Spanish-American Institute

Student Club Newsletter

215 West 43 Street Times Square Manhattan, New York 10036-3913

voice: 212.840.7111 fax: 212.719.5922  www.sai.nyc  info@sai.nyc  VoIP internet phone: 166.84.191.135 student news groups:  news://166.84.191.133  library catalog:  http://166.84.191.133/m3

February, 2008

Vol. 4, No. 2

 

Presidents’ Day, February 18

George Washington  Presidents’ Day celebrates the birthdays of two great American Presidents, George Washington (on the left) and Abraham Lincoln (on the right).   Washington led the 13 American colonies during the Revolutionary War in their fight for independence from Britain [England].  He refused to accept the title of King from the grateful former American colonies.  Elected the first American President in 1789 and again in 1792, he refused a third term, saying that a longer rule would give one man too much power. 

  Washington helped shape a form of government new in human history through the writing of the US Constitution and the idea of an elected president.  The Constitution provides for a representative government characterized by checks and balances among three branches of government—the Executive branch (President), the Legislative branch (Congress), and the Judicial branch (judges and courts).    

  Lincoln, the 16th President, served from 1861-1864.  He was re-elected but assassinated in 1865.  Lincoln led the United States through the Civil War, often called the War Between the States.  The more agricultural Southern states wanted to keep slavery.  The more industrial Northern states and Lincoln wanted to abolish [do away with] slavery.  The Civil War started when the Southern states seceded [left the Union, left the United States to establish their own government]. 

  In 1862, Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation freeing slaves.  On the bloody battlefield of Gettysburg that year, he gave the following short but powerful Gettysburg Address. 

 

Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address

  Fourscore and seven [87] years ago our fathers brought forth, upon this continent, a new nation, conceived in liberty and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal.

     Now we are engaged in a great civil war, testing whether that nation, or any nation so conceived and so dedicated, can long endure. We are met on a great battlefield of that war. We have come to dedicate a portion of it, as a final resting place for those who died here, that the nation might live. This we may, in all propriety [correct behavior] do. But in a larger sense, we cannot dedicate, we cannot consecrate [to set aside as holy or sacred], we cannot hallow [to make sacred], this ground. The brave men, living and dead, who struggled here, have hallowed it, far above our poor power to add or detract. The world will little note, nor long remember what we say here; while it can never forget what they did here.

     It is rather for us the living, we here be dedicated to the great task remaining before us--that from these honored dead we take increased devotion to that cause for which they here gave the last full measure of devotion--that we here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain, that this nation shall have a new birth of freedom, and that government of the people, by the people, for the people shall not perish from the earth.   

 

Valentine’s Day, February 14

 US Americans celebrate Valentine’s Day by giving  flowers, candy, and cards to those they love.  No one really knows the origins of Valentine’s Day.  It is often associated with Cupid.  In Roman myth, Cupid is the son of Venus, the goddess of love.  In Greek legend, he is a naughty boy who shoots both gods and humans through the heart with arrows, making them fall in love (usually against their will).      

Leap Year:  Why February 2008 Ends on the 29th

  Every four years, February ends on the 29th instead of the 28th.   The month has an extra day and the year has 366 instead of 365 days.  American children often recite the following old English nursery rhyme to help them remember the number of days in a month: 

Thirty days hath [old form of “has”] September,
April, June and November;
 February has twenty-eight alone
All the rest have thirty-one
Except in Leap Year, that's the time
When February's Days are twenty-nine

  Gentlemen, beware!  An old Scottish and English tradition says that women may ask men to marry them on Feb. 29 during a leap year. 

February is Black History Month

In February, the nation pays tribute to  the contributions made by African-Americans to this country’s history, culture, and development. 

 

February in New YorkFor Free  Check out the Spanish-American Institute Student Club Bulletin Boards in the Student Room and Special Events Center (room 13) for more information about free or low-cost events and activities like museums, concerts, flu shots, gyms, etc. 

