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oedipus' online complexes

a compendium of truth which is stranger than fiction

May 2007

( Monthly archive )

Improve Your Sax Life

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May 2007 Edition



for the next week, WKCR, the radio station of Columbia University, and the oldest FM station in the united states, is devoting all of its programming to a Sam Rivers Festival Broadcast

if you live in the NYC area, you can tune into the broadcast directly at 89.9 FM; if you're anywhere else, you can listen to WKCR's online stream

the festival started at noon, eastern daylight savings time, on Friday, May 18, 2007 and will last through Venerable Bede's Day, friday, may 25, 2007 at 9 PM...

that's 177 straight hours of the genius of sam rivers -- enjoy it (and him) while you can..

the real mystery of fort dix

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the U.S. is abuzz with the news of the arrest of the alleged terrorist cell in new jersey, whose members apparently -- amongst other insidious aspirations -- were plotting an attack upon new jersy's own fort dix...

ever since i was a young jerseyman, i have felt an involuntary shudder whenever i passed fort dix, as the motto of the fort, which plays a prominent part in the design of the main gate of the walled compound -- Work Makes You Free -- is the same motto (albeit in english), which, most famously, was (and still is) emblazoned over the entrance to the first incarnation of the concentration camp at auschwitz: Arbeit macht frei

i checked with the wikipedia article on the phrase, Arbeit macht frei, but it didn't explain why it should have been used as a motto for fort dix -- at least, not to me... even more surprising, the article didn't contain a reference to fort dix... so how -- and why -- did the same motto come to be so prominently displayed at two such divergent places?

construction of fort dix began in the summer of 1917, but i don't think the motto-emblazoned gate dates from the fort's founding; in 1939, "Camp Dix" became "Fort Dix", a permenant army post, which meant construction of more permenant structures at the site, as well as the site's expansion... other opportunities for the erection of the motto-emblazoned gate came in 1947, when the fort was designated a basic training center, as well as during the 1950s and 1960s, when the fort further expanded to accomodate a simulated vietnamese village... i checked fort dix's official base site, and found the official fort dix history, but nothing there helped me pin down the date of construction of the gate, which is clearly visible from the turnpike (hey, it's new jersey, after all), although it was a handy source for much of the detailed information contained in this paragraph....

i thought that i might find that Work Makes You Free was a particular army company, corps or division's motto, or even that it was derived from a classical work of antiquity, and -- as so much else -- revived and misused by the nazis... but no; nothing...

i suppose that's it -- nothing profound -- i just wonder how the hell the same slogan came to adorn the entrance to one of the twentieth century's major training centers for american soldiers fighting (ostensively) in the name of freedom and several centers dedicated to one of the twentieth century's most inexplicable (and despicable) endeavors?

i wonder if there's anyone who knows... i wonder if there's anyone else who cares...

a third of the way to nowhere...

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when visiting in late january, chaals enthusiastically explained how he was dedicated to reading at least a book a week this year.

at that point, i had just overcome a nasty blow to the head, which required me to remain horizontal for a couple of weeks, during which i had an opportunity to get quite a bit of reading done. as i thought of it, i realized that if i kept my current pace, i too could read at least 52 books this year.

so, i set myself some ground rules: all audio books must be listened to at normal, rather than at a quickened speed; a book must be unabridged in order to qualify; and i must finish it in its entirety before listing it.

what i had read so far, not only fit these requirements, but gave me a head-start on the endeavor:

  1. Washington's Crossing, by David Hackett Fischer (RFB&D: DT-HC454)
  2. The Cabala, by Thornton Wilder (NLS: 17679)
  3. The Eighth Day, by Thornton Wilder (NLS: RC 37676)
  4. An Honest President, a biography of Grover Cleveland by H.Paul Jeffers
  5. Partly Cloudy Patriot, by Sarah Vowell (RFB&D: DT-HJ907)
  6. My Life as a Fake, by Peter Carey
  7. The Ides of March, by Thornton Wilder (NLS: RC 61139)
  8. Team of Rivals, by Doris Kearns Goodwin (RFB&D: DT-HM597)
  9. The Devil & the White City, by Eric Larsen
  10. Of Time, Fire and the River, by Norman F. Brydon (NLS: C2896)
  11. The Jonestown Flood, by David McCullough
  12. The Mysterious Flame of Queen Luana, by Umberto Eco

and then, in February 2007, i joined MyOpera, and was asked, whilst setting up my profile, what was the latest book i had read? to this, i could only answer: Against the Day by Thomas Pynchon, for i had made the decision 6 hours into the 53 hours and 34 minutes it would take me to complete the book, that i was suspending my regular habit of reading several books simultaneously, until i finished Against the Day, so i listed it as the last book i read, attempting to keep current the progress i was making in completing the 53 hours and 34 minutes...

here is a partial (off-the-top-of-my-head) list of books i suspended reading until i finish Against the Day:

  1. Julius Ceasar: A Military Biography, by J.F.C. Fuller
  2. The Roman Way, by Edith Hamilton
  3. The Iraq Study Group Report
  4. Mayflower: A Story of Courage, Community and War, by Nathaniel Philbrick
  5. Jurgen: A Comedy of Justice, by James Branch Cabell
  6. The Chronicles of Clovis, by Saki (HH Munro)
  7. Fables for the Frivolous, by Guy Wetmore Carryl
  8. Many Masks: The Life of Frank Lloyd Wright, by Brendan Gill (NLS: 27227)
  9. Stiff: The Curious Lives of Human Cadavers, by Mary Roach
May 2007
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