2h“Normally, the streets are so noisy and you have to watch out because drivers are going to kill you with their cars.” “We created a ‘walking’ forest and people want us to leave it in place.”
↩︎ The Guardian
3hThis season, I've sent home about $800. Technically, it’s against DOC policy. We’re not supposed to be gambling, bartering canteen items. But as long as nobody is getting stabbed over unpaid debts, they’ll turn a blind eye.
↩︎ The Marshall Project

Your weekly hardcore classical moment: ELISION performs Richard Barrett's "world-line."
In physics and cosmology a world-line describes the path an object takes through four-dimensional spacetime. Here, the journey is marked by the energies of fifteen different vortices that fling the listener and performer ever outwards into new sonic dimensions with 'Rasa', the eighth movement, being the still centre of this hurricane universe. From the pounding opening chords of 'Dust 1' to the madcap tightly woven ensemble of the 'Lens' sequence, invention is ceaseless.
4dSuicide is the No. 2 cause of death for girls age 10 through women age 24, up from No. 3 a decade ago. America’s maternal mortality rate of 24 per 100,000 live births is the highest of any industrialized nation
↩︎ Bloomberg
4dWhether they’re targeting cruise ships or private yachts, they attack with similar tactics of pirates past, which usually means “negotiating” for the most goods they can steal without having to draw weapons. Bloody battles are, and were, rare.
↩︎ Hakai Magazine
“The results never quite reach homogenous status.”
A coffee aficionado's assessment of the recently trending idea "mayonnaise with your morning coffee."
While mayonnaise in coffee is always a surprising concoction, the pairing is not new. About every five years or so the great debate about whether or not to put may in coffee refreshes anew.
Have you ever had Mayonnaise with your morning coffee?@UKFootball QB @will_levis is known to dabble w/ said combo �� pic.twitter.com/ZuR92Toa4m
— CBS Sports (@CBSSports) July 20, 2022
5d“In the past, I thought that certain woodwind players played certain solo passages too loud. But now I know better. In Carnegie Hall, even a pianissimo may seem loud and clear.”
↩︎ The New Criterion
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