I spoke with Dartmouth sports legend Shaun Teevens ‘82 today in reaction to an alumni magazine cover story about his brother Buddy, which seemed lacking

Brad Parks’ article missed this basic point: (from Big Green sports web page)

The name Teevens is intertwined through Dartmouth athletic history. Buddy’s father, the late Eugene F. Teevens II ‘52, was a hockey letterwinner. His younger brother, Shaun ‘82, was a two-sport athlete in football and hockey and also a recipient of the Watson Trophy. A sister, Moira ‘87, captained the women’s cross country and track teams and earned All-Ivy and All-East recognition as a runner. I.e. organic, like the alma mater song: granite of New Hampshire in their muscles and brains; or veins; either way, can’t get more Dartmouth than from here, ayuh; also has me reading coinky-dinky or not: “A Yankee in King Arthur’s Court” by Mark Twain esp baseball riff

 

NEXT DAY BLUF: I woke up the next day after writing below wanting to revise and finish (and nix the pomo visual as text thingy). I kinda want to ring up Shaun again and ask two more questions: 1) do we know of anybody, at Dartmouth or in Ivy League, before or after who doubled in varsity hockey and varsity football (and his brother Buddy did, intrumental in a different way, because he plugged away for three years as JV before lettering senior year), or scored more combined goals and TDS: I have it a 18+6 = 24; and 2) does he think of this as performance art — the thing I didn’t quite mention: see also Paul McCarthy, Situationists, the swiss dudes named Weiss I think dressed as Rats, — but also Colin Kapernick in an ironic way; but walked back by Mateo Romero ’89 who is plaintiff in Washington Pro Football case; but how often are people expelled from Dartmouth for “expression”? Worth pondering. And not to insult my classmate MDH. An interesting part is the skating: his skating is so good, it was a tell. But in some ways it honors.

 

A1457031-EF6D-46FE-855E-A1D59339AB43.jpegI will have to finish this later. It’s intereting how willing and enthusiastic Dartmouth alumni are to talk about the College, and the presumption of a bond or kinship, or the lack of guardedness. Maybe my sample pool is small. But I can only think of one time, in 1983, with a member of the Class of 1933, the chair of his 50th reunion, the head of the American Bar Association when a Dartmouth guy didn’t have time to talk.

I thanked Shaun for his time today— 30 minutes, and will get back to writing, reformatting and editing my report.

The article by Brad Parks ‘96, an author, is here.

Dartmouth beat Georgetown 41-0 last week.

Use of the term “losers” on the cover of the Dartmouth Alumni Magazine is a bit offensive. Even winless Dartmouth competitors are far from “losers”. In fact, by some sense, we are undefeated.

Maybe Plotkin should fall on his pen.

3698F441-5081-419E-83CB-57C42AD72D53During Buddy Teevens’ first tenure as coach, which yielded two championships I recall going with Rich Durante ‘84, a former fullback, to hear the young coach give a very inspiring talk.

8A51AA1C-9FAA-4387-BC74-6C11D339B328.jpegTwo photos of Shaun Teevens hockey where he was 2nd team all Ivy Team MVP and later assistant coach at Union then Princeton (by Kathy Slattery, 1950-2007, who was always very helpful)

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1B7A3509-1CB9-4CC7-BA6F-AD696AF71E51in terms of the hockey-football double (and cumulative goals-touchdowns tally) I found two Canadian athletes from nearly 100 years ago who won both the Stanley Cup in hockey and the Grey Cup in Canadian football: This makes (Carl) Voss, along with Lionel Conacher, one of only two people to have their name engraved on both the Stanley Cup and the Grey Cup as players.

 

and and: Peter Lavery ’83, who Kenny Moore of Sports Illustrated called the last 3-sport athlete in NCAA, according to Schribman had 35 points in hockey – -how many in football, and are points goals or what? So Lavery Peter had 17 goals in hockey — and how many touchdowns? Two, so 19 total (unless you want to count “points” of hockey and a TD is 6?) Shaun has 34 goals. Unless you want to compete Footballtouchdowns + hockeygoals + baseball homeruns and maybe Lavery will catch him? Or add brothers vs. brothers? Pretty soon you need Kemeny to do the math.

