Saturday, July 27, 2019

Old Timers

Monday, July 22, 2019
Message to MS St. Louis from U.S. government on June 3, 1939 -- "Go back to where you came from."
https://www.britannica.com/topic/MS-St-Louis-German-ship
. . .

I attempted to observe the 50th anniversary of the moon landing this weekend more or less the way I witnessed the event itself.  In 1969, I was in my first year as a rookie computer programmer with the newly-formed U.S. arm of a German computer company.  I had some success in that venture, which further diverted me from what had once seemed like the inevitable road to law school, a path that I returned to 30 years later.

I was living in a nasty, tiny studio apartment in Greenwich Village, on Morton Street, the block once home to Elliott Gould, John Belushi, Wally Cox (and his overnight companion Marlon Brando), and the Rosenberg spy ring, none of whom of my acquaintance.  It was furnished with a gateleg table and two leather chairs that I took from my Uncle Jimmy's waiting room when he closed his medical practice.  There was a built-in chest of drawers and a crudely-fashioned Murphy bed, which covered the remaining floor space when opened.  There was a window air conditioner that operated so poorly that I stayed in my employer's sleek new office space late at night in warm weather, which got me promoted because my productivity outstripped my co-workers, who had a comfortable place to go home to.

I was already building my record collection and owned a decent stereo system.  But, I did not own a television set.  In fact, I never owned a television set as an unmarried man, for whatever that's worth.  The anticipated moon landing was big and I wasn't going to miss it, just as I took care to be parked in front of a television set 25 years later in the Manchester Pub, 920 Second Avenue, now closed, on June 14, 1994, when the New York Rangers won the Stanley Cup for the first time in 54 years.  

For the moon landing, I did not require the kindness of strangers, because my colleague Altie D. invited me to watch it at her family's apartment.  I drove my Adrian Cruttwell-Vaughn Blue Volkswagen Beetle (a private joke too good to ignore) to Brooklyn, stopping at a delicatessen to buy corned beef sandwiches and fixings to fuel us through time and space.  Okay, I forgot what delicatessen, so sue me.

By the way, my relationship with Altie was thoroughly respectable, I think because of her wise caution.  In any case, we watched the historic event then and yesterday I tracked her down after about 48 years, living in Florida, married, but retaining her distinctive maiden name (can we still use that term?) as her middle name.  I called in the morning, in the afternoon and in the evening without speaking to her.  I finally left voicemail with sufficient detail to convince a  normally skeptical person of my identity and my sanity.

By bedtime Sunday, my hope to recreate in conversation that historic evening together went unrealized.
. . .

We did have a successful reunion today, but it represented a different time and place.  In 2013, madam and I took a trip to Greece, Bulgaria and Macedonia, under the expert guidance of Marcia Haddad Ikonomopoulos, president of the Association of Friends of Greek Jewry.

Among our interesting fellow travelers was Dr. Laura, born in Salonika, hidden in a basement from the Nazis during WWII.  Now retired from her medical career, she recently moved from the suburbs to the building next door to Palazzo di Gotthelf and we were happy to accept her lunch invitation.  Joining us was Sharon S., another traveling companion, who knows as least as many languages as Pete Buttigieg.  We stuck to English, though, and had a wonderful time.

Tuesday, July 24, 2019
A Harvard professor examined the prospect of free college tuition, proposed by several Democratic presidential candidates, in the New York Times this weekend.
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/07/19/business/tuition-free-college.html

However, it seems that the professor never heard of the "proletarian Harvard" a/k/a CCNY.  https://nypost.com/2009/04/19/free-for-all-27/

From 1847 until 1976, City College of New York, followed by its sister colleges as they emerged, charged no tuition, while providing an unmatched vehicle for upward mobility for tens of thousands of kids, present company included.  Its graduates' have a superlative legacy of Nobel Prizes, Ph.D.s, inventions, philanthropy and cultural achievements, present company excluded.  Yet, this information seems not to have reached the Harvard Harvard; the good professor omitted it entirely from his essay.
. . .

Two weeks ago, I got off the #7 train at 74th Street-Broadway (Jackson Heights), and found myself at the intersection of Tibet, Burma, Nepal, Pakistan and India.  Today, I continued to the end of the line, Main Street-Flushing, and arrived at downtown China.  I was trying to address one of the very few fair criticisms levelled at me, my failure to explore Flushing's Chinatown.  I went to the highly-reputed White Bear, 135-02 Roosevelt Avenue, actually around the corner on Prince Street.  It is fair to call it a hole in the wall.  Six two-tops are squeezed in the small place, leaving room for no more than two skinny people to order at the counter.

