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OCTOBER
6, 2025
When I was enrolled at Oberlin College, my favorite place was WOBC-FM. I loved to hang out with my friends in the spacious studios of the student-operated radio station on the third floor of Wilder Hall, the student union building.
Nearly six decades later, in the wake of COVID, senior Emma DeRogatis-Frilingos told the Oberlin Review that there's been a complete and utter disruption, and it's hard to focus on little things like tradition and consistency. There's been a campus-wide forgetfulness. Clubs and traditions have been disappearing. And WOBC literally disappeared from the third floor of Wilder. On April 28, 2022, came the announcement: the station was going to be disassembled and moved to a temporary location on the fourth floor as part of a multi-year project of renovating the building. In September 2023, I visited those smaller quarters. On May 24, 2025, another tour of the quarters included one of my former colleagues: J. Michael Barone, who had been WOBC's Classical Music Director when I was Program Director in 1968. Mike writes:
I was on campus in May to receive an Alumni Award during commencement weekend, and happened to get into town just before the WOBC photo-op on the stairs in front of Finney. I was surprised that, despite it being a special 75th anniversary year for WOBC, so few alumni showed up (fewer than half a dozen?). They were doing 'history' interviews upstairs and coaxed me to visit them (as I was the oldest alumni representative on hand) and I provided them with about 20 minutes of my connection to WOBC ... which led directly to my involvement with what was to grow into Minnesota Public Radio, where I am still employed after 57 years (!).
Though I cannot discount my Conservatory courses in organ and music history, my experience during three years at WOBC provided me (and likely many others ... Randy Bongarten?!?) with (little did I realize it at the time) a lifetime career option which has, in its strange way, touched many. For instance, it was a delight to learn, while interviewing the 30-year-old Johannes Skoog (winner of the 2023 Canadian International Organ Competition and, subsequently, appointed Royal Swedish Organist) that he knew all about Pipedreams and had been listening (online) for the past 15 years! Then the ground fell out. Mike included last Friday's article by Skylar Brunk of the Review, who quoted student engineer Beck Robertson:
Peters G33 is a temporarily-vacant faculty office in the basement of 138-year-old Peters Hall. The building includes classrooms for world language study. Unfortunately, during many hours of the day and night there's little other activity there.
WOBC moved their equipment into G33 late last month. They hoped to train DJs and begin broadcasting early this month. And they still dream of a future permanent home, still promised for a renovated space in Wilder. Andrea Simakis, the director of media relations for the College, emailed the Review: We know this displacement has been tough for everyone at WOBC and appreciate their help and patience as we work to build a safe and accessible home for WOBC operations.
OCTOBER
4, 2025
Many news stories about Taylor Swift's latest album, The Life of a Showgirl, featured a closeup of the cover. Was I the only person who wondered why there's an ugly white scratch running across the singer's face?
It turns out that she's partly submerged. The ragged white line is merely the edge of the water. Oh.
OCTOBER
3, 2015 The federal government has introduced a website called College Scorecard that allows families to compare universities on several different metrics. One of them is how much money a recent graduate can expect to make. At one end of the scale, alumni of North Dakotas Sitting Bull College earn an average annual salary of only $11,600. At the other end, SUNY Downstate Medical Center graduates are paid nearly 11 times as much. In between are institutions youve actually heard of: MIT $91,600, Harvard $87,200, Penn State $47,500. My alma mater, Oberlin College, barely beat the national average at $38,400. In fact, 48% of Oberlin graduates earn less than people with only a high school diploma! But thats okay. Im not surprised that Oberlinians are paid less than SUNY doctors, or MIT engineers, or Harvard lawyers, or Penn State executives. We tend to heed less lucrative callings. We may become educators or social workers or classical musicians or organic farmers or pastors or poets or performers. Our treasures are not necessarily in our bank accounts.
If you ask whether college is worth it, dont just compare how much youll make to how much itll cost. Consider more than return versus investment. A college is not merely a trade school to prepare you for a specific career. A college particularly a liberal arts college like Oberlin is a place where young performers and politicians, poets and physicists, talk to each other. It prepares you for life.
