sex at the sun
I dig the Cornell Daily Sun. E.B White and Kurt Vonnegut worked there once. Jessica Saunders and Kate McDowell work there now.
originally posted by xowie
I dig the Cornell Daily Sun. E.B White and Kurt Vonnegut worked there once. Jessica Saunders and Kate McDowell work there now.
originally posted by xowie
Here in Hollywood I climbed a light pole to hang the cumbersome sign I was carrying ("Let the Inspections Work") and saw before me an endless valley of signs, bobbing like square-headed daisies and extending as far ahead as I could see. (There were a few undercover cops, too, but nobody stopped me.) For the first time I thought, as maybe civil rights workers did in '63 and AIDS activists did in '93: This mass of humans, this noise, this exuberance — maybe all of this will register in Washington. Maybe.LA Weekly: A Day for Peace.
originally posted by daiichi
On February 26th, you can join a massive march on Washington without leaving your living room. The Virtual March on Washington is a first-of-its-kind campaign from the Win Without War coalition.Virtual March on Washington Headquarters.
originally posted by daiichi
I know Kris and Rita and Marty MullLA Times on the rejuvenation of the Roxy, Troubadour and Whisky. Also, NYT on the Malibu scene. Howzat blizzard, boys?
Are meeting at the Troubadour
We'll get it on with the "Joy Of Cooking"
While the crowd calls out for more- Peter Rowan, 1973
originally posted by xowie
This one’s a keeper: Browser News: Resources > Fonts features samples of just about every font it’s safe to assume a Mac and/or Windows user will have installed – with the necessary caveat that “fonts will not be depicted properly if they are not installed or if your browser’s CSS support is poor.”
“The Weblog Kitchen explores current research in weblogs, wikis, and other hypertext systems.”
The more Americans start talking with each other about where our country is headed the better. But these conversations need to be genuinely helpful, not exercises in mutual misunderstanding. And since they are most likely to occur without much prior arrangement, you need to get ready.Susan Strong, Mainstreaming Our Conversations On War.
originally posted by daiichi
Faces in the Crowd by Carol Lay.
originally posted by xowie
When it became obvious what a dumb and cruel and spiritually and financially and militarily ruinous mistake our war in Vietnam was, every artist worth a damn in this country, every serious writer, painter, stand-up comedian, musician, actor and actress, you name it, came out against the thing. We formed what might be described as a laser beam of protest, with everybody aimed in the same direction, focused and intense. This weapon proved to have the power of a banana-cream pie three feet in diameter when dropped from a stepladder five-feet high. And so it is with anti-war protests in the present day. Then as now, TV did not like anti-war protesters, nor any other sort of protesters, unless they rioted. Now, as then, on account of TV, the right of citizens to peaceably assemble, and petition their government for a redress of grievances, ‘ain’t worth a pitcher of warm spit,’ as the saying goes.In These Times: Kurt Vonnegut vs. the !*!@. Which reminds me I've been looking for an excuse to post this quote which is the entirety of the afterword of the children's book of Free to Be... You and Me:
I've often thought there ought to be a manual to hand to little kids, telling them what kind of planet they're on, why they don't fall off it, how much time they've probably got here, how to avoid poison ivy, and so on. I tried to write one once. It was called Welcome to Earth. But I got stuck explaining why we don't fall off the planet. Gravity is just a word. It doesn't explain anything. If I could get past gravity, I'd tell them how we reproduce, how long we've been here, apparently, and a little bit about evolution. And one thing I would really like to tell them about is cultural relativity. I didn't learn until I was in college about all the other cultures, and I should have learned that in the first grade. A first grader should understand that his or her culture isn't a rational invention; that there are thousands of other cultures and they all work pretty well; that all cultures function on faith rather than truth; that there are lots of alternatives to our own society. Cultural relativity is defensible and attractive. It's also a source of hope. It means we don't have to conitnue this way if we don't like it.