Noted for its wontons in hot sauce (12 for $7), almost nothing else on White Bear's limited menu was available.  However, all the very youthful looking Chinese customers were eating the wontons in hot sauce.  Once I dug in, I understood why.  They were delicious and spicy, but they looked fiercer than they tasted.  Fortunately, plastic forks replace chopsticks, because the Szechuan pepper oil bathing the wontons was as slippery as WD-40. 

If I were heading right back to the subway, lunch would have been over.  But, I was on a mission and I needed more fuel.  Of the many choices in the vicinity, I stopped at BoneMan Fried Chicken a/k/a Secret Fried Chicken, 135-45 Roosevelt Avenue.  I ordered chicken strips ($7.99), chicken wings the only other choice.  Since BoneMan was only a counter facing the sidewalk, I ate leaning on a newspaper dispenser.  A table and chair would not have improved the experience.  The breaded coating was not crisp and the white meat within was about 15 seconds removed from being undercooked. 

I did not clean my plate, a rare event, and headed down Roosevelt Avenue to Citi Field, one mile away, where the New York Mets allegedly play baseball, to complete my business.

Wednesday, July 24, 2019
Last night, I tried again to reach my former colleague Altie, leaving a voicemail message, promising that it would be my last.  I don't want to appear to be a stalker; I'm just interested in what has transpired for this very nice person over the decades.
. . .

Let's get this straight.  Republicans in the White House and Congress insist that the Mueller Report was the product of "13 [or 18] Angry Democrats."  http://www.trumptwitterarchive.com/archive/angry%20democrats 

Yet, they assert that it demonstrated no collusion, no obstruction and was "a total victory for the president.”   

We spent several hours at the Auschwitz exhibit at the Museum of Jewish Heritage, 36 Battery Place, with cousins Barbara and Bernie.  I have been to the actual site and also visited major Holocaust museums and memorials here and abroad.  Beyond just conveying information, they serve as a mirror for self-reflection and a prism to see the world today, especially today.  In fact, the exhibit is titled "Auschwitz.  Not Long Ago.  Not Far Away."  You don't need me to tell you more about it.

We took a baby step to restoring our peace of mind by going to Shanghai 21, 21 Mott Street, for an early dinner.  The four of us got stuffed with 2 scallion pancakes ($3.75 each), cold noodles with sesame sauce ($5.75), eggplant with garlic sauce ($12.25) and tangerine beef ($17.50).  It took a 25% tip for us to reach $60.   

After our meal, we walked through Chinatown and Little Italy to MO Gelato, 178 Mulberry Street, which Barbara correctly recalled had chocolate sorbet.  MO offers small ($4.75), medium ($6.75) and large cups ($7.75).  I had a medium cup with two scoops, Monella -- Amarena cherry, roasted almonds & hazelnuts, and Delirium -- "Creamy cookie with chocolate fondue."  It is widely understood that a good Chinese meal ends with ice cream.

Thursday, July 25, 2019
My million dollar mouth was restored today at Montefiore Medical Center.  You prosthodontistry fans out there might remember that the errant tooth was the same one that fell out 6 years ago in Greece, Bulgaria and Macedonia, waiting for me to cross a border to fall out again. 

Friday, July 26, 2019
News from the generation gap:
I was chatting with a new neighbor this morning when he noticed that I was wearing a T-shirt celebrating an event at Cardozo Law School.  Did your child or grandchild go to Cardozo, he asked.  "No, I did."

Saturday, July 20, 2019

Into the Woods 2019

Monday, July 15, 2019
As it happened, the Upper West Side’s Power Couple left for a week in the Berkshires midday Saturday and were sitting surrounded by second and third generation family members in a lovely house outside Great Barrington when the lights went out in Manhattan.  We heard about it first from my brother who knew where we had gone, but we eventually got inquiries from others near and far concerned about our ability to navigate in the dark.  

Earlier in the afternoon, we had lunch at Donaji Mexican Restaurant, 389 Stockbridge Road, Great Barrington, offering very good food with good service in a nondescript setting.  I started with a frozen mango margarita ($12), delicious but not particularly intoxicating.  It went well with the complimentary tortilla chips and salsa that came to the table immediately.  I ate enchiladas verdes filled with shredded beef in a green tomatillo sauce, plus rice and beans, a bargain at $18.

Like the famous chicken, we only had to cross the road to get to one of the area’s major supermarkets to purchase sufficient potato chips, cookies and diet soda to last for the week in our rented house.
. . .