OCTOBER
1, 2025
Four years ago I wrote:
In 2025, others agree. Scott Renshaw posts that he has literally never heard the phrase do your own research from the mouth of anyone who shows even a rudimentary understanding of how one conducts reliable research. And why are there suddenly more planets and stars than there were in the 1600s? Clearly some root cause is to blame, and not the advancement of scientific knowledge. Robert F. Kennedy Jr., whom Virginia Montanez calls a brain-wormed weirdo, notes that autism rates among eight-year-olds have risen from 0.7 percent in 2000 to 3 percent in 2022. What might be the root cause that we can blame for this very dramatic 300% increase? There are several possibilities, including:
In the New York Times, autistic Maia Szalavitz writes, To see the nation's scientific agencies following Mr. Kennedy's lead and promoting pseudoscience is shattering. And Jessica Grose opines that the Trump administration is using Tylenol to blame mothers for their children's autism because it's easier than building a society that can support people with special needs.
How did Tom get started in television? A year ago he told the story in a Facebook post that I've reproduced here.
President Trump loves to use similar expressions, but he overhyperbolizes beyond all credibility. For Trump, writes John McWhorter, to say something is to force it, to assert in the same breath that it's true and that its truth cannot be questioned.
Maryland Governor Wes Moore says that Trump doesn't have experts. He has sycophants who go into cabinet meetings and spend three and a half hours telling him how good he is instead of actually educating him. Never-before-seen things, observes Chris Megerian of the Associated Press, are happening with stunning regularity. Trump's successes are legendary in his eyes, and the country's problems are urgent crises that require him to consolidate power and take drastic action. Nothing is ever getting a little bit better or a little bit worse it's always so good or so bad that it's never before been recorded in the annals of human history.
SEPTEMBER
27, 2025
SEPTEMBER
25, 2025
For whatever reason, I like seeing the face of a woman with non-threatening friendly light-colored eyebrows. For example, the face of Kelli Giddish from Law & Order: SVU, which tonight kicks off its 27th season (!)
My preference for blondes and redheads, including those whose hair has been lightened, is that the brows ought to match the hair color. I don't like aggressive dark-colored eyebrows, especially when artificially enhanced like Sabrina Carpenter (center) or Laura Loomer.
SEPTEMBER
24, 2015 The Beatles released their White Album when I was a college senior, and we featured it prominently on our campus radio station WOBC. One of the great songs on the first of its four sides was George Harrisons While My Guitar Gently Weeps. I didnt discover until recently that George didnt play the solo; the gentle weeping was provided by uncredited guest star Eric Clapton, who also joined in this performance. Half a century later, what is it that we should be bewailing? Pope Francis and I would say its the slow death of our planet. The Associated Press reported last week that according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the month of August smashed global records for heat. So did the entire summer. That's the fifth straight record hot season in a row and the fourth consecutive record hot month. Meteorologists say 2015 is a near certainty to eclipse 2014 as the hottest year on record. Many of us dont want to hear it, but scientists have been trying for years to alert us to global warming. As more and more people burn more and more oil and gas and coal, the atmosphere is being polluted by greenhouse gases. In the coming years, low-lying lands will be flooded by rising seas, temperate farmlands will be transformed into dusty deserts, species will go extinct, and billions will starve. But we cant do a thing about it! Why not? Because we dont want to. The rich and powerful can buy and sell us, but they wont restrain the use of fossil fuels because that would reduce their profits. None of us want to sacrifice. We might have to make drastic changes to our lifestyles. Will we not be able to drive our cars as much? Will coal miners have to find other jobs? No, we dont want to do anything about global warming. And commentators divert us with excuses to avoid doing anything. Sean Hannity: I dont believe climate change is real. I think this is global warming hysteria and alarmism. Tucker Carlson: You cant tell me that global warming is destroying the earth. Rush Limbaugh: Its already a hoax, its already been established: There is no man-made global warming. The worst catastrophe, if it comes, is still decades away. I wont be alive to see it. Younger folks figure theyll be able to find a way to cope. Besides, it wont happen at all because Rush says its a hoax. I regret to inform you that Rush is the one whos lying. He and the other perverted deniers are full of hot air. Theyve inverted the facts. The real hoax is their insistence that we can carry on as usual.
SEPTEMBER
22, 2025
Over the weekend I caught a little of the telecast of a small-college football game from Joe Walton Stadium at Robert Morris University. I've worked one or two games on that hillside west of Pittsburgh.