  Museum at FIT (Fashion Institute of Technology). 

Like fashion?  Visit the free Museum at FIT to view formal exhibits of famous designers. Tues-Fri. noon-5 pm, Sat. 10-5pm.  7th Ave. @27th St.  Walk from the Spanish-American Institute or take 1,C,E,F,V,N,R trains to 23rd or 28th St. stops.   

  Brooklyn Museum Target  First Saturdays, Sat. Feb. 2, Mar. 1, Apr. 5, etc., 5-11pm.  Free art, music, dancing, entertainment, etc.  First Saturday of every month. More info.@ www.brooklynmuseum.org/visit/first_saturdays.php.  2,3 trains to Eastern Parkway/Brooklyn Museum at  Museum entrance. 

  Jazz of Duke Ellington at Harlem School of the Arts (HSA), Tuesdays Feb. 5, 12, & 19, 7-8:30pm.  HSA is near 141st St. next to the St. James Presbyterian Church.  A,B,C,D to 145th St. and St. Nicholas Ave,; walk south towards 141st. St.

  Where is Home? Chinese in America . . ., Museum of Chinese in the Americas. Tues. to Sun., 12-6pm.  $1 students, free Fridays.  Corner of Mulberry and Bayard St. across from Columbus Park (see map below). 

 

Art of William Steig, to March 16, Jewish Museum. View the work of the “King of Cartoons” and author of Shrek.  Free Saturdays 11am-5:45pm. 5th Ave. @92nd St.  6 train to 103rd St.

 

Chinese Lunar New Year Market,  Sat. Feb. 2 & Sun. Feb.3, 12-5pm.  Arts, crafts, and performances in celebration of the Chinese LionNew Year. Columbus Park, 70 Mulberry St. between Bayard and Worth (see lower middle of map below) (N/R/Q/W/J/M/Z/6 trains to Canal St.)

  Chinese New Year Parade, Fireworks, and Festival, Sun. Feb. 10, 1-5 pm.  Parade starts at Mott and Hester Streets and winds its way through every Chinatown street.  View the famous Lion and Dragon dancers, acrobats, martial artists, and other entertainers.  (See Chinatown map below.)

  Sword Dancers at Museum of the City of New York, Sat. Feb. 16, 1&3 pm.  Pay what you wish admissions.  5th Ave. @103rd St., 6 train to 103rd and walk west. 

  Pathmark Gospel Choir (National) Competition, Sat. Feb. 16, 10am-5pm., Winter Garden at World Financial Center (WFC) on Battery Park Side at the Hudson River. Gospel music to help celebrate Black History Month.   See map for WFC on school bulletin boards.  Any train  to lower Manhattan:  A, C, J, M, Z, 2, 3, 4 or 5 to Fulton Street/Broadway-Nassau: Exit onto Fulton Street and walk west to Church St.; turn right and walk to Vesey St.; turn left and continue across West St. to the WFC. E to World Trade Center:  Exit onto Church Street and walk north to Vesey St.; turn left and continue across West St. to the WFC. R or W to City Hall:  Exit onto Broadway and walk south to Vesey St.; turn right and continue to the WFC. 1 to Rector Street:  Exit onto Greenwich Street and walk north to Liberty St.; turn left and continue to the WFC.

 

Chinatown:  A Bit of the Far East on Manhattan’s Far East Side photo from www.chinatown-online.com - New York City  

  Explore Chinatown, located in one of the oldest and most unique and lively NYC neighborhoods.  Manhattan’s Chinatown is the largest in the Western Hemisphere, home to thousands of Chinese-Americans and recently arrived Chinese immigrants. 

  A good place to start is south of Canal St. (runs east to west on map, below) at Mott Street and Canal (about lower middle of the map). You will pass Chinese shops, restaurants, and the Eastern States Buddhist Temple of America pictured above. N,R,Q,W,J,M,Z,6 trains to Canal Street.