WSJ Links
Section D (Off Duty):
- As usual, the weekend edition is filled with articles on food. I probably had the best enchiladas en mole I have ever had; at the Casa Salsita in Lincoln Heights, north of downtown San Antonio; incredible; in addition, their charro beans were incredible
- This should be fun: photography under the microscope: what does a mosquito look like in extreme close-up? Images from the Nikon Small World Photomicrography Competition.
- This should be useful: novelist and essayist Paul Theroux on note-taking while traveling
- A field guide to unusual words in this week's Wall Street Journal. This article is particularly relevant for me having just finished the chapter on the Oxford English Dictionary (OED) in James Gleick's The Information.
- The Legend of Zelda: two novels prove Zelda Fitzgerald's life remains almost as fascinating as her husband's fiction. Having read much on Zelda and much of Fitzgerald, I would argue that Zelda is much more fascinating than his novels.
Section A:
- Employers push back on health law's insurance trigger -- the 30-hour ObamaCare work week. I have stated often on the blog -- and probably the first among Bakken bloggers -- to argue that this will be just one of many pieces of ObamaCare that will be waived. There's even a chance, ObamaCare, in general, will be delayed. But as the commercial says: it's hard to stop a train (wreck)
- Op-ed: is Obama already a lame duck? Not quite, but he sure is quacking like one. -- Peggy Noonan.
- Op-ed: why the energy mopes are wrong. America's fossil-fuel boom is not a curse upon the world. -- Jenkins.
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