Bush’s New Book Quotes Yours Truly

Wow. I am surprised—and very flattered.  SHSer Lauren tells me that President Bush’s new book Decision Points quotes me.  The Corner also takes note, because the quote is from something I wrote on NRO.  Here’s what Bush wrote:Those on the other side of the debate . . . . Continue Reading »

Marketing Death

Well, I’m not surprised. As Joe mentioned last week , the death salesman who created the exhibitions of human bodies is now putting up his specially prepared cadavers up for sale . Gunther von Hagens came up with techniques for extracting fluids and fatty flesh from dead bodies that are . . . . Continue Reading »

Reading for Veterans Day

Though we don’t celebrate Veterans Day until Thursday, in preparation readers may want to read Joe Carter’s “On the Square” article from last year: What a Veteran Knows . For me, it’s a useful reminder to think about those the day celebrates and what we owe them — . . . . Continue Reading »

Afternoon Links — 11.9.10

“Many students,” especially freshmen, writes an English professor at West Point, “do not rate their knowledge very highly; they divorce their private or extracurricular expertise from knowledge they acquire in a formal academic context,” and they need to read Sherlock Holmes . . . . Continue Reading »

For the Love of Bacon

According to a recent report in the U.K., a hard-working cafe owner has been ordered to tear down an extractor fan—because the smell of her frying bacon ‘offends’ Muslims. Mrs Akciecek and her husband Cetin, 50,—himself a Turkish Muslim—work more than 50 . . . . Continue Reading »

A New Age-y Pictorial Fantasia

In today’s second “On the Square” article, painter and art critic Maureen Mullarkey reviews an exhibit at a New York museum comparing icons in Orthodox Christianity and Tibetan Buddhism. Modernity’s Seductive Hedges begins: Modernity offers uneasy secularists two seductive . . . . Continue Reading »