Tuesday, December 24, 2013

Comment du Jour

Christmas time in the City






December sparkles in New York!  The lights, the smells and the evergreen trees all add to the festive atmosphere. Pictured above and below are the Skating Rink at Rockefeller Center and the Christmas Tree, an annual feature since the 1930's.



And just blocks away, the amazing Radio City Music hall, a splendid Art Deco landmark which attracts visitors from round the world.


                                                          MERRY CHRISTMAS!!

Wednesday, December 11, 2013

Comment du Jour

The SS United States

Oceanliner in Waiting



The SS United States seen in Philadelphia across from the IKEA store.



  Berthed in Pier 82 in south Philadelphia, the SS United States, the fastest ocean liner in the world, awaits its fate.  The clock is ticking...

Designed by renowned naval architect William Francis Gibbs, the 990 foot vessel was completed in 1952. The ship was a sleek platform of American innovation.

While the pride of United States Lines in the 1950's and 1960's, the ship was surpassed by jet travel and the sad reality that people don't want to or can't take five days to sail to Europe.  The ship made crossings from New York to Southampton in the UK and Le Harve in France.





Looking at the ship up close and personal, we simply can't allow this American icon to rust away!

                                               




There used to be an ad, "You have a Friend in Pennsylvania."  Agreed.  While peering at the
Big U through the chain linked fence outside the dock, as close as you can get, a shipyard foreman came by and asked about our interest in the ship.  After telling him that I made the transatlantic crossing on the ship back in 1962,  he immediately escorted us into the pier area for a close up view.

Thank you Frank for the unique privilege to get as close to the ship as I have been in fifty years!



After revisiting the SS United States a few years back--an inspiration for this blog by the way--I became keenly interested in the fate of this iconic American ocean liner.  So on a cold and windy day, I returned to see the ship which is a MUST visit for maritime aficionados!!

Now let's focus, there's an amazing organization trying to save and preserve the SS United States from a fate we won't even discuss during the holidays.  It suffices to say that one click on the site 
www.ssusc.org 

and you will see the need to get involved NOW to help this worthy historical preservation group.

   

Friday, November 29, 2013

Comment du Jour



                                              Mercedes Benz 300 SL Gullwing 1955


"Art of the Automobile" Sotheby's Auction in New York

Presenting a stunning display of  rare and iconic motorcars, Sotheby's in cooperation  with RM Auctions put an amazing display of vintage cars on view. 

British Jaguars and Rolls, a French Delahaye and Talbot-Lago,  Italian Ferrari, Buggatis, and Maseratis, German BMW's and Mercedes, not to mention a Stutz, Duesenberg, and Cadillac from the USA and you begin to see the picture. According to observers this was the first major vintage auto auction held in New York City in over a decade.


                   Delahaye Type 135 Teardrop Coupe 1936--French Art Deco par excellence
 
 
 
Some would argue that the French Talbot-Lago Teardrop Cabriolet of 1938 (seen below) is even more alluring
 
 
 
 
Then there's the Lincoln Indianapolis prototype from 1955 which has Italian coachwork and was previewed at the Turin Auto Salon 
And Yes there were many Ferraris most notable among them the 250 LM 1964 pictured below which was described as one of the first and finest original examples of mid engine car.  The catalogue described the auto as an Italian operatic masterpiece of sound and color.  
 
 
 
 
 
And why not end with a Duesenberg Model SJ Beverly 1933?
 
 
Congrats to both Sotheby's and RM Auctions for a beautiful presentation. By the way the cars were displayed on the tenth floor of Sotheby's New York headquarters!

Thursday, November 21, 2013

Comment du Jour






Le Beaujolais Nouveau est Arrive



It's the third week of November which means the new wine from the Beaujolais region of France is here!

As is our tradition, we sipped the fruity new wine at Park Avenue's Sherry Lehmann wine store which was graced as usual by Franck Dubeouf, scion of the celebrated wine family.  









The bottle labels for the new harvest are specially designed  by American artist Wayne Ensrud who is pictured here below signing posters.



                                    





A Votre Sante!!

