Ghost-dogging and gehry’d ARB ap

Hoover Tower by Michael Broadhurst, of Abilities United and Greensboro, N.C.

Hoover Tower by Michael Broadhurst, of Abilities United and Greensboro, N.C.


In the film you and Gehry compare filmmaking with architecture. What similarities or differences in the two arts struck you the most?

A: They’re both mosaic arts in that they’re comprised of many, many, many other art forms all put together like a big puzzle. When they’re successful, they have a pleasurable dreamlike element – the shape of a piece of sculpture, of a building, the way light hits it, the dream of a movie, the idea of a movie. But in order to achieve either you have to break it down into technical components, which are sort of mosaic in nature. In order to build the building you have to understand all kinds of physics. You have to figure out how to get people in and out of the building, how to get sewers in and where to put the loading docks, etc. If I want to make people moved or cry in a film, I figure out what the room looks like, what the people are wearing, what time of day it is, what the light is, how to photograph it, where to put the camera. It involves optics and costume design and set design and architecture. (Sydney Pollack on Frank Gehry and Dr. Milton Wexler)

event 9/20/14 Lytton DESIGNED site specific by mark weiss for earthwise of paloalto

event 9/20/14 Lytton DESIGNED site specific by mark weiss for earthwise of paloalto

I’m lampin’, I’m lampin’, I’m cold cold lampin’

Arrington et al

1. What is it about ARB that is compatible with your experience and of specific interest to you, and why?
I design concerts, especially site-specific events like on Sept. 20, 2014, “!Taylor Ho!” featuring Taylor Ho Bynum and Ben Goldberg, free jazz concert at Lytton Plaza, when the music stopped Taylor and I biked from Lytton Plaza (he had started his day in San Francisco), to Bol Park and past Gunn High, towards Foothill where he proceeded on to Cowell Redwoods Park and eventually Los Angeles. I’ve produced more than 200 events here, most at Cubberley, and, based on that, submitted to Mandy Lowell et al a white paper on the value of Cub as a regional arts venue. I think the board would benefit from non-architect design values.

In Pollock's film about Gehry and his therapist Milton Wexler, the doctor noted that couples come to him to be happy while artists come to change the world

In Pollock’s film about Gehry and his therapist Milton Wexler, the doctor noted that couples come to him to be happy while artists come to change the world

2. Please describe an issue that recently came before the Board …and describe why you are interested in it.
I’ve spoken on about 10 projects in the last six months. Regarding the antennas at the Little League field I wrote, published and read into the record a prose poem about there being no “center field foul pole” which was not quite to the standards of Jack Hirschman or Lawrence Ferlinghetti, but borrows form it. I called it “chin music for corporate creep”: Old timers recall Art Kuehn bouncing a ball off the library, a long home run — he is our Babe Ruth. calling a shot Also, because my partner Terry Acebo Davis, the former two-term arts commissioner, once owned a house on Venice beach, which we checked on in July, I commented on a current downtown plan, the one designed by a psychologist but not Dr. Milton Wexler, and lauded it as “sorta Abbott-Kinney”. I knew slightly–ok, we met once, on the stairway, between the 5th and 6th floor of 77 Maiden Lane — Jay Chiat, the early champion of Frank Gehry — this is 1986 — and immediately sero-converted to Frank, and just this same July — we actually stayed Downtown LA at the old Universal Studios buildings — Pickford, Fairbanks — now called the Ace Hotel — with the JESUS SAVES neon intact — on Broadway but zipped out to Santa Monica Venice to see the Oldenburg binoculars at what is now Google La (goog lay lah) and made a little film there, similar to a film I made just last weekend walking from the new Anderson building thru the Richard Serra corten steel structure, to Cantor. We also, Terry and I, walked on the Disney concert Hall, exterior, a Gehry. Palo Alto needs, if not a Gehry, our version of such. We are more garish than Gehry.

artwork by Stacey Carter, based on photo by Mark Weiss, NYC, summer 1988

artwork by Stacey Carter, based on photo by Mark Weiss, NYC, summer 1988

I also own a print of the Oldenburg baseball bat; if you want to put one of those on Middlefield and pack that with senders and receivers, that I will support.

3. If appointed to ARB — but not seated by will of the people to Council November 4, 2014 — the specific goal I would like the ARB to achieve, and why and how I would suggest achieving, as part of process per se, an effect where, as Thoreau in 1849 and George Packer — Gunn 1978 — said in 2013, the leadership seems representative of and responsive to the people, and it’s not so much what color stucco or how much glass each new investment into our skyline and walking tour adds, but that there is a little of us in each brick, nail or plate so to speak, and, with due respect, to for example my Fremont Hills, Terman and Gunn schoolmate RP, there is at least a perception of lack. So maybe a sound and ambience slash negative space bricklayer would add a nuance to these proceedings and not just as a finish fetish.

