Guardian Weekly Letters, 15 April 2016

Edit The Guardian 12 Apr 2016
Rethinking taxation; New Zealand’s flag vote; people smugglers’ vital role. Taxation isn’t a dirty word ... Greg Boyd ... With regard to New Zealand, he also overlooks the clumsy efforts by the prime minister, John Key, to write for himself a page in the nation’s constitutional history by overtly backing one of the alternative flags – even to the point of wearing it in his buttonhole when representing the country on various occasions ... ....

Labour’s Keir Starmer: ‘If we don’t capture the ambitions of a generation, it doesn’t matter who is leading the party’

Edit The Guardian 09 Apr 2016
@StephenMossGdn. Keir Starmer will be on crutches in the House of Commons next week ...It’s about as unglamorous a story as you can imagine,” he says. “But on the other hand, it’s bloody painful.” ... It was an early lesson in democracy ... It was toxic for the party in 2010 and 2015, and he has been touring the country gathering the views of members, trade unions, business leaders, refugee groups and anyone else who wants to buttonhole him ... ....

Journalists bewildered by Rhodesia black list - archive

Edit The Guardian 06 Apr 2016
6 April 1966. In Salisbury these days British journalists tend to greet each other with a cheerful “Heavens, are you still here, old boy”. Salisbury, April 5. Being declared a prohibited immigrant in Rhodesia is becoming a journalistic occupational hazard, like ulcers or alcoholism ... One man said to me today when I telephoned ... You would get a little silver buttonhole badge with the initials “PI” surmounting the Rhodesian crest ... ....

The 100 best nonfiction books: No 10 – The Selfish Gene by Richard Dawkins

Edit The Guardian 04 Apr 2016
An intoxicating renewal of evolutionary theory that coined the idea of the meme and paved the way for Professor Dawkins’s later, more polemical works. What is man, and what are we for? Remarkably, it was not until Charles Darwin published On the Origin of Species in 1859 that anyone, in our history, had thought methodically to address the reason for our existence ... He buttonholes his readers; he dazzles with paradox and provocation ... ....

The 3 Best Sewing Machines (Guide 2016)

Edit The Examiner 28 Mar 2016
If you are starting a sewing machine for beginners with a few stitches and buttonholes will suffice, but if we take needlework as a hobby, you will see that soon we practice different stitches, try new finishes and implement the ideas we come to the head ... 70-2 / 80-2 / 90/100, buttonhole foot, darning plate, screw driver, zipper foot, and blind stitch foot....

A poet who knows it: Bill Murray shares some favorite verse

Edit WPXI 25 Mar 2016
NEW YORK —. NEW YORK (AP) — Bill Murray has turned up everywhere from bachelor parties to baseball games, but his latest surprise has a more literary side ... Two months went by without a response ... He also felt a personal connection to Nye's "Famous" and its lines "I want to be famous in the way/ a pulley is famous/ or a buttonhole, not because it did/ anything spectacular/ but because it never forgot/what it could do.". Murray's take ... ___ ... ....

Bill Murray shares some favorite verse

Edit Atlanta Journal 25 Mar 2016
Two months went by without a response ... Murray’s other picks include Lux’s romantic ode “I Love You Sweatheart,” of which he said, “This poem vibrates the insides of my ribs, where the meat is most tender.” He also felt a personal connection to Nye’s “Famous” and its lines “I want to be famous in the way/ a pulley is famous/ or a buttonhole, not because it did/ anything spectacular/ but because it never forgot/what it could do.” ... ....

Bill Murray's New Job: Poetry Editor

Edit Rollingstone 24 Mar 2016
Sidebar. Bullets, Sand and Bill Murray. Inside 'Rock the Kasbah' » ... "It was so funny," Haber told the AP. "He had scraps of paper on which he'd scribbled notes and Xeroxes of poems ... "I want to be famous in the way / a pulley is famous / or a buttonhole, not because it did/ anything spectacular / but because it never forgot / what it could do." ... ....

Bill Murray loves a good poet, and now we know it

Edit Chicago Sun-Times 24 Mar 2016
... said, “This poem vibrates the insides of my ribs, where the meat is most tender.” He also felt a personal connection to Nye’s “Famous” and its lines “I want to be famous in the way/ a pulley is famous/ or a buttonhole, not because it did/ anything spectacular/ but because it never forgot/what it could do.”....

{English} The Boutet de Monvel Collection (Sotheby's Inc)

Edit Public Technologies 22 Mar 2016
(Source. Sotheby's Inc) The Guennol Lioness. Paris press release. 33 (0)1 53 05 53 66 . Sophie Dufresne . sophie.dufresne@sothebys.com. 33 (0)1 53 05 52 32 . Chloé Brézet . chloe.brezet@sothebys.com. The Boutet de Monvel Collection. Bernard Boutet de Monvel, Le Maharadjah d'Indore, est. €300,000 - 500,000 ... Seated on a desk, the artist is holding his cane, cream gloves and flannel hat, with the inevitable white daisy in his buttonhole ... (noodl....

Why are shirt buttons always on different sides for men and women?

Edit The Times of India 21 Mar 2016
It's all because of servants, babies, battles and Napolean. Gendering is a universal way of telling what is male-y and what is female-y. Just look around, we are what the length of our hair appears to be ... And what about the all-time favourite. pink-blue colour debate! ... Go ahead, take a look. So What's The Big Deal? ... Etsy) ... That was until around 1200, when human kind invented the buttonhole and we finally had a practical use for button....

Russia and the Arts: The Age of Tolstoy and Tchaikovsky review – not to be missed

Edit The Guardian 20 Mar 2016
National Portrait Gallery, London. This once-in-a-lifetime show of portraits on loan from Moscow is like seeing Chekhov, Tchaikovsky, Tolstoy et al for the first time. @LauraCummingArt ... He came before the painter Ilya Repin in dressing gown, peasant smock and tousled hair ... Twitter ... Twitter ... Twitter ... The shadow of history is there in this portrait of an elegant, elongated intellectual adjusting his buttonhole and dreaming of a better future....

Elliot Gant, the man who popularised button-down shirts, dies aged 89

Edit Sydney Morning Herald 19 Mar 2016
NEW YORK. Linguists can't precisely pinpoint when "button-down" was redefined from cutting-edge collegiate to uniformly conformist, but the marketing expertise of the Gantmacher brothers of Brooklyn probably had something to do with it ... Elliot Gant, the last of the founders, died March 12 in Boston. He was 89 ... Advertisement ... "We're individuals ... Elliot's mother, the former Rebecca Rose, focused on buttons and buttonholes ... ....
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