Linkagery for Jan. 28
Gerard Van der Leun is right: Science Made Stupid Online is a fabulously funny site, a sort of Dave Barry takes on technical writing. I'd excerpt, but I wouldn't know where to stop.
Belmont University in Nashville, where works Bill Hobbs, will host a C.S. Lewis academic conference Nov. 3-5. The school has issued a call for academic papers, so start that writing now!
David Klinghoofer writes for OpinionJounral on whether scientists who have religious beliefs are welcome at the Smithsonian.
Iraqis are covering the elections there on "Friends of Democracy: Ground Level Election News From the People of Iraq" sponsored by Spirit of America. Michael Totten is selecting, editing, and posting the reports and photos, but they
are all written by Iraqis themselves.
Doug Petch sends word of an essay on his group blog about some of the moral dilemmas of the "right to die" argument and how one husband resolved the agony of watching his wife waste away in terrible pain. Hint: it was an awful resolution.
Mohammed at Iraq the Model writes, "Go, Iraq, go!" Brief but heartfelt, read the whole thing.
by Donald Sensing, 1/28/2005 07:12:29 PM. Permalink
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