At the Tsuchianura Festival at Lucie Stern Sunday a lady named Nemet (but not unlike “Broadway Joe”) suggested we, like our Japanese Sisters, adopt a mascot; maybe we need a monster-mascot, to exorcise from these flippers and tear-downs and carpet-bagging opportunities, that which lurks herein. Maybe a zombie-ice-cream-cone fetish will make the monster homes seem more humane.

4. (long question, but opens doors, so to speak, to these visual aids)

event DESIGNED by mark weiss for earthwise, lytton

event DESIGNED by mark weiss for earthwise, lytton

I like 250 Hamilton just fine, with or without the $4 mil facelift, Phil Ciralsky. (insert photo).

I can also link to or reproduce in entirety here my previous draft of this posted as “Dancing About Architecture”.

(I wrote two previous versions of this, from 4:20 to 5:25 while seated in lobby of 7th floor of 250, on my Apple laptop, but twice had the file deleted after answering the 4 questions above; David the clerk said “use Acrobat not Preview” and I admit I don’t know everything about this little doo-hicky — Terry did pay for, it was my 50th birthday — time at the “genius bar” but so far I have been faking it like an idiot savant, so maybe its just me. Number 5 I could not even get the thing to let me squeeze in a doomed bit of copy between all the links. I did suss out a bit on the previous links, thusly:

Our forty six (46) not 80 zoning ordinances under Title 18 and our 38 not .62 building regulations, (i.e Title 16 et cetera) including the new ordinance about Public art and private development (which incidentally, I privately opposed, although I am somewhat known as proponent of the 1 percent in muni projects, and my partner is a former two-term arts commissioner).

I likes me some Birge Clark.

I think we should be charging Joe Bellomo for his bike racks on Civic Center MKL Plaza — it is not a park, it is a limited public forum. Can I say that here?

This is my 59th post this month alone and my fourth attempt to be boarded.

Two hundred fifty patters by “Christ” to 618 shields of reality by “King” David.

Ten titles, or volumes, pulled somewhat hastily from my shelves, and then stacked neatly on a table at Peet’s about three hours and two posts ago:

1. Hiroshi Sugimoto & Jonathan Safran Foer, “Joe” about Richard Serra and Ando, in this case;

2. Art in America, June/July 2014 for article about architecture at Venice Bianalle,

3. Off The Wall!: A Guide to Greg Brown’s Murals in Palo Alto;

4 Trisha Brown, So That the Audience Does Not Know Whether I Have Stopped Dancing — if and only if it has the photo of her site specific piece of people waving flags from rooftops;

5. Scott Meacham, Dartmouth College: The Campus Guide;

6. Almanac Chapple-Mazinani-Thomas which I think is about recent grad students at Stanford, and something in a tower, ala Ann Hamilton tower at the art colony up in Petaluma I toured a whiles back; which reminds me to look for content I created or documented when John Barton had some cute young French exchange students talk in a compelling way about 27 University; and further about John Barton, who said, at the time, I could ring him>

7. Al’ America, by Jon Curiel, the former Chron writer and friend of a friend thru the dear Charlotte Gerstein (Dartmouth 1986, from West Hartford, CT, whose father made a film about the fact that Mark Twain deliberately made his house there face that of Harriet Beecher Stowe, to annoy here) the connect being that Barton and Carrassco here build a lovely mosque;

8. From Bauhaus to Our House by Tom Wolfe;

9. Fodor’s New York City from 1983 back in the good old days (and very avid Plastic Alto readers or close personal friends my recall that I spent February, 2001 that is in the final seven months of Western Civilization in New York, or Brooklyn for you sticklers and bums;

and lastly a 10. Frank Lloyd Wright Field Guide Clayton, Running Press Cyclopedia, this fits in my pocket although I shlepped all ten, plus David Shields Realty Hunger and a Linda Ronstadt cd in a canvas bag from SXSW 2009;

I regrettably sold off my Christopher “Christ” Alexander, “A Pattern Language” which I bought in 1988 because Rob Bagot had it, Rob a future Howard Gossage winner, compared to Dan Mountain the 1988 Howard Gossage winner, Dan and HISWIFE, who Terry and I saw in July, Clay Kershaw was on the mound and the tv, in Venice Beach, an Abbot Kinney kind of thing, you know.

This is my way of announcing that beyond or technically before in some ways running Mark Weiss me that is for Palo Alto City Council — and again, since we are on topic, exactly 26 years after conceiving of an actualizing and presenting the 1988 Goose Gossage Award for copywriting-reading to Jeff Goodby– I am also concurrently little poMo and yes “pomp” (my computer is now ghost-writing this part, on auto-Pilot the pen) that I am applying for the appointable position or seat for Architecture Review Board. Not being an actual architect – although Matt H. Porteus and I, in Clay Leo’s 1978 HisGoBAM/APB History and Geography of the Bay Area Metropolis slash American Political Behavior did once design a lovely little piece of fiction, and fishin’ for that matter, Port Weissius, somewhere between Escondido and San Diego or in another dimension, an architect. But I have a good eye for music.

