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Yoknapatawpha TV
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This year
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marks the centennial of William Faulkner's birth and the Web release of some of
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his lost hack work. A graduate student at the University of Illinois at
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Springfield stumbled upon two teleplays by the Nobel Prize-winning
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author--Faulkner's only known forays into the genre--while researching his
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master's thesis, Yoknapatawpha
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TV , at a Duke University archive.
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The teleplays, adaptations of undistinguished short stories by the author,
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aired in 1953 and 1954 on Lux Video Theatre , a dramatic series sponsored
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by the makers of Lux soap. To appease censors, Faulkner eliminated a suicide
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from The
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Brooch , and to update the appeal of Shall Not
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Perish , he changed the setting from World War II to the Korean War. The
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first pages of both teleplays are available on the Web but, as a columnist in the Raleigh, N.C.,
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News & Observer remarked, "based on the response of critics,
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Faulkner might have wished these scripts had remained lost."
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Red,
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White, and Tawny
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It is
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commonly taught that Europeans invented the concept of race and color-coded the
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world's peoples. Not according to Nancy Shoemaker, an assistant professor of
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history at the University of Wisconsin at Eau-Claire. In the June issue
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of American Historical Review , she debunks the standard accounts of how
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the American Indians became "red." (Traditional explanations include European
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encounters with Indians wearing red paint, or else the creative labeling system
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of 18 th -century Swedish naturalist Carolus Linnaeus.) Shoemaker
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cites English and French diplomats' diaries and treaty records from the 1720s
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to argue that American Indian tribes came up with the label themselves. The
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transcript of a peace treaty between the Chickasaws and the Cherokees in 1726,
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for example, features the phrase "red people" only within speeches by Indian
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delegates. Besides, Shoemaker writes, Europeans at the time usually described
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Indians not as red but as "tawny."
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Pete
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Sampras' Secret
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Rod
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Cross, a tennis-obsessed Australian physicist, went to the lab to figure out
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the science behind Pete Sampras' power serve. Top players have found that the
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best serve comes from the tip of the racket. But why? Cross put his own racket
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in a vise grip and hooked it up to instruments designed to measure the bounce
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of a ball dropped from 50 centimeters onto the strings at various points. He
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found, as he reports in the American Journal of Physics , that Sampras'
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famous serve is generated by a "dead spot" five centimeters from the tip of the
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racket, where the ball doesn't bounce at all. The explanation is basic physics:
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At the dead spot, 100 percent of the ball's energy is transferred to the
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racket, which, were it in full swing on a tennis court, would return the energy
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to the ball, guaranteeing a power serve. For returns, however, the dead spot is
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no good; it would just absorb all the ball's energy.
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Braving
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the Elements
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Twenty
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years of Cold War bickering over who gets to name certain disputed elements of
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the periodic table has ended in a compromise befitting the new world order--or
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almost. According to a recent article in Science , Americans, Russians,
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and Germans all claimed proprietary rights to the elements 104 to 110 until
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last month, when the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry
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("chemistry's high court") handed down its decisions. The Americans will claim
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elements 104 (rutherfordium, after physicist Ernest Rutherford) and 106
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(seaborgium, after nuclear physicist Glen Seaborg); the Russians get element
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105 (dubnium, after the Joint Institute of Nuclear Research in Dubna, Russia);
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and the Germans 107 to 109 (respectively bohrium, after Danish quantum
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physicist Niels Bohr; hassium, after the German state of Hesse, where it was
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discovered; and meitnerium, after German physicist Lise Meitner). Element 110
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remains under dispute.
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Poetry
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for Lawyers
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Who says
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a creative-writing MFA is a sure path to permanent unemployment? The London law
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firm Mishcon de Reya--whose star attorney, Anthony Julius, last year wrote a
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polemical book about T.S. Eliot's anti-Semitism--has hired its first
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poet-in-residence. According to the London Sunday
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Telegraph ,
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35-year-old Lavinia Greenlaw will be paid
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