Author: thecolumnrule

NEARING THE BARRICADES …

May 28, 2018 By Arthur H. Gunther III thecolumnrule.com There’s an analogy between “English” muffins and the present government of the United States, once known as “of, by and for the people’ and now an oligarchy. In Englishman Samuel Bath Thomas’ later 1800s’ days and for most of the 20th century, the yeast-derived muffin was […]

A RESETTING

May 20, 2018 By Arthur H. Gunther III thecolumnrule.com One snowy evening a long time ago, with the temperature not so low that a walker would freeze and not so high that there would be rainy ice, and with the flakes delicate and inviting, I took a lengthy walk in Hillcrest, N.Y., just to chill […]

DEDICATED TO GINNY

May 7, 2018   By Arthur H. Gunther III thecolumnrule.com      In the tucked-away room, in the original attic, was a very tall radiator and a very small rocking chair where the ghost, quite friendly, dwelled much of the time, looking out the long window or seeing through herself in the mirror high above […]

WHY SOME PAINT

“1956, Pink and Gray” May 1, 2018 By Arthur H. Gunther III thecolumrule.com Art — painting — is like life: abstract, realistic or symbolic, captured fragments of what could be a full conversation or perhaps just the wisps of one. Sometimes you want the dialog, and sometimes the mystery. Why someone morphs his/her own earthly […]

THE ‘INDECENT’ REPUBLIC

April 23, 2018 By Arthur H. Gunther III thecolumnrule.com The decency that was Barbara Bush, the late first lady, is in sharp contrast to the White House norm these days. That has to be said whether you are the tearful liberal Democrat or the Tea Party fellow or gal swallowing an ultra-conservative energy drink. This […]

OF TWO SEASONS

April 9, 2018 By Arthur H. Gunther III thecolumnrule.com Spring has not yet sprung in this part of the Northeast, a bit north geographically of New York City but with a history and flavor set distinctly apart. There may be daffodils in Brooklyn’s Prospect Park, especially in the wonderful Botanical Gardens, but they do not […]

THE REAL WAY TO ‘THANK’ VETERANS

  By Arthur H. Gunther III thecolumnrule.com Why does war often begin with a parade and end with one? At the first, youthful excitement, naiveté, innocence, natural inclination and lack of experience and judgment as to horror fuel the adrenalin of patriotism as the quick steps of those who would save the world or avenge […]

VOICES NOT HEARD ANYMORE

March 5, 2018 By Arthur H. Gunther III thecolumnrule.com When someone is asked, “What is your biggest regret?,” perhaps most would recall one particular moment, though for others it surely depends on what year, month, even day (or night) you are referencing. For example, in the great, immature, developing years of childhood, teenage time too, […]

COLOR IN THE GRAY

  February 26, 2018 By Arthur H. Gunther III thecolumnrule.com In a world often gray, you wish for a spot of color, because that is always there, you know, even in fog or overcast. It’s all in the eye, literally, as color is reflected or light is emitted. But that is too technical for emotion, […]

‘… OF THE PEOPLE …’

February 19, 2018 By Arthur H. Gunther III thecolumnrule.com It is said that Lincoln frequently jotted words, phrases, sentences on paper scraps that were thrown in a desk drawer. When he neared writing a speech, he took the jottings and assembled his word thoughts as stitched quilt patches, with the whole the message. That he […]

IN FLU, SOME ZEN

February 5, 2018 By Arthur H. Gunther III thecolumnrule.com Enduring the flu is a cleansing experience, literally and beyond. It is also lucky triumph over what has been a killer this most unusual season as the preventive vaccine has often not worked. It did not for me. But maybe it was not the flu, though […]

TEA TIME IN AMERICA

January 15, 2018 By Arthur H. Gunther III thecolumnrule.com It is tea time in America, whether that is your favored beverage or not. The Irish, the English know that troubled moments are best navigated with a spot of the brew, and now is our need. So, metaphorically, let us sit a spell. It need not […]

