Towse: views from the hill

May 27, 2010

View Alcatraz

Filed under: architecture,photographs — Tags: , — Towse @ 10:55 am
Red and White booth at Pier 41 1/2

May 11, 2010

Tuesday in San Francisco.

Filed under: life,restaurants — Tags: — Towse @ 11:07 pm

Went to the rosé tasting at Butterfly (P33) . Very crowded. Young hip crowd. Deejay. They didn’t ask for the ID they’d told me I had to bring. :-(

Too crowded for my sensibilities. (I was tempted to ask Rob Lam if I could hide out in his kitchen and have his nibs ferry me tastes of rosé.)

Tasty, but. …

We split early and went down to …P5 for a no-reservation dinner at Lafitte, which opened in April.

They sat us at the counter where we could watch the action in the kitchen. Fun.

We shared an appetizer charcroute plate. (Amazing. Amazing. Amazing. Try it if Russell has it on his menu again.)

His nibs had roasted lamb sirloin (medium rare) because the house had sold out of scallops. I had seared Iberico pork belly and sweetbreads. (Tasty!)

For dessert, we shared an English pea panna cotta (amazing!).

We walked back home and up 223 (who’s counting) steps and then down the path to home sweet home.

Tuesday in San Francisco. …

May 9, 2010

The Kaiwo Maru sets sail.

Filed under: photographs,ships — Tags: , , — Towse @ 5:15 pm
The Kaiwo Maru

Cadets in the rigging

The Kaiwo Maru

Rising Sun flying

SFFD boat

Ceremonial farewell from one of the SFFD fireboats

The Kaiwo Maru

Next stop, Honolulu.

May 8, 2010

The Green Street Mortuary Band

Filed under: photographs — Tags: , , — Towse @ 5:38 pm
Green Street Mortuary marching band

01 May 2010. The band marches up Stockton.

The NPR story begins

Lawrence Ferlinghetti wrote a poem about them. Novelist Amy Tan’s mother was serenaded by them as she lay in state. Muckraker Jessica Mitford’s memorial procession was led by them. And more than 300 Chinese families a year hire the Green Street Mortuary Band to give their loved ones a proper and musical send-off through the streets of Chinatown.

May 6, 2010

Busy times at Pier 27

Filed under: photographs,ships — Tags: , , — Towse @ 12:43 pm

The Kaiwo Maru arrived yesterday and will be moored at P27 until Sunday.

Kaiwo Maru - Japanese four-masted barque

Looks pretty all lit up at night.

Kaiwo Maru

Kaiwo Maru as sun sets

Earlier in the week the Golden Bear  was here overnight for “a California Maritime Academy alumni reception.” Ah, those receptions. …

California Bear arrives with the tidal bore. 02 May 2010

And for a couple days before that   the F/V Frosti   was moored at P27. Current task, roaming from San Francisco to San Diego surveying sardines for CalCOFI.

F/V Frosti

All-in-all a very busy time for the pier.

April 28, 2010

Moon. Clouds. Scud.

Filed under: photographs — Tags: , , — Towse @ 12:25 pm

Lovely moon last night.

April 19, 2010

Night coming tenderly …

Filed under: photographs — Tags: , , , — Towse @ 11:19 pm

I always wonder why the GGB gets all the press and photos and postcards and what-not.

I think this view is the best.

[In honor of National Poetry Month, the title of this post a snippet from a Langston Hughes poem I love: Dream Variations]

April 15, 2010

Sun breaks through

Filed under: photographs — Tags: , , — Towse @ 10:44 pm

A little before 7A this morning.

April 13, 2010

It’s National Library Week, so let’s talk about libraries.

Filed under: libraries — Tags: , — Towse @ 5:47 pm

It’s National Library Week, so let’s talk about libraries, but first, let’s listen to Neil Gaiman talk about why he loves libraries. (He claims librarians have asked him not to describe himself as “a feral child raised by librarians.”)

Read Twelve Ways Libraries Are Good For The Country and Ten Reasons Why The Internet Is No Substitute For A Library.

Done? Good. I’ll continue with my library-centric post. …

I was talking last night with a good friend about my pet hobby horse: the location for the revamped North Beach Library — where it should (and shouldn’t) be.

She said, well, we don’t need to worry so much about the fact that the location being considered will only allow a 10-15% expansion of the collection forever and ever after because, really, with the way technology is evolving there shouldn’t be much need for expansion in the future. Libraries aren’t growing like they used to, she said, or words to that effect.

Au contraire, I said. Library visits and circulation stats are booming. People assume that cheap books from Amazon and access to the Web are decreasing library usage, but the exact opposite is true.

Here, take a look at the 2009 California state statistics [PDF file].

Circulation per capita at California public libraries has increased 5% over the past five years. The State mean circulation per capita is 5.78 items. San Francisco clocks in at 10.11.

Stats from the ALA for the nation as a whole show similar trends.

In Los Angeles, about 18 million people visited the city’s 72 libraries in the fiscal year ended in June 2008, up 12 percent from the previous year. Result: a 10 percent spike in checkouts, to a total of 17.2 million books, DVDs, CDs, and other material.
—Los Angeles Daily News

Art Brodsky wrote Our Public Library Lifeline Is Fraying. We’ll Be Sorry When it Snaps for Huffington Post a couple days ago. He talks about the challenges libraries are currently facing.

Support your local library and the library staff not just during National Library Week but 24/7/365. They’re hard working and working harder.

A final note — an excerpt from something Vartan Gregorian wrote in 1999 (complete text here) when he was President of the Carnegie Corporation of New York:

Public libraries in our midst are so much taken for granted that their significance as living institutions is in danger of becoming lost to us. Libraries contain the heritage of humanity, the record of its triumphs and failures and of its intellectual, scientific, and artistic achievements, and its collective memory. Libraries are not only repositories of past human endeavor, they provide tools for learning, understanding, and progress. They are a laboratory of human aspiration and a source of self-renewal, intellectual growth, and hope.

Update: Another why-I-love-libraries Neil Gaiman interview, given in his role as honorary chair of National Library Week.

April 12, 2010

Strangers on a Train – Highsmith/Hitchcock

Filed under: books,movies — Tags: — Towse @ 11:38 pm

Last month book club read THE TALENTED MISS HIGHSMITH by Joan Schenkar because we planned to read a (an?) Highsmith this month.

This month we read STRANGERS ON A TRAIN and tonight we discussed the book =and= watched the Hitchcock adaptation.

Farley Granger as Haines — a tennis star in the film, an architect in the book. Ruth Roman — his love interest (her family connections way different from the book). Robert Walker as Bruno (looking nothing like the Bruno I imagined). Leo G. Carroll (as Roman’s dad and looking very LGC-like). Kasey Rogers (credited as Laura Elliott — as Miriam, the soon-to-be-in-any-way-possible ex-wife). Patricia Hitchcock — as the younger sister of the love interest, a role that did not exist in the book.

Patricia Hitchcock was great. The story was way different from the book. We spent the evening doing a line by line (that didn’t happen! they were eating a hamburger! wait! what about the. …)

Chandler got screen credit but admitted that the final screenplay included almost none of what he wrote.

Highsmith was not happy with the film.

The book is cherce. The movie too. Watch/read both. Or either.

For those with gaydar going WHOOP!WHOOP!WHOOP! who were speculating about Farley Granger. … Read Wiki. You’re vindicated in a way. Granger was bisexual. He had affairs with Ava Gardner, Shelley Winters, & al. but his long-time love was Robert Calhoun.

Wikipedia entry for STRANGERS ON A TRAIN

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