More to comb.
(Do I get bonus points, in some universe, parallel or on a different plane, for bridging, like the grandfather of a nice lady from Michigan in Old Palo Alto, Claytons Kershaw and Leo?)

edita, ten minutes later: I also shot on my Moto Android a group of 11 photos of works on paper (and in one case tin) of architectural themed art works, that I hope color, shapes, supports and bulwarks (if that is a verb) this application, or essay, or exercise, from a private collection; a private collection {self-edited} and then addendumbed down.

>>>sarsaparilla, and this is NOT a Palo Alto Buildings Inspector training film, unless we want to be SEIU’d:

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Terry, Bruce and I

Terry and I sat under the Bruce Beasley arch, at Mitchell Park Library, Saturday, September 27, 2014, more than five years after we first met at Bruce's Oakland studio.

Terry and I sat under the Bruce Beasley arch, at Mitchell Park Library, Saturday, September 27, 2014, more than five years after we first met at Bruce’s Oakland studio.

Terry shot this view:
beasley

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Gunn football chasing first win

Gunn footballers also known as "14 Angry Men" console themselves after tough loss Friday

Gunn footballers also known as “14 Angry Men” console themselves after tough loss Friday


Gunn dropped a 35-28 decision at Prospect of Saratoga Friday, its four straight defeat.
Coach Shinichi Hirano’s Titans are continuing to remind me of “The Seven Samurai” from the famous Japanese movie about a small group of fighters trying to defend a village against a powerful group of brigands (bad guys). The Titans lost two players to injury, sophomore linebacker Sam Rothstein (hand surgery) and senior back Forrest “Bubba” Larson (possible broken tibia, his leg). They finished Friday’s tilt, which went down to the wire, with only 14 players. Okay, in the Kurosawa film of 1954, there are 7 Samurai but only three survive. For Gunn football, the intrigue is can they garner a win before injuries become insurmountable.

I’ve watch four straight Gunn games, three of which were closely fought. I don’t believe I had ever seen four straight games, two home and two away, ever, in 40 years of living in this community. Even as a Gunn student –and sports editor of the Oracle – I doubt I saw four games in a row. My senior year I skipped Gunn games to go on assignment for the Peninsula Times Tribune – I distinctly remember that the night I covered a 55-0 Carlmont over Mills game, Gunn beat Santa Clara as Chris Strausser to John Chovanec accounted for 227 yards, a league record.

I will update this with more from my notes and my interview with Shinichi. For now here are some random photos.

The highlight was Jared Bibo’s 90 yard touchdown return, on a kickoff. Phil Bibo, Jared’s dad, said it was his first score of the season. Moments earlier I had greeted Phil, my classmate at Terman and Gunn, 1978 – 1982, for the first time in years. I pounded his back somewhat vigorously as his lad romped up the near sideline and left the Panthers in the dust.

Nozo Imanaka, despite struggling with cramps in his legs, reeled off an electrifying long touchdown run, his fifth this season of 20 yards of more. But Gunn clearly felt his absence in the fourth quarter, on defense, as the Panthers worked the clock and ate up the field to break a tie and revenge a defeat from the previous season. Nozo is normally one of the eight Titans who go 2-ways, while 10 others had been working in shifts. Hirano praised the play of Max Chiew who scored a TD and picked up some of the slack of Larson and Imanaka.

Another player I would highlight for Gunn is sophomore nose guard Drew Maltz, and not just because his father Matt Maltz was my teammate for the 8th grade A-team at Terman, or that I knew his mother Jamie Sparaco before Matt did, or that I chatted with Jamie’s father, a retired Palo Alto police officer who was also a stalwart footballer at San Jose High back in the 19(50s, for the first time Friday, for most of the pre-game warm-ups. Drew looked to dominate his opposite number for most of the game; in fact that Titans seemed to dominate line play before the attrition and fatigue combined to yield just enough to lose.

There is some solace, going in to league play, that you could say that as measured by aggregate scoring Gunn is having a finer season than the Paly Vikings. When Gunn lost to Branham by 35, Paly lost to Mitty by 41. When Gunn lost to Prospect by 7, Paly lost to Palma by 30. (And by the way I met Eli Givens’ mom, a red-head who told me that she went to Gunn a few years after me, but sent her boy to Paly; meanwhile Mrs. Larson, Bubba’s mom, before responding to the page from PAMF, said she is from Kansas but is married to Brock Larson, who either went to Gunn a few years ahead of me, or is our age and went to Paly).