For several months he staked out the Gladstone Hotel on East 52nd Street, where she was recovering from her divorce from Joe DiMaggio and her summary dismissal from her contract at 20th Century Fox. On one of those truant mornings, Mr. Mangone took an eight-millimeter Kodak camera from his brother, headed downtown and met Monroe just as she was leaving the hotel for a therapeutic shopping spree. Then, just as in the movies, she waved, winked and asked him to come along.NYT: A Boy's Film of a Day With Marilyn Monroe.
originally posted by xowie
The founder of Maon Farm, Yehoshefat Tor, says he still thinks the bombing was a good idea. "The Torah says we should kill all the Arabs," he told me. "Not just Arabs who maybe help terrorists. Everybody." His neighbor at Maon Farm, David Ben Zvi, a 27-year-old shepherd who lives with his wife and children in a blue-and-white city bus, tells me that he would like to see a "Jewish Taliban" that would run the country according to the Torah. "This is my land, but it is not my nation," he says.The Unsettlers by Samantha M. Shapiro (via MeFi).
originally posted by daiichi
Google buys Blogger; randomwalks moves to Movable Type. Coincidence? Well, yeah.
Massive marches inMore at dayku.
every city, in every
country on the globe
originally posted by xowie
We call upon the Spirit of the Founders to guide us as we create a new world where all may live in peace.Remarks of Rep. Dennis Kucinich at Feb. 15 peace march in New York City.
originally posted by daiichi
The case against the war by Jonathan Schell.
originally posted by daiichi
And the terrorists in WashingtonSpeak Out, by Lawrence Ferlinghetti
Are drafting all the young men
And no one speaks
And they are rousting out
All the ones with turbans
And they are flushing out
All the strange immigrants
And they are shipping all the young men
To the killing fields again
And no one speaks
originally posted by daiichi
Most of the world cried out at the slaughter of the people of Guernica. Such bombings were considered highly inhumane and Picasso's painting caught much of the outrage that was shared by most civilized people... Perhaps remembering the original horror and revulsion that was felt in 1937 after the bombing of Guernica will remind us that the bombing of civilians is a hideous and immoral practice of eliminating helpless and innocent people whose only crime is living in a war zone.Editorial, Cornell Daily Sun, April 26, 1966.
originally posted by daiichi
Happy birthday, Domina Jane Die!
originally posted by daiichi
At the Coalition on Homelessness, Tracy has another idea: "There are very acute mental illnesses that are specific to the activist scene. For one, you have a society that ridicules and marginalizes your vocation. And second, people who come in and are expecting change now or change today are in for a big disappointment. If you don't have the long view, you're going to be in a constant cycle of raising your hopes and having them beat down. It's very easy to get into the 'nothing changes' mentality."SFBG, Looking for Hugh: The strange, sad disappearance of an activist.
originally posted by daiichi
Bastard, by M. Shahid Alam.
originally posted by daiichi
Stop Mad Cowboy Disease.Some slogans for this weekend's anti-war rallies. Also, SFGate: Lifting the veil on anti-war groups.
Make Tea Not War.
War is sweet to those who haven't tasted it (Erasmus).
originally posted by daiichi
You can watch a bit of video (scroll down) at dc.indymedia and listen to a bit more of the town hall meeting on Pacifica’s PeaceWatch.
The audience — mostly middle-age professionals — broke into sustained applause when the veteran said the nation was being led into war by men who had never gone to war. He thundered off half a dozen names: "George Bush, hawk, did not fulfill his National Guard duty; Dick Cheney, hawk, did not serve; Paul Wolfowitz, hawk, did not serve; Richard Perle, hawk, did not serve."Love that town hall meeting!
originally posted by xowie
"I would say I'm probably relatively insane, to an extent," he was quoted as saying. "I take medication for schizophrenia, but I wouldn't say I'm schizophrenic. But I have a bipolar personality, which is strange. I'm my own worst enemy. I have devils inside that fight me."
"Don't move the mikes," Phil would warn if we got up to take our 5-minute break which we were lucky to get. He didn't want anything to touch the "sound-waves" of that room once he had gotten balance. "DON'T MOVE THE MIKES," so we were very careful. The whole band was in the room. Some were playing chess, or throwing darts to naked ladies drawn on the walls. Phil would sometimes dress in outlandish costumes and then use his psychological tricks on us. We were ready for him.Wrecking Crew doll Carol Kaye is the most recorded bass player in history, Hal Blaine (1, 2) the most recorded drummer.
originally posted by daiichi