It
was rather hard to watch. The director seemed to be cutting
from one angle to another for no particular reason. Worse, it
seemed he had instr At the bottom of the screen, I want to see all the people standing around on the near sideline. And at the top of the screen, I want to see the trees beyond the far sideline as well as the shopping center across University Boulevard. Don't pan unless necessary, and under no circumstances zoom in. So on every play that went to the far side of the field, we saw a wide expanse of empty grass in the foreground and, on the upper part of our TV screens, a confusing mass of tiny players doing something or other. We can expect better coverage this Thursday when ESPN takes us to East Carolina's Dowdy-Ficklen Stadium in Greenville, NC. I've worked telecasts from there too. But I have to check the map because I keep getting the city's name confused with other collegiate sports meccas that I've never visited:
Finally,
let's go to another place I've never visited: Azerbaijan.
Near the end of Saturday's Formula 1 qualifying session in Baku,
championship leader Oscar Piastri crashed in Turn 3. Another driver, Esteban Ocon, was disqualified from qualifying. This happened when officials measured his car's rear wing main plane tip deflection. Due to a manufacturing problem, the distance between the two sections of RV-RW-PROFILES and RV-RW-TIP inboard of Y=525 varied by more than the permitted 0.5mm. Half a millimeter? That's the diameter of one of these things. Not one of the pencils; one of the leads. Half a millimeter? You couldn't slip a stack of three playing cards into a gap that small. The FIA Technical Regulations are extremely exacting.
Yesterday
I watched the Grand Prix itself. Piastri, relegated to ninth
position on the grid, jumped the start. Le He's still ahead of teammate Lando Norris by 25 points in the standings, but the two McLaren drivers don't normally make mistakes like that. Sky Sports pit reporter Ted Kravitz apparently is familiar with the British version of the old game show To Tell the Truth. Quoth Ted, Would the real Oscar Piastri please reveal himself.
SEPTEMBER
21, 2015
Language learning site Preply has listed the town names in each of the 50 states that are hardest to pronounce correctly, meaning the way that local residents do. I'm proud that I already knew how to say the following:
And that's despite the fact that I've personally been present in only Loogootee, Worcester, and Montpelier! Preply also needed to cite towns in Connecticut, New Hampshire, and Nebraska. They picked Berlin, Milan, and Cairo, the existence of which I was previously unaware. However, it appears they're each pronounced the same peculiar way that I'd already learned for towns in Ohio and Ohio and Illinois, namely BURR Lin and MY Linn and KAY Ro. Those are not how they're pronounced in the old country.
For six months in my youth I lived in the suburbs of another Newark. Located in central Ohio, it's pronounced in the more common NEW Urk manner. I recently learned about the Apple Tree Auction Center (blue symbol), just 2000 feet from my former home. Some time after I moved away, the Center was founded by local resident Sam Schnaidt, five years older than I.
Earlier this month, it was discovered that the Center was holding two 17th century still-life paintings that were originally owned by Adolphe and Lucie Haas Schloss. According to researchers, the Jewish-French family's collection of 333 paintings were hunted down, seized, and divvied up by Nazi officials and their French collaborators in 1943 and destined for Hitler's planned museum in Linz.
When the angels arrived in Sodom, Lot hospitably invited the strangers to stay with him. However, Lots neighbors had resented him ever since he had immigrated to their town (19:9). Surrounding his house, they demanded that he hand over the undocumented aliens. The mob wanted to rape the angels (19:5). Lot came out and offered his daughters instead, because its more virtuous to give up some of your own property than to allow your guests to be treated unkindly (19:8). But the angels yanked Lot back into the house and warned him to get his family out of town before the rain of fire began. Aside from the mobs threat, theres no indication here that homosexual activity was more common in Sodom than anywhere else. So why did God destroy the city? What was its sin? Hostility to outsiders? Sodomy? Something more? The Bible gives us the answer. Its in Ezekiel 16:49.
To me, the Sodomites sound like present-day Republicans who dont think taxes on the wealthy ought to be used to assist the less fortunate. Ezekiel 16:50: They were haughty and did detestable things before me. Therefore I did away with them, as you have seen.
SEPTEMBER
15, 2025
More than 12 years before Saturday Night Live debuted on NBC, I wrote a quasi-SNL skit and performed it with a few friends one Monday evening before a live classroom audience. It got laughs, so we repeated it in the high school auditorium later that same month. Having watched comedy on TV for years, I had some idea of how to write it. Reading my script now, I notice that I began with a serious interview to get the audience off guard, then started with the jokes, using timing and physical humor and a Jack Benny line (now cut that out!) and a callback (hic) to an earlier gag. Later, the elaborate setup for the Battle of Zama was overlong with a rather lame punch line, so it probably could have been cut.
