New York Trip report
Here’s what I learned on my trip to New York City:
- the old Continental-powered Piper Malibu is a lot quieter and smoother than the newer Lycoming-powered Piper Mirage (flew down from Boston in a couple of for-sale Malibus)
- the Petra exhibit at the Museum of Natural History is inspirational–it might be time to take a leaf from Indiana Jones’s book and head over to Jordan
- there are several good shows at the Metropolitan, as usual
- the Whitney Biennial was one of the best in a long time. At least 20 percent of the works were charmingly creative. The show just ended but it might still be worth taking a trip to the Whitney because they’ve concentrated the best of their permanent collection on the fifth floor and also brought in some Thomas Hart Benton murals from Connecticut. [If you want to get into the Biennial for 2006 just take a page from one of Edward Tufte’s books and blow it up to wall size, then reverse it and stick it next to the first enlargement… that’s what one of the artists in the exhibit had done.. without credit to Tufte.]
- the RM seafood restaurant on 60th between Madison and Park is fantastic and for the summer does a weekday $20 3-course lunch menu that is as good as any meal I’ve had in Boston at any price, www.rmseafood.com
- seeing Shrek 2 with a 4-year-old girl is fun but the movie is disappointing after Shrek 1.
No New York experience is complete without at least one cabbie story. The fellow who drove me to LaGuardia Airport was a Coptic Christian from Egypt (the Copts are the descendants of the original Egyptians who built the pyramids, etc.; after the Arab invasion of 640 A.D. they’ve survived as a minority within their ancient homeland). Fully trained as a lawyer in Egypt, he came to the U.S. 12 years ago. “The Muslims were making it harder and harder for Christians to survive. I was just starting out so I decided to start in the U.S. Of course the situation in Egypt is much worse now for Copts than it was back then.” He couldn’t work here as a lawyer easily because Egyptian law is based on the Napoleonic code rather than cases. “I got a degree in networking from NYU and worked at a French bank in mid-town until 2001 when they downsized their IT department.” Since then he has been driving a cab. How does he like living in New York compared to Egypt? “I came here to escape the Muslims but now they are coming to America. They may appear to accept American values but 15 years from now you’ll see that they haven’t. They can’t stop fighting Christians and they hate the West because it represents Christianity. Americans don’t understand anything about Islam.”
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