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Dec. 11th, 2016 08:07 am
calimac: (puzzle)
[personal profile] calimac
1. In memoriam, Vaughn Howland. Tolkien scholars knew him as the domestic partner (that's the term they preferred) of Verlyn Flieger, and thus one of the small band of meta-scholars, including the redoubtable Janice Coulter and my own B., who keep their scholar-partners going. Vaughn was always relaxed and cool about it. He was a tall, rangy fellow with a quiet, slightly raspy voice. Go have some barbecue in his honor, because that was his favorite avocation.

2. Also gone from us, John Glenn, last of the original astronauts. Some day I may try to tell you the story of why his house moved. He lived a good, long life. Godspeed.

3. Also gone, 36 people in the Ghost Ship fire. This has gotten a lot of space in my paper because it's local, but aside from sorrow, my reaction to that angle is to be struck by how little I knew about it. I was vaguely aware that artists were working in warehouses in Oakland - even Jerry Brown lived in a converted loft when he was mayor there - but I'd never heard of the Ghost Ship or the music scene it was part of or any of the people involved. There are worlds beyond worlds in the naked city. What a shame it took this to bring it out.

4a. Britain is advanced: Everywhere I went, the credit card readers took chips. My own credit cards have only gone chipped within the past year or so. If you pay with a card for a restaurant meal, the server brings a portable machine which will even calculate your tip for you, instead of taking your card off god knows where.

4b. Britain is retarded: It has something I hadn't seen in the States for over 30 years, at least. Pay toilets.

4c. Britain is middling: Turns out New York is not the only city with overhead signs using arrows pointing up, meaning "proceed forward," right next to escalators that literally go up. So does London. Taking an escalator up to exit from the Hammersmith tube station, or so I thought, I found at the top another sign indicating that the exit was back down the escalator again. Did Lewis Carroll design this station?, I thought.

5. Half the time I start to read an article about Trump appointing somebody, it turns out that he hasn't actually appointed anybody: this is just speculation about whom he might appoint. The headlines don't make this clear a lot more often than they do. I don't want to read speculations, so I'm just ignoring the whole thing.

Date: 2016-12-11 04:39 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cmcmck.livejournal.com
We've been chip'n'pin for years here and we're now wave card at machine for instant scan too, although that's proving to have a few bugs that still need ironing out.

Not losing sight of your card is a real plus!

We've actually returned to pay toilets after realising that people don't respect the free ones.

I know Hammersmith tube station well and it is particularly notorious for being utterly confusing!

Date: 2016-12-11 05:51 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kalimac.livejournal.com
One thing I didn't know until I got to Hammersmith is that there are actually two separate tube stations. Going from the Circle line one to the District/Piccadilly one, which I did the first time I was there, was easy enough; but this time I was going the other way. Not only couldn't I find the exit, but there were no directional signs to the other station, which was also not true in the other direction.

Date: 2016-12-12 11:53 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cmcmck.livejournal.com
Indeed there are and I know both of 'em well.

Date: 2016-12-11 07:08 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] whswhs.livejournal.com
Really? We saw a pay toilet here in Riverside just a couple of months ago. It was in a building owned by a medical practice that C was checking out; it was the only toilet available to patients. That wasn't the most offputting thing about that particular practice, but it contributed to her decision not to go back, I think.

I think you're prudent not to worry about what Trump might be about to do; better to save your distress for when he actually does bad things, if you can manage that detachment. There's a passage about that in The Screwtape Letters, where Wormwood's target has been called up for military service, and Screwtape advises Wormwood to keep him worrying about all the terrible might-bes—what if I die? what if I'm crippled? what if I'm taken prison by the Germans?—and praying for strength to face them, but by no means to pray for help with his present fear, which is inspiring all those hypotheticals. But of course social media work to disseminate and magnify alarming hypotheticals, and the older news media seem to have gotten into the game.

Date: 2016-12-12 03:04 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sturgeonslawyer.livejournal.com
Also gone: Greg Lake, bassist/vocalist/guitarist of Emerson Lake and Palmer.
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