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by Greg Carlson | Cinema | May 19th, 2020
…Caity Birmingham is a production designer who lives in Los Angeles. We have been friends for a long time, and originally bonded over our mutual appreciation of teen movies. In addition to that genre, she also loves costume dramas and apocalyptic sci-fi. Caity works on feature films, and also does…
by Ed Raymond | Gadfly | May 17th, 2020
…Something Is Not Rotten In DenmarkWilliam Shakespeare, writer of my favorite play Hamlet, was born in Stratford-on-Avon, England during a plague year. Thomas Nashe, a contemporary, wrote a short poem A Litany in Time of Plague to commemorate serious plagues in England during 1564, 1582, 1592-93, 1603-04, 1606, and 1608-09.…
by Charlie Barber | Last Word | May 12th, 2020
…“(the Federalist authors) saw that government must rest upon the will of the majority, but they saw too that majority rule must be tempered by a system of checks and balances designed to safeguard fundamental liberties and give time for sober second thought. They saw…the important distinction between the jurisdiction…
by HPR Contributor | Last Word | May 10th, 2020
…by Michael Str!ke, Krissee Grosso, Hoff, and othersA restaurant can be a very special place. It can be where you see the folks that live above, around, and beyond; coming regularly and enjoying the flow of the days, the nights, the food, and the drinks. It’s where workers come together…
by Greg Carlson | Cinema | May 10th, 2020
…Cinematic depictions of the creative process are as common as they are usually unconvincing. Whether encapsulated in a montage or stretched out over several scenes, images of painters painting, composers composing, writers writing, and rockers rocking are regularly meant to convey to the viewer a sense of awe or accomplishment…
by Ed Raymond | Gadfly | May 10th, 2020
…Two American Con Men With An Insatiable Appetite For WealthPhineas Taylor Barnum was born poor in 1810 in a rural village in Connecticut where survival was determined by cunning, smarts, drive, and ruthlessness. He had an insatiable appetite for wealth. Some say it was from when he learned to count.…
by HPR Contributor | Last Word | May 9th, 2020
…by Michael Str!keWe got the news just over two weeks ago. The state of North Dakota was going to reopen for business on May 1st. Restrictions and guidelines were promised by both the state and by our own management and owners of the restaurant I work for. I’m a kitchen…
by Charlie Barber | Last Word | May 7th, 2020
…#18 of On Tyranny: Be Calm when the unthinkable arrives – “Modern tyranny is terror management. When the terrorist attack comes, remember that authoritarians exploit such events in order to consolidate power. The sudden disaster that requires the end of checks and balances, the dissolution of opposition parties, the suspension…
by HPR Contributor | Editorial | May 5th, 2020
…by Sofia Makarova and Massimo Sassi The global pandemic is an incredibly challenging time for many. Nearlyone in every three Americans’ jobs have been affected, whether a temporary layoff, a permanent job loss, or a reduction in hours and/or pay. Most universities and schools haveclosed down across the country in…
by HPR Contributor | Writer's Block | May 5th, 2020
…by Debra Marquart marquart@iastate.edu A few years ago, I was giving a talk at the Fargo Public Library about researching and writing my book, The Horizontal World, which is a memoir about growing up a rebellious farmer’s daughter on a North Dakota wheat farm. In the 1970s, I was a college…