My semi-addiction to diet soda is no secret, but it doesn’t preclude my simultaneous devotion to seltzer, an increasingly “hot" drink, if you’ll pardon the expression.  https://www.nytimes.com/2019/07/13/style/seltzer-sparkling-water-bubble.html

In fact, I was guzzling seltzer as a wee tot in Brooklyn even before diet soda hit the market in 1952, No-Cal Ginger Ale.  https://culinarylore.com/drinks:what-was-the-first-diet-soda/

Each week, the seltzer man delivered a wooden crate of thick glass siphons, blue or clear, to our home, removing the empties.  Once a job more common than reality TV star, we may be down to our last seltzer man.
. . .

Had we stayed in the Holy Land this weekend and survived the blackout, we might have had brunch in one of the nine places recommended by the New York Times.  

When I read that “[t]here’s no finer place to eat dim sum in New York than Bamboo Garden in Sunset Park, Brooklyn,” I sent out an all points bulletin to the usual suspects arranging a lunch in a couple of weeks, report to follow.
. . .

Saturday’s newspaper carried the headline "Sanders Struggles to Connect, but Refuses to Run on Personality."  Interesting, but more interesting was the headline that appeared over the exact same article on-line "Why Sanders Wanted His Meeting With a Rabbi Kept Secret.”  Discuss.

Tuesday, July 16, 2019
The usually prescient Nate Cohn provides an interesting analysis of prospective voter turnout in the 2020 presidential election.  

In brief, he says, on the one hand, on the other hand.  You may be comforted or agitated as you choose.
. . .

A few of us had lunch in Great Barrington, which necessitated a stop at Soco Creamery, 5 Railroad Street.  I had a cup with peanut butter mudslide (peanut butter ice cream, fudge swirl and crumbled chocolate cookies) and “Dirty Chocolate” (dark chocolate, darker chocolate and milk chocolate) ($5.35).
. . .

The male segment of our clan went to a baseball game tonight, an all-star game at Wahconah Field, Pittsfield, which has stood since 1919 on a site where baseball has been played since 1892.  It is currently home of the Pittsfield Suns, a member of the Futures Collegiate Baseball League.  At first, you wonder about the connection between the sun and Pittsfield, Massachusetts, far removed from Phoenix or Miami in almost every regard.  Once seated, though, you observe that the line from the batter’s box to the pitcher’s mound runs due west.  In summer, the height of the baseball season, all afternoon through sundown, the batter is blinded by the direct rays of the sun coming from above and behind the pitcher.  Of course, this disability applies to both sides, but the pitchers of the Pittsfield Suns have this advantage in all home games, half their season.  As long as they can get the ball anywhere near the plate, this should put them in championship contention year after year.        
Wednesday, July 17, 2019
As has become the custom during our one-week family vacation, I hired a chef to cook a nice meal for us.  It was Austin Banach again, a talented young man who has more than satisfied us before (banachaustin@gmail.com).  He started the adult meal with a bruschetta, diced tomatoes and peaches lightly dressed in olive oil, with a glob of fresh burrata on the side.  "Burrata is a fresh Italian cow milk cheese made from mozzarella and cream," can you imagine?  What followed was a fabulous corn soup, more a puree than a chowder, with three simple ingredients -- corn, butter and cream.  The main course was cod baked with mustard and herbs.  Asparagus in tarragon dressing and black rice noodles in sesame vinaigrette were served with it.  A very thick chocolate pudding completed this outstanding meal.  Sorry you missed it.

Thursday, July 18, 2019
We had lunch at The Marketplace Cafe, 53 North Street, Pittsfield, a funky place that all three of our generations can recommend for its sandwiches, quiche and salads.  It is also convenient to the Berkshire Museum, 39 South Street, currently exhibiting models of Leonardo da Vinci's brilliant designs.  
. . .

We ended our formal vacationing tonight by attending Inside/Out, a free outdoor dance performance regularly held at Jacob's Pillow.  I have borrowed this photograph to give you a feel for the beautiful setting.

https://www.jacobspillow.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/HERO_IO-FelipeGalganniAndCompany_2018cDuggan_031.jpg 
We saw the Bombshell Dance Project, a female (if I am allowed) group, presenting Like a Girl, in which "the company reimagines the phrase 'fight like a girl' through contrasts in athleticism and power dynamics."  Okay, if they say so. 
 