Saturday, November 9, 2013

Comment du Jour

Veterans Day in America


Remembrance Day in Canada and the Commonwealth




11 November 

At the Eleventh Hour, On the Eleventh Day, of the Eleventh Month....1918.

The ending of WWI, is commemorated in Britain, Canada , and the Commonwealth as Remembrance Day.  Here in the USA, what used to be called Armistice Day has been known as Veterans Day since 1954.









Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Comment du Jour

Autumn in Vermont!!!

People from around the world visit the New England state of Vermont to
see the glorious fall foliage and pumpkin harvest.

Thursday, October 24, 2013

Comment du Jour

Happy United Nations Day!






October 24 Marks the Day of the entry into force of the UN Charter, signed in San Francisco  in 1945.

Rising from the ashes and chaos of WWII, the new Organization was founded as a last hope to maintain peace, encourage freedom and promote post-war development.  The original founders the USA, Britain, France, Nationalist China and the Soviet Union became the Permanent Members of the UN Security Council.  

Though UN Day was widely commemorated in the USA until the 1970's, the date is still  significant in many of the world organization's 193 member states. 

Thursday, October 10, 2013

Comment du Jour







UN Secretary General Ban in Budapest--Recalls Spirit of 1956

Speaking at Budapest's Corvinus University, UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon recalled the times and spirit of the 1956 Hungarian Revolution.

In an address to Faculty and students, the Secretary General stated, "This month marks the anniversary of the 1956 uprising. Back then I was only 12 years old--perhaps not old enough to know the details of the revolution so far from my home in Korea.  But I knew enough about the cause of freedom."

Ban implored, "Our heart was with the people of Hungary. On behalf of my school, I sent a letter to the United Nations Secretary General at the time: Dag Hammarskjold. The letter appealed to him to support the brave people of Hungary."

"Exactly 50 years later, when I was elected United Nations Secretary General, your government recognized my very modest effort by designating me a 'Hungarian Hero of Freedom."

The SG conceded, "It is a humble reminder to me that the struggle for human rights is constant everywhere."

After seemingly overthrowing the communist- installed regime in October 1956, the Hungarian Revolution was soon crushed by Soviet tanks in November.  Neither the UN, nor the Western powers,  did anything to stop the fighting, but played an important role in refugee resettlement in the following years.





                                            Parliament in Budapest

Thursday, October 3, 2013

Comment du Jour

Day of German Unity

3 October 1990-2013

A few thoughts on the Day of German Unity would be incomplete without mentioning HOW it happened.

The fall of the Berlin Wall, a piece of which stands in the UN gardens in New York, was instrumental in bringing the unity of the former "German Democratic Republic" LOL, East Germany, with the truly democratic Federal Republic in the West.  

One must thank the largely Lutheran church demonstrations in the East during the Autumn of 1989, the unwavering  freedom agenda of Chancellor Kohl  and U.S. President Ronald Reagan, and even Russian leader Gorbachev for "blinking."   The rest is history, as they say.

The united German state is about freedom.  Last year Foreign Minister Westerwelle stated before  the UN General Assembly--

 "As we Germans have experienced what it is to lack freedom in the course of our own history, we will always stand by those who, wherever they are in the world, call for freedom. For freedom of opinion and for freedom of religion. For freedom of the press and for artistic freedom.


Freedom has a daughter. It is tolerance.

And freedom has a son. It is respect.

Respect for other people.

Respect for what is important to others. Respect for what is sacred to others.


Freedom therefore does not mean freedom from responsibility. Freedom always means free­dom to shoulder responsibility."

Sunday, September 29, 2013

Comment du Jour

 

 

 

