yakalskovich: (The Princess' typist in RW)
Maru ([personal profile] yakalskovich) wrote2004-03-12 03:15 pm

Varia and miscella

From the Life Long Learning department:
Just now, à propos of an opera poster, I realised that the "Nabucco" from the Verdi opera of the same name (the one with the famous chorus) is meant to be Nebuchadnezzar!!! Argh!!

From the department for the Observation of Human Oddities:
There was a fellow in the train this morning who actually looked a bit like [livejournal.com profile] madame_mercredi 's husband, Paul, and he was reading "Order of the Phoenix" (German edition). Only he was obsessively wrapping it up in the plastic bag he had taken it out from so the nobody should see the title. He was behaving as if he were reading pron. I felt a bit like asking him what he was doing that for, and did he realise if anyone said "Poor Remus!" out loud among a random group of perfectly normal people, almost everybody would know who and what was meant, and most people would actually agree with the sentiment? But I was mulling over developments and non-developments between Teppic and Chidder on [livejournal.com profile] discworld_rpg, so the Paul-oid remained unmolested.

From the department for Political Opinions and Conspiracy Theories:
Telepolis has a great article about why war doesn't work against terrorism, and one rather unsetling one about right-wing politicians calling for tightening security already. (The links are in German, and posted here especially for [livejournal.com profile] woelfle, with whom I was discussing this last night.)

From the Personal Department:
I'm much relieved as I had a mail from my former colleague Angela that our former colleague Graciela (who lives in Madrid) is all right.  She says Graciela said there's total chaos in the city and she was far too sad to write much.-

[identity profile] wiebke.livejournal.com 2004-03-12 08:29 pm (UTC)(link)
In the early 90s found a German magazine that was doing profiles of all these Eastern European teenagers and there was this Polish woman who looked just like my mom. My mom disagreed with me on this, but it DID look like her!

I read on transit all the time and also enjoy observing what other people are doing. Here in Atlanta, a lot of people read the Bible, often while taking notes or marking pages. Why do I find it unlikely people are doing that in Munich? The U.S. is pretty religious but here in the South, it's amazing. Even the city's Pride parade is dominated by (gay-OK) church groups! Bah!

I think the most fun I ever had reading stuff "in public" was when I was reading a lot of Ancient Roman poetry and philosophy. Nothing like reading Lucretius while pressed up against a lot of commuter, going through and underground tunnel... :)