Where you going? fellow asks me, he coming out of George’s on Oak Park Avenue.
Good question, say I, quipping.
He laughed good-naturedly, but the two of us are 80, and I might have said, Heading for the last roundup.
Oh boy. Aren’t we all?
Where you going? fellow asks me, he coming out of George’s on Oak Park Avenue.
Good question, say I, quipping.
He laughed good-naturedly, but the two of us are 80, and I might have said, Heading for the last roundup.
Oh boy. Aren’t we all?
Union League Club, lunch. He’s in the belly of the beast where devil takes hindmost in struggle for soul of Notre Dame.
Heshima Kenya makes a difference in the lives of girls in Nairobi.
Excellent interview with co-founder.
Now, the economy is falling apart and people like me who made all the right decisions and invested in themselves are being forced to bail out all the people who didn’t. The people that overspent their paychecks suddenly feel entitled to the same luxuries that I earned and sacrificed 42 years of my life for.
‘Tain’t fair.
I hadn’t heard the expression before, but Gov. Mitt Romney nailed it when he said President Barack Obama believes in “trickle down government.” (Here,here and here.) That’s an unforgettable line from tonight’s debate between the Democratic and Republican presidential candidates.
Excellent observation. So good, in fact, that Blithe Spirit has been there.
I take exception to the esteemed columnist.
Having little regard for Richard Roeper’s taste or even his feel for the gestalt of things, I find his comments about the TV show “Homeland” helpful. They mean I will have eventually to look at this show when it comes to the library.
Especially what he says about Clare Danes the female star:
Claire Danes has always been an acquired taste. Rarely has an actress so often resorted to going wide-eyed and then even wider-eyed to convey her emotions. Sometimes its heartbreakingly effective; just as often, its as distracting as Kristen Stewart biting her lip every 30 seconds or Jennifer Aniston constantly playing with her hair.
Thin stuff, I grant you. Pats her on head, then gives back of hand, more or less. But this is Richard, not quite sure but that’s enough. For me, anyhow.
Ms. Danes, the lady in question:
at MuchMusic, for the program…
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Former Green candidate Laurel Schmidt got 10,000 votes last time around, but has tale of woe in a note boosting current candidate.
I’m having a wine and cheese to raise money for Nancy Wade in Congress this Friday at my home: 203 Parkview, Riverside, IL. Call me if you can make it! Fri, October 5 at 7:30pm —
As some of you know too well, I ran for Congress as a Green Party candidate in the 3rd Congressional District in 2010 and got over 10,000 votes. This should have been enough to keep me as an established party candidate, but state Dems redistricted me out of the 3rd and cut off the Green Party’s established status.
I’ve run into this before, in Oak Park, after I wrote a column about being Republican in Oak Park some years back. Green friend bemoaned Green problems even then. Makes the naive person wonder if Being Green isn’t as important as Keeping Power.
I love a mystery . . .
The 100 best mystery novels of all time. Here they are, with links…
1. The Complete Sherlock Holmes, by Arthur Conan Doyle (Included in this are The Hound of the Baskervilles, A Study in Scarlet, The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes and The Sign of Four, each of which garned a lot of votes on its own.)
2. The Maltese Falcon, by Dashiell Hammett
3. Tales of Mystery and Imagination, by Edgar Allen Poe (Includes “The Gold Bug” and “Murders in the Rue Morgue,” which also received a lot of individual votes.)
4. The Daughter of Time, by Josephine Tey
5. Presumed Innocent, by Scott Turow
6. The Spy Who Came in from the Cold, by John le Carré
7. The Moonstone, by Wilkie Collins
8. The Big Sleep, by Raymond Chandler
9. Rebecca, by Daphne du Maurier
10. And Then There…
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Some “crazy things” in papyruses:
Scholars are questioning the authenticity and significance of a much-publicized discovery by a Harvard scholar who reported that a 4th Century fragment of papyrus has provided the first evidence that some early Christians believed Jesus was married.
“. . . many questions remain unanswered about the Harvard fragment.”
. . . from Martin Marty at his best:
Vying for space and time on the religion-and-media front this week, in competition with presidential campaigns, Muslim extremist riots, and almost numberless other stirs, has been the attention given to a tiny piece of papyrus which includes the teeny words “Jesus” and “wife.” This text was pictured as being “hot off the press,” with only a four century pre-publication delay after the time of the occurrences to which it presumably referred. Four centuries from the implied wedding of Jesus to this “evidence” is the amount of time from the writing of the Mayflower Compact to our own.
And there’s more more more . . .