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April 19 Talking about Does torture really work? - Profiler's Perspective - MSNBC.com
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Talking about Yale, Columbia grad teaching assistants strike - Education - MSNBC.com
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April 13 VampiresI imagine most people have noticed the topicality of vampires these days. They seem to be everywhere: tv, movies, traditional horror fiction and, increasingly they and other supernatural types appear in mysteries, which were once the clear domain of the rational, scientific and explicable. Watson may have had his doubts, but Holmes never for a moment harbored any suspicion that the Hound of the Baskervilles was a supernatural apparition. And, of course, it turns out to be a throughly mortal dog decked out with flourescent paint. Even children's literature, such as ScoobyDoo cartoons, would adhere to the formula that the spooky doings at the old mansion would turn out to be the efforts of greedy developers to scare off the rightful tenants. Looking back, I try to see when the genre bounderies began to blur, a subject for more study, I suspect. April 10 too much choiceThere is a scene in Moscow on the Hudson, a film in which Robin Williams, playing a Russian defector, is shopping for coffee in a NY supermarket. He becomes overwhelmed by the choices and has some sort of seizure. This seems to be the perpetual risk of shopping for any but the most basic commodities in America. Or probably the entire technologically connected world. Whether choosing a new appliance, a new cell phone plan, or in my case, trying to pick a web host, the choices become so overwhelming that it becomes a matter of exhaustion rather than of completely researched choice. It would be impossible to learn about and comprehensibly compare all the available options. Or at least so I tell myself after settling on what seems to be a reasonable deal. The only comparison I can make with my younger days is shopping at the farmer's market. In my case, it was Denios Farmer's Market and Auction, in Roseville CA, an institution that still exists, although I believe they have dropped "auction" from the title. You didn't buy the peaches at the first stall unless you were rushed for time. Another booth, deeper in, might have the same variety at a better price, or in better condition, or a different variety. Or the apricots might look better than the peaches. And so on. But if you delayed too long the first vendor might run out, or have only the picked over remnants of the morning's harvest. But at least the task was finite, it was possible to view all the stalls at a given market. And f you were a regular customer you would become familiar with the regular stall keepers and know to look in a particular corner for the vendor who always had the earliest sweet corn. |
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