I also had a nice chat with Mr. Sweat, his son Dietrich Sweat had another stellar game, at tight end and inside linebacker. He says his son is starting to think about how football might impact his college strategy; off the top of my head I think the young man might look into, for varying reasons: Dartmouth, Hamilton, Wesleyan, NYU. Something about this family makes me think Buddy Teevans would back his application. (There is a sibling at BYU, father reports). Sweat made a nice catch and run in the second half that went for a long game but maybe should have stood as a touchdown. The refs called him out of bounds but something about that reminded me of the lady in the Panthers’ concession who told me that the rotten Polish sausage they sold me was actually a smoked sausage that got snuck in the mix. Politics may be, as von Bismarck said, like making sausages but football should be football and they should give the game the benefit of the doubt and Dietrich’s romp should have gone the distance.

Gunn coach Shinichi Hirano likes his prospects for league play despite a win-less start to season; his Titans have stayed within a touchdown of winning in three of four starts.

Gunn coach Shinichi Hirano likes his prospects for league play despite a win-less start to season; his Titans have stayed within a touchdown of winning in three of four starts.

from Prep2Prep/MaxPreps/Mercury/DailyNews/PAWeeklyonline:
Gunn 14 7 0 7 — 28
Prospect 6 15 7 7 — 35
Gunn — Bibo 90 punt return (Riley kick)
Prospect — Pollard 55 pass from Adams (Kick failed)
Gunn — Paletua 1 run (Riley kick)
Gunn — Imanaka 55 run (Riley kick)
Prospect — Adams 2 run (Avdagic kick)
Prospect — Sainz 3 run (Jones pass from Adams)
Prospect — Pollard 8 pass from Adams (Avdagic kick)
Gunn — Chiew 3 run (Riley kick)
Prospect — Pollard 8 pass from Adams (Avdagic kick)

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David Shields San Jose 225 229 A

  1. 1IMG_20140925_120704890
229

229

With 81 reviews on Amazon alone 4 "Reality Hunger" I might have expected and with 2 books in pipe line, as did the planners booking these 3 rooms ore 1 room with three doors Speak Friend & Enter kind of thing to have felt less alone today

With 81 reviews on Amazon alone 4 “Reality Hunger” I might have expected and with 2 books in pipe line, as did the planners booking these 3 rooms ore 1 room with three doors Speak Friend & Enter kind of thing to have felt less alone today

I was expecting a more content rich experience.

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Grand Jury Report, our response and my real time qualms

I’ve read the Grand Jury Report. I have not seen the response, written by Pat Burt (council),Greg Schmid (council) and Jim Keene (staff, City Manager).

Here is a reprint of a speech I gave to ARB two years ago, in November 2012 — I tie the hulabuloo about 27 University to the lack of response or failure to act regarding 456 University, the Varsity Theatre. What isn’t well known is that Arrillaga first started thinking about the office towers during the months at the end of 2011 when people were talking about the Varsity and that staff member Amy French (or so she told me, later) is the one who suggested adding a theatre (for Theatreworks) to the office towers plan. In my opinion, staff might have put the same energy in brokering a deal to bring a nationally known concert promoter to 456. Meanwhile, based on hearing Chop Keenan out on the topic, and his insistence that the plan to let SAP corporation run a type of incubator at 456, that features food and programming for all citizens — Chop says it will “rock” – I have stopped obstructing the project.

My thoughts from two years ago (and this is a recreation I wrote up shortly thereafter; the actual address is searchable):
I want to thank the Board for its diligence, on this matter, and the preceding item (on Newell Street Bridge , where residents decried the plans for a new bridge design five times bigger in “footprint” than the existing bridge, built in 1911).

I attended the meeting on October 24. I want to highlight something I found interesting from that meeting. I noticed that three of you, or two (Architectural Review) Board members and one Planning Commissioner noted that in terms of the plan presented, (for the Arrillaga Office Towers and Theatre proposal, at 27 University) you would do, professionally speaking “the opposite”, that you would place the theatre closer to University Avenue and the office towers back near the soccer field.

I think this is relevant in that it speaks to something about the aesthetics of the proposal. I think there are concerns over both the product – what is being proposed – and the process – how it is being proposed.

I first heard of this project when it came up at Council in March, 2012, this year. But in the staff report from September it turns out that the project was initiated back in August of 2011, meaning that it has been going on partially in secret for more than a year, in addition to these types of recent hearings and discussions.

What I just learned last week however, speaking with staff after the meeting, and what Bruce (F_, consultant to the City for the project) spoke of just now very briefly – and I believe that is the first time this fact was part of the record – my understanding is that the proponent of this project first approached the City with an idea for an office tower, and it was staff that suggested that the project would go over better with an arts element, as public benefit. So the theatre is something of an afterthought, despite the fact that it was described in the local media as “a theatre project” and then you go down the story and it says office space and in fact it is three times as much office space as theatre.

