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California Tipping in the Ocean

There is nothing like the sea. Bodysurfing off the coast of Ventura on Wednesday evening, the ocean carrying me from surf to shore, was truly a treat for body and soul. The Pacific and her awesome vastness will never cease to amaze me, whether I encounter her in Oregon, San Diego or Baja California. When I walk on those shores and look out at the endlessness … oh, mother. I fancy myself a mermaid in a previous existence. Pisces to water, or something like that. Of course, the allergies are back upon landing in New Orleans.

California Field Trip 2004

Coastal California. I can only begin humming Thomas Dolby’s Screen Kiss:

Miller time at the bar where all the English meet
She used to drink in the hills,
only now she drinks in the valley.
Where every road has a name like Beachwood Avenue or so it seems,
a Croydon girl could really hope to find a home.
With a thousand miles of real estate to choose from,
you begin to see the value of your freedom.

The moon is bright in the haze above old Hollywood
and deer look down from the hills
And it’s three o’clock in the morning
Pill in hand you can hear his golden surfer voice
crying out, mummy won’t come out of the bathroom
And you’d hoped he’d say he’s sorry if he hit you
but he’s buried in the screenplay of his feature

Screen kiss, one screen kiss
Straight from a film I forget who was in
Screen kiss, one screen kiss
Blue filter lens, a pool of vaseline

But all the rushes look the same
Only there’s a movie I wouldn’t pay to see again
if it’s the one with him in

You and I could be a mile above the earth tremors
Hold to me and we’ll climb
You could sneak out while he’s sleeping
Suicide in the hills above old Hollywood
is never gonna change the world.
Change the world overnight
Any more than the invention of the six-gun, child
Any more than the discovery of Radium,
or California tipping in the ocean

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Finn For All

8 times! 8 times I’ve tried to catch Neil Finn live in concert and finally succeeded. Neil Finn has got to have one of the most amazing lyrical voices in the music industry. Guy’s almost 50 but still retains his boyish voice and charm. That was a great show, some old standards, some new! And I got to stand a mere 5 feet away from Neil … swoooon!

A nice, small environment at the House of Blues, close to the action, great songs, and a very respectful crowd. They started with songs from Finn, their first brother-act album and then went into a few from Woodface and the later Enz albums, all sprinkled with material from their latest album, which I pre-ordered and will be out August 28th. Not a whisper from Temple of Low Men – boooo. Through it all, Tim either played keyboards or flailed about with a tambourine like a flamingo with balance issues – that was funny. They closed with Four Seasons in One Day, which made me feel quite melancholy for a while after.

Did I tell you I got to stand 5 feet away from Neil for one song, before the speakers got too loud?!

LAB replies to my review: “He is only 45! Isn’t his voice beautiful? It’s too bad you couldn’t have seen him solo, or with Crowded House. He rocked out a lot more then. Hopefully he will release another solo album sometime soon, and then we will get another solo tour! I would have loved to hear Four Seasons, such a beautiful song. The song list will be posted on the frenz of the enz site.

7 Worlds Collide, the live CD, is really good. Johnny Marr is all over it and what’s his bucket from the Smiths sings “There is a light that never goes out,” which I always thought was a funny song. That’s my weird sense of humor for you! (Morrisey … blanked out for a minute).

I have to liven up my Enz/Crowdies/NeilFinn CD collection. Lessee:

Best Crowded House: Temple of Low Men, Woodface, and Together Alone. Their first (Crowded House) is just OK.

Best Neil: The new(er) Neil Finn – One All, is again just OK. I love Try Whistling This. One All has too much basement stuff (see below).

Best Enz: Coroboree or True Colors – the Greatest Hits CD

Best Finn Brothers: None? Don’t really like ’em. Sounds too much like they were written and recorded in the family basement. (Probably true.) But I have them anyway.

One Nil: So-so. It’s called One All in the the States because I guess Americans are idiots and don’t understand what “Nil” means. There are some good songs on it, but nothing as good as Sinner or King Tide from the first solo CD. It’s much more mellow.

Together Alone, the last Crowded House CD, is a solid album. Nails in My Feet is a great song that didn’t make it on Recurring Dreams.

Here’s an interesting website I came across with CH record reviews. This guy certainly has a love/hate relationship with CH. Note especially the Lord of the Rings paragraph.

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According to a Boston Globe article, the federal government has ordered that some pamphlets already issued to federal depository libraries be taken out of circulation and returned because they are internal. Librarians note that the information has long been in the public domain and are resisting the order.

Full article

from boston.com.

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Pretty much work safe, just don’t blast the volume!

JibJab presents This Land Is Your Land.

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Latin Americanist decides which US govt-funded scientists may speak at conferences? Ok, I go crawl in hole now.

Bushwhacked
Ben Goldacre . Thursday July 15, 2004 . The Guardian

Pointing out that the current American government is manipulative, deceitful and interventionist is hardly news: although it hadn’t occurred to naive little me that it’d started meddling in science. The Bush administration has decreed that the World Health Organisation must clear US government-funded researchers with the health and human sciences department, before they can speak at conferences.

Nice. The editor of the Journal of the American Medical Association, the largest US academic journal, has already criticised the ban on authors of papers on Aids going to conferences, talking about their work and sharing knowledge, just because they have ideas counter to the Bush administration.

The man who decides who can speak is William Steiger. His qualifications are a PhD in Latin American history and having George Bush Snr as godfather. He was behind the attack on WHO’s reasonable suggestion that no more than 10% of people’s energy intake should come from sugar: he said there was no supporting scientific evidence. The US has a 25% guideline. That’s a quarter of your dietary intake of energy “safely” coming from pure sugar.

It gets worse. The American “Union of Concerned Scientists” has collected the signatures of dozens of Nobel prizewinners, in protest at government interference in “independent scientific review panels”. You can read the full report at www.ucsusa.org, but it’s pretty depressing. It includes examples of the Bush administration blocking research and twisting evidence on issues as diverse as safe levels in lead poisoning, the environmental impact of mining, farming, drug abuse and patterns of infectious diseases. It’s practically impossible to research a lot of these things without being part of government infrastructure.

Funny things happen when political ideologies start interfering with science. Trofim Lysenko was the top Soviet biologist for decades: he thought natural selection was too individualistic, and spent his career growing plants really close together, in the hope they would develop collectivist tendencies. Challenge him and you were out of a job.

Governments that interfere with science, with the lies of alternative therapists, the fluff of cosmetics adverts, and childish dramatisations of science stories in the news, all contribute to the popular impression that it is nonsense concocted by boffins pursuing their own peculiar agendas.

And that’s bad.

Please send your bad science to bad.science@guardian.co.uk
Guardian Unlimited C Guardian Newspapers Limited 2004

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