We felt like two teenagers running
around on a summer night.
Not exact matches
I've never had much luck sharing the Gospel with strangers, but I've shared it often
around my kitchen table, in the Eucharist, at baby showers, in long
summer nights on the back porch talking with friends, at coffee shops, at funeral homes, in living rooms, through tears, through music, through celebrations.
I could be mistaken, but as memory serves the
summer time is really when a decent volume of guys begin pulling the trigger
on their college decisions, especially in the heat of camp season
around events like Friday
Night Lights.
There is a bar district
around the water where,
on an extremely long and unusually perfect
summer night, people sit
on enormous white pillows lined up along the waterfront drinking wine and talking to each other.
Floating at an altitude of
around 50 miles, they are only seen well after sunset
on summer nights above 50 degrees latitude in either hemisphere and have been increasing in frequency and brilliance with each passing year.
With spring and
summer around the corner, they'll pair perfectly with ankle boots and a light blazer for a
night out, or a neon bikini, jersey tank top and floppy hat for a day
on the beach.
I like all different types of things from sports to camping or sitting
around a campfire, to sitting
on a blanket at
night in the
summer stareing up at the stars and wondering which one is you to cuddling
on the couch while watching a movie.
This is the rarefied environment in which Luca Guadagnino's Call Me by Your Name is set, a world in which beautiful and / or flawlessly erudite people spend balmy
summer days and
nights, fall in love, ponder
on the vagaries of life, in and
around a stately Italian villa, while almost invisible domestics — at least, they're occasionally glimpsed, but have next to no dialogue — tend to their needs, cooking, gardening, or presenting them with handsome, freshly caught fish.
You'll find them
on summer nights hanging out in the yard socializing over a beer while the kids whiz
around on bikes and scooters.
on view at MUSEION studio house, Bolzano, Italy, through Nov 22, http://www.museion.it/current-exhibitions/?lang=en Goldschmied & Chiari in group exhibition «The Body as Language,» curated by Paola Ugolini at Richard Saltoun, London, Oct. 9 - Nov. 27, http://www.richardsaltoun.com/exhibitions/ Kristen Lorello to exhibit at UNTITLED., Miami Beach, Dec. 2 - 6 Nadia Haji Omar / Bayne Peterson exhibition previewed in ArtCritical by William J. Simmons 9/7/15, http://www.artcritical.com/2015/09/07/labor-day-shout-outs/ Rachel Higgins interviewed in «From the Salvage Yard to the Shopping Mall: Rachel Higgins» Logistical Aesthetics,» by Natalie Hegert, in ArtSlant, June 30, http://www.artslant.com/ew/artists/rackroom/244140-rachel-higgins Rachel Higgins: Logistics featured in «Standing Out in the Crowd: 10
Summer Solo Shows
Around the World in 2015» by Natalie Hegert in MutualArt http://www.mutualart.com/OpenArticle/Standing-Out-in-the-Crowd — 10-
Summer-Sol/648DC5F4E3B290BD Josh Slater in CKTV Karaoke
Night at Redbull Studios, Friday, June 12th, http://nyprojectspace.redbullstudios.com/news/karaoke-
night/ Goldschmied & Chiari in «Organic Matters — Women to Watch 2015,» at the National Museum of Women in the Arts, Washington, D.C., through September 13, http://nmwa.org/exhibitions/organic-matters Rachel Higgins in Martha Schwendener's New York Times article, «10 Galleries to Visit in Brooklyn and Queens,» April 16, http://www.nytimes.com/2015/04/17/arts/design/10-galleries-to-visit-in-brooklyn-and-queens.html
5 C. Earth's Revolution The Earth's journey
around the sun One revolution = 365 1/4 days Causes seasons Seasons are reversed north & south of the equator Example: It is now summer in Australia Around March 21, the sun's rays fall directly on the Equator — equinox — equal night — daylight & nighttime hours are
around the sun One revolution = 365 1/4 days Causes seasons Seasons are reversed north & south of the equator Example: It is now
summer in Australia
Around March 21, the sun's rays fall directly on the Equator — equinox — equal night — daylight & nighttime hours are
Around March 21, the sun's rays fall directly
on the Equator — equinox — equal
night — daylight & nighttime hours are equal.
Sheer netting
around the bed is a romantic detail that also comes in handy when you leave the windows open
on summer nights.
Trust us, watching them swoop, swirl and call (the sound bats make)
around your garden
on a
summer's evening once the birds are tucked up for the
night is pretty cool and a spectacular site - just ask Dracula!