Syria  shadowed UN General Assembly 


 Presidents, prime ministers, kings and potentates came to New York for the 68th annual UN General Assembly. The ongoing Syrian crisis and the toxic haze of recent chemical weapons use, clouded the diplomatic horizon at the global gathering as delegates confront issues of war, peace and widening humanitarian disasters.
But it’s the General Debate, the key policy speeches over the next two weeks where the headlines are generated, that’s the highlight of the session. While delegates speak with broad brush themes concerning development, disarmament, poverty and peacekeeping, be certain the focus will remain on Syria’s ongoing civil conflict and the regional shock waves reverberating throughout the Middle East from Turkey to Lebanon and Jordan.
By tradition Brazil spoke first followed by the United States. Normally this is a gracious formality between two friendly nations but this year Brazil’s leftist president is irate over alleged U.S. electronic eavesdropping on her government and herself personally. Dilma Rousseff took the unprecedented step to cancel a state visit to Washington, D.C. planned for October.
Brazil a close U.S. Latin American ally and rising economic power has been plainly insulted by the eavesdropping allegations and it looks like political damage control won’t work this late in the process.
Key speakers included Barack Obama,  Argentina’s President Christina Fernandez-Kirchner, Islamic Iran’s Hassan Rouhani, and France’s Francois Hollande.
King Abdullah of Jordan, probably the most erudite and sagacious speaker, as well as the Monarchs of Monaco and Qatar also addressed the delegates.

More controversial leaders, included Zimbabwe’s longtime dictator Robert Mugabe.
Contrary to past years, delegations from 193 UN member states will not meet under the dome in the majestic General Assembly hall with its soaring ceilings, marble rostrums and aura of history but rather in what looks like an IKEA-type building with low ceilings, functional furniture, and a faux marble rostrum more akin to a model UN than to the real deal. Given that the Assembly hall is under renovation, as was the 38-story UN Secretariat building for the past five years, the whole presence looks a bit low budget.
One hundred thirty-one heads of state and government will attend the session as shall sixty foreign ministers. Yet many of the heavy-hitter countries such as the United Kingdom, Canada, China, Germany, Russia, and South Korea were represented by their respective foreign ministers.
There’s the plethora of 174 assembly agenda items to wade through; from hot button political issues, to vital peacekeeping operations, and budgetary items to a gaggle of the usual perfunctory anti-Israel resolutions, and slap on the wrist items ranging from the question of the Falkland Islands to the continuing American economic embargo on Cuba. Many of the agenda items center on the mantra of sustainable development.
After the controversial one year tenure of Serbia’s Vuk Jeremic, this year’s new Assembly President Dr. John Ashe hails from Antigua and Barbuda in the Caribbean.
 

Sunday, September 22, 2013

Comment du Jour





Steuben Parade in New York

German/American Festival with a French Flair

The 56th annual German-American Steuben Day parade marched down Fifth Avenue but with a French flair.  Amid the brass bands, and beer garden omm-pah music themed floats the were French groups celebrating the 50th anniversary of the Elysee Treaty, the landmark diplomatic accord signed by Charles de Gaulle and Chancellor Konrad Adenauer, cementing Franco/German peace and reconciliation.

    Float celebrating the Elysee Treaty and French-German Friendship



Thousands of marchers from German/American dance, cultural and sport groups, many in traditional costumes, were joined by groups from Brittany and Alsace among others from Germany and Switzerland.




Parade Marshalls included Warner Roth, a U.S. soccer star from the New York Cosmos, Christian Dinkelacker of the famed brewery, and Harald Leibrecht, the German Parliament's Coordinator of Transatlantic Affairs.  




The annual Steuben Day Parade honors the memory of Prussian General Frederich von Steuben, who came to America during the Revolution and played an instrumental role in organizing and training troops for General George Washington's infant Continental Army.




The Parade has become a September tradition in New York along with the Oktoberfest in Central Park adjoining the parade route.




