Short Takes: News From All Over
Staff Utne.com
eRuv: A Street History in Semacode
By Elliott Malkin, dziga
A digital graffiti project in New York City has paired Talmudic
tradition with modern gadgetry to put a 21st century spin on
Orthodox Judaism's eruv. An eruv uses physical markers like cords
tied to poles to extend an Orthodox Jew's home to a broader
community. It's helpful during the Sabbath, when such Jews aren't
supposed to carry things like keys or prayer books outside their
home. The eRuv project has recreated a stretch of the old Lower
East Side eruv along the former Third Avenue elevated train line by
using semacodes, which are like electronic bar codes that can be
posted on walls or telephone poles. Passersby can use compatible,
Internet-ready camera phones to access URLs and pick up historical
tidbits along the former eruv boundary. (Thanks,
The Revealer.) --
Rose Miller
http://www.dziga.com/eruv/index.php
The Road to Nowhere
By Clara Jeffery, Mother Jones
An assorted palette of statistics paints a bleak picture of America
as an all-work-and-no-play nation. The gleaned figures collectively
contrast the dull-boy US with the fun-boys of Europe and elsewhere.
-- Archie Ingersoll
http://tinyurl.com/b7gjt
Overheard in New York
Published by S. Morgan Friedman, Edited by Michael Malice
Loudmouth New Yorkers beware -- there's a snarky website posting
choice excerpts from conversations overheard in the Big Apple.
Eavesdropping contributors have their ears perked on sidewalks,
subway trains, and wherever else they can hear juicy tidbits.
(Thanks,
CampusProgress.) --
Archie Ingersoll
http://www.overheardinnewyork.com/
Call of the Wild
Mark Fisher, The Guardian
Environmental artist Angus Farquhar's latest work, The
Storr, is drawing 200 Europeans for an illuminated hike
through the Isle of Skye's unique and delicate landscape. The
installation, which took four years to create, uses carefully
designed lighting to highlight the natural beauty of the landscape,
with pre-recorded soundscapes complementing the view. -- Rose
Miller
http://tinyurl.com/83fea
Speaker for the Dead
By Rebecca Meiser, Scene
Obituaries written by The Plain Dealer reporter Alana
Baranick bring death to life in Cleveland. A talent for crafting
honest, yet sensitive life stories that include quirky details and
revealing anecdotes has earned her a national obit-writing award.
'People are dying to get into my columns,' she says. -- Archie
Ingersoll
http://www.clevescene.com/Issues/2005-08-03/news/news.html
Blocking All Lanes
By Sean Dockray, Steve Rowell, and Fiona Whitton,
Cabinet
Today, the word 'traffic' evokes images of gridlocked highways and
disgruntled commuters. It wasn't always that way. 'Traffic' used to
connote the movement of commodities within the marketplace. Sean
Dockray, Steve Rowell, and Fiona Whitton trace the evolution of the
term and the accompanying technology -- from shouting and waving
policemen in 19th century New York to the keen science of traffic
control in Los Angeles today, where drivers can be regulated by 'a
simple click of a mouse button.' -- Rose Miller
http://www.cabinetmagazine.org/issues/17/blocking.php
Comments? Story tips?
Write a letter to the editor
Like this? Want more?Subscribe to Utne
magazine