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Earlier: Pearl loses her ball under the oven
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kohler | toilets
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I asked the following seemingly googleproof question on the NPL list, and quickly got the answer, as usual:
Can anyone shed light or offer speculation on what the final three words of the following passage from Vol I of Victor Klemperer's Nazi Years diary I Will Bear Witness refer to? I have the book in the original German, also, and it sheds no light on the questionthe translator to English copied them exactly as written in the original German version (well not quiteit's 'dawke oder proprio' there).
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24 April 1936
The Garden Show, for which we have bought season tickets, opens today. This flower show is a major reason for my decision to learn to drive. Eva so much wanted to see just this show. To take a taxi there every time would be prohibitive; but if she has to go on foot as far as the tram, then she is already completely worn out by the time she gets there. The second motive was that Heiss, as Vossler wrote, had "died of heart failure beside his little car." I thought: Heiss was my predecessor here in Dresden in this respect also. The third reason: that as a dismissed non-Aryan front line veteran I expected to get my full salary. That hope came to nothing, and so there was a fourth motive: dawke or proprio! [Thanemy bold]* * * Thane
Answer from Andrew M Greene:
Perhaps "dawke" is supposed to be a German transliteration of the Hebrew word that I would transliterate as "davka"? It's impossible to translate exactly.
"Just because!" is the closest, but almost with a sense of spite, although not necessarily malicious or even animate spite.
"His parents wanted him to be a doctor, so davka he went to Julliard." "Davka it rained on the day I had planned the picnic."
That would seem to fit the context. "I expected to get my full salary. That hope came to nothing, and so there was a fourth motive: dawke...." I.e., just to show them all!
- nmHz
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[I'm working through a backlog of Nation cryptics]
29 and 24 Across (9) (ed.[split 6 letters + 3 letters]: What some people wait to see on TV, being an exceptionally wise old bird!
SUPERBOWL
ie, SUPERB + OWL
Posted at 06:56 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)
From an article in today's Stanford Daily newspaper, "A look inside Bush's meeting with Hoover fellows and Hennessy":
"If you suitably impress Hoover fellows, you can turn to them for advice," said Bill Whalen, a research fellow at the Institution, in a phone interview with The [Stanford] Daily. "Advice you would be hard pressed to find otherwise."
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By Joe DiPietro.
My eye fell first upon
45 Down: Be acquainted with Vanna? (9)
I thoughtKNOWWHITE. But surely not.
It was.
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Howard (the designer of the Burning Man Desert Nose) challenges Tom Davis (SGI/geometer.org) to a duel.
Nobody told me this was a pirate party [sniff!]...
Posted at 11:37 AM | Permalink | Comments (0)
[At least I did a little yelling. This article was just published by the Stanford Daily newspaper]
Protesters Force Bush to Relocate Meeting planned for Hoover Institution
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By Amit Arora
Friday, April 21, 2006 [last updated April 21, 2006 7:25 PM]
Although President George Bush was scheduled to meet with fellows at the Hoover Institution on Friday, the presence of more than 1,000 protestors forced him to change his plans and meet with the advisors and faculty members at the residence of former Secretary of State and Hoover Fellow George Shultz on the outskirts of the Stanford campus.
More than 100 armed law enforcement and Secret Service officers lined the streets outside of Encina Commons, as students, parents, faculty members and local residents protested Bush's anticipated arrival on east campus. While the protest was peaceful, three Stanford studentsseniors Claire Wagenseil, Diogo Pereira and Caroline Martinwere arrested as police pushed the crowd out of Serra Street.
The protest began at approximately 2 p.m. in White Plaza, where 200 students gathered to make signs and rally against the administration. As they began marching toward Hoover Tower, others joined their ranks and began to chant slogans. By the time the rally reached Hoover Tower at 2:30 p.m., approximately 400 protesters had lined the police barriers set around the building.
People continued to join the movement and the slogans for reform grew louder as time passed. This increased protest ultimately forced Bush to conduct the meeting at Shultz's house on Delores Street.
Meanwhile, outside the Hoover Institution, the crowd chanted, "Hey-Hey-Ho-Ho-Bush is here, he's got to go." Another popular slogan targeted conflict in Iraq, as students yelled, "1-2-3-4-We don't want your fuckin' war-5-6-7-8-Stop the killing, Stop the hate."
As the protest grew louder, the Sheriff's Department attempted to clear the street of students, possibly to provide the president's motorcade a safe entrance into the complex. When students refused to obey these verbal commands, more than 50 police officers in full riot gear were called to the scene. Dressed in protective helmets, the officers used their batons to push individuals back from the Tower.
In response to the use of physical force, students directed their chants at the perceived infringement of their rights.
"Whose campusour campus. Whose streetsour streets," they yelled. "Tell me what democracy looks likethis is what democracy looks like."
The struggle between the Sheriff's Department and protestors reached its climax when a fire truck attempted to drive down the street and was blocked by the crowd. Security personnel attempted to move the students blocking the truck, when the three Stanford students sat down in the road and refused to move.
Officers then dragged the three students out of the road and bound their hands with plastic ties. Though students demanded that their peers be released, after 15 minutes, the three students were placed into a Sheriff's Department vehicle and taken away. The fire truck, meanwhile, reversed and did not proceed down the street.
To mock the incident and voice their resentment against the Bush administration and the police, approximately an hour later, members of the San Francisco-based Global Exchange Group drove a Hummer toward the police barrier. Using a speakerphone and donning masks of Bush and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, they parodied Bush's foreign policy and the level of security on campus.
In its own investigation, The Daily discovered that the Hoover fellows, along with University President John Hennessy, who had planned to meet with Bush, were driven from the complex to Shultz's private residence.
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