Tuesday, September 10, 2013

Comment du Jour

Hungary: the nexus of history and commerce in Central Europe


BUDAPEST — I chanced upon Ronald Reagan walking towards Freedom Square here in Budapest. Actually his bronze statue, set in a brisk stride, larger than life, and facing a Soviet war memorial, sums up so many of the political emotions, poignant memories, and ghosts which still swirl round the Hungarian capital even in the bright Summer sunshine.
Budapest of course has seen darker days so it’s all the better to celebrate freedom.
Hungary remains one of the few former Soviet satellites states to proudly honor the U.S. President’s role in what became the extraordinary peaceful liberation of Central Europe in 1989.
Budpaest-300x236
Though Ronald Reagan never actually visited Hungary, his policies towards the former Soviet Union triggered the momentous political changes of Autumn 1989.
But 1989 is now a generation ago. I remind myself that the generations of young people who flock to Budapest for fun and frolic were not even born when Hungary became the first of the East Bloc regimes to open its border to Austria in summer that year. The symbolic and very real opening of the infamous Iron Curtain would trigger a political tsunami which swept the socialist so-called people’s republics into the dustbin of history.
The generation born in 1989 knows only a very fleeting memory of the old regime; theirs fortunately was a happier time. Hungary regained its sovereignty, established a parliamentary democracy, and integrated itself into the European institutions which today remain a bulwark and insurance policy for its continued freedom and prosperity. Hungary joined NATO in 1999 and the European Union in 2004.
Indeed by the late 1990’s Hungary was prospering economically emerging as a nexus for foreign investment and trade with Europe, the USA and the Far East. But bouts of a Socialist government combined with the global recession starting in 2008 has noticeably jolted and jarred the good times of a decade ago. While the Socialists, noted for corruption, were massively voted out by the current center-right coalition in 2010, the country still is paying the price for the profligate spending of their tenure.
Significantly the current government has made an early repayment of a $3 billion IMF loan it owed from 2008.
It hurts me to say, but Budapest, this magnificent capital on the Danube looks a bit more tattered and down than it was when we last visited a decade ago. Naturally the economic downturn plays a big role; while growth rates a decade ago averaged 5 percent, today they are anemic inching back towards just under one percent. Unemployment is high at ten percent despite what seems like massive public works projects just about everywhere even in front of the majestic Parliament building.
Hungary’s central geographic location, skilled workforce and still relatively low wages give the country a genuine comparative advantage for foreign investment. Investment from the United States, Germany, France and Japan is central to Hungary’s open export- oriented economy. Since 1989, Hungary has hosted $98 billion in direct foreign investment.
Germany’s AUDI automaker has expanded its factories in Gyor with a billion dollar plus new facility to ramp up car production from 33,000 today to a projected 125,000. French firms number 350 and have invested more than $13 billion. American investment plays a central role with more than 200 companies. Much of Hungary’s production is exported duty-free within the European Union.
Equally in 2012, U.S.. two-way trade with Hungary stood at $4.8 billion.
Hungary’s fractious but free political atmosphere is already clouded by parliamentary elections scheduled for next spring. The current conservative populist Fidesz/Civic Union government led by Prime Minister Viktor Orban, a former soccer player but an equally tough player on the political pitch, is prone to rhetorical flourishes. Recently Orban stated that despite its political freedom of the past twenty years, Hungary remained a “vulnerable and exploited” country. Such nationalist tones have not played well with much of the foreign business community.
Indeed 1956 is a long time ago too. The indelible events of October and the Hungarian Revolution against the occupying Soviets, remain a political bellwether in a country defined by its proud and independent personality. The reformist Prime Minister Imre Nagy tried to pull socialist Hungary from the bear’s grip, only to be slammed back by a massive counter attack in November. Hungary would remain communist until 1989.
Those shadows still linger on Budapest’s streets and boulevards where the aspirations, the ghosts, and the memory of that brief whiff of freedom in 1956, have never quite disappeared. Just across from Parliament there’s a small monument with a bridge on which Imre Nagy stands, looking at the parliament but suspended in time as if wondering what would happen. Just down the same street, Ronald Reagan strides confidently towards Freedom Square.

