NOEL...

...derives from the Old French word noel, a variant of nael. The Latin origin is the word natalis ("birth").

Noel may also refer to:

* Noel (name), male or female name derived from noël
* Noel, Missouri
* 1563 Noel, an asteroid
* Hurricane Noel
* Noel (company), Colombian cookie manufacturer
* Novell (company) software manufacturer
* No observable adverse effect level (NOAEL), toxicological measure

In music:

* Noel (singer), Noel Pagan, an 1980s musician
* Noel (Noel album), 1988 album by Noel
* Noel (Joan Baez album), 1966
* Noell (Josh Groban album), 2007
* The First Nowell, traditional English Christmas carol
* Nouveau Livre de Noëls, classical compostion by french composer Daquin

In fiction:

* Noel (film), 2004
* Noell (comics), a comics series and character by Andres Franquin
* "NoEl" (The West Wing), episode of NBC series

facts: from Wikipedia

NOEL joke(s) on Google

SCOOBIE DOO ON ZOMBIE ISLAND

www.sage.edu/opalka
November 1 - December 16, 2009

NOW at the Opalka Gallery
Albany, NY


DONA ANN McADAMS: "Some Women"


This exhibit surveys 35 years of this significant photographer's work, exploring this artist's deep interest in women which threads through all of the portfolios of this keenly engaged observer. The show consists of 35 gelatin silver prints dating from 1974 to the present. This exhibit is the first full career survey evidencing the constancy and growth of this artist's vision.


December 9, at the gallery: GUEST of CINDY SHERMAN

"Guest of Cindy Sherman" takes an eye-opening look at what happens when a skeptical outsider finds himself romantically involved with the ultimate insider.

Present for the screening will be the director of the film, Paul H-O, and photographer Dona Ann McAdams, who appears in the film. There will be a question and answer session after the showing.



PAUL HASEGAWA-OVERACKER PHOTOGRAPHED BY DONA McADAMS AFTER HIS BICYCLE ACCIDENT, 1984


"THE GHOST OF CINDY SHERMAN RIDES THE BIG ONE"

75Grand.posterous.com
12-10-09
Albany

Patrick and I, having learned at the last minute about the showing of Paul H-O's "Cindy Sherman" documentary, rushed over to Opalka gallery for the screening. The weather had been crappy all day, slush and sleet still filled the streets. Parking at the gallery was simple. Parking slots were numerous. We slogged through the muck, tracking snow and ice onto the gallery's polished hardwood floor. Every time we stood still for a moment, to look at one of Dona McAdams silver gelatin enlargements, a puddle would form at our feet.

"Oooh, this one's nice," says Patrick. I slide over beside him. A lonely prostitute stands, deep in the space of an industrial streetscape in Barcelona. As we're moving around,
I'm noting the locations where the photos were made: Fiji, Brooklyn, Manhattan, Barcelona, Madrid, and a few places that remainded unidentified. "This one's pretty interesting," Patrick says. I cut across the gallery to see what he's looking at and the gallery lights start flashing, telling us it's time to find some seats, as the film showing is about to start. Because of the lousy weather, turnout for the showing is light, and we have no problem finding seats in the front row. In fact, we've got the first two rows to ourselves. Patrick shucks off his knee-high Wellingtons, dropping them in a puddle by the seat next to him. I toss my hat, coat and scarf onto the seat beside me. He leaves his fedora on his head and two scarves wrapped around his neck.

"Hey, you might get heat stroke," I tell him.

"I'm cold," he replies.

I'm still dripping, so I know what he means. Jim Wilson, gallery director introduces Paul "Aeicho" (at least that what I hear) producer and director of the Cindy Sherman
documentary. Paul then mumbles a short lead-in to the film we're about to see. Actually, he has a kind of conversation with someone in the back of the auditorium. The space is small, about 100 seats, so conversing is not too difficult.

"We were a lot younger then," says Paul.

"Yeah, and cuter too," says the woman in back.

Patrick and I shoot each other looks, wondering what this is going to be about. Lights out, roll the film. We're watching a surfing documentary. "Ride the Wild Surf" or "The
Last Wave" or "Surfer, Dude" or "Beyond Paradise" or "Liquid Bridge" or "Have Board Will Travel" or "Cat on a Hot Foam Board" or "Waterlogged" or "Walk on the Wet Side" or "High on a Cool Wave" or "Sacrifice for Surf" or "Gone with the Wave" or "Ride on the Wild Side" or "A Life in the Sun" or "Going My Wave" or "Huh?" or "Splashdown" or "Some Like it Wet" or "Bottoms Up" or "Stop the Wave, I Wanna Get Off" or maybe even "Dr. Strangesurf."

