back tomorrow because the second refill would have to be a partial as well, since Walgreen's was out of stock to fill the second refill completely. (UPDATE:NBC5 10 April 2015)WALGREEN'S ANNOUNCED THAT IT WILL CLOSE 200 STORES BY 2017 (now we know why I have to make 4 trips for 2 scrips, don't we.)


    It was time to clear the head and go look for an owl. After searching for 7-years, finally, I found the owl. He had been driven up higher in the canopy by a 600MM photographer, the sky was getting dark with building thunderstorms in the large grove of trees, but, trying to make lemonade out of lemons, I cranked up the 200MM and just started shooting into the canopy, then, I saw the big owl fly into another tree. The shot is terrible, out of focus and nearly to dark, but who cares...... I photographed the big owl that had, until today, evaded me, unlike the many times I have seen the two bald eagles when others had not. For my patience, Mr. Owl rewarded me with a red cardinal on a car mirror and a lesser hawk feeding on grubs.

    Sunday, April 5, 2015

    Deep Ellum Arts Festival Underway

    So cute!
    This year, the annual Deep Ellum Arts Festival fell on Easter Weekend. It traditionally runs Fri evening, all day Saturday until late and the Sunday until early evening. Saturday, this year, was by far the best weather day of all. Easter Sunday, it rained and was gloomy and cold.

    As usual, the festival is fun. The food is great. The entertainment is always traditionally Deep Ellum! The street performers were exceptionally hot (the sax player was jammin') and was quiet the show with one crowd watcher and a young lady really getting down to his music,especially. It was an awesome performance. One of the best that I have seen in years.

    Then, there were the dogs that stole the day as well. I love Deep Ellum and the eclectic air. While Deep Ellum has been around for 100 years or more and people like Blind Lemon  were real, Deep Ellum is in a sort of revival and I like to see that. New Orleans is New Orleans. Beale Street is Memphis, Chicago and Detroit had their own as well, but Deep Ellum is Dallas and is growing new sounds all the time.
    As some still say, "this is old-fashioned, cuttin' the rug."


    Tuesday, March 31, 2015

    Gabrielle Bonheur Chanel

    At one time on this planet, there was a golden age of glamor. Today, we have none of it left. I've been reading a lot about those days and it always amazes me how there is always a common connection somehow. Such is with another one from that great generation of glamor. Gabrielle "Coco" Chanel.

    I was stunned at her humanity. A couple of sources seem to verify her generous moods. In Coco & Igor, Chris Greenhalgh  and Karen Karbo in The Gospel According to Coco Chanel: Life Lessons from the World's Most Elegant Woman, the stories of her are amazing and yet, being human during a time of war almost cost her everything.

    Igor Stravinsky, with his family, stayed with Coco. He was in the early stages of his "The Rite of 
    Spring". It was Coco, who guaranteed financially the success of his production.  Later, she took care of yet another family and payed for the husband's funeral following his death. It just so happened that he was the head of the German SS which almost cost her everything. Coco, had had an earlier affair with the German.

    Coco was once ask why she did not marry the Duke of Westminster. She had also had an affair with him. Her reply came, " There have been several Duchesses of Westminster. There is only one Chanel." This original account was first published in her Biography.

    When she left Paris, she moved to Switzerland and remained there for years. She had designed and built her villa, La Pausa, on the French Riviera. It looks toward the Italian and French border on one side and overlooks Monaco on the other. It sits high above the village of Roquebrune. It was built in the 1930s during that golden era and of her own design.

    In 1953 Coco sold her villa, La Pausa, to the Hungarian publisher and translator Emery Reves. He purchased the villa from Coco with his translations royalties of foreign languages for Winston Churchill's
    Not the French Riviera but still a pretty awesome place.
    books. Churchill lived there four months of each of the years 1956,1957 and 1958 while he worked on his book. After Emery's death, his wife Wendy continued to live there until her death, but in the early days after her husband's death, the Dallas Museum of Art approached Wendy about the master collection of fine art that was displayed in the house from both Coco Chanel and from the Reves. Fearing that she would sell the collection as a whole, the museum agreed to terms set down by Wendy. She wanted five (5) rooms replicated from La Pausa and to include pieces of furniture belonging to Chanel. The museum built  a 16,000 square foot addition to house Wendy's collection. Today, the Emery and Wendy Reves collection can be visited at the Dallas Museum of Art.

    Chanel No. 5 has always had class. It was the woman who developed the concept as a fashion designer that lifted Chanel No. 5 to the top shelf. Coco Chanel is buried in Switzerland following her death in Paris. She had lived in Switzerland for 30 years after leaving Paris the first time.


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