Comments

naomie:

i love u Celine and keep it going u are the best we all love you*

rich:

"opiate of the masses."

Jeez.

Sarah:

You should know that this blog is one of the first sites to come up in a search for the terms, "harvard square" and "crazy people" (I was seeking a couple specific crazies). While I may not have found what I was looking for, I am digging your blog.

sarah:

this is gay

1minutefilmreview:

Wow!

sushiesque:

Oh, you're quite right. I did not read the fine, italic print.

Icarus does not give me great confidence in their products.

rick:

i'm pretty sure that the propellant is icarus.

Pippa:

A couple are driving home in the dark when the car breaks down, the husband decided to walk to a petrol station for help that was a few miles back, so he locked all the doors,windows and boot. On his return there was a stranger in the car and his wife was dead,there was no damage to the car at all.what happened?????

James Price:

Yeah I found this out the hard way. The people who work at the Library of Congress were none too nice about setting me straight. Most of the people that work there do not want to be bothered, I think. The people that registered me and got me my car (of which there were three) were super nice. But everyone else is either mean or indifferent. I shouldn't have even gotten the reader ID (which you supposedly need to even read anything at the LOC) because I've yet to be stopped and asked for it, even at the "researcher only" entrance! Weak.

semele:

Dear sushiesque - is there any way I can contact you offsite to ask for permission to use one of your photographs?

You can reach me at mirlac@yahoo.com

Thanks so much, and it's a terrific blog.

Kathleen:

Still attracting the crazies, huh? It's nice to know some things never change.

sushiesque:

Erin: I just wish I knew what I was up to.

Obo: Why are they on my doorstep?

obo:

They're fantasy sports league prizes.

Erin:

Clearly you are living a double life.

Jamie:

A man and woman go before a preacher in Pennsylvania to be married, but the preacher says,"I can't marry you two." Why?

sushiesque:

perhaps we could meet up there for a (possibly very cold) picnic?

1. no; I was with my parents, and they had their own agenda.

2. I couldn't find it, but I didn't look too hard. I do hope it has not been felled.

bonus: there was an unusual quantity of big green snails clinging to little rocks in freakish clumps.

Gabriel Mckee:

Awww, jealous-- I love Harkness. I rather want to go back there sometime soon. Two questions:
1. Did you go to Sarge's? I rather want to go back there, too. (It's where I bought my first Ace Doubles!)
2. Did you see the tree with the boob?

Gwynne:

I wish you were around all the time so you could document my meals. Well, that and cuz you're awesome.

saima:

can you answer this?

You have a chicken, a fox, and a sack of cornfeed how do you get across with a boat that holds 2 things only t a time.

Deathchicken:

Well duh, the chickens are locked in there and then they fart all over each other and it gives them the special zest.

Madison Guy:

Heartbreaking.

sushiesque:

Thanks! It was a good day.

Madison Guy:

Really nice sequence. Cool blog, too.

Alie:

what is the answer to this riddle:

most eyes are forced wide open by the dance

it's really confusing to me o.o

Allan. Forsythe:

They call me a man but I'll never have a wife. I was given a body, but not a life.
They made me a mouth, but didnt give me breath. Water gives me life but the sun brings me death

What am I?

ilana:

I cannot figure this riddle!
what can run but never walk what has a mouth but never talks what has a face but does not weep what has a bed but does not sleep

Mimi :

Here is the riddle. "When 1 door closes 9 open. When 9 close 1 opens. What is it?

mike:

there are 12 balls all look the same in all aspect, but one is different in weight. you are allowed to use a balance scale,not a weight measure. if you are allowed to use the scale one three times how do you find the different ball ?
can anyone help

Holy Cuteness:

Wow, gorgeous pics!

Johnny:

Lovely photos:)

Shiraz:

That's sort of awesome. But now I am fascinated to know by what criteria they do decide what to keep.

Justin:

As a youthful book-lover, it was my dream to visit the Library of Congress to read until my brain exploded.

I'm glad I've learned this many years later.

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« March 2008 | Main | May 2008 »

Fontstruct will ruin your life

If you are anything like me.

Big_gay_h

Fontstruct: typeface design without the burden of skill or the pressure of producing anything too legible.

Morning commute with Philip K. Dick

False_reality_1

Continue reading "Morning commute with Philip K. Dick" »

Blackletter days

This is the Adventist Congregational Church on Hampshire Street, Cambridge, as photographed by AntyDiluvian last summer:

Adventist_1

Note the tidy lettering visible across the bottom of the photograph, amidst the peeling black paint. This was the only clue I could find to explain what the church's freshly-painted sign (pictured below) was trying to mimic.

Adventist_2

I am charmed by the combination of lumpy not-quite-neo-Gothic capitals, semi-Roman numerals, and inexplicably dotted i's.


Thanks, Tom!