Friday, July 19, 2019
One might think that the Holy Land was carpeted with temples, shrines, churches, synagogues, mosques and yoga studios.  In fact, we seem to be the favored location for chain drug stores and bank branches.  So, I was surprised to read that "[s]ince 2009, the number of commercial bank and thrift branches [nationally] has shrunk nearly 10 percent, or just over 1 percent per year."

But, the Upper West Side is often out of step with the rest of the country.  Within 2/10 of a mile of Palazzo di Gotthelf, you find 3 branches of Chase Bank, 2 Citibank, 1 HSBC, 1 TD Bank, 1 Bank of America, 1 Capital One Bank and 1 Santander Bank ATM for petty cash transactions.  Apparently, we limousine liberals also like liquidity.

Saturday, July 13, 2019

Is the Jared Suite Available for the Weekend?

Monday, July 8, 2019
I haven't read Mad magazine for decades, but I was unhappy to learn that it was ceasing publication.  It was part of my youth and, no doubt, contributed to my skeptical and ironic view of human behavior.  

The newspaper article suggested that the publication "would seem to be an awkward fit in the blockbuster-centric media universe of 2019."  A careful reading of the story disclosed how Mad's fate was sealed.  "Last year, Mad moved from its New York home to Burbank, Calif."  It's well known that Burbank is an antidote for humor.
. . .

The New York Times summarizes "Which States Are the Safest?"  https://www.nytimes.com/2019/07/04/realestate/which-states-are-the-safest.html

Determining factors include crime, highway safety, and environmental threats.  I didn't find the list surprising, Minnesota at the top, Mississippi at the bottom.  I followed up, though, and found that 7 of the safest 10 states voted for Hillary Clinton in 2016, while all 10 of the least safe voted for the stable genius occupying the White House.  
. . .

If you are concerned about safety, financial safety, that is, you might consider an annuity.  If you need prodding, you might be influenced by knowledge that the Alliance for Lifetime Income, a trade association that promotes the sale of annuities, is underwriting the current Rolling Stones tour.  https://www.nytimes.com/2019/07/01/business/rolling-stones-social-security-retirement.html

I saw the Rolling Stones twice in person, Voodoo Lounge in 1994 and Bridges to Babylon in 1997, well before either they or I needed an annuity.  The next time around, I imagine that Depends and Ensure might vie for sponsorship rights.
. . .

I have a suggestion if you find the cost and complexity of arranging a tour of South Asia daunting.  Take the 7, E, F, M or R train to the Roosevelt Av-Jackson Heights-74 St station.  Within a radius of one block, you will find restaurants serving the food of Nepal, Tibet, India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, and Thailand, amid sari stores, mobile phone merchants, jewelry stores and Asian grocers.  For variety, you can also try Latin American cuisines and there is a Wendy's with a clean bathroom.

One word of caution -- even using GPS and noting the exact address, many desired destinations seem to be hiding in plain sight.  It took me 10 minutes to find the entrance to Namaste Tashi Delek, 37-66 74thStreet, a Nepali restaurant favorably discussed in the New York Times last week.  The restaurant is on two levels, but the ground floor area is even harder to find than the basement space.  Many subway platforms are more attractive than the dark, grungy room where I sat.

I had a lunch special ($8), 4 fried beef momos a/k/a dumplings and stir-fried noodles (between mei fun and lo mein) with beef.  It was undistinguished.  The best deal was a bulky samosa for $1, filled with curried shredded beef, potatoes and peas.  Two of those and your favorite diet soda would make a good lunch. 

I was pleasantly diverted by meeting a group of 15 North Carolina Christian teenagers, here to pray for the heathens.  I gave them some advice on bible study: Stick to the Original Testament.

Tuesday, July 9, 2019
After taking a virtual tour of South Asia yesterday, I came back to earth with the Boyz Club at Shanghai Asian Cuisine, 14A Elizabeth Street, at lunch today.  We five dug into 2 orders of soup buns (6 pieces for $6.25), 2 scallion pancakes ($3.75), cold sesame noodles ($5.50), hand ripped chicken salad ($8.25), tangerine beef ($17.25), crispy whole yellow fish with sweet and sour sauce ($19.75) and a couple of bowls of white rice to fill in the crevices.  How easy it is to make old men happy.

Wednesday, July 10, 2019
You lose some, you win some.  I started the day by losing a tooth, actually a tooth that had been installed 6 years ago, not one that was original factory equipment.  In 2013,  I received a million-dollar mouth, or something approximately that expensive, at the talented hands of a team of oral surgeons and prosthodontists at Montefiore Medical Center in the Bronx.  This morning, one tooth apparently got bored with my mouth and dropped out of its own volition.  Fortunately, I was not eating or drinking or even swallowing at the time, so I captured the errant chiclet and headed to the Bronx.

