Semi Truths A highly irregular weblog dedicated to Truth, Justice, and American Cheese…!

March 17, 2003

EVE OF DESTRUCTION

Filed under: Politics,War and Peace — semi @ 4:58 pm

I have been struggling to find the words to express my dismay and disgust at the war that is going to start this week. Michael Moore has already found those words and put them together much more succinctly than could I. Read:

A Letter from Michael Moore to George W. Bush on the Eve of War

OUR MAN IN THE WHITE HOUSE

Filed under: Humor,Images — semi @ 4:40 pm

There’s something not quite right about this picture…

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(captured from CNN.COM)

March 14, 2003

THE BARBS OF CVILLE

Filed under: Charlottesville,Humor — semi @ 9:52 am

The University of Virginia Center for Politics “promotes the value of politics and seeks to improve civic education and increase civic participation through comprehensive research, pragmatic analysis, and innovative educational programs.” It also, apparently, has a wicked keen sense of irony, for on the eve of an American-led war in the mideast and the complete breakdown of our moral leadership, the Center is sponsoring a National Symposium on Political Humor.

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If you are anywhere near Charlottesville in March or April, attending any or all of these events could be a real tonic for what’s happening to our country. I’ll be there, and will report here.

March 11, 2003

OF PAINTED WINGS AND GIANT RINGS

Filed under: Charlottesville,People — semi @ 2:14 pm

At Cornell University in 1959, a nineteen year old student named Lenny Lipton sat in the library at Willard Straight Hall and read a poem by Ogden Nash about a “realio, trulio, little pet dragon“. As anyone who has ever been nineteen knows, it is a serious and sentimental age. Lenny later found himself thinking about dragons and lamenting the end of his childhood as he walked down the hill to the city of Ithaca to meet a friend for dinner. No one was home at his friend’s apartment, so he just let himself in (remember, this is 1959) and while he was waiting, sat down at a typewriter that belonged to his friend’s roommate, Peter. Lenny wrote down his own poem about a dragon and lost childhood fantasies and left the sheet in the typewriter.

Peter, a performer and concert organizer at Cornell, found the poem, added some words, and set it to music. A few years later, when Peter joined the emerging folk music scene in Greenwich Village, he founded a group with two other friends and that piece quickly became part of their repertoire. Peter tracked Lenny down to give him co-writer credit before the group recorded and released the song on vinyl. By early 1963, their record reached #2 on the popular charts and has been sung thousands of times since. Why, you probably know most of the lyrics yourself…

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