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.sai2000.org  info@sai2000.org  VoIP internet phone: 166.84.191.135 student news groups:  news://166.84.191.133  library catalog:  http://166.84.191.133/m3

 

September, 2007

Vol. 3, No. 9

 

This year, Autumn (also known as Fall in North American English) begins on September 23.  Fall makes the transition from warm to cold weather in the northern hemisphere.  The Eastern United States is famous for the brilliant color of the Autumn foliage [the leaves of a plant] as many leaves turn beautiful colors before dropping from trees.

 

 

New York City Calendar—Some Free Events

 

Concerts at Julliard, Manhattan, and Mannes.  These three world famous conservatories (schools) of music and performing arts resume their free public concerts in September.  Consult the school bulletin boards in the Student and Founders’ Rooms for schedules and directions. 

September 3, Monday (Labor Day), 11am-6pm, Annual Brazilian Day Festival.  One of NYC’s most interesting street festivals.  Live music.  6th Ave, betw. 42nd&56th St. and 46th betw. Madison and 7th Ave. 

September 7, Friday, 7-11 pm, Dance Party, Dance the night away on the Hudson River.  Pier 1 @70th St., Riverside Park,  1,2,3, A trains to 72nd St. and walk west to Riverside Park on the Hudson River. 

September 8, 9, 15, 16, Saturdays and Sundays.  Lincoln Center Autumn Crafts Festival.  Not your usual crafts festival.  Very high-end juried craft from all over the USA outdoors at Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts.   A great show in a great location.  Lincoln Center Plaza, 1 train to 66th St. 1,A,C,D to Columbus Circle/59th St. and walk north on Broadway to W. 63rd St.

September 8, Saturday, 7:30 pm. Musica Bella Orchestra,  All-Bach concert.  Pay-as-you wish donation.  Holy Name Church, 245 Prospect Park West @Prospect Ave., Brooklyn, F train to 15th St./Prospect Park, exit near or at rear of train. 

September 9 and 23, Sundays, 6-9 pm.  Let’s Dance.  Free salsa, swing, and hustle lessons by top instructors from the Soho Dance Studio.  1,2,3, A trains to 72nd St. and walk west to Riverside Park on the Hudson River.

September 16, Sunday, 1-6pm.  Annual West Side County Fair.  An American country fair comes to Manhattan.  Carnival rides and games, music, dancing, sideshow performances, and more!  Riverside Park South between 62nd and 72nd Streets on Hudson River.  1,2,3, A trains to 72nd St. and walk west to Riverside Park on the Hudson River, then south. 

Sunday, September 23, 2 pm.  Vladimir Ashkenazy at Julliard.  Limited free tickets available to be picked up at Julliard Box Office beginning 9/10.  See directions on School bulletin boards. 

September 7 to November 25, Visual Griots of Mali.  Captures the importance of African storytelling with the power of the camera.  World Financial Center (WFC) Courtyard Gallery. [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.]  See map on school bulletin boards. 

 

School Bulletin Boards

Consult the school bulletin boards for more free or low-cost activities and services.  The Spanish-American Institute posts up-to-date information on the school bulletin boards in the Student Room and Founders’ Room (room 13).  Find out about free concerts, ice-skating, swimming pools, kayaking, museums, recreation centers, flu shots, etc. 

 

Back Issues of the Student Club Newsletter

Back issues are available online at the school homepage:  http://www.sai2000.org.  Each issue features something special about an American holiday or about NYC—a neighborhood, a cultural center, an activity, etc.  Want to know more about Hell’s Kitchen/Clinton—the Spanish-American Institute’s “other” neighborhood (April, 2007)?  Free ice-skating (December, 2006)?  The Statue of Liberty (June, 2007)?  The Student Bike Club (August, 2007)?  Send suggestions and comments to:  clubnews@sai2000.org. 

September 3, Labor Day, is a national holiday always celebrated on the first Monday in September.  It is a holiday unlike most others, honoring not historic figures nor events but ordinary working people. 

     The United States changed from an agricultural [farming] economy to an industrial [factory producing] economy in the late 19th Century.  Skilled workers and factory workers began to organize for better working conditions.  They began to demand an eight-hour workday, a secure job, and a future in their trade or job. 

     Some say Labor Day started in September, 1882 when the first Labor Day parade was held in New York City.  20,000 workers marched down Broadway to Union Square carrying banners that read “Labor Creates All Wealth” and “Eight Hours for Work, Eight Hours for Rest, and Eight Hours for Recreation!”

     Today, many American communities celebrate Labor Day with parades such as the one down Fifth Ave in New York City.  Labor Day is also the unofficial end of summer.  For school children, it usually marks the end of the summer holiday.  People go to beaches, have picnics, and enjoy the outdoors during the last long weekend until Columbus Day in October.

 

Some Unusual Occupations

  Rich Man, Poor Man (Nursery Rhyme)

A “nursery rhyme” is a short rhymed poem for children.  Some are centuries old.  How can you tell that this is an American nursery rhyme?

 

Rich man

Poor man

Beggar man

Thief

Doctor

Lawyer

Indian Chief.

 

  The Acrobats by Shel Silverstein.

This is an amusing portrait of an unusual job.  Why does the poet ask the man not to sneeze?

Trapeze

I’ll swing                                 

By my ankles,

She’ll cling to your knees

As you hang by your nose

From a high-up

Trapeze.

But just one thing, please,

As we float through the breeze—

Don’t sneeze.

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 Featured Museum—The Whitney Museum of American Art at Altria, 120 Park Ave. at 42nd St.

The Whitney Museum of American Art at Altria is a free branch museum of the larger (and not free) Whitney.  A short walk from the Spanish-American Institute, it is located in the street-level pedestrian plaza of the Altria office building.  It offers four solo exhibitions of contemporary artists a year. 

  Visit the Sculpture Garden at any time.  The Sculpture Garden is a glass-enclosed atrium [courtyard] with public seating and an espresso bar.  A nice place to sit and relax away from the mid-town hustle and bustle. 

  The museum also produces Performance on 42nd St., an ongoing series of free music, dance, theater, and performance art.  See the school bulletin boards or future issues of the Student Club Newsletter for scheduled events

  Gallery Hours:  11am-6pm, Mon.-Fri. 

  Sculpture Court Hours:  Mon.-Sat., 7:30 am-9:30 pm. 

 

A City of Islands

NYC is divided into 5 boroughs-Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens, Bronx, and Staten Island.  Manhattan and Staten Island are islands.  Queens and Brooklyn are attached to the western tip of Long Island.  The Bronx, part of the mainland, has its own island, City Island, a NYC residential marine community.  Manhattan, as island, has its own island too in the middle of the East River—Roosevelt Island (see August 2007 Student Club Newsletter.