On the way to the subway station, I stopped at Trader Joe's, 2073 Broadway, to be awarded my winnings.  Trader Joe's has been in the Holy Land about 10 years, first appearing on 14th Street, near Union Square, drawing long lines at all hours, resulting to a great degree from being surrounded by NYU student housing.  The next one opened about 7 years ago, conveniently situated between the Palazzo di Gotthelf and the 72nd Street subway station. 

I shop there regularly, although you have to watch out for impossibly busy times.  Trader Joe's attempts to be consumer-friendly, health-friendly and eco-friendly.  It gave up plastic bags earlier this year.  While other stores refund 5¢ or 10¢ directly for those bringing their own shopping bags, Trader Joe's tries to encourage recycling with a voluntary lottery for those using their own bag, my normal custom.  When asked, you usually have to leave your name and telephone number with a cashier.  So, finally, after hundreds of shots, I hit it.  My name was pulled and I won a Trader Joe's reusable shopping bag and a $25 gift card, the equivalent of 250 10¢ refunds, unadjusted for inflation, so I came out okay. 

Thursday, July 11, 2019
The president had a rare victory in court yesterday when the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit found that the state of Maryland and the District of Columbia had no legal standing to sue the president for violating the Constitution's emoluments clauses by receiving income from a hotel near the White House, popular with foreign visitors, diplomats, lobbyists and other buyers and sellers of influence.  Federal officeholders are generally prohibited from receiving any gift, payment, or other thing of value from a foreign state or its rulers, officers, or representatives.

The court's ruling illustrates an elusive issue that often divides lawyers from ordinary human beings -- standing.  Article III, Section 2, Clause 1 of the Constitution extends federal judicial review to a case or controversy, barring advisory opinions or generalized resolutions.  With some exceptions, a plaintiff must have actually and personally suffered injury or harm that is fairly traceable to the defendant's actions.  So, what harm did Maryland and/or the District of Columbia experience by the operation of a garish hotel on Pennsylvania Avenue?  The court dismissed the case without examining evidence of possible unconstitutional enrichment, because it held that the plaintiffs lacked standing, they had no case or controversy.  
  
Ubi jus ibi remedium is a classic common law axiom, "For every wrong, the law provides a remedy," but not this time it seems.  Before you burst a blood vessel, however, wait for a decision in a similar case brought by members of Congress in the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals.  Might federal legislators, who swear to "support and defend the Constitution of the United States," have standing to assert a violation of the emoluments clauses?

Saturday, July 6, 2019

Red, White and Jews

Monday, July 1, 2019
While the Democratic presidential candidates squabble over Medicare For All, let us not forget that the Republicans long stood as the party of Medicare For None.  https://thinkprogress.org/flashback-republicans-opposed-medicare-in-1960s-by-warning-of-rationing-socialized-medicine-fad860d68e5c/
. . .

The New York Times instructs us that, even as the need for affordable housing for one or two-person households increases, the market is answering with larger, more expensive homes.  https://www.nytimes.com/2019/06/27/realestate/not-enough-homes-and-the-wrong-kind.html

While "[t]he share of new homes with four or more bedrooms has doubled over 30 years," large households are decreasing and small ones are increasing. 
. . .

Our newspaper of record has also conveniently compiled a list of the 50 best memoirs of the last 50 years.  https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2019/06/26/books/best-memoirs.html

It's a strong collection, including Barack Obama's Dreams From My Father.  Will the 45th president eventually write My Father Was Born In Germany?

Tuesday, July 2, 2019
The U.S.'s withdrawal from the Iran nuclear deal has only seemed to have made Iran more dangerous, which the pact was intended to prevent in the first place.  https://www.nytimes.com/2019/07/01/world/middleeast/iran-uranium-enrichment-limit.html


His friend in the White House is apparently aiming to realize Bibi Netanyahu's dream of Iran as an existential threat to Israel.

Wednesday, July 3, 2019
I have always been more interested in 1787 than 1776, the creation of the US Constitution over the Declaration of Independence, because the Constitution continues to shape our institutions and policies, while the Declaration remains purely aspirational, contending that "all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness."  The Constitutional Convention drained these sentiments from the foundation of the new republic, accommodating slaveholders at almost every turn, inhibiting democracy to this day.  
 
