Today was pick-up day for Good Will (or one of the related equivalents),
so Ting and I had spend the weekend looking through our drawers and finding
clothes to give away...thus the bags shown in the bright morning light
of the first picture.
A few hours later, I arrived for another day's work at Stanford,
and finding myself parking at the top of the medical center parking structure
once more, I snapped a few view pictures, the first showing progress on
Construction of the Clark Center, and the second showing the Dish silhouetted
against the foothills.
A brief article in last week's S.F. Chronicle had alerted me to the
installation of a new sculpture by Andy Goldsworthy in the arboretum, and
as the sunny weather beckoned, I decided to delay the start of my work
day awhile longer.
The installation is located near the entrance to the Art Museum.
A sinuous bark path leads off to the piece, which is quite large (composed
of 128 tons of cast-away sandstone, that should be no surprise!).
After a bit of contemplation and appreciation, I wandered back to
the medical center through the arboretum, stopping here and there for a
few more pictures.
That night, Ting and I zoomed across the bay to see McCoy Tyner and
friends at Yoshi's. Although we arrived about an hour after the doors opened,
we lucked out and got a front row table, off to the side in front of the
drummer, Al Foster.
As could be expected from a group composed of such eminent musicians,
the show was excellent, and the house was packed thick by the time the
band hit the stage. The set ran a little over seventy minutes, and was
capped off by a truly impressive rendition of Coltrane's Impressions.
Here's what Phil Elwood had to say about the previous night's show
in his article Tyner group penetrates
heart of jazz. |