ON THE NORTHEAST COLD

Great-grandfather’s old stove January 8, 2018 By Arthur H. Gunther III thecolumnrule.com It is one degree in Blauvelt, N.Y., as I write this piece, unusual cold these days in this part of the Northeast not far from New York City but reminiscent of old winters. In that time, though, cars did not start easily, coal […]

THEY WAITED FIRST

  January 1, 2018 By Arthur H. Gunther III thecolumnrule.com In these days of online buying, in these days of the disappeared downtown bakery, we don’t stand on long lines anymore except maybe at Motor Vehicles … and the tax office at my local town hall. Hundreds of property owners were there in the mad dash […]

WOODEN ESCALATORS

Some years ago, when I was a newspaperman at the original Journal-News in Nyack, N.Y., I gave my usual weekly column slot to my son at winter holiday time. He always pens a fictional piece. Here is his writing for 2017. By Arthur H. Gunther IV She had outlived him by four years. At least […]

NO LEARNED HISTORY IN D.C.

      WASHINGTON, D.C. — Just a short walk from the fortress that is now the White House, isolated from what its present inhabitant apparently fears is the terrorism of public opinion, are the words of a flawed but arguably great president and eloquent speech-maker, Franklin D. Roosevelt, carved in the granite of his […]

A VILLAGE BECKONS

December 11, 2017 By Arthur H. Gunther III BLOG: thecolumnrule.com NYACK, N.Y. — It has been a long time since I haunted Main Street as a shopper in this forever charming village north of New York City, a place never to be confused with Gotham. It has its own vibe — it’s not the city […]

BEHIND THE CURTAIN

December 4, 2017 By Arthur H. Gunther III thecolumnrule.com I have a friend in Colorado, a former Rocklander, one whose family roots go back to before the Revolution, who would walk into a room with sun trying to pop its buttons through a brilliantly lit window shade and focus just on that, even if the […]

SEEK THE NEWS, PEOPLE

  By Arthur Henry Gunther III thecolumnrule.com Since printing began and the first sheets of paper brought information to the masses, newspapers could count on people buying enough copies to keep the profession going; to support advertisers; to hold circulation stable; most of all to protect democracy by reporting and commenting on the news. Now […]

OF COMMON LANGUAGE

September 13, 2017 By Arthur H. Gunther III thecolumnrule.com All professions have shop talk, but that rhythm is more likely to play in tune not in the daily grind but after the job, most often in retirement. Such was the conversation the other night at an arts gathering at the Edward Hopper House in Nyack, […]

THE HUMAN REQUIREMENT

As one of the many volunteers in the Rockland Interfaith Breakfast Program and as a strong supporter of the overnight/outreach program Helping Hands-Safe Haven, I was asked to write the following. By Arthur H. Gunther III thecolumnrule.com It is 1940, and the Great Depression is persisting after 11 years. At Maud Gunther’s Spring Valley, N.Y., home, […]

TWO OLD HOMES

October 9, 2017 By Arthur H. Gunther III thecolumnrule.com NYACK, N.Y. — It was easy, at this fund-raiser aiming to protect and restore a 200-year-old village house, to imagine social gatherings in the 1930s-‘50s at which Helen Hayes and Charles MacArthur held court. Easy to picture, leaning against the 1800’s living room molding. Lawrence Olivier […]

THE FALL SEASON

THE FALL SEASON October1-2, 2017 By Arthur Henry Gunther III thecolumnrule.com Once, so very long ago, almost in another age but I know it still must relate to the accumulation of living, just part of me, you see, gave someone a small birthday present. It was the first gift for a new someone, and I […]

ONCE, A GOTHAM

“Talking Skyscrapers”   September 25, 2017 By Arthur H. Gunther III thecolumnrule.com NEW YORK, N.Y. — The area where I live is just north of this famous, at times infamous, metropolis, enough distance in my youth to have enjoyed a life apart —rural countryside, building huts in the woods, traipsing through fruit orchards, riding with […]

