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

May, 2008

Vol. 4, No. 5

 “April showers bring May flowers.”  This year, New York City had enough rain and cool weather in April to help the City bloom with “May flowers.” New York City begins to be an outdoor city in May with lots of free activities. 

 

Free May Events

 

  May Conservatory Concerts.  New York City is home to three world famous music schools (conservatories), Julliard, Mannes, and Manhattan School of Music. Concerts end in May for the school year.  Check the School bulletin boards for concert schedules and directions. Don’t miss the Manhattan School of Music’s “Salute to American Musical Theater” (see below). 

 

  Bronx Museum First Fridays!  May 2, 6-10pm, live bands and DJs.  D or B to 167 St./Grand Concourse, exit rear of station and walk south along Grand Concourse 2 blocks

 

 

 Brooklyn Museum First Saturdays. May 3, Sat, 5-11pm.  Free art, music, dancing, etc.   www.brooklynmuseum.org/visit/first_saturdays.php.  2, 3 trains to Eastern Parkway/Brooklyn Museum at Museum entrance.

 

  Lukeman Sings Newman @ South Street Seaport.  May 8, Thurs., 7pm.  May 9, Fri. 7&11pm.  Free admission but reserve early to avoid disappointment at:   info@dimaproductions.com.  219 Water St. at Beekman St.  2 or 3 trains to Park Place or Wall St. and walk east to the East River.  See map on bottom right of second page. 

 

 Jazz Museum of Harlem Jazz Concerts, May 6, 13, 20, 27 (7-8:30 pm).  May 8, 16, and 29 (6:30-8:30pm).  Free, reservations (212)348-8300.  Harlem School of the Arts, 645 St. Nicholas Ave. near 141st  St.  A,B,C,D to 145th St.

 

  Salute to American Musical Theater, May 15-17, Fri-Sun, 7:30 pm.  John Borden Theater, Manhattan School of Music.  1 train to 116th St., walk north on Broadway to 122nd St. 

 

  Dance Parade. Sat. May 17, 1pm on.  Parade starts at W. 32nd St. between 5th Ave. and Broadway, proceeds to Union Square and E. 13th St., then turns right onto 5th Ave. to Washington Square Park for performances and DJs. 

 

  Fleet Week starts May 21.  Navy sailors from all over the world will visit NYC, including Times Square.  .

 

  Largest Dog House in the World in Times Square @43rd St. Weds, May 21. 

 

  Lower East Side Festival of the Arts, May 23-25, Fri-Sun 6pm, showcasing performers, musicians, dancers, etc. @ Theater for a New City, 155 1st Ave.  Street festival Sat. on E. 10th St. from 10-6. 

 

  Arbiters of Style:  Women at the Forefront of Fashion from the 18th Century to today.  Starts May 21.  Fashion Institute of Technology Museum, Tu.-Fr, noon to 8pm and Sa. 10am-5pm.  Seventh Ave. at 27th St.

 

 Washington Square Outdoor Art Show, May 24-26.  Over 200 artists exhibit around Washington Square in Greenwich Village.  A,B,C,D,F to West 4th St and walk east to 5th Ave., 6 to Astor Place and walk west to 5th Ave.  

 

 

 

 

 

May Day, May 1st:  May Day, the 1st of May, is celebrated around the world.  It means something different in different countries.  In some countries like the USA, it is not an official holiday but it celebrates spring and the coming of summer.  In others, it is a celebration of workers. 

 

Mother’s Day, May 11:  Most cultures also honor their mothers on special days.  Mother’s Day may have emerged from ancient festivals dedicated to mother goddesses.  In the United States, families celebrate Mother’s Day by giving their mothers flowers, cards, and/or gifts.  (Fathers will have their day too this year on June 15.)

 

Memorial Day, May 26:  In the United States, Memorial Day honors those who died for this country in war.  Memorial Day began in 1865 to mark the end of the Civil War between the North and South.  It is often celebrated with parades and visits to a cemetery to honor and remember servicemen and women (people who served in the military).

      The following poems were written after World War I, a terrible bloody war lasting from 1914-1918.  The fighting took place primarily between the Allies (the US, Britain, France, Russia, etc.) and the Central Powers (Germany and Austria-Hungary).  At the time, it was known as the “war to end all wars.”  Sadly, it was not. 

 

Grass, by Carl Sandburg (1918)

PILE  the bodies high at Austerliz* and Waterloo*

Shovel them under and let me work—

I am the grass; I cover all.

 

Pile them high at Gettysburg*

And pile them high at Ypres* and Verdun*.

Shovel them under and let me work.

Two years, ten years, and passengers ask the conductor:

What place is this?

Where are we now?

 

I am the grass. Let me work.

*Famous battlefields with terrible numbers of deaths--Austerlitz and Waterloo from the early 19th Century Napoleonic Wars, Gettysburg from the American mid-19th Century Civil War, and Ypres and Verdun from World War I.

 

 

In Flanders Field, by John McCrae (d. 1918), Canadian World War I doctor

Û(The poem continues, as follows--)Þ

 

That mark our place; and in the sky

The larks*still bravely singing, fly

Scarce heard amid the guns below.

 

We are the Dead. Short days ago

We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow,

Loved and were loved, and now we lie

In Flanders* fields     . . . .

 

*”Larks” are a kind of songbird. “Flanders” is the general name for parts of Northern Europe that today belong to France, Belgium, and Holland.  Flanders contained some of the bloodiest battlefields of World War I.

 

Map of Lower Manhattan

South St. Seaport on East River