Another thing – a semantic thing about the proposal, a quibble – is that they call it an “arts and innovation district” but in terms of innovation we are talking not about start-ups, spin-offs, clusters of entrepreneurs, incubators, that are the heart of the Silicon Valley ethos, as distinct from a mature company, with a thousand employees, that the proponent says he wants to lure to 27 University – and that in terms of arts it is really one art – live theatre – and only one potential beneficiary.

What I find interesting, and I am interested in hearing staff or leadership make this more clear as more daylight reaches this project – and I work in the arts – is that at that same time, August, 2011 myself and others were looking at 456 University, the historic and beloved Varsity Theatre, and whether leadership could work with that private owner and find a suitable nationally-recognized concert promoter to take that lease. Staff was given a list and did some outreach to people who run, for example, the Warfield, the Fillmore, Fox Theater in Oakland, Yoshi’s, Freight and Salvage [which completed a $15 million capital campaign, to rebuild and renew in Downtown Berkeley, for concerts, at a time when Palo Alto City Manager Jim Keane was city manager of Berkeley, he is familiar with the project, and instructed staff here to research 456 University]. I am curious for someone to compare the two proposals, in terms of the need for a downtown arts amenity.

Anyhow I am anxious to hear more discussion here and that there is more public input. Thank you board and staff.
(the buzzer rang — today of all day’s I was cognizant of what Shakespeare called “the brief candle”)

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U.S. State Department and McFaul Support Jailed Rock Band

Since I heard Michael McFaul speak locally recently and wrote about him or that, I am re-posting something I wrote about culture and Russia during the 2012 campaign, on my “Swayambh-PA” blog; the title of the blog referenced a concept my Anish Kapoor about natural growth.

markweiss86's avatarSvayambh-PA, or New Residentialist Platform(NRP)

Russian authorities interrupt performance by agitprop group Pussy Riot, February, 2012

The United States is concerned about both the verdict and the disproportionate sentences handed down by a Moscow court in the case against the members of the band Pussy Riot and the negative impact on freedom of expression in Russia.

We urge Russian authorities to review this case and ensure that the right to freedom of expression is upheld.

This is a direct quote from Victoria Nuland at the U.S. State Department, as announced today, and then cited by ambassador Michael McFaul on his social media device.

Pussy Riot is a group of young female artists and activists, recently sentenced to two years in prison. They were deemed to offend Orthodox followers because they staged a musical protest February 21 inside of an important cathedral. Many believe that the harsh punishment is part of a larger and more…

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Cubberley As a Regional Arts Center for 300-capacity theatre

I ran into Mike Cobb the other day and mean to follow up with him regarding my campaign for Council 2014, and my thoughts on Cubberley; in truth I am not current with what the Cubberley ad hoc group led by Mandy Lowell are recommending. I respect Mr. Cobb, who I first met at a Cubberley advisory meeting when I was producing concerts there in the 1990s. Further, although I was shocked to learn that Mandy Lowell was Mrs. Charles Munger, it is still unclear to me what to make of that: I am not completely writing her off as a potential Democratic citizen. People I admire respect her. More to come. Note that the first segment is more organized than the subsequent two, that being the nature of communicating by email. Not sure where this document was filed, other than Reklis said it would be included.

Of the top of my head, I would keep Cub as a community center rather than let it be developed for housing. I wonder how it fits in with the proposal to stop Sobrato from turning Fry’s into more housing: I favor half-housing and half-park.

markweiss86's avatarSvayambh-PA, or New Residentialist Platform(NRP)

I am on my way to the Cubberley meeting at 7:30 tonight. While checking the time online, I became perhaps the last person in the room to learn that Mandy Lowell is also known as Mrs. Charles Munger (the Mungers who gave millions to defeat Prop 30 — I voted for Prop 30 — in Palo Alto you never know which billionaire or multi-millionaire in the elevator you will meet).

Usually when you meet a billionaire you should pretend you don’t know they are billionaires. I remember the time that Nelson Rockefeller came into the newsroom to ask us to cover the drinking games / fundraiser he was hosting at his fraternity and I of course knew who he was — maybe we had met once before, exactly, he sat to lunch with us at the cafeteria, he rowed with one of my hallmates — and he said “Hi…

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Colorado dissent debate and Lytton Plaza

New York Times photo Matt Staver

New York Times photo Matt Staver


The Chronicle teed me up and the New York Times online hit me home about some noise out of Arvada, Colorado where a school board wants to revise U.S. History so as to produce a citizenry that is less likely to protest. Huh?

Reminds me of the effort in recent years to discourage musicians from gathering at Lytton Plaza, in payback for the unruly protests during the Vietnam era.

