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- Newsgroups: rec.arts.books
- Path: sparky!uunet!gatech!rpi!uwm.edu!spool.mu.edu!umn.edu!csus.edu!netcom.com!dani
- From: dani@netcom.com (Dani Zweig)
- Subject: Schooling, Rabbis, and Asparagus -- a temporally cohesive post
- Message-ID: <1993Jan2.020311.11933@netcom.com>
- Organization: Netcom Online Communications Services (408-241-9760 login: guest)
- Date: Sat, 2 Jan 1993 02:03:11 GMT
- Lines: 37
-
- The problems with the school system are a perhaps-inevitable outgrowth
- of a more general collapse of values: What else can you expect in a
- society which trains teenagers to make hamburgers with mayonnaise unless
- you *insist* on mustard? Perhaps if we concentrate on getting the
- mustard back into hamburgers, the problem of getting the schooling back
- into school will take care of itself.
-
- I went out and got Kemelman's "The Day the Rabbi Resigned". The title
- has a note of finality to it, which is just as well. There have been
- good Rabbi Small mysteries and there have been indifferent ones, but this
- one is actively bad. I think Kemelman may be sick of Rabbi Small. Certainly
- in this book he was just going through the motions: A little pinch of
- Jewish philosophy, a dash of friction between the Rabbi and the congregation,
- a murder which is neither interesting nor challenging... Is resignation
- the rabbinical equivalent of going over the Reichenbach falls?
-
- I finally got to Suetonius, which had been sitting on my shelf for too
- long (the book, not...), and I'm sorry I didn't read it earlier. I
- noticed, in passing, that Augustus used the expression "quicker than you
- can cook asparagus", which implies that asparagus doesn't take long to
- cook. Well, it takes *me* a long time to cook asparagus, so I deduce that
- either asparagus has mutated significantly in the past couple of millenia,
- or Augustus liked his asparagus almost raw, or the Ancients had a since-
- forgotten super-microwave technology, or the boiling point of water was
- significantly higher in those days -- perhaps due to a change in the
- values of Universal Constants over time. Now there's glory for you!
-
- And a happy new year to you.
-
- -----
- Dani Zweig
- dani@netcom.com
-
- Roses red and violets blew
- and all the sweetest flowres that in the forrest grew -- Edmund Spenser
-
-
-