Beside the document itself, the Betsy Ross flag, red and white stripes and a blue square with 13 white stars in a circle, is the most notable symbol of the revolutionary period, emerging in 1777.  Now, Nike has cancelled a new sneaker with this image, because "it could unintentionally offend and detract from the nation’s patriotic holiday.”  It was observed that "the Betsy Ross flag had been co-opted by groups espousing racist ideologies." 

So, we allow the bad guys to shape the public forum, corrupt our history and deny us choices right down to our feet.  Are our progressive values so fragile that they wither in the face of junior grade Scheiße ausbreiten?  We are engaged in a competition of ideas, almost as important as the athletic competitions Nike so heavily invests in.  Woman up, Nike.
. . .

The New York Times sought 10 distinctive ice creams for this holiday. 
 
The people doing the scooping were often as interesting and unusual as their flavors.  They or their parents came from Iran, Cuba, Thailand, Trinidad, Syria, Philippines, Peru, India, Mexico, Pakistan, and the Dutch Antilles.  The only "local" is Hawaiian.  Not only do they share foreignness, none feature vanilla.
. . .

The Chinese restaurant that Michael Ratner and I were headed for was temporarily closed at lunchtime, so we went to the seventh and newest location of Tacombi, 377 Amsterdam Avenue, a casual Mexican joint, that replaced a pretentious dessert café.  The only hangover from the previous, ill-conceived venture is too much floor space, making it a challenge to appear busy with even a semi-large crowd.  Tacombi deserves a crowd, offering a simple menu of mostly modestly-priced food -- 4 entradas (appetizers or sides), 13 tacos (too Americanized to warrant italics), 4 quesadillas, and beverages, hard and soft.
 
We started with some good guacamole ($11.95), a large portion accompanied by excellent tortilla chips (cf. tacos supra).  It was the most expensive item on the menu, pricey mainly because of its recent popularity like salted caramel confections and flatbreads.  We then dug into 6 different tacos -- Al Pastor ($3.95, marinated Heritage pork), Pollo Yucateco ($3.95, marinated chicken), 
Acapulco Shrimp ($5.95, seared shrimp), Barbacoa ($4.49, Angus beef shoulder), Baja Crispy Fish ($5.95, beer-battered Atlantic haddock), Carnitas ($3.95, slow-roasted Heritage pork).  Each was served on 4 1/2" round, soft tortilla and deserved a repeat performance.  Not that we had any room to continue at that point.

Thursday,  July 4, 2019
By coincidence, madam and I joined Diane and Irwin for dinner at Tri Dim Shanghai, 1378 Third Avenue, the original location of the new West Side branch at 467 Columbus Avenue that was closed to Michael and I yesterday.  This Tri Dim is a "nice" Chinese restaurant, white tablecloths, waiters enrolled at NYU graduate school, and a full bar (which we availed ourselves of).  Most importantly, the (sometimes overpriced) food is very good although located in a neighborhood that often puts decor over cuisine.

Irwin and I concentrated on BBQ spare ribs ($12), cold sesame noodles ($7), steamed shrimp dumplings (4 for $8), and shredded crispy duck wrapped in 4 pancakes with chive threads and hoisin sauce ($26).  The women shared tri mushroom bok choy ($12) and fillet of sole in rice wine ($21); Diane also nibbled on curry prawns ($24).  By the way, none of their food was immune from our intrusions. 

"Forget it, Jake.  It's Chinatown."  I thought that I'd throw that in for no reason.


Friday, July 5, 2019
My brother clarified the president's misstatement at yesterday's salute to Amerika.  When he said that George Washington's  Continental Army "took over the airports," he meant to say that it seized the radio stations.  
. . .
  
Before the Internet, you would never be able to determine "the States With the Most (and Least) 'Seinfeld' Fans." 
https://www.cheatsheet.com/entertainment/these-are-the-states-with-the-most-and-least-seinfeld-fans.html/

Slicing and dicing data from Google, we now know that basically the Northeast is opposite the Old South in admiration for Jerry et alia.  Most surprising was Utah's affinity for the show, with its 3 out of 4 faux-Gentiles inhabiting Manhattan's Upper West Side.  While somewhat attenuated, I suggest you consider the Mormon belief that America's Indians were the ten lost tribes of Israel.  https://www.bibleodyssey.org/en/places/related-articles/mormon-scripture-and-the-lost-tribes-of-israel

We all know that Manhattan Island was once populated by Indian tribes, now replaced to a large extent by Jews, creating a profound spiritual link to the Mormons.