Friday, August 30, 2013

Comment du Jour




American Movies Riding High in France

PARIS—The Lone Ranger has galloped down the Champs d’ Elysees on his trusty horse Silver. The little blue Smurfs are at the palatial Opera Garnier. As has long been the case in recent memory, the French remain enchanted and enthralled with American movies ranging from Wolverine, Pacific Rimand World War Z.  
Walk round Paris or see movie ads on the Metro or the grand cinemas of Montparnasse and it’s abundantly clear that Hollywood continues to capture the imagination and the box office receipts of French movie goers.  Look at the cinema selections over the past few weeks of August and Viola, each of the top ten films playing throughout La Belle France is from the USA.
Now You See Me, The Lone Ranger, the Smurfs and Despicable Me-2 are among the highest box office hits.  Others include American Nightmare, Monsters University and RIPD.
And some  people claim that the French don’t like Americans?  Well when it comes to popular culture be it at the cinema, the television or the radio, movies, it’s the shows and songs from the USA dominating the French airwaves. This is hardly a new phenomenon but a reality from more than a generation.
It’s not that France does not have a vibrant and creative film industry, far from it, but at the end of the day, most people are attracted by the high budget, high tech and high action American thrillers which simply don’t get produced by many of the creative and artsy production houses. And even with the high state financial subsidies the French government doles out to domestic movie producers, (Spain does this too), when it comes to crowd appeal, the U.S. wins nearly hands down.
Over the past year, Hollywood has held the high ground among the French cinema audiences. Of the top ten box office hits through France, eight were from the United States. Skyfall, the latest James Bond thriller was overwhelmingly the favorite.
New selections being released as the Summer vacation season winds down, are  Kick-ass 2, Jobs andThe Conjuring.
So what is the real appeal of films or for that matter popular culture Made in the USA?  This is certainly not for a lack of French films, literature and music.  Quite the contrary, the tradition here is long and rich. Moreover the French publishing industry is very vital, varied and strong.                                                      
Indeed the popularity of American movies is hardly unique to France but reflects a global phenomenon.  What is ironic is that for a country which pouts at globalization, the very same people then eagerly consume its popular cultural fruits.  Maybe this is seen as an antidote and escapism from to France’s economic doldrums?
Lacking any logical explanation and seeing the box office bottom line, it’s remains a nagging question why the French so favor the American movies.  One woman explained it simply but philosophically; “these movies portray a vision of America,” even if flawed and stereotypical but still a view that fits comfortably into a mindset.
These movies are popular in France and elsewhere because they are governed by the sovereignty of the free market, the unvarnished appeal to what people want, seek and are looking for even if it is hopefully not American Nightmare.   
Hooray for Hollywood?

                        

Friday, August 23, 2013

Comment du Jour

                       Stone Monument Honoring the French Battalion In Korea


France and the Forgotten War

The 60th anniversary of the Armistice ending the Korean War was commemorated recently, especially among the combatants countries who fought in the sanguinary conflict between 1950 and 1953.

 America lost 50,000 soldiers in what is known as the Forgotten War. Among over fifteen other countries which provided troops to the United Nations operations, France too has remembered this struggle which was sandwiched between WWII and the Indochina War.

For the record France sent a Battalion of volunteers to Korea to help stem the communist assault on the South.  The French Battalion arrived in country in November 1950 and was under the operational command of the U.S. 2nd Infantry.

French units participated in some of the most savage fighting in Korea and took heavy losses.  Of the 3,421 French serving in Korea, 287 were killed and an further 1,350 wounded.

Following service in South Korea, the Battalion was sent to active duty in Indochina where it took heavy losses in the closing stages of the French conflict in Vietnam. The unit would later serve in Algeria in a counterinsurgency mode against nationalist insurgents until 1962.

Today few French or Americans recall the role of the French Battalion in Korea, save for a small monument here in Paris on the banks of the Seine River.



Friday, August 9, 2013

Comment du Jour







Springtime for Qatar in Paris?

A Qatari investment group has bought the Printemps Department store in Paris.  The landmark property is the most recent acquisition for the petroleum rich kingdom who already owns some well-known hotels in Paris, among them the Royal Monceau.

Besides the Printemps store on Boulevard Haussmann in  Paris, the department store owns 16 stores throughout France.

The French media has been increasingly critical of Qatar, an Arab Gulf  Kingdom which has shown a high political and business profile in Europe.  




Sunday, August 4, 2013

Comment du Jour




Bonjour From France!!!

Despite lovely weather, it's the Summer of discontent. Socialist President Francois Hollande
is straddled with a 10.8 percent unemployment rate--the numbers are soaring among youth.

Pundits expect the rate to climb to 11 percent.  

The French shrug it off, for now, and go on vacation!!

Monday, July 22, 2013

Comment du Jour


                                           Prague's Art Nouveau Municipal House



Mucha Art Highlighted in Lendl Collection

The world-renowned Czech artist, Alfons Mucha (1860-1939) needs no introduction.  Yet when his works were assembled in a splendid exposition at Prague's historic Municipal House, the true genius of this  Central European painter and illustrator shone forth.