See also: Clarendon Hill.

Record shop clerks vs. Conor Oberst

Sad

Last weekend: Conor Oberst of Bright Eyes is sad at Turn It Up, on Pleasant Street in Northampton.

Late

April of 2005: The since-departed CD Spins on Newbury Street, Boston, was looking forward to the demise of Conor Oberst.

Now and in the hour

Hedge

Driving through one of the Brookfields (East? West? plain vanilla Brookfield, Mass.?), we wondered whether the dead were speaking to us through shrubbery.

We did not turn the car around.

Update: We have located the hedge in Google Maps, and it is actually in Spencer, east of all the Brookfields, between Lake Lashaway and Muzzy Lake.

Also from this weekend's Western Mass. shenanigans: Where have our civil liberties gone?

Learned & Noble

Excerpted below: some private correspondence in the wake of our query concerning the elusive N.S.D.U.N.S.P.H.I.

Fancy McCulture-Pants: There is only one mention of [American Name Society founder and probable N.S.D.U.N.S.P.H.I. member] Mr. Elsdon Smith in OASIS, in the papers of some dude named Learned Hand :

* 80-2 Smith, Elsdon C., 1946, 1950.
Attorney in Evanston, Ill., later in Chicago. Author of "The Story of Our Names" (1950) asking LH how his name may have affected his life; very amusing answer by LH.

Dick Umbrage: he is a famous mid-century US judge, responsible for the "Hand Test," a determination of negligence in tort law. he was one of the judges who shaped U.S. jurisprudence (for better or for worse) to evaluate the majority of civil law actions in strictly economic terms.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calculus_of_negligence

Sushiesque: the Hands were apparently way into adjectives-as-names: Learned had a cousin named Augustus Noble Hand (also a judge).

Dick: HE WAS THE JUDGE IN THE U.S. VS. ONE PACKAGE

Dick: i apologize for the enthusiasm.

Fancy: The enthusiasm was well founded...

U.S. VS. ONE PACKAGE

was about "immoral or obscene devices"

Dick: the defendent was a package of condoms!

Continue reading "Learned & Noble" »

Where have our civil liberties gone?

They are staying at the Econo Lodge on Route 9 in Hadley, Massachusetts.

Civilliberties


Special thanks to Kalista, for turning the car around.

Query concerning the National Society to Discourage Use of the Name Smith for Purposes of Hypothetical Illustration

The following plea was sent to the secretary of the American Name Society, but we're interested in relevant information from any source. (Please leave a comment here or send a message to christine at sushiesque period com.)

from: c*******.e*****@gmail.com
to: tg*****@usd.edu
date: Fri, Mar 28, 2008 at 10:29 AM
subject: Query concerning the National Society to Discourage Use of the Name Smith for Purposes of Hypothetical Illustration

Dr. Gasque,

Hello. I am an academic librarian doing research on the National Society to Discourage Use of the Name Smith for Purposes of Hypothetical Illustration. I am contacting you in the hopes that, in your capacity as secretary of the American Name Society, you might be able to help me.

I recently came across an intriguing entry for "N.S.D.U.N.S.P.H.I." in a 1949 dictionary of abbreviations, but my subsequent searches on Google and LexisNexis have not turned up any references to the organization later (or more informative) than a brief mention in a 1981 Washington Post article that implied [American Name Society founder] Elsdon Smith's involvement. Am I correct in believing that the society is disbanded or, at least, inactive? Or has it merely changed names? I am curious as to whether there is any archive of the society's records or publications (if they produced any) and am interested in corresponding, if possible, with any lapsed members.

Sincerely,
Christine [Middle Name] [Last Name]


Our query has since been forwarded to the American Name Society listserve.

Proofreading in public

We are not responsible for the vandalism pictured below, but applaud the literate vigilantes who took it upon themselves to correct the punctuation on these MBTA signs:

Walk

Commas on ramp to inbound platform at Harvard.


Usage

Semicolon on outbound platform, Park Street.

Richard B. "Rico" Modica Way attacked by zombies

The ever-mutating alley in Central Square, on Tuesday:

Img_2343

Img_2348

Continue reading "Richard B. "Rico" Modica Way attacked by zombies" »

"I now had a vast quantity of paper at my disposal, and I set about filling the notebooks with odd facts, stories from the past, and all sorts of other things, including the most trivial material. On the whole I concentrated on things and people that I found charming and splendid..."
Sei Shonagon.

In the past, recurring topics have included Shows, Zombies, Dictionaries, Gay Marriage, Crazy People, Neck Face, Mary Bathtubs, Waffle House, Religion, Film, &c.
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Listen

Found in the wild, tagged, and podcasted.


Have you heard of my new band?

Adorablog

Adorablog is the group blog that Unsinn & Sushiesque founded on the belief that "Some parts of the internet should be nice, for the nice people." Some recent entries: