Category Archives: Thought of the Day

Thought of the Day 6.28.12

“There are many little ways to enlarge your child’s world. Love of books is the best of all.”

-Jacqueline B. Kennedy Onassis

 

Jacqueline Lee Bouvier was born on this day in Southampton, New York, in 1929. She would have been 83.

She she had a  privileged childhood full of books and riding lessons. She went to Vassar College and after her Junior year abroad, in France, transferred to George Washington University.  In 1951 she began to work for the Washington Times-Herald newspaper as an “Inquiring Camera Girl,” roving the streets of the city shooting the people she met and asking them for their opinions on current events. One of the people  she met was a young Congressman — and soon to be Senator — from Massachusetts, John F. Kennedy.

Bouvier and Kennedy  wed in 1953. In 1960 he ran for President of the United States. Jackie was  pregnant with their second child and was confined to home, but she helped Jack with the campaign by writing a weekly column “Campaign Wife,” filming commercials and answering letters. Kennedy won the election by a narrow margin over Richard Nixon.  and Jackie became First Lady (a term she disliked because it made her sound like a race horse.)

As First Lady she made renovations to the White House, promoted the arts, and became Good Will Ambassador  to the World. But above all she wanted to be a good wife and mother. “If you bungle raising your children, I don’t think whatever else you do well matters very much.”

President Kennedy was assassinated on November 22, 1963 in Dallas, Texas, and Jackie became a widow at the age of 34.

In 1968 she fell in love with Aristotle Onassis a Greek shipping magnate and the two married. Sadly, Onassis died in 1975, leaving her a widow for the second time.

Jackie returned to the publishing world, becoming an editor at Viking Press and then a senior editor at Doubleday Press.

She died on May 19, 1994 and is buried next to President Kennedy at Arlington National Cemetery.

 

Mrs. Kennedy's trip to India. Udaipur, Rajasth...

Mrs. Kennedy’s trip to India. Udaipur, Rajasthan, cruise on Lake Pichola, March 17, 1962. (Photo credit: Sacheverelle)

 


Thought of the Day 6.27.12

“When one door of happiness closes, another opens; but often we look so long at the closed door that we do not see the one which has been opened for us.”

–Helen Keller

Helen Keller was born on this day in 1880 in Tuscumbia, Alabama. She would have been 132.

 

When Keller was 19 months old she contracted an illness that left her deaf and blind. Although able to communicate with rudimentary “Home Signs” she was essentially isolated from the outside world until Anne Sullivan arrived at the Keller home. Sullivan taught Keller American Sign Language. Keller went on to become the first deaf blind person to earn a Bachelor of Arts degree. Eventually she learned to speak, could read Braille, and could communicate through sign language and by reading people’s lips with her hands.

She became a political activist and writer, advocating for people with disabilities.

Helen Keller

Helen Keller (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

 


Thought of the Day 6.26.12

“You can judge your age by the amount of pain you feel when you come in contact with a new idea.”

–Pearl S. Buck

Pearl S. Buck was born Pearl Comfort Sydenstricker on this day in Hillsboro, West Virginia in 1892. She would have been 120.

She was one of seven children born to Absalom and Caroline Sydenstricker. The Sydenstrickers were Southern Presbyterian missionaries who were stationed in China. Pearl spent much of the first half of her life in Asia and drew on her experiences there for East Wind, West Wind and The Good Earth. The latter won the Pulitzer Prize and the Howells Medal. She was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1938

In 1935 she moved back to the US and became active in both the Civil Rights Movement and the Woman’s Rights Movement. She also worked to bridge the cultural gap between the US and China, and she founded the Welcome House and the Pearl S. Buck Foundation.

English: Pearl Buck

English: Pearl Buck (Photo credit: Wikipedia)


Thought of the Day 6.25.12

“Every generation imagines itself to be more intelligent than the one that went before it, and wiser than the one that comes after it.”

–George Orwell

George Orwell was born Eric Arthur Blair  in Motihari, Bihar, British India today in 1903. He would have been 109.

Orwell was a writer who both drew on his own experiences and penned dystopic fantasy to skewer social injustice and totalitarianism.

Although born in India he was raised in England. He returned to the East as a member of the Indian Police Service  in 1922.  He worked there for five years until he came down with Dengue fever, at which point he came back  to Great Britain. Orwell’s novel Burmese Days and his essays “A Hanging” and “Shooting an Elephant” are based on his experiences in India and Burma.