In an extraordinary exhibit from Czech/American Tennis Star's private collection, the range and magic of Mucha's work, especially his iconic Art Nouveau posters shone forth. The Tennis legend Lendl (who now lives in the USA) started collecting Mucha originals in 1982, and has assembled a world class portfolio.




 The collection of 122 works of art covering each of Mucha's artistic periods in Paris (1894-1904), America (1904-1909), and the Czech Period (1909-1935), presented the evolution of this master.
Mucha is best known in the West for his Parisian period--his famed advertising posters for Ruinart Champagne, JOB cigarette paper, and the LU biscuits.  He  theatre posters of the stage legend Sarah Bernhardt are widely known.                                         



During the American and Czech periods, Mucha's art reflected Bohemian nationalist themes and the Slavic Epic.  This period coincided with the First World War and the subsequent independence of the Czechoslovak state in the wake of the Austrian monarchy's collapse.  Many of Mucha's murals grace the Municipal House, site of the proclamation of Czechoslovakian independence in 1918.


                                                                 



Saturday, July 13, 2013

Comment du Jour


                                                 Dragon Fly in JFK Hangar



Solar Impulse

Dragonfly Wings Across America


A dragonfly-like aircraft, large but seemingly fragile, slow but silent, and powered by sunlight, has flown safely across America. The amazing and indeed epic coast to coast journey by the Swiss engineered and piloted Solar Impulse plane concluded in New York setting a number of aeronautical records for exclusively solar powered flight.

Swiss aviation pioneers Dr. Bertrand Piccard and Andre Borschberg remain the founders, pilots and the driving force behind the world’s first aircraft which can fly day and night without traditional fuels. The amazing carbon fiber aircraft has the wingspan of a Boeing 747 (63 m or 208 feet) but the weight of a small car (1,600kg or 3,500 lbs).

Inside an aircraft hangar at JFK airport, the plane resembles a huge dragon fly or the iconic U 2 recon plane; a large wing and a pencil-thin fuselage. Indeed 12,000 solar cells are built into the wings to power four 10 horsepower electric propellers with renewable energy. 

Arriving at New York’s JFK on a hot summer night, the aircraft set a new aviation milestone; the first trans-continental flight from San Francisco to New York without using a drop of fossil fuel.



                              Pioneer Pilots Bertrand Piccard (left) and Andre Borschberg



“Yesterday we had a dream, but today it has come true,” stated an ecstatic Bertrand Piccard, “ it is a miracle.”



Indeed beyond the actual flight Solar Impluse has developed new technologies and new materials. And the cost? According to Andre Borschberg, while the project is “a catalyst for new technology” the actual price was about $130 million or half the cost of a Hollywood blockbuster film such as Avatar.



                                                          The Solar Impulse



Starting in San Francisco, California in early May with a majestic sweep over the Golden Gate Bridge, the plane piloted by Piccard, first flew to Phoenix, Arizona. Later in the May the plane flew to Dallas, then in early June to St. Louis. In mid-June the aircraft flew to Washington DC/Dulles airport.


In early July with Andre Borschberg at the controls, the plane made its final flight leg from Washington to New York. The distance covered was 495 kms or 267 miles; the flight time 18 hours and 23 minutes. Why so long? Slow speed and complicated air traffic control patterns on the east coast. As the cockpit holds only one person each pilot alternated in flying the plane on different legs of the trip.
                                                                
                                   Andre Borschberg briefs French Air Force Officer

Viewing the evolution of solar powered aviation, Borschberg suggested “You should see this like being in 1915 when the aviation pioneers were trying to do these first cross-country flights, but still unable to cross the ocean…but it’s an important step for the development of aviation.”



The single-seat plane flies with a painstakingly slow average speed of 70 kms per hour; the plane is powered entirely by solar cells. Now that the cross-country journey is successfully completed, the aircraft shall be disassembled and shipped back to Switzerland.

Solar Impulse is a pioneering prototype aircraft, what is likely the first step in a long research and development phase which according to the team is “fueled by dreams, driven by passion.”