NYACK’S TEN

September 18, 2017 By Arthur H. Gunther III thecolumnrule.com NYACK, N.Y. — This Hudson River village has a park with a usual name, Memorial, just like the one I played in as a kid in another community, though this also was an occasional spot for imaginary doings when my parents shopped here on long-ago Saturdays. This […]

‘UNDER THE INFLUENCE’

  Der Einfluss,’ acrylic on wood panel. September 4, 2017 By Arthur H. Gunther III thecolumnrule.com In German, “Einfluss” means “influence,” and so that is how a recent painting gained its name. I was intrigued by a photograph taken by a Deutsche designer and decided to do my interpretation via acrylics and wood. She deserved […]

THE SABERS RATTLE

By Arthur H. Gunther III ahgunther@yahoo.com If, at the 11th hour of the 11th day in the 11th month of each year, from 1918 on when “The War to End All Wars” was over, you would begin to toll a bell 20 times a minute for the 37,468,904 total in casualties, it would take more than […]

DIVERSITY THE NORM

August 7, 2017 By Arthur H. Gunther III thecolumnrule.com One of the givens in growing up in the semi-rural county of Rockland, New York, in my 1950s years was that we were surrounded by diversity. It had always been that way, since the Dutch days and before that those of the various, mostly intinerant Native-American […]

WHITHER A EULOGY?

July 31, 2017 By Arthur Henry Gunther III Not all eulogies are truthfully written, because there is a natural spin to comments made about the departed, much like the wailing of a relative or two at a wake for someone they actually disliked in life. The good-form factor seems to kick in, in the balance […]

GEORGE CHALSEN AND THE ‘FRATERNITY’

July 24, 2017 By Arthur H. Gunther III thecolumnrule.com One of the customs of an old-style newspaper hot metal composing room — where printing type was cast in lead by brilliantly designed mechanical marvels called Linotypes and then placed in page forms called chases so that the process could continue to the presses and then […]

ON THE JOB

July 10, 2017 By Arthur H. Gunther III thecolumnrule.com   College is not for every one, and even for the collegiate, there may be a best time to go. It’s an individual moment, and getting there can be tough. I was there, once, actually several times before the degree was conferred several years into actual […]

HOPE, AT ‘HOME’ ANYWAY

July 4th Weekend, 2017 By Arthur H. Gunther III thecolumnrule.com NYACK, N.Y. — You would expect July Fourth weekend — and the gathering in public area that comes with that — to be boisterous, noisy, of course, celebratory. It is all that in this village along the Hudson River just north of New York City, […]

THAT WHICH ENDURES

June 26, 2017 By Arthur Henry Gunther III thecolumnrule.com With Paris under recent attack in a discordant world in which bad people exploit differences and legitimate need, in a beautiful city of proud and diverse citizenry, there is a constant hum that cannot be quieted. It is reassuring in the punctuation of bombs and terrorism, […]

THE HUMAN ‘ABSTRACT’

June 5, 2017 By Arthur H. Gunther III thecolumnrule.com If you could see a person’s emotions, thoughts, likes and dislikes, even the soul, you would be looking at an abstract painting, for the elements of each reveal existence. Line, form and color are the abstract, however jumbled some or even many may term the painting, […]

THE FALLEN SPEAK

By Arthur H. Gunther III ahgunther@hotmail.com No Memorial Day, USA or elsewhere, is without heartfelt words and tribute, parades, wreaths, re-mourning. What is always missing, though, are the voices of the fallen. Would that we could hear them. What would they say? “Mom, I was as scared as you, but I could not show that […]

GETTING LOST

“On a Hill,” acrylic on wood May 22, 2017 By Arthur Henry Gunther III thecolumnrule.com Every child, kid, needs a place to get lost. You can’t always be with parents or siblings or even friends. There has to be your own spot, be it imaginary, through reading or day-dreaming, or actual. I day-dreamed enough to […]