Penn Hills had to take out a $12 million loan to balance its budget. If money is that tight, maybe they should consider once again employing old-school methods: metal cops and adolescent escorts, no salary required.
SEPTEMBER
10, 2015 Baseballs best pitchers especially those who are relatively inexperienced or recovering from surgery are burning themselves out during the long regular season, then having to sit out the more important stretch drives in September and playoffs in October. In 2012, the Nationals shut down Stephen Strasburg on September 9 after 159.1 innings. This year, Matt Harveys agent Scott Boras warned last week that the Mets will put his client in peril if they use him for more than 180 innings; the latest guess is that Harvey will make only one more regular-season start. And Pirates pitcher Gerrit Cole already has thrown 180.2 innings, many more than his previous career high; because the Bucs would like to keep Cole fresh for the postseason, hes skipping his regular start tonight. How can we avoid these situations? Let me make two off-the-wall suggestions.
Replace the customary five-man pitching rotations with six-man
rotations. Granted, a manager will still try to find a way to
get his ace onto the mound every five days, thus using him up before
the postseason. To minimize this, add a rule that anyone who
pitches five innings or more on a given day is ineligible to pitch
again until six days later. If a game is a blowout, the manager
might replace the pitcher after 4.2 innings so he could make another
start in a few days. No problem; that would tend to save his
arm, while giving a long reliever a chance at a win. Shorten the season from 162 games to about 142, provided that you can somehow convince the owners to give up the revenue. Forget the first half of April, when weather in the North can be challenging. Start the season on April 15 as it did in 1947 and call it Jackie Robinson Opening Day to honor Robinsons debut with the Dodgers on that date, meanwhile ending the silly April 15 custom of making every player wear #42. Then finish the season early enough to allow the wild-card teams to play five-game series (not one-game playoffs) during the last week of September.
SEPTEMBER
7, 2015 It was a recent Sunday. I tuned the TV to an afternoon baseball game and curled up on the couch, my back to the screen and my face buried in a pillow and my eyes closed, listening to the commentators.
It wasnt until late in the 1980 football season that NBC and Don Ohlmeyer were confident enough in their pictures to broadcast an announcerless game. I remember watching that one-time-only experimental telecast, Jets versus Dolphins. We viewers heard only what we could have heard in the stadium: cheering, PA announcements, and the sounds of players hitting each other. I rather enjoyed the realism. On this recent Sunday, I wasnt paying nearly as much attention. Within a few minutes, I had slipped into an afternoon nap. When I woke up a couple of hours later, the baseball game was still on. I wondered, Whats the score? I could have bestirred myself to roll over and peer at the corner of the screen, where the score bug is always visible. But I was too lazy. I lay there and waited for the announcers to tell me. For a long time, they didnt. Much play-by-play commentary is superfluous. We can see Theres a ground ball to shortstop, so we dont really need to be told. Therefore, TV narration has gradually become less comprehensive. Sometimes if the guys are telling a story, they may not feel the need to interrupt themselves to say Ball two outside, and the count is now 2 and 1. This attitude has now extended to the score. Ive heard of radio announcers using an egg timer to remind themselves to give the score every three minutes. TV announcers dont worry about that. An attentive viewer can be expected to know whats happened in the game so far, and if he forgets, the score bug can remind him. As an inattentive viewer, I had to listen for clues. If a certain batter had grounded out in the fourth inning, that implied we were now in about the sixth inning. If the announcers started worrying about the Pirates bullpen, the Pirates were probably protecting a small lead. Eventually, about the eighth inning, when a walk was described as bringing the potential tying run to the plate, the mystery had been resolved. I could remain in my comfortable semi-napping position.
SEPTEMBER
4, 2025
Two days after North Korea invaded the South on June 25, 1950, President Harry S Truman announced that the U.S. would intervene to support South Korea. What? It hadn't been even five years since our victory in World War II, and now we were at war again? (Well, technically it was a UN-sanctioned police action.) Residents of my future Ohio home town didn't have to think back very far to recall the difficulties of wartime rationing of civilian goods like gasoline that were more urgently needed for our allies and the military. For example, purchases of sugar had been restricted from May 1942 until June 1947. Now, three years later, the soldiers were marching again. Domestic products were not being rationed again, not yet anyway. However, the citizens were beginning to hoard again.
I realize that most of us are too young to have used ration points during World War II. We might not understand the term. So I Googled it. Within a minute I was reading this explanatory article and discovering that the product which was rationed the longest, more than five years, was sugar!
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