"Hey, I thought this was suppossed to be an art movie," says Patrick, a little too loudly for my comfort.

"Uh, yeah, that's what I thought," I whisper. "Do you wanna leave?"

"Yep," he says, "I'm hungry."

We stand up. Pull on our coats and hats, still dripping with snow and ice, and head off for CCK, the new Chinese restaurant on Central Avenue, where I've heard,
the food is incredible.

"Oh yeah," says Patrick, "we eat there all the time. We'll have Crispy Duck with Taro, Whole Flounder in Black Bean Sauce, Pepper with Salty Soft Shell Crab, Conch with
Golden Mushrooms, and maybe a side of Sauteed Snow Pea Tips."

"Are you THAT hungry?" I ask him.

"You bet," he says. "Snow and cold always gives me an appetite."


============


artnet.com
04-25-07

by Paul H-O (Hasegawa-Overacker)
"STREET SHOTS"

In 1984 I ended up living in New York. I didn't have a plan. I was an artist and I had a show at P.S. 1, and when the show moved on, I stayed. I didn't have anywhere to live, and this photographer I knew had a basement darkroom in the East Village, so I crashed there for a couple months until I found a place in Brooklyn.

Then that winter I started working as a bike messenger, and after five road-rashing months I got a job with an art mover from Queens. Four days before I was to start my new gig I was blindsided by a car while on a messenger run and I woke up in Bellevue Emergency Room. My face was a mess and I was missing a tooth and a half.

When I showed up at the new job, I was a big hit. Everyone thought it was funny, including the photographer, who took some headshots of me, and now when I look at them it reminds me of the good old days.

That photographer -- Dona Ann McAdams -- is having a long-overdue exhibition in New York at the Library of the Performing Arts at Lincoln Center on Manhattan's West Side. Her photo of me didn't make the cut, but I think you should check out the show all the same...

Though it emphasizes photographs of the downtown New York performance art scene in the 1980s and 90s -- Dona Ann's specialty -- the show also includes pictures that have nothing to do with staged performances. In fact, McAdams best work is the street stuff, the part of real life where the staging has to do with how the shooter frames the action.

The action taking begins when Dona Ann was attending the San Francisco Art Institute and running all over California shutterbugging that wacked-out decade. McAdams pictures from the 70s are old school black-and-white American cultural landscape, with the usual subjects from the history of photography, but McAdams shots are seriously wry, postmodern, bisexual and feline. Dona's pictures are full of quirks, framed with humor and pathos. I'mfascinated with the UCLA Cheerleader (1976) because it's sexy, and the crowd is vast and all over the frame. I know I'm not alone in liking a good cheerleader picture.

When Dona Ann returned to her hometown of New York at the end of the 70s and into the 80s, she shot the mean streets of Loisaida's Alphabet City, patients in a mental ward, the Hasidim in Williamsburg, Barcelona before the Olympics and more. But especially she more or less became the top photographer of downtown performance art.

Now when anyone needs pictures of the outrageous talents moshing the club scene and PS 122 in the East Village, Eric Bogosian, Holly Hughes, Ann Magnuson, Meredith Monk, Ethyl Eichelberger, David Wojnarowicz, etc., McAdams is the one they go to. That work became "Caught in the Act", published by Aperture in 1996.

One sharp picture in the show is the now-classic 1987 photo of Karen Finley, her topless bod covered in raw egg and glitter, shoveling handfuls of Easter candy at the frightened but excited audience at PS 122. Dona Ann was and is the only shooter to capture Finley's infamous early performances. Senator Jesse Helms waved
Dona's photos of Karen around on the Senate floor in an apoplectic rant about the NEA 4 (and then no doubt used them to fan himself later in the Senate toilet). Look at the pictures and you understand how much Dona and her Leica quietly collaborated with artists performing live and with the extreme power of youth.

The performance photographs capture stage scenes that were notably stellar, and often excruciatingly politically and sexually indulgent. Attending art performances back then was a dicey undertaking, but McAdams photos are symbiotic with their subjects, and convey the passion and beauty of the best and most outrageous talents that did their thing during that turbulent Reagan era. Not to mention the flopping dicks and hairy pussies flaunted in stark defiance of good Christian morals. You had to be there.