THE HARVEST PROMISE

“APPLES AT SINK” May 15, 2017 By Arthur Henry Gunther III thecolumnrule.com In the Rockland County, N.Y. of my late 1940s into 1950s youth, taking the same, long bicycle ride twice but a month apart often meant witnessing a disappearing landscape. This was post-World War II suburbia, and rural land so close to New York […]

BACK-PORCH SANDWICHES

May 8, 2017 By Arthur H. Gunther III thecolumnrule.com My grandmother was used to seeing road-worn men in old but once-pressed suit jackets at her back porch in Spring Valley, N.Y. They were there during the 1930s Great Depression, hobos off the Erie line looking for a bit of work and the sandwich to follow. […]

THE MUSIC PLAYS ON

May 1, 2017 By Arthur H. Gunther III thecolumnrule.com I needed a large circular template for a painting, and since neccesity is the mother of invention, I glanced across the basement and saw an old 33 rpm vinyl record, and the roughly 12-inch disc did the trick. It was a bit of irony that the […]

Rescuing the suburbs

By Arthur H. Gunther III Thecolumnrule.com I live in Rockland County, N.Y., a semi-rural land when I was young but now a New York City suburb that is graying with older housing stock, demands for more urban-like density, rising infrastructure costs and other threats to the quality of life. It is the typical U.S. suburb, […]

USE IT UP

April 16, 2017 By Arthur H. Gunther III thecolumnrule.com When my son Arthur IV bought his small Upper Nyack, N.Y.,  house from Leroy Buckout, the owner explained that he long ago had adopted a way to deal with the lack of closets, not uncommon in a 1929 home. “When I buy a shirt, I get […]

THE MESSENGER

April 10, 2017 By Arthur H. Gunther III thecolumnrule.com Some time ago, at a table of friends and family through marriage, the talk was of newspapers — media in general, actually — and how you “can’t believe what you read, what you hear, maybe even what you see.” One person in particular, a good man […]

A BARN, SOME BRIDGES

April 3, 2017 By Arthur H. Gunther III thecolumnrule.com In Nyack, N.Y., just a few hundred yards from the great historic river named the Hudson, the shores of which will soon be joined by two new bridges to replace one just 62 years old, stands a small barn so classic in shape and so reminiscent […]

‘DISMISSED HUMANITY’

March 27, 2017 By Arthur H. Gunther III thecolumnrule.com When we come across the Jacob Riis photographs of late-1800’s lower New York City poverty, in his book “How the Other Half Lives,” most of us feel sad yet grateful for our family’s escape, if forebears had lived, say, in Irish Five Points, as some of […]

WE ARE BETTER THAN THIS

  March 20, 2017 By Arthur Henry Gunther III thecolumnrule.com One of the benefits of social media (and there are significant downsides) is that much information is presented, all of it requiring prudent review. But so deep are the vaults that many looksees are self-educating, even the “fake news.” Included in the social media explosion […]

TWO ‘JR’ MOMENTS

March 13, 2017 By Arthur Henry Gunther III thecolumnrule.com My week just past had two “JR” moments, and the thought of that had me smiling. In a time when simplicity and common sense, just the basic black and white of things, seem to be obscured by grayness, slowness and complexity, the get-it-done, no-big deal method was […]

EDUCATION

By Arthur H. Gunther III thecolumnrule.com There was a moment when the day was better spent riding on roads through state parks or hiking trails than focusing on the timepiece that ticks away your life. Call it education. Not all learning happens in school, though you feel guilty if responsibility nevertheless calls for hitting the […]

WATERSIDE

  “Beach,” acrylic on canvas, AHG 2017 By Arthur H. Gunther III thecolumnrule.com Waterside — it’s an endless frontier, a blank canvas, with the sea’s waves your personal brushes. If a calm, still lake, that’s meditation. In retirement, people move to homes near water perhaps because the turmoil of life — jobs, raising family, paying […]

