archive for November 1st, 2006

Do the write thing: NaNoWriMo, meet NaNoBloPo

by @ Wednesday, November 1st, 2006.

It’s November 1. Last year, at this same time of night, I was more than 2,000 words into National Novel Writing Month, the fiction-writing marathon started by the inspiring Chris Baty. Almost 60,000 people signed up worldwide; only 1 out of 6 crossed the 50,000-word finish line on Nov. 30.
I was one of them, and […]

Digest: You say macro, we say micro; Hearst beef; Turin redux

by @ Wednesday, November 1st, 2006.

Slate.com: Tyler Cowen critiques Michael Pollan’s book “The Omnivore’s Dilemma” from a macroeconomic perspective and finds it wanting — yet his critique is curiously (and dismally) unsatisfying, too. Cowen says that Pollan’s desire for food-cost transparency is “an unattainable ideal, given the interconnectedness of markets,” and argues that the best solutions to environmental problems are […]

Examining genetic engineering

by @ Wednesday, November 1st, 2006.

Chris Smith, a Master Gardener, recently took a look at gardening and genetic engineering in three successive articles in the Seattle Post-Intelligencer. According to Washington State University’s Master Gardener Program, a Master Gardener is a person trained to serve their communities through horticulture, gardening and pest management.
Smith begins by urging gardeners to educate themselves […]

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