January 2011

  • Greek Prostitution

    Look what turned up in a press release: Prostitution has been called arguably the world’s oldest profession. And the world can now get rare insight into some of the earliest prostitution from ancient Greece in a new book that was co-edited by Madeleine Henry, a professor in Iowa State University’s department of world languages and…

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  • A Randy Newman Roman Rant?

    Brief item in the Gambit: In January 2007, The New York Times ran a guest editorial by Randy Newman. It was, appropriately, the lyrics to a song, “A Few Words in Defense of Our Country,” which condemned the current state of American politics through a clenched-teeth grin, belittling modern leaders in light of the more…

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  • I don’t know which is more stupid … this claim or the fact that a news organization would actually give it any attention at all (to say nothing of a county board of some sort). From the CarmiTimes: An Iuka man who believes the lost Tomb of Alexander the Great may be located in extreme…

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  • Old Men in the Chorus

    Umit Dhuga at Calvin has been working on a project related to tragic choruses of elderly folk: His long study of the choruses in Greek drama has led Umit Dhuga to the following question: “Why are so many choruses composed of men who limp and complain about their decrepitude?” he asks, Dhuga, a Calvin professor…

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  • Horace and the Mona Lisa

    Just the other day I was wondering what my former prof Ross Kilpatrick was up to … a news item from Queen’s University suggests interesting things: Queen’s University Classics professor emeritus Ross Kilpatrick believes the Leonardo da Vinci masterpiece, the Mona Lisa, incorporates images inspired by the Roman poet Horace and Florentine poet Petrarch. The…

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