This will take a few more readings and writings to get clear on, but I wanted to mark the discussion so far.

From Matt Bowling:
The leftist Midpeninsula Free University (MFU) first took advantage of Lytton Plaza’s in-between status during the summer of 1968. After staging a series of rallies and music concerts there — some of which had resulted in police intervention — downtown business had grown weary of the new MFU scene at the plaza. The Palo Alto Times reported that summer that 63% of downtown merchants wanted the plaza closed and 86% favored the police stopping the demonstrations.

Lytton and his bank responded to business concerns by posting a list of rules at the plaza. Reiterating that the land was owned by Lytton Savings, the poster stated that music and crowds over 25 people were prohibited except through the permission of the bank. The poster was soon graced with an expletive-laced response.

By 1969, Saturday night rock concerts with live bands were commonplace at the plaza, many sponsored by the “Free People’s Free Music Company” run by Paly teenagers. One summer concert devolved into mayhem when a motorcycle gang began numerous fist fights and scuffles with the largely hippie high school crowd.

From Jack Healy’s Times report Sept. 23, 2014:
So far, nothing is settled in Jefferson County. The board put off a discussion of the curriculum-review committee until a meeting in October, and Ken Witt, the board president, suggested that some of its proposed language about not promoting “civil disorder, social strife or disregard of the law” might be cut.

“A lot of those words were more specific and more pointed than they have to be,” Mr. Witt said. He said that the school board was responsible for making decisions about curriculum and that the review committee would give a wider spectrum of parents and community members the power to examine what was taught in schools. He said that some had made censorship allegations “to incite and upset the student population.”

But on Tuesday, those allegations were more than enough to draw hundreds of students into the sun. They waved signs declaring, “It’s world history, not white history,” and talked about Cesar Chavez and the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Leaders of the walkout urged others to stay out of the streets and not to curse, and sympathetic parents brought poster board, magic markers and bottles of water.

“Occupational Hazards of Democracy” by Lynn Stegner in the Chronicle, November, 2011, and the inspiration for an Etsy-sold work of art by Evelyn Markasky:
freedomEvelynMarkasky

Ok, I admit this is not very good writing, in that I am merely stringing together a group of sources or excerpts from such.

I

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Shields 224 (on R.Stern), ‘Damn right I’m no body’ & 10 day schedule

A dayworker and artist in Mountain View, calling him or her self Art Work, recommends via this yellow edifice that Palo Alto and its ARB retain and ratify its 50 foot height limit

A dayworker and artist in Mountain View, calling him or her self Art Work, recommends via this yellow edifice that Palo Alto and its ARB retain and ratify its 50 foot height limit

As I started to write this, waiting for my breakfast burrito, my table overcrowded with books and papers, I knock the plastic case of my reading glasses from the high top to the floor, and bending over I notice that the stool on which I set is metal painted as wood and not wood per se.

“Damn right, I’m no body” I woke to, as my inner monologue emerged from whatever accompanies the REM-stage; I heard Nick next door, left-handed Nick, grew up in Palo Alto and Woodside, baseball pitcher at Stanford and Colgate, my coach covered, moving around something, making himself useful, at 7:15. Chores around our home delayed my launch until about 10 a.m. I timed it at about 6 minutes to drive to Cafe Zoe — “Hi, Kathleen!” — from Downtown North. I went South on Middlefield rather than North because of a back-up, counter-intuitively or experts.
(Oddly, as I revisited this later that evening, having missed the Shields lecture in San Jose, I realized the pun in the headline in that Richard Stern had recently passed away).

Live 105 had a song, in that interstice, that I thought fit. Sublime Badfish the green light say. It’s about identify. I am really channelling Salinger, or Shields and Salerno’s version of. Shields is in San Jo tonight but I have a date with the City Manager, and his assistant, Janice Sherwood or Janice Shields. Svendson. Shields David also has a nooner on Thursday, with Evan Bishovshy ethan nosowsky or someone. Jesus took my money, poured my O.J and explained that a “Chuy” is probably also a Jesus, the way Memo is actually a Guillermo. Fijate. Jesus, is telling another customer that he just had a son about a year ago. Mazel tov. (The machine wants to change it to “Mazel Gov” — government luck?)

