Monday's Noted Things
Dan Bilefsky,"Belgians Hail the Middle Ages (Well, Not the Plague Part)," NYT, 9 April, looks at Belgium's enthusiasm for medieval re-enactment.
At Lawyers, Guns, and Money, Robert Farley has an on-going series:"Sunday Deposed Monarch Blogging". He's covered the House of Hohenzollern, House of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Glucksburg, Lao Dynasty, House of Osman, House of Iturbide, House of Singh, and House of Hesse. His colleague, David Noon, has another series:"Worst American Birthdays." So far, Roy Cohn, Bill Frist, Joe Lieberman, Lee Atwater, George Lincoln Rockwell, Gail Norton, William J. Casey, John Wayne Gacy, Sam Alito, and Tom DeLay have joined David's charmed circle. If pushed, I imagine that he would admit that there are degrees of bad.
"From Bakelite to Plasma: TV through the Ages," Wired, 6 April, is a visual history of television's 75 years. Hat tip.
Charlie Savage,"Scandal Puts Spotlight on Christian Law School," Boston Globe, 8 April. What Pat Robertson hath wrought.