But they are almost gone. A SPORTS ILLUSTRATED survey turned up just one at an NCAA Division I college, Peter Lavery of Dartmouth, a sophomore who competes in football, hockey and baseball. Is he the last Division I three-sport athlete? And, if so, who served in the last rank with him?

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Belated happy 41st to Tauheed Epps pka 2chainz fka Tity Boi

CD7672B4-4CE9-4D90-BCA4-27F7A1ECEAF6.jpegBirthday wish was bees in the trap bees in the

 

Edit to add: I think I found the new logo for Earth wise productions

and: early 2Chainz in his TB days with Playerz Circle our of Hitlanta

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Bretts Anderson

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Criss cross: Darren w Harold Lopez-Nussa

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Jazz pianist from Cuba, appearing in San Francisco

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Emmy winner, from San Francisco

edit to add: ok, the guy owns a piano bar in LA, called Tramp Stamp Granny’s and made a video of himself playing and singing “Desperado” so this is a natural collaboration, four hands even. He also went to St. Ignatius and is part Flippin’.

and: somehow i like them in a 3-piece with Oscar Isaac.

andand: i don’t know if its just me, or I stole this: Taylor Eigsti and Bradley Cooper. Ok: Sonny Rollins and Don Newcombe. It’s a hit!

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Typical is what one might be drawn to say

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Chris Johanson at Altman Siegel in San Francisco, on 25th St

I met this guy once at a breakfast place in the mission. I also have a 7″ he did under name Tina Age 13. He did the first part of the Palo Alto tryptich on Cali Ave (with Joey Piziale and Huffman)

edit to add, a couple days later: I made it to SF by train and bike to get to 25th and Minnesota next to McEvoy Found, Altman-Siegel gallery where Claudia A-S has mounted her 4th show with the guy I first knew of as Tina Age 13. And could and should go on and on about this. (Oddly, the piece above is not in the show, was on the website, and CAS couldn’t quite pull it from her vertical files and keep a conversation going, so who knows). The chairs are part of the show. I thought the flyers were fake but they are for reals. There’s some weird collaborative or curatative things in a second room. It is a departure from the typical Johanson look. I plunked down $10 for a show poster and got it home (on bike and train and bike, in heat) in reasonably good condition. The prices are a little out of my reach– It would be like suddenly deciding I can afford to eat at French Laundry every weekend. Maybe they are investment grade. The flyers show Chris to be down with Sally Timms of the Mekons, the painter and I guess musician (and former Starry Plough bartender) Christine Shields (who did an Idiot Flesh poster for me once, silky screeny), Sonny and the Sunsets. I forget his new band name, Sunwolfs or something. Not sure I ever really listened to my Tina Age 13 7″ and probably did not see the band, just saw the name around, like maybe BOTH calendar and bought the vinyl single when it appeared. (and maybe I’ve kept it despite my great purge).

I shot a philosophical caterpillar in my San Jose Earthquakes Womdolowski shirt. I liked the two ants paintings although I have to admit I was thinking of my Dave Matthews concert experience (and I doubt CJ would ever admit he likes DM, if he did).

I posted about 3 years ago here about the CJ mural being damaged in the building redevelopment. (and now want to check it again.

the show merits a better reviewsky than this.

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I Saw The Figure 483689 in Black: Emma Acker’s ‘Cult of the Machine’ and tour

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Emma Acker curated the “Cult of the Machine” exhibit at the DeYoung Museum in San Francisco. She also led a small group on a special tour of the show, in July.
I actually wrote a paper on this topic, the precisionists, for Felix McGrath, at Dartmouth in the 1980s. Maybe my paper was just on John Sloan and a rooftop painting in the Hood. (I recall that the painting had been refinished; the artist added color to the pigeons). Dartmouth also has a protrait of Paul Revere. I noted that Acker included Revere silver in her show. I bought a t-shirt of the Charles Sheeler depiction of Golden Gate Bridge.