Wed Sept 24
wait, back it up, rewind to Tuesday, my unfinished call list: Baer, Young, Garston, Goldberg (some of these were not urgent, I just didn’t want to lose the number if I lose the card), — I just did a rare thing, for a blogger, for Plastic Alto, I edited and changed the punctuation; John Seeley aka John Paige; Booker,

NEWS FLASH
WE INTERRUPT THIS POST FOR A POST-WITHIN-A-POST:

NAOMI THE KLEZMER ACCORDION IS CURATOR FOR A QUILT SHOW, NOW AT CAFE ZOE IN ON MENALTO, FEATURING ART WORK OF DAY WORKERS, OF MOUNTAIN VIEW. (Meanwhile, she also had the out card for my converso with Jesus: his name is Yeshu. Photo TK

Naomi the Klezmer and curator accepts kudos from Shachi she says her Hebrew name, at Cafe Zoe, in Menalto, September 2014 for the day worker quilts

Naomi the Klezmer and curator accepts kudos from Shachi she says her Hebrew name, at Cafe Zoe, in Menalto, September 2014 for the day worker quilts

(Shortly after I bid adieu to “Shachi” the guy from Cal Voter Guide called and we talked for a few minutes and he said he would send me a hard copy of what they do and I said I would call him back when I got it — this would only run me $800, to use their service, for my campaign running for Palo Alto City Council, this is real, you know — and then at the end of the conversation I said “Fuck you” and he laughed. — Payback for him writing me yesterday and calling me a “nobody”, because I wouldn’t use his service. That some weird passive aggressive sales shit. Also the photo I found online and sent to him as a link is another guy with same name, but he thought it was supposed to be me. He is, literally, -30-)

What is the best, most interesting thing going? Stern, Richard Stern via Shields, David Shields has continually asked since being a “tyke”. He does not mind being in the shadow of greats, like Philip Roth.

I admit I am still processing the fact that a guy called me to sell me some sort of service that candidates in elections might buy or use, then got frustrated and wrote me an email calling me a loser and a “nobody”. Is he saying that they target such? For some reason I am channeling Borat: Do you have the yard-sign with the pussy magnet? (And that is not a Burt joke, it’s a Borat, brat). “Damn right I’m somebody” sounds like James Brown.

There were about five other names and numbers on my call list and log.

Today: maybe Rotary with my Dad, in Cupertino. Maybe A’s-Angels nooner; I wrote “Lytton Plaza” for no discernible reason. Maybe follow up or keep trying with Michael McFaul — the Richard Stern folds into that. Maybe Shields tonight in San Jo, especially if San Jo Merc has a preview that is irresitisible; City Manager: there is email from Janice Svenson, close but no cigar even try 3; more architecture: Dartmouth buildings and, um, Shields; I have the book of Book of Mormon Broadway cd to read and then return. Over due. Speaking of latter days. Trevor Noah is a South African comedian recommended by Palo Altan Rob Mori who is a bike enthusiast and also writes apps for droids.

Thurs Sept 25 is a blank page. Get out my sunglasses as Joan Rivers told Ricki Stern, no relation to Richard Stern or I am certain they are different people at least. I just sneezd as I wrote that and a man across, who kinda looks like an Arab said “bless you” a minute ago he was straddling somebody’s large curly haired dog. he knows them? None of my business. I am that Emersonian eyeball seeing all. — which reminds that I am trying to reach David Perez our County Poet Laureate if I have not scared him off, or scarred him, with my bad channeling of the greats. (What do I mean “blank page” if 16 hours ahead I am already salivating for my nooner in San Jose with David Shields — talk about short attention span, only 1,800 words).

Fri 26 Sept LWVPA survey due
Cristina Velazquez at PA Art Center 7 p.m.
Gunn football?
maybe the famous La Para breakfast klatch

Sat 27 Sept
Stanford Washington –I kinda want to go, accept I’m broke. My classmate and friend Chris Strausser all league for the Titans at QB is new Huskie offensive asst coach, with Chris Peterson from Boise State.
I have “Dartmouth in Ashland” a guy can dream can’t he?
Sun 28 Sept
football

Mon 29 Sept
Daily News 1 p.m. candidates meetings with Mario Dianda Jason Green — I think I saw Brenna or Breena Kerr of the Post not News at Policy and Services meeting yesterday but we’ve never met. I am boycotting the Post and the Weekly even if that seems counter-productive. Jim Newton of the LA Times bit on something I copied him on, if only to question why I had copied him. I think there is a story here, in PA about leadership that might be of statewide interest and not just because Jim was editor of the Campanile. He wrote about Lev, the LA council member (whose name is on Wall of Hollywood Bowl, I have the photo to prove); Michael McFaul, if I ever update my coverage of his excellent address, said that in 1991 there were delegates from LA and other U.S. cities as part of glasnost visiting civic officials in St. Petersburg and that is were he first met Vladimir Putin. I also am toting The Economist “The long game” chess and Putin to skim thru for future bluffing on what little I know about Russian. Damn right I know nothing as Shultzie the comic actor in Hogan’s Heroes with Bob Crane and not the former Princeton football hero with a Tiger tattoo on his high thigh with the Yalie Bush-leaguer might say. McFaul’s mentor is Condi by the way, he says. Nothing wrong with a little McFaul envy or obsession, for a no body. I am tempted to print out the 10 articles that reference him here and drop them off at the Tower.