Upon his return to England he took up housing on London’s Portobello Road and decided to write about the lives of the impoverished in his own country. He dressed as if he lived in the streets, took menial jobs and purposefully got himself arrested so he could write first hand accounts of society’s

underbelly.  The book Down and Out in Paris and London chronicled this time period. But he was a man living two lives, as he also held respectable jobs as a journalist and as a teacher much of that time.

Other novels include: The Clergyman’s Daughter, Coming up for Air, The Road to Wigan Pier, Homage to Catalonia and Keep the Aspidistra Flying

Animal Farm, an allegorical take on Communism and corruption,  was published in 1945. It was a critical and financial success, but Orwell was is poor health. He published Nineteen Eighty-Four , his last novel, about a grim society  with perpetual war, thoughtcrimes, doublethink,  and Newspeak in 1949.

Category:George Orwell Category:Nineteen Eight...

Category:George Orwell Category:Nineteen Eighty Four (Original text : George Orwell, 1984. This self-made image is based on a picture that appears in an old acreditation for the BNUJ.) Picture of George Orwell taken from File:GeoreOrwell.jpg. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)


Thought of the Day 6.22.12

“If you’re going to tell people the truth, be funny or they’ll kill you.”

Billy Wilder

Billy Wilder was born today in Sucha, Galicia, Austria-Hungary 1906. He would have been 106 years old.

Wilder was a film director, producer and screenwriter who made 60 films in a career that spanned more than five decades.

He left Austria when the Nazis came to power and by 1933  found his way to Hollywood.  He worked brilliantly in both drama and comedy. His first American screenwriting credit was for Ninotchka, a screwball spy comedy with Greta Garbo and Melvyn Douglas which he co-wrote in 1939. The classic 1944  film noir drama Double Indemnity with the beautiful Barbara Stanwyck made his reputation as a Director. He pulled double duty, screenwriter and director, for The Lost Weekend and earned double Oscars for his work on the drama. In 1960 he pulled a hat trick, winning Writer, Director and Producer for The Apartment with Jack Lemmon and Shirley MacLaine.

Other Wilder films include: Sunset Boulevard (for which he won an Oscar for Best Screenplay — he co-wrote, but not for Director,) A Star is Born (Writer), The Seven Year Itch, Witness for the Prosecution,  Some Like It Hot, Sabrina, and Stalag 17. [Sunset, Sabrina and Stalag are three of my favorite movies of all time, BTW ]

In 1987 he won the Irving G. Thalberg Memorial Academy Award for lifetime  acheivement.

 

Billy Wilder
Billy Wilder (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

 


Thought of the Day 6.20.12

“I like people who refuse to speak until they are ready to speak.”

Lillian Hellman

Lillian Hellman was an American writer and dramatist born in New Orleans, Louisiana, in 1907.  She would be 105.

She wrote for both stage and screen. In 1934 her drama, The Children’s Hour, hit Broadway. It ran for 691 performances. The Little Foxes premiered in 1939, the film version won an Academy Award. Her Watch on the Rhine followed in 1941  (it was later adapted by Dashiell Hammett for the screen in 1943). Hellman was nominated for an another Academy Award for her screen play for The North Star. Another Part of the Forest premiered on stage in 1946, the story line followed the same characters from The Little Foxes, only this time they were 20 years younger. She penned an English translation of L’Alouette Jean Anouilh’s play about Joan of Arc, called  The Lark in 1955. Toys in the Attic won a Tony Award in 1960.

Hellman published three memoirs. Her first, An Unfinished Woman: A Memoir,  won the national Book Award in 1969.

Hellman was a member of the Screen Writers Guild and one of the groups major supporters. She was also active in politics, and was especially interested in the Spanish Civil War. She wrote several anti-fascist plays and was a casual member of the Communist Party. She was blacklisted in 1947.

I found a lot of Hellman quotes to choose from for today’s thought. Here are a few others I really liked:

“Since when do we have to agree with people to defend them from injustice?”
“I cannot and will not cut my conscience to fit this year’s fashion.”
“It is not good to see people who have been pretending strength all their lives lose it even for a minute.”

Hellman, on jacket of her autobiography An Unf...

