“Its net loss was $57.8 million, or 89 cents a share, up from $47 million, or 73 cents a share, a year earlier.”
Tag: 11.05.09
Rambert Dance Company’s Scientific Advisor (Yes) Speaks
“So I talked to the team and to the dancers about bird behaviour, including my research on corvids [crows, rooks and jays]. I drew on examples such as the dance of the blue manakin, which, for me, is avian tango, and the Lawes’s parotia (the six-plumed bird of paradise), which has a courtship dance that looks like a bird ballet.”
The Future Of College
“What is the future of this thing called college? What became quickly and painfully obvious in their deliberations is that the center will not hold. In something of an irony, higher education leaders acknowledged here Thursday that the very system that put them in the position to run the nation’s colleges and universities is no longer fit to groom their successors or the rest of the U.S. work force.”
EU To Give Teeniest Tiniest Protection To Those Accused Of Illegally Downloading Media
“Some members of the European Parliament felt nobody should lose their connection until after they had been prosecuted in a court for illegally downloading content. The new rules take the form of an amendment to a much wider revision of all Europe’s telecoms regulations.”
Pianists As Super Heroes (Okay, Virtuosos, Then)
“Today’s virtuosos and super-virtuosos are reluctant members of the club. Many of the younger generation are shunning the repertoire and the older ones are shunning the label. So why are pianists wary of being associated with this tradition?”
Why Not? Art Under The Big Top
“Paris’ Pompidou Center plans to fill a colorful circus big top with Picassos, Matisses and Calders instead, creating a roving museum to take its masterpieces of modern art to France’s culturally deprived rural regions and rough suburbs.”
Durham, NC, PAC $1M In Black, Gives $400K To City
Eight months after opening, “the Durham Performing Arts LLC [has] made a profit of $1,004,265, of which 40 percent, or $401,706, is to be shared with the city, which owns the building.” (Who says the arts aren’t an economic engine?)
Francisco Ayala, Spain’s Literary Lion, Dead At 103
“Considered one of 20th-century Spain’s most distinguished intellectuals, Mr. Ayala was routinely mentioned as a contender for the Nobel Prize in Literature. Besides being a novelist, he was a poet, critic, essayist, lawyer and academic sociologist. Much of his work was banned in Spain during the Franco era.”
When God Was Dead: A Look Back
Remember that notorious 1966 issue of Time magazine whose cover read simply, “Is God Dead?” The article covered “what may be the last theological craze in history,” an intellectual movement “to turn Nietzsche’s proclamation of the deity’s demise from frightful blasphemy into the basis of a new kind of faith.”
Disney Moves To Give Mickey Mouse A Little ‘Tude
“For decades, the Walt Disney Company has largely kept Mickey Mouse frozen under glass, fearful that even the tiniest tinkering might tarnish the brand. … Now, however, concerned that Mickey has become more of a corporate symbol than a beloved character for recent generations of young people, Disney is taking the risky step of re-imagining him for the future.”