Tag: Princeton

  • Rainy Day Fun Princeton Books Music Crossword

    Rainy Day Fun Princeton Books Music Crossword

    You wouldn’t guess it now in the Princeton area, but there’s more rain on the way this afternoon. In fact, rain is in the forecast, to a greater or lesser extent, for the next week or more, mostly in the form of scattered thunderstorms. But you know how it is. It’s a very unstable time of year.

    When it pours down rain, you can waste the opportunity by doing what I can’t help noticing a lot of people do much of the day anyway – flip through your phone. OR you could unplug and enjoy some quiet time with a book.

    Even if I were Burgess Meredith in a post-apocalyptic world with “time enough at last,” my life couldn’t possibly be long enough to read everything I would like to. And that goes for listening to music also.

    Having just polished off the “Kalevala” – the Finnish national epic that inspired so much of Sibelius’ music – and recently posted a photo of my library, reading is much on my mind lately.

    Here’s one of many Classic Ross Amico crossword puzzles I compiled while we were all sitting at home during the first wave of COVID in 2020-21, a puzzle that celebrates two of life’s great pleasures – books and music!

    To fill out the puzzle, follow the link and select “solve online” at the bottom of the page. You’ll then be able to type directly into the squares. Once you feel you’ve exhausted the puzzle, you’ll find the solutions by clicking on “Answer Key PDF.”

    Rain or shine, summer is a great time to catch up on your reading. Pour yourself something cheering, relax, and enjoy!

    https://www.armoredpenguin.com/crossword/Data/2020.08/0206/02062839.850.html?fbclid=IwAR0k-_3ekCIGTo3h8stMi2A6pWYJd2uzd_oC7cKDvHdyXxGAH-mRvxaJk0c

  • Living Well Hutchins at illy

    Living well is the best revenge. Kenneth Hutchins and I yesterday, during his visit to Princeton – enjoying the good life, in “The Parlour” at illy At Earth’s End coffee shop.

    Who’s next?

    (Photos courtesy of Kenneth Hutchins)

  • Princeton’s Unknown Composer You Know

    Princeton’s Unknown Composer You Know

    Here’s my editor, after I just squandered another day of my life pounding out a 1700-word piece against a 1200-word quota. I won’t spill the beans about it just yet, but it has something to do with a composer who lived in Princeton for about a quarter century, beginning in 1856. You may not know his name, but if you’re at all connected to the university, you know his music. I’m hopeful the article will run in next week’s U.S. 1 newspaper – out on Wednesday – unless it’s waylaid by vampires, extraterrestrials, or Jack the Ripper!

  • Princeton Porchfest 2023 Music Fest Tomorrow

    Princeton Porchfest 2023 Music Fest Tomorrow

    A cup of coffee, a windbreaker, and thou…

    Princeton Porchfest 2023 will take place tomorrow, from 12 to 6 p.m.

    Dozens of performers, bands, and singer-songwriters will present classical, jazz, blues, hip-hop, bluegrass, Americana, alternative, and rock.

    According to the Arts Council of Princeton, the event is a “walkable music festival where neighbors offer up their front porches as DIY concert venues. Talented local performers play rotating sets throughout the neighborhood during this day-long celebration of music, art and our wonderful community. Stroll from porch to porch to enjoy live, local talent.”

    Among that talent will be mezzo-soprano Kelly Guerra, who sang the role of Ruth Bader Ginsburg in Derrick Wang’s opera “Scalia/Ginsburg” at last year’s The Princeton Festival. Guerra will return in June to sing Rosina in Rossini’s “The Barber of Seville.” (The Princeton Festival will be held at Morven Museum & Garden, June 9-25.) Hear her tomorrow, from the porch of 71 Wiggins Street, at 2 p.m.

    There’s occasional rain in the forecast, with temperatures in the lower 50s, so bring an umbrella and a sweater and fortify yourself with cheering edibles. The music will go on, rain or shine!

    For more information about Princeton Porchfest, and a complete schedule and interactive map, follow the link.

    Porchfest Map

  • Einstein Anderson Friendship Defied Racism

    Einstein Anderson Friendship Defied Racism

    Anyone remember the time Marian Anderson spent the night with Albert Einstein?

    If that sounds sordid, it absolutely is, but unfortunately in all the wrong ways.

    Anderson, the contralto whose voice no less than Arturo Toscanini gushed was of a kind that comes once in a hundred years, was notoriously barred from performing at Constitution Hall in Washington, D.C., by the Daughters of the American Revolution because of the color of her skin. In the ultimate example of turning lemons into lemonade, Anderson sang instead from the steps of the Lincoln Memorial – to 750,000 people on the mall and a national radio audience estimated in the millions. That was on April 9, 1939, which, as it turned out, was Easter Sunday.

    Two years earlier, after a performance at Princeton’s McCarter Theatre – a performance that drew a packed house and elicited glowing reviews – Anderson had been denied accommodations at the Nassau Inn.

    Fortunately, Einstein happened to be in the audience. Learning of Anderson’s dilemma, he extended the invitation for her to stay with him in his home at 112 Mercer Street.

    Anderson recollected, “I remember thanking him from the bottom of my heart and he seemed just sort of to brush it aside…. Dr. Einstein greeted one warmly and said, ‘We are very happy that you can come and welcome into our home.’”

    For the next 18 years – through 1955, the same year she made her belated debut at New York’s Metropolitan Opera and the last year of Einstein’s life – Anderson made it a point to stay with Einstein whenever she was in Princeton.

    In 1946, Einstein received an honorary degree from Lincoln University. In his acceptance speech, he stated, “There is a separation of colored people from white people in the United States. That separation is not a disease of colored people. It is a disease of white people. I do not intend to be quiet about it.”

    Einstein himself was no stranger to racism. It was antisemitism that drove him to renounce his German citizenship, at a time it was still within his power to do so. The Nazis barred Jews from holding official positions, including professorships, they repeatedly raided his home, they sold his belongings, they burned his books and – though it seems superfluous under the circumstances – one German magazine put a $5000 bounty on his head. “Jewish intellectualism is dead,” proclaimed Goebbels.

    Hitler’s loss was our gain. Though there were Jewish quotas in place at universities even here in the United States, including at Princeton University (unofficially, but understood), Einstein accepted a position at the newly-formed Institute for Advanced Study – which in its early days, kept offices on Princeton’s campus while its own facilities were under construction. Einstein would become an American citizen in 1940.

    Einstein embraced America’s system of meritocracy. He extolled the “right of individuals to say and think what they pleased,” without social barriers, a right he found conducive to creativity and innovation. At the same time, he condemned America’s racism, which he found to be the country’s “worst disease… handed down from one generation to the next.”

    Einstein joined the Princeton chapter of the NAACP. When he put himself forward as a character witness for civil rights activist W.E.B. Du Bois at a trial in 1951, the judge dropped the case.

    In 1959, Anderson herself received an honorary degree from Princeton University. Although by then Einstein had passed, again she stayed at his home.

    There are a lot of reasons to share this story, but I do so today in conjunction with Pi Day (3.14), always a big deal in Princeton. Find yourself a seat at an integrated lunch counter and order yourself a celebratory slice in honor of this extraordinary friendship.

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