PAUL HASEGAWA-OVERACKER (H-O) is presently in post-production on the
feature documentary, "Guest of Cindy Sherman."


SQUID AND FRESH CHINESE VEGETABLES

03+22+1947 = 01: BINGO!

Indian Soothsayers Offer Tips Using Numbers and Names -NYTimes.com


name="description" content="Numerologists in India offer advice
that uses mathematical formulas, and market themselves through
infomercials, or writing newspaper columns or with Web sites.">




According to Mr.Sanjay B Jumaanii, people's personalities and destinies are shaped
by the interplay of various numbers
. Among the most important are numbers
derived from birth dates, like the sum of the digits that make up the day
of birth. Babies born on the 28th day of a month, for example, are said to
have a good life ahead of them because 2 and 8 add up to 10, and 1 plus 0
equals 1.

<<meta> Mar 22, 1947 ===> 03+22= 7 1+9+4+7= 21 2+1=3 7+3=10 =1 VOILA!  </meta>>

One, three, five and six are considered auspicious numbers: Mr. Jumaani
points out that Bill Gates was born on Oct. 28, 1955.

Numbers correspond to the sun, the moon or a planet; one is the sun, two is
the moon, three is Jupiter and so on, and so forth...

Read the full story here:  http://www.nytimes.com/2009/12/05/business/global/05numbers.html?sq=numerology&st=cse&scp=1&pagewanted=print

CATS & THE U.S.A. - I'm Bound for America. Kiss Me.

Buffalo Evening News
Final Edition, 192 pages
Sunday, Jan. 3, 1999
Front Page

Marriage Plot Led to Abduction, Authorities Say
by Karen Robinson, staff writer

A car headed over the Rainbow Bridge in Niagara Falls was carrying a
prospective bride and groom - but this was no ordinary wedding party.

The couple was found in the ice-cold trunk of the car, with the unwilling
bride bound and gagged. Her uncle was driving.

Federal officials say Wahid Nader, 29, and Jamal Nassar Azia, 37, both
natives of Afghanistan, were trying to smuggle Mine Betoor of Toronto
into the United States and force her to marry Nader. The marriage had
reportedly been arranged by her family.

When she refused to marry Nader, police said, Nadir and Aziz clubbed her
in the head, abducted her and then imprisoned her in the basement of a
home in Etobicoke, Ont. for more than two days.

When the trio got to the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service
inspection
booth at the bridge, an inspector sensed something was suspicious about
Aziz's behavior. He asked Aziz to open the trunk. The man and woman were
found inside the trunk and the woman was bound.

"This case is really sad," said Assistant U.S. Attorney, Trini Ross.



Buffalo Evening News
First Sunday Magazine
Page 4
WHATEVER: Edge Joke of the Month

A woman lion tamer has the big cats under such control that
they took lumps of sugar right from her lips on command.

"Anyone can do that!" a skeptic yells.

The ringmaster comes over and asks, "Would you like to try it?"

"Sure!" replies the man. "But first get those cats out of there."

CAUTION!

TO: 75Grand.posterous
From: garrettart@comcast.net
Re: Posterous | Re: UPDATE!


CAUTION! This triad of links represent the points on the cyber-version of the Bermuda triangle.


----- Original Message -----


From: galligan@sprynet.com
To: garrettart@comcast.net
Sent: Wednesday, November 11, 2009 3:23:00 PM GMT -08:00 US/Canada Pacific
Subject: FW: Posterous | UPDATE!


Something about linking the Posterous blog, Facebook and Twitter
prompts page views on the Posterous blog. See numbers in statistics
below. Average views per post: 250


blog: http://75grand.posterous.com

RECENT STATISTICS: 75Grand @ posterous 6 subscribers // 61 posts // 932 site views (# = Views/Pageviews)
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Omnivore LA food critic meets NYC's Most Adventurous Epicure

11-11-09
Albany

Great to run across this mention of our man in NY, Robert Sietsema,
food writer for the Village Voice, and formerly, Gourmet. Regular
food blogger, and all around gourmand. Here's what Sarah DiGregorio
says in the Voice about Robert:

Our Man Sietsema: Eats! Cooks! Blogs!
Wednesday, Nov. 5 2008 @ 3:14PM

If you need one more reason to guzzle Champagne all day, I've got another
nugget of good news for you. Our Man Sietsema, otherwise known as the
venerable Robert Sietsema, will be contributing to Fork in the Road on a
regular basis. Look forward to his thoughts on locavorism, snacks, cheap
eats (a perennial favorite around here) and the trademark Our Man
eccentricity. You'll know it's him because you'll see his byline above the
post. Capiche? http://blogs.villagevoice.com/forkintheroad/

============

FROM THE NEW YORKER
NOVEMBER 9, 2009
ANNALS OF GASTRONOMY

"THE SCAVENGER"

Pig's ear, octopus, and fish-kidney curry with LA's most-adventurous eater
by Dana Goodyear

ABSTRACT
Jonathan Gold is forty-nine, and grew up in South Central. He attended
U.C.L.A., and then worked for a legal newspaper downtown. As an experiment,
he set about trying every restaurant along Pico Boulevard, which
encompasses Korean, Nicaraguan, Salvadoran, Oaxacan, and Jaliscan areas.
Mentions Brooklyn Bagel Bakery and Mama's Hot Tamales. Gold eats at three
to five hundred restaurants every year. Mentions Robert Sietsema.


Photos: 1) Our Man in NYC Robt. Sietsema  2) Exceprt from New Yorker Jonathan Gold article

EXITOS MIXTO

Original Message:
-----------------
From: galligan@sprynet.com galligan@sprynet.com
Date: Fri, 4 Sep 2009 14:34:59 -0400
To: galligan@sprynet.com
Subject: EXITOS MIXTO
 


Frank Sinatra arrested in Bergen County, NJ in 1938 for "carrying on with a married woman."


THEY CAN'T TAKE NOTHIN' AWAY FROM ME
as sung by Frank Sinatra

  
All or nothin' at all
There are many (many) crazy things
And with your permission I'd rather (rather) have nothin' at all

 All or nothin' at all
If its love, there is no in-between
Why begin, then cry, for something that might have been
No I'd rather (with your permission) list a few...

 The way you wear your hat
The way you sip your tea
But please dont bring your lips so close to my cheek
or my heart may go dizzy (dizzy) and fall

 We may never (ever) meet again, on that bumpy road to love
But I'll always (always) keep the memory of your smile, or
I'll be lost and caught in the undertow
The way you hold your knife
The touch of your hand makes me weak
 And if I fell (fell) under the spell of your call
I would sing off-key
So you see
I've got to say you changed my life

All The Way (All The Way)


FUERA NO PUEDEN TOMAR NOTHIN' FROM ME

 GOOGLE (English to Spanish)

Todo o nada en absoluto
Hay muchas (muchas) cosas locas Y con su permiso
Mis bien (y no) tienen nada en absoluto
Todo o nada en absoluto
Si su amor, no hay en el medio
Por que empezar, y luego llorar, algo que podr'a haber sido
No, yo prefiero (con su permiso) una lista de algunas ...

La manera de llevar el sombrero
La manera de beber el te
Pero, por favor dont llevar sus labios tan cerca de mi mejilla,
o mi corazon puede vertigo (mareos) y la caida
Es posible que nunca (nunca) se reinen de nuevo,
en ese camino lleno de
baches para el amor

Pero malos siempre (siempre) mantener
la memoria de tu sonrisa, o de
Estar perdido y atrapado en la resaca
La manera en que sostiene el cuchillo
El toque de su mano me hace dï bil

Y si me ca' (cay) bajo el hechizo de su llamada
Quisiera cantar fuera de tono
Asi que ya ve
Tengo que decir que cambio mi vida

All The Way (All The Way)


CAN NOT TAKE AWAY NOTHIN' FROM ME

 

GOOGLE (translated Spanish, back to English) 

All or nothing at all
There are many (many) crazy things
And with your permission I'd rather (rather) have nothing at all
All or nothing at all
If your love, there is in the middle
Why start and then mourn, something that could have been
No, I prefer (with permission) a list of some ...

How to take your hat
The way to drink tea
But please do not bring your lips so close to my cheek,
or my heart may vertigo (dizziness) and fall
We may never (ever) meet again in the bumpy road to love
But Ill always (always) keep the memory of your smile,
or I am lost and trapped in the undertow

The way you hold the knife
The touch of your hand makes me weak
And if I fell (fell) under the spell of your call I would sing out of tune
So you see I have to say that changed my life

All The Way (All The Way)