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Before I reached the age of 77, I recalled the Bible's remark in Psalm 90:10 that our days may come to seventy years, or eighty if our strength endures. This blatantly contradicts what we're told about the earliest patriarchs in Genesis. All of them are inerrantly reported to have lived more than 900 years. How could that be possible? Was the author simply lying, fudging the numbers to magnify the reputations of the great ancients? I'm told that there's an Aramaic word for a period of time like awhile. In our alphabet it's spelled iddan and pronounced with the accent on the dawn. It's often considered to be a year. For example, Daniel 7:25 prophesizes in Aramaic that the holy people will be delivered into his hands for an iddan, iddans, and half an iddan, which is generally assumed to represent a year, years, and half a year or 3½ years. However, I formed a theory which I explained in this article. Perhaps the ancient authors of Genesis used a word like iddan in various circumstances to refer to various appropriate spans of time. Sometimes one iddan could in fact mean a year of 365 days. But maybe an iddan could represent only 180 days half a year, either seedtime or harvest. Suppose an iddan could be 90 days, which we call a season. Suppose it could denote the period from one new moon until the next, which we call a month. I used this theory to calculate that Adam, reported to be 130 iddans of age when his son Seth was born, at that time had attained only 33 of our years. Using a different definition of the ancient word, Adam miraculously survived to the age of 930 iddans, a believable 95 years. I managed to make all the other numbers make sense. And now I realize that my theory can also explain why 700-year-old Grandpapa Noah kept quoting numbers ten times too large. Also, now I can rationalize the eighth chapter of Deuteronomy. Speaking to the Israelites who had escaped Egypt only to wander in the desert for 40 years, Moses says:
Barring a miracle, after 40 years clothing does usually wear out. But maybe 40-iddan-old clothing needs to last only 40 months. That's just a bit more than three years. It might not yet have gone out of style! The wandering Israelites might be grumbling, but they would not yet be on the verge of revolt against Moses. And earlier, if they had been slaves in Egypt for 400 iddans (Genesis 15:13), that could be only 30 years little more than a generation.
APRIL
19,
2026 The clues for a Thursday New York Times crossword puzzle assumed knowledge of obscure Asian foods. One was a steamed dumpling in Tibetan cuisine and another was a Sichuan bean curd dish. As a native of Ohio, I had no idea how to fill in the blanks.
APRIL
16,
2026 Last Sunday, AMC premiered a TV series called The Audacity. The first episode ran little more than an hour, but I spent three hours watching it.
I've heard movie podcasters withhold their judgment about a new release, saying I only saw it once and I'll have to watch it again before I can give it a good or bad score. Were they not paying attention the first time? But now I can sympathize.
APRIL
13,
2026 I can claim that way back in the fall of 1969, I ad-libbed a bit of improvisational comedy with Edie McClurg, a future member of the Groundlings. It was completely forgettable, except to me. We were graduate students at Syracuse University, studying radio and television, and Edie was helping teach the audio course as a graduate assistant.
So in the classic 1986 movie Ferris Bueller's Day Off, featuring Edie as the dean's secretary, why was Bueller the name chosen for the title character? I think I have a clue.
In a snobbish April 6 essay for the New Zealand Herald (not on my usual reading list), Rachel Wells wrote in part, On Thursday, Swedish fast fashion retailer H&M will launch its first ever bridal collection. The most you will pay is $599. The launch of the affordable wedding gowns comes just weeks after fellow fast fashion giant ASOS launched its first bridal collection to the Australian market. Prices for ASOSs wedding gowns start from as little as $137. I think its a little tacky. I am well aware that not every bride can afford to spend thousands of dollars on a bespoke wedding dress, but I cant help feeling that wedding dresses that cost less than your weekly grocery bill somewhat trivialise the significance and sanctity of a wedding. A cheaper garment is ready to wear or off the rack, while a custom gown the only kind worthy of a bride evidently is bespoke. But that word bothers me. I guess its the proper term if youre a tailor. No, you cant buy this suit Im constructing. Its not destined to hang on the display rack. Im not making it on spec to a standard set of measurements. Its bespoke. Im making it on the request of a specific client who has already spoken for it. But until very recently Id never heard the word outside Albanys line in the fifth act of King Lear:
Shakespeare means the lady is engaged. Someones already called dibs. To describe clothing designed for a particular person, lets use custom made. The word bespoke is bespoke. (Besides, shouldnt it be bespoken?)
APRIL
6,
2016
Cook remarked, People are nameless and faceless in a mob. That leads to courage they wouldnt have in another situation. Moreland concurred. Even nice people will do these kinds of things when theyre in a group. To be influenced by your conscience, you have to turn your attention inward. That tends to happen when youre by yourself. But the acts of a group draw your attention outward. That tends to short-circuit guilt when it comes to your values and beliefs. Were basically selfish people who are prone to misbehave as long as we can get away with it. Well try almost anything if we think we wont get caught. ...And even if [we] are caught, the punishment probably wont be as severe because, well, everyone else was doing the same thing, werent they? So go ahead and break the speed limit and cheat on your taxes, right? Its okay. The rest of the mob is doing it.
APRIL
1,
2016 Because sports is merely the toy department of news media, sporting types sometimes play hoaxes. In 1941, a group of stockbrokers wondered about the many college football results that were listed in tiny agate type in the New York Times. They suspected the newspaper was making up games to fill space. Slippery Rock State Teachers College? Come on! That cant be a real school, can it?
So
the guys invented Plain A quarter century later, George Carlin as sports anchor Biff Barf asserted, I call em the way I see em. And if I dont see em, I make em up! No games today; however, weve got a few late football scores still coming in from the Far West. Guam Prep 45, Tahiti 14. Mindanao A&I 27, Molokai 10. Cal Tech 14.5, MIT 123. And heres a partial score: Philadelphia 29. In the fall of 1965 I was a freshman on a campus near Cleveland. And this is not fiction: The Cleveland Browns were actually the defending champions of the National Football League. I had no TV in my dorm room, so I listened to local sportscaster Gib Shanley calling the Browns games on the radio. Cleveland was also the source of my daily newspaper. Every morning, I bought a copy of the Plain Dealer for a window on the wider world. The PD covered American college and pro football, of course. But it also had its own football scores coming in from the Far West. Each week that fall, columnist Bill Hickey reported on the exploits of the Pusan State Panthers.
That was not the end of imaginative sportswriting, of course. Two decades later, George Plimpton wrote about a Mets rookie with a 168-mph fastball. The story of Sidd Finch ran in SI on this very date in 1985. The date, of course, was April 1.
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