TEA AND SIMPLICITY

February 7, 2017 By Arthur H. Gunther III thecolumnrule.com Tea may be for reading leaves, but there is more to the brew. There are reasons why the Irish, the English, the Chinese, Indians and those of so many cultures not only enjoy their tea but are tethered to it, for it is a port in […]

VIEW FROM THE COUCH

  January 30, 2017 By Arthur H. Gunther III thecolumnrule.com Couches are for more than potatoes, of course, though in my working years it seemed I never tarried long enough on one before falling asleep. These days a comfy sofa — davenport, chesterfield, divan by other names — near a fireplace on a coldish night, […]

ON A SUPERMARKET LINE …

January 22, 2017 By Arthur H. Gunther III ahgunther@hotmail.com I  do not know at which point you realize there is less road in front of you than behind, but for me it came on the supermarket line just the other day. I was the only Caucasian in a four-person queue, and I suddenly thought that […]

Modern-day Königssee

  January 16, 2016   By Arthur H. Gunther III ahgunther@hotmail.com The first photograph above this column is a 2016 shot I took of the Austrian Alps from the Königssee, Germany’s third deepest lake and with water so clear that only electric boats are allowed. What we saw was beautiful, with snow still in the […]

‘THE IRREVERENT’ ARE FEWER

January 2, 2017 By Arthur H. Gunther III ahgunther@yahoo.com “The Front Page,” a reverent bow to the once more-irreverent news profession, written by Nyackers Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur and recently revived on Broadway, could have been staged in the 1930s-1970s city room of the original Rockland Journal-News just blocks away from Hecht and MacArthur […]

‘SEWING A FUTURE…’

  December 26, 2016 By Arthur H. Gunther III ahgunther@hotmail.com Rita-Eileen Glynn Smith, a former Rockland County, N.Y., resident, notes on Facebook that she owns her great aunt’s Singer sewing machine, complete with accessories and the equally famous oil can. She has history in her possession, the nation’s, that of the earlier emerging middle class, […]

DIGITAL RUMOR-MONGERING; A ‘PUBLIC’ NEWSPAPER?

November 21, 2016 By Arthur H. Gunther III ahgunther@hotmail.com “All the News That’s Fit to Print” has long been the masthead motto of the New York Times. The intention and obligation of that phrase to help keep a society free cannot be underestimated. It also is in sharp contrast to today’s social media postings that […]

NOVEMBER 9, 2016 — THE DAWNING

November 7, 2016 By Arthur H. Gunther III ahgunther@hotmail.com      For a third grader on Nov. 5, 1952, the day after President Dwight D. Eisenhower was elected, the ordinary was still in place, in my neck of the woods anyway. We boys were wearing winter corduroys, and the girls still had to freeze in […]

‘REVOLUTION,’ BUT FIRST ELECTION 2016

October 24, 2016 By Arthur H. Gunther III ahgunther@hotmail.com Americans are stressed by a presidential election that is removed from the vaulted experience most of us were taught to expect. Though there have been many rancorous contests and too many unqualified Oval Office candidates (and presidents), 2016 is a special disaster that has pulled us […]

A MESSENGER

October 17, 2016 By Arthur H. Gunther III ahgunther@hotmail.com Bob Dylan, this deeply gifted soul, poetically defined lives and direction so far back. Fan or not, we might hear again what he had to say, especially in this world and nation nearly gone mad. He did warn. Garnering the Nobel Prize for Literature should be […]

THE MAN IN THE ROOM

  October 10, 2016 By Arthur H. Gunther III ahgunther@hotmail.com A tall, gaunt man with the cares of the world deeply set in the lines of his craggy face walked into the big room and sat in the back as two presidential candidates “debated” in the current contest. The man was black, though not recognizable […]

