New York – Round 1

When your travel-holiday starts with a huge leap, it’s nice to land in a spot that allows you to pause and acclimate.  First leg of our 2011 “Land of Our Fathers” tour, for example, we took a massive leap from California to the Netherlands that landed us in semi-familiar territory:  English-speaking, tourist-friendly, cultural-cousin Amsterdam, where … Read more New York – Round 1


On Holiday

We’re off on a 33-day, cross-continental journey, my husband Roy and I.  (I’d call it a “grand tour,” but I believe that term is reserved for a different continent.)  Whether this is a brilliant idea or a questionable one, time will tell.  It’s ambitious, certainly, especially for a couple of old folks like us. Broad … Read more On Holiday


Scientific Americans

Science . . . is an imperfect science. Scientists are people, after all.  People bring their biases to work.  In the work-place, personal biases affect hiring/firing, promotion, pay, what tasks are prioritized, to whom they are delegated, how productivity is assessed, which behavioral and interpersonal standards are applied, and job expectations. In the lab and … Read more Scientific Americans


Seeing is Believing

Ronald Reagan’s Hollywood career – spanning decades and marked by more than 50 films – was on the down-slide by the time I came into the world.  For me, he was simply the host of Death Valley Days. And a pretty bland host he was, too. Two years after DVD went off the air, Reagan … Read more Seeing is Believing


Under Fire

It’s not the time the Despicable D (hereinafter referred to as “45”) has been in office. It’s how much has happened in that time – how many appointments, hearings, nominations, confirmations, executive orders, policy changes, tweets, phone calls, purged government web-pages, firings, hirings, leaks, lawsuits, demonstrations, bills, interviews, judicial decisions, and altercations with the press … Read more Under Fire