I also bought the book on the show, which travels.

from the website:
The lack of a human presence in most Precisionist scenes—notable in depictions of factories and cities, which are in reality teeming with humanity—was acknowledged by Sheeler when he wryly described his work as “my illustration of what a beautiful world it would be if there were no people in it.” Historically, these scenes have been interpreted as “proud symbols of technological splendor” that celebrate the nation’s industries, focusing on their formal beauty and awesome power rather than social content. Yet more recently, scholars have argued that many of these works reflect—and perhaps even subtly critique—the dehumanizing effects of industrialization and urbanization.

 

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I have to admit I like this one because Emma Acker’s gesture recalls the robot behind her

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This one reminds me of the Bedlam Rovers’ song “Big Drill” featuring Caroleen Beatty

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Embarcadero and Clay by John Langley Howard, 1935

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Socialite Xiao Jun Lee and friend admire the vintage car along the precisionist continuum.

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Art deco gate from 1928

detail of above:
Gerald Murphy “Watch” 1925

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kinda reminded me of Demuth I saw the figure 5 in gold

and:

In a related matter I used Electro and Sparko in a poster for Train and Mother Hips, 1999.

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Curator Acker and blogger Weiss
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Yours truly and Barbara Goldstein San Jose’s expert of public art:
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Ms. Lee makes an offering to the Auburn Cord 812 Phaeton 1937
I think my dad, Paul E Weiss, would have nailed this without looking it up
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Kudos to Emma her show opened yesterday in Dallas: I hope she gets to see the anish Kapoor at the football stadium whilst there.

edit to add, a few hours later: I’m picking Peter Muller-Munk (Germany and American, 1904-1967) of Revere Copper and Brass Co (American, est. 1928) Normandie shaped pitcher as my favorite piece of the show. For this show, Acker borrowed from Dallas Museum of Art (where the show traveled to, and in fact, opened Sunday), 1935, although it is also in the Met and the British Museum, and was shown at the Legion of Honor in 2004 as part of an Art Deco show.
“Pitcher; chromium-plated brass, of tear-drop section, the body formed of a single sheet of metal bent to shape, with a tear-shaped piece for the base, the join concealed beneath a strip which runs round the base, along the edge and round the rim; the handle is formed of a flat strip of metal expanding at the top to blend in with the line of the rim.” Excuse the indulgence but I am going to quote generously from the British Museum’s curator on this piece — and I recall I made a comment to the group of my tour, something about Paul Revere, which I allude to above. (although I also had a similar conversation with a clerk at a new coffee house in Redwood City called Revere who didn’t seem familiar with the manufacturer or the historical figure; and she posed with a tea service.
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2. this is a bit of a digression but I was recently reliving certain childhood moments via my Hot Wheels collection from 1970 and just made the connection that the Cord Phaeton depicted above is the inspiration of a popular Hot Wheels model, which I now have to race home or to storage and see if I have. I had been riffing on Beatnick bandit and R2D2, a prequel to this exhibit. Or isn’t everything: Altoon Sultan.

3. The article on Normandie led me to a cite for Walter Benjamin seminal essay on art in a machine age, briefly referenced by Adrian Daub in the catalog.