I also taped a local news segment on Peter Thiel speaking of Tower, Lord of Rings: don’t they know that Palantir was a force for evil, sued by Sauron and Saruman? They seem to be gong more elemental: silver, gold, what nuggotnot.

thielian architecture themed

thielian architecture themed

Beyond merely negating the ego, maybe I can cloak myself in an alter ego, Neal Young Jeezy, or Neil Young Jeezy –he’s so breezy, he’s our saviour, on his best behavior; first it was Tim who channeled NYJ because a rapper joined his folk song set, then later I stepped up and spit a few rhymes on that riff.

Monday the 29 Sept also has an opportunity to have coffee in the morning with Preston Metcalf of Triton museum 8 to 930 in Santa Clara.

Tuesd 30 September
League of Women Voters Forum, 7 to 930 p.m. at Etz Chayim, the former YWCA on 4161 Alma, although the site is also on the Housing Element and the developers are salivating about destroying the temple, forcing the Jews of Ari Cartun branch to dispora-ate and building building building more homes homes homes. Shana tova indeedy.

Wed Oct 1
rent is due. new lease on life, for only 200 bump. My rent has gone, I said this in a public forum, from $2,200 in 2008 to $3,1000 in October, 2014 a 40 percent jump in six years, which I calculate roughly as 6 percent per year or at least twice the CPI consumer price index, for a 1BR. I asked in a forum: Does the assessor re-price this as often? And Greg Schmid later that night, at a different meeting, or in the hall outside such, said in passing that they did gloss that, although I didn’t sit still long enough, nor was it the place — we were in Council Chambers, for a art commission meeting — to get on same page, but I hope to squeeze him in here, Plastic Alto and God’s green spinning mush, soon enough.

the very next day
Thursday Oct 2
PAN Palo Alto Neighborhoods forum at Council chambers hosted by Sid Espinosa our former best mayor — Wesleyan grad, from Salinas or Gilroy, Kennedy School, Clinton speechwriter, clog-dancer, old movie buff, lived at 365 Addison or what-not, head of philanthropy at Microsoft, he who walks the oxymoron with moxie, 6:30 to 9p.m.

and if I make it to Friday Oct 3, it is written and sealed, dayeinu it is enough

up to 81 reviews

and as i type this into the tag bar it starts to list as “reality unger” and I think about a Dartmouth classmate, Rob Hunger, a Canadian and rugby player, I hardly knew beyond that, and that Carol Hegna, Stanford 1981, aka Carol Milton (friend of Milt McColl and Cindy Swenson McColl) sent me a post card from Kenya or East Africa, where they might have safari tourism to see she met Rob there and mentioned me to him. Howzit, Hunger? Howzit, Hegna? I’m also flashing to Richard Freed arm-wrestling with Carol’s sister, younger sister, more of a Wyoming cow-girl than Carol was, Carol who skateboard across White Plaza, I was just telling a young lass the other day, and was nearly a Dolly. But alas I cannot pull, even in an Aquarian fit, the younger Hegna’s first name.

And that’s my hour.

Thank you Terry, my Terry, Terry Acebo Davis, for all your help on my campaign and on wardrobe. Luv ya (and this is a business blog, not personal, please note. I am saying that to make money, in a Walter Mischel Marshmellow-differed kind of way).

Shieldsian addendum watching “Auto-focus” the Bob Crane biopic with my mom and texted Steve Cohen of Ally McBe fame: who plays Newkirk?

Michael e Rodgers as Newkirk to kinnear as hogan right says cohen

Michael e Rodgers as Newkirk to kinnear as hogan right says cohen

Chapter 224: What Does It Mean for Hospitals, Health Plans, Consumers, and Clinicians? (Blue Shield, that is, not David Shields, but close enough for Plastic Alto)

and as I am typing that, while watching the Giants tangle with Clayton Kershaw, 1-1, and typing the gratuitous coda about Blue Shield, a Dignity Health spot comes on with Secret Sister Tomorrow Will be Kinder, which was also used in Hunger Games:

reality hunger games?

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Sam and Bill displaces Jenny

sam_billSam Amidon is a young artist on Nonesuch and, according to Mark Christman of Philly’s Ars Nova series, is touring with Bill Frisell as a sideman.

Sam Amidon is also married to British folkie Beth Orton. Ok.

Sam Amidon is from Vermont area. Cool.

But where does this leave Jenny Scheinman? Same instrument.

We saw Bill with his normal new quartet, Wolleson Scher and Leisz, in Napa, weeks before the big quake. We got the ok to try to say hello but somehow missed our cue.

Nothing in life perfect.

edita: reminds of: Sam Amico, printer, near Felicia Rose Rice

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