04 January 2008, 08:10 AM
jktThe Invisible Boy
quote:
Originally posted by Doug Spaulding:
Nice bat with a pin in its nose.
I don't remember Uncle Einar having been a punk in his teen years.
20 January 2008, 03:48 PM
jktThe premiere of Mr. B's new play series was last night. I expect that Nard will post images sometime soon.
In my defense, my goddaughter "bought it for me." That's all I'm saying until Nard posts the pictures.

20 January 2008, 09:47 PM
Nard Kordelljkt:
I put the photo in the RESOURCE Invisible Boy posting.
I DONOT like the new format of posting photos. It doesn't do as well as the previous, easy to use photo online posting. This one is never adequate in presenting what was photographed, and the detail is always lacking.
I left out a lot of photos, but I'm putting in JOHN's photo that he mentions in his post.
21 January 2008, 08:27 AM
Mr. DarkThanks for the postings. I wish I could be out there, hang out with you guys, and see Ray. Thanks so much for sharing with us this way!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
22 January 2008, 01:29 PM
philnicMaybe in May, eh Mr Dark?
22 January 2008, 08:27 PM
Mr. DarkIn May, certainly. I finally got a formal acceptance of my abstract; so I'll be going!! Looking forward to seeing you there!
22 January 2008, 08:55 PM
Braling IIRemind me, what happens in May?
I seem to recall some talk of getting together for a last trolley ride with Mr. Tridden and a picnic...
22 January 2008, 09:16 PM
Doug SpauldingNo, a bunch of intellectuals will be gathering in Riverside to present papers on RB's Mars at University - sounds like fun!
Although I'm sure a picnic could be arranged.
22 January 2008, 09:19 PM
Mr. DarkIt is a conference that will highlight Ray Bradbury and his martian landscapes. Ray himself is scheduled to appear at the conference, also. I'm hoping some of us Bradbury board participants who have never had the chance to meet will be able to meet up while we're out there.
The 26th J. Lloyd Eaton Conference.
Chronicling Mars.
May 16-18, 2008.
University of California, Riverside.
http://library.ucr.edu/?view=collections/spcol/call_for_papers.htmlThe discovery and exploration of Mars has provided a central element in the development of science fiction. Since actual physical observation of what seemed a possibly habitable planet in the 19th century, Mars has been the location of very different scenarios, which could serve as a map both of the evolution of SF, and of changing modern attitudes toward the human condition. For Wells, Mars the place of never-ending war awakens, and brings us real devastating destruction. For his contemporary Rosny aîné, Mars offers a place of parallel, carbon-based evolution. Heinlein's Martian “old ones,” on the other hand, with their decadent wisdom, prove to be no match for human expansion. If Bradbury's Mars is a nightmare mirror of the human condition; Clarke's sands of Mars are the place of a successful terra-forming experiment. In turn, Clarke's new world for mankind becomes, for D. G. Compton, a terrible penal colony. Mars has been a mythic place, a hostile place, a colony, more recently a utopian space, and finally the neutral terrain of scientific investigation. Examining the nature and significance of these Martian metamorphoses is the subject of this conference.
Papers of 20-25 minutes in length will be considered on the following topics:
The Mythic Mars: Why its survival in the age of modern science;
Mars: Utopia or Dystopia?
The Visual Mars: Imaginings versus photos;
The Mars of Science: the “real” Mars as source of fiction;
The Future of Fictional Mars.
Other Martian musings will be considered if significant.
http://eatonconference.ucr.edu/As to the "a bunch of intellectuals...". I have no response to that. But, I do take some comfort in the fact that the "bad" people in F451 were the ones who did not read, did not think, did not challenge assumptions, etc. In other words, the "good" people were either pseudo-intellectuals or intellectuals. Lacking a PhD, I suppose I would fall under the category of a pseudo-intellectual.

) I do, though, humbly aspire to be intellectual if not quite an intellectual......
23 January 2008, 12:48 AM
philnicquote:
Originally posted by Mr. Dark:
...But, I do take some comfort in the fact that the "bad" people in F451 were the ones who did not read, did not think, did not challenge assumptions, etc. In other words, the "good" people were either pseudo-intellectuals or intellectuals. Lacking a PhD, I suppose I would fall under the category of a pseudo-intellectual.

) I do, though, humbly aspire to be intellectual if not quite an intellectual......
Only an intellectual would have written that!
23 January 2008, 05:19 AM
Mr. DarkActually, my thesis here is wrong in that fire chief Beatty was an intellectual. But he sold himself out for order and security. It is often a very, very difficult choice--either freedom and truth OR order and stability.