Wednesday, January 27, 2021

An unambiguous forecast

From a National Weather Service alert for our area:

Between 1 and 2 inches of snow is expected by supper time today.
Do you see what they did there? For some people dinner is a mid-day meal; for others, an evening meal. Supper leaves no ambiguity. Merriam-Webster explains both words.

Now I want to know whether the NWS uses supper regionally or nationally.

Idle question, Michael, let it go.

*

I know myself too well to know that I could leave the question alone. So I e-mailed the Central Illinois office of National Weather Service to ask. Chris Geelhart, lead meteorologist, replied:
The forecaster that issued that statement comes from a farming background in the Midwest, which is probably why he used that wording. My mom also comes from a farming background (in South Dakota) and would use similar wording when I was growing up. Typically we tend to lean toward using actual clock times or more broad terms such as “mid afternoon”, “early evening”, etc. The NWS doesn't have a formal policy on regional terminology, as far as I know.
Chris noted that the use of supper in this morning’s alert was a subject of conversation on social media.

And it’s snowing.

[Thanks to Chris Geelhart for permission to quote him here.]

Time as money

From Innovation Hub, a remarkable story about selling the correct time: “A Watch Named Arnold.”

A magazine exhibition

From the Grolier Club, “Magazines and the American Experience: Highlights from the Collection of Steven Lomazow, M.D.” Many covers to admire. Maybe my favorite: the September 1929 Black Mask, which began the serial publication of The Maltese Falcon.

The Grolier Club has a dozen more exhibitions online. Happy browsing.

“Dead Man Teaching”

The Chronicle of Higher Education tells the story of a Concordia University course: “Dead Man Teaching.” Unconscionable, Concordia.

What most galls me: for the university, it doesn’t seem to matter if the professor is living or dead. Who cares? It’s not like a student would want to e-mail a professor with a follow-up question, right?

Tuesday, January 26, 2021

Full disclosure

The e-mail’s subject line read Glasses Disclosure. I didn’t see the sender’s name.

Full disclosure: I wear glasses. They disclose to me a world that, at a distance, would otherwise be blurred.

If J.D. Salinger’s unpublished stories about the Glass family are ever published, they would constitute a Glasses disclosure.

And there’s a Bud Powell composition, “Glass Enclosure.”

All or none of these observations might have something to do with my dream mail.

Related reading
All OCA dream posts (Pinboard)

“Apple Beige”

“This beige ushered in personal computing, which eventually helped change the world”: Ben Zotto goes in search of “Apple Beige.”

For me that color will always mean dysentery. In other words, playing The Oregon Trail with my children on the public library’s Apple IIe. At home we had a //c, whose color was a beautiful cream.

Monday, January 25, 2021

Terence Davies adapts Zweig

Exciting news: Terence Davies will direct an adaptation of Stefan Zweig’s novel The Post-Office Girl.

Our household has seen two Davies films: The Long Day Closes (1992) and Of Time and the City (2008). They’re reason to think that The Post-Office Girl is something to look forward to.

Related reading
All OCA Stefan Zweig posts (Pinboard)

Naked City Mongol

[Joe Silver as “Dean of Admissions.” From the Naked City episode “No Naked Ladies in Front of Giovanni’s House!” (April 17, 1963). Click for a larger view.]

I dunno. Maybe they used the same pencil from episode to episode. At any rate, there it is in the cup, a Mongol.

On the second shelf, the fourth book from the right looks like it might be a volume from the Reader’s Digest Condensed Books series. In a dean’s office?

Like every other Naked City episodes, this one is at YouTube. Not one of the best, but it does afford the chance to see Harry Guardino, Marisa Pavan, and Christopher Walken.

Venn reading
All OCA Mongol posts : Mongol and Naked City posts : Naked City posts (Pinboard)

Everything changes

A question for non-smokers and ex-smokers only: when did you last see an ashtray? Meaning a traditional tabletop ashtray, not the enormous outdoor kind. My answer: I can’t even remember.

Sunday, January 24, 2021

Leaving Mar-a-Lago

From CNN:

Many once-loyal members of Mar-a-Lago are leaving because they no longer want to have any connection to former President Donald Trump, according to the author of the definitive book about the resort.

“It's a very dispirited place,” Laurence Leamer, historian and author of Mar-a-Lago: Inside the Gates of Power at Donald Trump’s Presidential Palace, told MSNBC host Alex Witt on Weekends with Alex Witt Saturday. He said members are “not concerned about politics and they said the food is no good.”
It sounds like Mar-a-Lago may be turning into a latter-day Xanadu. Jigsaw, anyone?