                                            French Consul General Bertrand Lortholary



Philosophically speaking, the plane evokes many images. French Consul-General Bertrand Lortholary opined that standing alongside the Solar Impulse recalls the historic moment when the American Consul in Paris would help greet the Spirit of St. Louis and the arrival of Charles Lindbergh after his historic transatlantic flight in 1927. Viewing the arrival of the Solar Impulse the Consul added, “Dreams are not Illusions.”


                                            

Thursday, July 4, 2013

Comment du Jour

HAPPY 4th July!!!

The Transatlanticecho takes a special look at the American oceanliner which is named after the  USA!

The following information comes from a press update from the SS United States Conservancy, an amazing non-profit trying to both save and restore this iconic ship.

                                                        www.ssusc.org
Maiden Voyage (courtesy of Corbis Images / Bettmann Archive)





















The SS United States Celebrates her 61st Anniversary 


On July 3, 1952, the "Big U" embarked on her maiden voyage and shattered east- and west-bound transatlantic speed records, making headlines worldwide. For 17 years this powerful symbol of post-war pride, power and innovation plied the North Atlantic.  However, since her retirement in 1969, her prospects have remained precarious.

The SS United States Conservancy assumed ownership of the SS United States in 2011 and continues to advance negotiations on the vessel's restoration and redevelopment as well as build its curatorial collections, plan a shipboard museum, and expand public outreach programs. We remain profoundly grateful to our members and donors: Without your support, the majestic SS United States would not have reached her 61st year. 


Please go to their website, look around, and HELP NOW!!!

www.ssusc.org   

Monday, July 1, 2013

Comment du Jour

Baltic Rebirth

Lithuania assumes the Presidency of the European Union today for a six month stint between July and December.  The Baltic state's Presidency of the 28 member organization follows Ireland's successful tenure.  The EU Presidency presents a historic first for the Vilnius government.

Who could have imagined that Lithuania, one of the Baltic states who only regained its independence and full sovereignty in 1990 after the long night of Soviet occupation and annexiation could not only be free but now the president of Europe?

One of Europe's most historic nation-states, Lithuania's history can be traced to 1009.  By 1387 the country had become largely Christian.  Lithuania's independence was often shadowed by neighboring states, largely Russia.   In modern times,  the country only gained its independence in 1918--something which would only last until WWII when it fell victim to the perfidious Hitler/Stalin pact of 1939.

Despite being formally "absorbed" into the Soviet Union after WWII, the largely Catholic Lithuanians never really surrendered their culture, religion, or will to be free.   The post-war period saw a huge Baltic diaspora with many Lithuanians moving to Chicago and parts of Canada.

The country only gained formal indencence in 1990, later joined the United Nations, and significalthly became a member of the European Union and NATO in 2004, along with Latvia and Estonia.

Commenting on the EU Presidecy, Lithuania's President Dalia Grybauskaite stated, "This is the start of a historic six months for our country. We have a unique opportunity to tell Europe what Lithuania can be proud of – capacities of our people, beauty and achievements of our country."
President GrybauskaitÄ—, dubbed the Baltic Margaret Thatcher for her free market philosophy, added that her country will focus among other things, on the the EU Eastern Partnership program, which seeks closer economic and political relations with six post-Soviet countries.

Lithuania is a proud and working democracy and a post-Soviet success story.
Later this year, the Vilnius government shall seek election to a non-permanent seat on the UN Security  Council.  We wish Lithuania well in advance.

For more official info on the Lithuanian presidency go to   EU2013.lrs.lt  









Thursday, June 27, 2013

Comment du Jour

                                         (Old Town Square/Our Lady of Tyn Church)



Welcome to Golden Prague!

The Czech capital is a moving feast of magnificent Baroque and Art Nouveau architecture, music,  the arts, and overall good food and drink.  Since the end of the communist regime in 1989, Prague has scrubbed, buffed, and painted its old polluted grey buildings, spruced up its roads, and really improved its attitude and thus image.  A jewel of city, Prague has become an attraction for American tourists, and especially undergraduate college students flocking to the city for the amazingly good beer and overall lifestyle. 

This is Bohemia after all!!!


                                                   (Old Town Hall, Prague dating from 1338)