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Wednesday, August 14, 2024

The Well-Off People Who Can’t Spend Money

 This 112-Year-Old NYC Icon’s Secret to Living Forever Is Pretty Easy Vice


The Well-Off People Who Can’t Spend Money The Atlantic




The Well-Off People Who Can’t Spend Money The Atlantic


 Q & A: Jamaica Kincaid

       The latest 'The books of my life'-column at The Guardianfeatures Jamaica Kincaid: ‘Don’t get me started on the New Testament, that celebrity magazine’.


       Stefan Tobler Q & A

       At new books in german Regan Mies has a Q & A with teh translator and And Other Stories founder, in Putting Words First: an interview with Publisher and Translator Stefan Tobler
       Among his responses -- sales numbers ! as he notes that Yuri Herrera's Signs Preceding the End of the World sold 13,000 copies last 

       Q & A: Will Evans

       At the (American) National Endowment for the Arts Blog Carolyn Coons has a Q & A with the Deep Vellum-publisher, The Artful Life Questionnaire: Will Evans (Dallas, TX)


  Taylor Swift terror plot: Suspect who pledged allegiance to ISIS had chemical substances, devices at home. Second suspect, 17, arrested near Ernst Happel Stadium in Vienna, Austria, where Eras Tour shows were canceled


Among 6,001 participants in the U.S., drinking two or more cups of coffee a day was associated with a 28% lower risk of dementia over 7 years compared with drinking less than one daily cup.


  1. “Digging deeper into the question [of the ‘realness’ of numbers] might challenge our assumptions about not only the nature of numbers, but the nature of the universe itself” — the philosophy math is covered at Salon, in an article that quotes Penelope Maddy (Irvine) and others
  2. “In news stories… some of the letters in a swear word are obscured by asterisks. So you get f**k instead of ‘fuck’ and there’s this puzzle about how that works” — a conversation with Rebecca Roache (Royal Holloway, University of London) on swearing
  3. “The goal is to help industry… corporations as well as startups, or organizations like law enforcement or hospitals, to develop and deploy AI systems responsibly and ethically” — a profile of Cansu Canca (Northeastern), recently recognized for work that “fosters an AI environment of equality and empowerment”
  4. “The problems of the pursuit of virtue through craft are on full display in The Bear — Errol Lord (Penn) on the television show The Bear and the virtue of hospitality
  5. “He had a way of bringing ideas from all these fields together into a grand synopsis, a grand vision that would then resonate with so many people” — David Chalmers on Daniel Dennett (video)
  6. The point is “to provide students with an experience of discussing and deliberating about difficult topics, knowing that they are with people that will disagree with them right from the beginning” — Harry Brighouse (Wisconsin) is interviewed about “Deliberation Dinners”
  7. “What is morally good depends… on what a hypothetical congress of socially sophisticated, developmentally expensive humans, post-humans, aliens, sufficiently advanced AI, and others of the right type would judge to be good” — Eric Schwitzgebel (UC Riverside) offers up a characteristically weird (not an insult) metaethics

The surprising Sydney suburb with a no-pub policy

The inner west may be known for its pubs and bars but one neighbourhood has retained its “dry” reputation thanks to its unofficial ban on drinking establishments. Will it ever break the drought?

When Des Middleton tried to open a pub in Haberfield in 1948, the Metropolitan Licensing Board quashed his application. A Herald report at the time noted 4238 Haberfield residents opposed Middleton’s proposed transfer of a Sydney CBD pub licence to their happy hamlet.

Given more than half of Haberfield’s then adult population of 7500 took time to object says something about the early residents of the suburb, located just over six kilometres from the CBD. Half a century earlier, in 1901, Ashfield alderman Richard Stanton had conceived Haberfield as “slum-less, lane-less” and – to the delight of the wowsers – “pub-less”. To this day, Haberfield remains not only pub-less, but also without the inner west’s accoutrements de jour: a wine bar or small bar

This historical drinking quirk was brought into the now with the arrival of restaurateur Con Dedes, who last month added Haberfield Rowers Club, rebranded as Regatta Club, to his hospitality portfolio.

Dedes, whose hospitality group includes Pyrmont’s Flying Fish restaurant, has armed the Haberfield venue with new menus and decked staff out in T-shirts with a cheeky nod to the suburb’s rather “dry” reputation. “It says Regatta Pub Club with the pub crossed out,” Dedes says.

Dedes explains the venue’s unique position as Haberfield’s only club where you can grab an alcoholic drink probably morphed out of its sporting club lineage and the quirk of its more isolated location at the edge of Haberfield, on the foreshore of Iron Cove.

In the heart of Haberfield, chef John Lanzafame felt the weight of trying to get a liquor licence when he opened a restaurant in the suburb two decades ago. “I had to jump through hoops, and it was only a restaurant,” he says.

Ramsay Street in Haberfield.
Ramsay Street in Haberfield.STEVEN SIEWERT

Lanzafame says the process became so arduous, he engaged a solicitor. “In the end we had to open without a liquor licence,” he says, unable to serve alcohol despite having a sommelier on the payroll.

When it was eventually granted six months later, Lanzafame says his Haberfield restaurant (which has since closed) was the only one at the time with a full liquor licence aside from “a couple of places that could serve wine, and ... a bottleshop”. “I did the hard yards,” Lanzafame says.

But why no pub or wine bar in the suburb? For all the talk of Haberfield’s heritage conservation zone, it’s hard to find anything precluding the opening of either. “I was told at the time it was an unwritten [mandate],” Lanzafame says.

Ashfield Council has since merged with Leichhardt and Marrickville councils to become Inner West Council in 2016, which says, “there are no specific planning controls relating to restrictions on pubs opening in Haberfield”.


Regatta Club, formerly known as Haberfield Rowers Club, has decked staff out in T-shirts with a cheeky nod to Haberfield’s “dry” reputation.1OH1

With no recent applications for either a pub or wine bar, the suburb’s reputation could be behind the lack of attempts from operators to test the waters.

“Before we opened, people used to pop in and ask if we were going to be a wine bar,” says Chris Theodosi, co-owner of Haberfield’s award-winning Happyfield cafe. “There might be a few residents resistant to it, but I think most are screaming for one,” Theodosi says, while conceding Happyfield “sells more merch than alcohol”.

“A wine bar or small bar seems to be one thing Haberfield needs,” Lanzafame says of his old stomping ground.

Until someone takes the temperature of residents on the issue, Haberfield restaurants are the best bet for a drink. Con Dedes says locals can grab a drink without eating at Regatta Club. Or they can pop over to neighbouring Summer Hill for a cocktail at The Temperance Society.