4. At a post-tour bread-breaking ritual, I found myself seated between Acker and Barbara Goldstein of San Jose, who had led a workshop on public art that my wife (then-girlfriend) Terry Acebo Davis attended. Karen Huang of the development office sat across from me.
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5. More on the pitcher, from Rudoe of London: Text from J. Rudoe, ‘Decorative Arts 1850-1950. A catalogue of the British Museum collection’. 2nd ed.1994, no.214.
Peter Müller-Munk studied at the Kunstgewerbeschule in Berlin under the silversmith Waldemar Ramisch and emigrated to America in 1926. He designed briefly for Tiffany & Co. before setting up his own studio for handmade silver. In his article in The Studio 98, London October 1929 (the same article appeared in the American magazine Creative Art 5, October 1929) Müller-Munk called for greater harmony of design and technique, criticising contemporary manufacturers in the silver and associated metal industries for striving to imitate handmade pieces with mass-production methods instead of adapting their merchandise to their machines; he despised the application of handmade ornament to a spun or stamped object and the ‘artful practice’ of cutting a hammered surface into the die. He claimed that the machine would not put the silversmith out of business: ‘I still have the outmodish confidence that there will always remain a sufficient number of people who want the pleasure of owning a centre piece without being forced to share their joy of ownership with a few thousand other beings.’ To illustrate his argument he included machine-made metalwork designed by Professor F. A. Breuhaus for WMF and his own handmade silver. He was soon to be proved wrong; the demand for silver was hit by the Depression and in the early 1930s he turned to industrial design. From 1935 to 1945 he taught at the Carnegie Institute of Technology, where he helped to organise the first college course in Industrial Design and Production Methods (Design 47, 9).
This pitcher was known as the ‘Normandie’ pitcher because its shape was blatantly derived from the smokestacks of the celebrated French ocean liner launched in 1935. The Normandie was a noted example of French modernist design and the image of the ship became familiar through Cassandre’s popular poster. The ‘Normandie’ pitcher has been described as ‘streamlining at its most elegant and practical, a perfect harmony of efficiency, material and the machine process’ (Brooklyn 1986, The Brooklyn Museum, ‘The Machine Age in America’, 307); the spout pours perfectly. Another recent discussion notes the use of the tear-drop form with reference to Norman Bel Geddes’s view that a drop of water was the perfect streamlined form. Streamlining thus suggests the flowing surface of water, thereby blurring the distinction between mechanistic and organic design – the pitcher could be grouped with either (New York, 1985, Whitney Museum of American Art, ‘High Styles: Twentieth Century American Design’, fig. 3.35, p. 120).
For examples of Müller-Munk’s silver, see Newhaven 1983, Yale University Art Gallery, ‘At home in Manhattan. Modern Decorative Arts, 1925 to the Depression’, K. Davies. cat. nos 9, 18, 68. Müller-Munk also participated in the Third International Exposition of Contemporary Industrial Art held at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, in 1930-31, nos 396-7, with illustration. For an account of an exhibition of Müller-Munk’s industrial design at the Philadelphia Art Alliance in 1946, see Design 47, May 1946, 8-9; the works exhibited ranged from electrical household goods and sewing machines to industrial canteens.See also J. Rudoe, ‘An historical continuum: collecting 20th century applied art from Europe and America at the British Museum’ from ‘The International Art & Design Fair 1900-2002’ pp. 15-28, fig. 12.

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The Deacons Hop by Big Jim McNeely early rockstar when sax was a rock instrument

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=Rv4bdrZy6g0
Thanks to okie dog and guy who signed that weird Oklahoma art rock Flaming Lips David cat katznelson for the heads up.

If you read the tags here you can see that I’m imagining stringing together six or seven different musical interlude‘s plus the fact that Terry and I were in the East Bay and caught exactly 2 songs and two different sets at Wood‘s Atwoods in uptown near the fox and I’m lamenting that sorry to bother you is only playing one more theater landmark California Berkeley boots Riley I can call the trombone player Robert Ewing defined out the rest of the band although it was Lisa Messe copper that your us in and she was advancing a show with either an academic or a very complicated out jazz guy I was ease dropping but did not show

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Rising Monday with Frost, Victor frost in fact why now factwino

Barely making McFall is a dead head and it’s not just when people confuse him with David Axelrod and I have a friend who is in the NSA and claims to have seen Jerry Garcia below the Mason-Dixon line. And when I previewed SF mime troop 2012 I compared fact Ueno as a cross between Langston Hughes and Victor frost victor frost a mentally ill former engineer mostly known as a homeless guy who ran for city Council three or four times and showered as many time
In that. Period PE are I OD.
AlsoOn the same topic which I admit is a weird up session I discovered a Jerry Garcia Chestnut called Rosie McFall or Rosalee before

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Lauren baabaa (youtube star)

Started with sublime Santeria eight years ago, 200,000 hits, recent posts have as few as 256 hits.

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I still don’t get Youtube and what it means in the real world. (or music world).
This is not first time I’ve wirtten about or posted random Youtube discovery.

Wasn’t there something in REady Player One about “Video Killed the Radio Star”.?

What is hip?

She sang a TOP song and I was, for no reason at all, I swear, sussing up TOP.

Cat Power, Norah Jones, Black Keys, Bruno Mars (finesse) Sublime again,

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Dartmouth 41 Hoyas 0 I’m just sayin’

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