Friday Five: Quotables from CASE

One of the takeaways from futurist David Zach‘s presentation at the CASE District VI Conference earlier this week was a handout of “FutureQuotes” from Zach’s collection and speeches. Below are five that resonated with me. (Download the PDF for the whole collection.)

  • Civilizations begin with religion and stoicism; they end with skepticism and unbelief, and the undisciplined pursuit of individual pleasure. A civilization is born stoic and dies epicurean. — Will Durant
  • Do not wait for leaders; do it alone, person to person. — Mother Theresa
  • Let us not look back in anger or forward in fear, but around in awareness. — James Thurber
  • The trouble with the rat race is that even if you win, youʼre still a rat. — Lily Tomlin
  • The library is the temple of learning that has liberated more people than all the wars in history. — Carl Rowan

Friday Five: snow day edition

OK, so it isn’t a snow day for everyone. Some of us had to stick around to alert the media and students, faculty and staff that classes were canceled for most of the morning. But because Thursday’s weather shut down much of the Missouri Ozarks, it seems like a snow day. At least it’s a slow day. Which means I can get caught up on some bloggables. Here are five for your Friday:

  1. After a full November of writing the Great American NaNoWriMo Novel, Morgan Davis returns to his blog, erelevant, without missing a beat. Welcome back!
  2. But enough about other economic news, let’s talk about us. Via Romenesko, a column by William Powers of the National Journal about how the news media’s narcissicistic reporting. “From Los Angeles to Philadelphia, newspapers are flailing — read all about it, in exquisite detail, in those papers themselves and everywhere else. … Of course, you’re reading one of the symptoms of this disorder — a regular column of media commentary, devoted today to questioning the idea of media narcissism. Next week we’ll discuss the media as simulacra of semiotic hyperstructuralism.” Paging Jacques Derrida.
  3. Speaking of media coverage of media: Bad news for old news — and seven more dire predictions for the media for 2007. Includes such shocking revelations as: “Technology will make it easier to find, access, and manage content.” Hat tip: I Want Media.
  4. Why didn’t my journalism profs tell me this? From Slate, by way of CyberJournalist: the newspaper industry knew it was doomed 30 years ago. Seems that in 1976, LA Times media reporter David Shaw wrote a page one feature that posed this question in its lead (lede): “Are you now holding an endangered species in your hands?” And then proposed some remedies, many of which the media have already tries. Interesting story for news junkies.
  5. Prospective college student Sam Jackson has narrowed his college choices to 15, and now he wants to know the dirt on them. ” I don’t want slurs, I don’t want attacks, but if you have a compelling reason for me to not go to one of the fifteen schools on my list, please tell me.”