Hellman, on jacket of her autobiography An Unfinished Woman: A Memoir (Photo credit: Wikipedia)


Thought of the Day 6.19.12

“Language is courage: the ability to conceive a thought, to speak it, and by doing so to make it true.”

Salman Rushdie

Salman Rushdie was born today in Bombay, India in 1947. He is 65 years old.

Rushdie is a novelist who combines magical realism with historical fiction in his works. He is probably best known for The Satanic Verses , a novel for which he was ‘sentenced to death’ by Ayatollah Komeini. 1 He spent most of the following decade underground to avoid the fatwa.  His Midnight’s Children won the Booker Prize in 1981. Other works include Shame, The Jaguar Smile, The Moor’s Last Sigh, The Ground Beneath Her Feet, Luka and the Fire of Life and The Enchantress of Florence.

He was appointed Commandeur dan Ordre des Arts et des Lettres in 1999 and dubbed a Knight Bachelor by Queen Elizabeth II in 2008.  In this country he was elected to the Academy of Arts and Letters as a Foreign Honorary Member the same year.

Salman Rushdie presenting his book "Shali...

Salman Rushdie presenting his book “Shalimar the clown” at Mountain View, USA, October 2005 Polski: Salman Rushdie podczas prezentacji swojej książki Śalimar klaun. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

1.  according to Rushdie’s Official Website


Thought of the Day 6.18.12

“Love is all you need.”

–Paul McCartney

Paul McCartney was born today in Liverpool, England in 1942. He is 70 years old.

McCartney is a singer/songwriter/musician who, along with John Lennon, George Harrison, Stu Sutcliffe, and Pete Best formed the Beatles in 1960. The fledgling band did a tour in Hamburg, Germany and performed at the Cavern Club in Liverpool, but it wasn’t until Sutcliffe left and Ringo Starr replaced Best on drums that the Beatles popularity really began to take hold. In October of 1962 they released “Love Me Do”  (… and we did.)

Working as a song writing team (at least in name) Lennon and McCarney produced an unprecidented string of hits that became the soundtrack of a generation with “Can’t Buy Me Love,” “I Want To Hold Your Hand,” “We Can Work It Out,” “Eleanor Rigby,” “Paperback Writer,” “With a Little Help From My Friends,” “When I’m Sixty-Four,” “A Day in the Life,” “Hey Jude,” “Get Back,”  “Let It Be,”  “The Long and Winding Road” and, of course, “Lovely Rita.” McCarney’s “Yesterday” is the most recorded cover song in history.

When the Beatles broke up McCartney started a new band with his wife Linda McCartney and Denny Laine. Although not as wildly successful as the Beatles, WINGS had a strong run in the pop charts from 1970 – 1981. Some of the band’s hits include  “Uncle Albert,” “My Love,” “Live and Let Die,” “Band on the Run,” “Mull of Kintyre,” “Silly Love Songs,” “Listen to What the Man Said,” “Coming Up,” and “With a Little Luck.”

His solo work includes “Maybe I’m Amazed,” “Here Today,” “Another Day,” and “No More Lonely Nights.”

Paul McCartney live in Barton, England on June...

Paul McCartney live in Barton, England on June 13, 2010 (Photo credit: Wikipedia)


Thought of the Day

Changing things up today … the THOUGHT is not from someone who is having a birthday … It is, instead, from something that has moved me on a personal level. If you know me through Facebook you know my handle is Rita lovestosingknitread. And today my thought is an nod to the SING side of my personality. Every week I get to sing (and play) with some fabulously talented and wonderfully generous musicians. This week I got to sing the Psalm at Mass. It really spoke to me, and I thought I’d share it here…  

O God, send out your Spirit;
renew the face of the earth…

Ev’ry time a person reaching out
is turned away by the racist
prejudicial attitudes of hate,
we are called to break the silence,
sanctioning the shame,
stepping across the lines of this
sometimes unholy game.

–Jesse Manibasan

Jesse Manibasan is a singer/songwriter of contemporary Christian Music. Besides “O God, Send Out Your Spirit,” Manibusan has written “Open My Eyes,” “Come Fish With Me,” and ” Revive Us, O God,”  and many others.

A variety of guitar picks

A variety of guitar picks (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

You Can find him on You Tube or  at http://jessemanibusan.com