UNFINISHED STORY

October 2, 2016 By Arthur H. Gunther III ahgunther@hotmail.com I once knew of — I didn’t get to know — a witty, young woman of strong intelligence, humming work ethic, high standards and deep lust for living. By all accounts, she has gone on to the exact life she sought from early on, perhaps with […]

SILENCE IN FRIENDSHIP

September 26, 2016 By Arthur H. Gunther III ahgunther@hotmail.com A long silence in the car, but it was not the dulling sort that makes you fidget and wish for time to fly because you are this and she is that and you no longer meet on common ground. Nor was the still moment the one […]

CURIOSITY — A LIFESAVER

By Arthur H. Gunther III ahgunther@hotmail.com Curiosity, we are warned, killed the cat, but the naysayers never tell you about the nine lives. There are other chances. In the University of Higher Education that is life, you can earn a doctorate via Curiosity 101, 201, 301, 401. Curiosity was a welcome push for Thomas Edison and […]

THE NOT-SO-ORDINARY WORKER

Sept. 5, 2016 By Arthur H. Gunther III ahgunther@hotmail.com This is crazy time in America, though if you subscribe to the thought that things happen for a reason, maybe we will learn why. But Labor Day is supposed to be free of deep thinking, so I guess any of that should be on hold. It’s […]

THE POETRY IN DRINKING TEA

By Arthur H. Gunther III We’ve got this Irish lass in the food program, you see, and wouldn’t you know that the gal from down Dublin way just has to have her tea first thing before the servin’ of the breakfast. It’s a right fine thing to do that, to have the lady’s tea, Barry’s […]

WAKING UP ON NOV. 8, 2016, NOV. 9, TOO …

August 8, 2016 By Arthur H. Gunther III ahgunther@hotmail.com     Now retired, I wrote hundreds of newspaper editorials endorsing candidates — local, state, national, These  days I often cast another in my mind to make an election choice. And so it is with the presidential contest. HILLARY OUR ONLY CHOICE; TRUMP DANGER TO WORLD  If U.S. […]

POLICE, CITIZENS: MUTUAL RESPECT

July 25, 2016 By Arthur H. Gunther III ahgunther@hotmail.com With all the sadness in the land over the deliberate targeting and killing of police officers as well as the harming of citizens by law enforcement, I will tell you of two local encounters that perhaps simplify but also articulate the issues today. Last week, at […]

‘PROGRESS’ AND THE OLD BOW SAW

July 18, 2016 By Arthur H. Gunther III ahgunther@hotmail.com Just before the pre-suburban explosion of the 1950s in my part of lower New York State, in a fruit orchard area fittingly off Cherry Lane, a young fellow, second grader, had just left a dream world adjacent to his backyard, a former polo field and then […]

FOCUS: OVAL OFFICE OR NATION?

  July 11, 2016 By Arthur H. Gunther III ahgunther@hotmail.com Equal time for Hillary in an unequal presidential race, in a time of sad national inequality. The last mildly satirical column suggested The Donald doesn’t want the presidency, that he never thought his sales job would connect, that he’ll give up the nation’s highest office […]

IT WAS ALL ABOUT THE RED HAT

July 4, 2016, weekend By Arthur H. Gunther ahgunther@hotmail.com So, “The Donald” won the presidency, and now we all wear red baseball-style caps with  the imperial slogan (“Let’s Make America Great Again”), purchased exclusively through the Trump Store. Seriously, if the former TV reality star, casino operator,  office space builder and bankruptcy court attendee wanted […]

WHEN YOUR FATHER BECOMES YOUR DAD

June 19, 2016 By Arthur H. Gunther III ahgunther@hotmail.com Father’s Day is a time for special reverence, especially when your dad is gone. It’s almost easier then, sad to say, because you don’t readily recall the difficult moments. All children have them with their fathers. All fathers have them with their children. Maybe even more […]