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Heiser CHRISTMAS
NEWSLETTER
members.aol.com/dickheiser/ December 2001 Paris
in the Spring
Loretta
and I were impressed with the beauty of Paris. We attended an Elderhostel art
history course for two weeks in May. Most buildings have been steam-cleaned for
the millennium, so the city sparkled. We always enjoy the company of the other
Elderhostel participants, and I was glad to discover ten museums new to me.
Ironically, I have always been hungry in previous independent visits to Paris,
but with Elderhostel’s guidance we finally learned how to order a proper
meal of entrée, main dish and dessert, so we were always very satisfied. Plato
Society
I’m
excited to be a new member of the Plato Society at UCLA. It’s a
learning-in-retirement group; each member leads the discussion at one weekly
meeting. This Fall, I took a class on the Brain and Mind; next I plan to take liberal arts and
literature courses. This
Spring, I plan to audit Karen Kleinfelder’s history of photography course
at Cal State Long Beach. She’s a fabulous teacherJ Eli
Jaxon-Bear
Eli,
my spiritual teacher, teaches regular seminars in California. I have attended
retreats in Santa Monica and San Rafæl, and look forward to a longer
seminar in Ojai in January. Although I haven’t been able to evangelize
others, I’m very happy at what I’m learning from him. If
you’d like to borrow a videotape, let me know! Dick’s
Picks
Dean
Kamen’s Segway personal transportation system gets my vote for product of
the decade. Kamen has previously invented an insulin pump and the iBOT dynamic
stand-up wheelchair. The Segway is fun, safe, cheap, and will get millions of
cars off the streets. I hope some day there will be more Segways than cars! Los
Angeles area readers shouldn’t miss The World from Here at the UCLA Hammer Museum, through January 13.
It’s free on Thursdays, and features the most beautiful and historically
significant books from 33 local libraries. There’s an excellent website
at www.calbook.org/theworldfromhere/ How
to Use Your Eyes by James Elkins is a
beautiful book of short essays on looking at sunsets, sand, pavement,
perspective, scarabs, x-rays, fingerprints, etc. I wish I could send you a
copy! Dick’s
Pix
A
Minolta DiMAGE 7 camera is my third digital; each camera has been twice as good
as its predecessor. This one has five–megapixel resolution and a
sixteen(!) element 7X zoom lens. The hard disk is the size of a quarter, and
holds a thousand pictures. The electronic viewfinder is WYSIWYG (what you see
is what you get) so exposure corrections are a snap. It gobbles batteries, but
I carry spares. The price has already come down by a third since August. I’ve
taken a lot of digital pictures of paintings. They show barrel distortion that
I thought was inherent with the wide-angle zoom setting needed for hand-held
available-light shots. Bill Attig explained that a proper (fixed-length) lens
won’t do that, but I had already figured out how to undistort the
pictures in Photoshop, so I’m a solution looking for problems. I’ve
been scanning various images of a famous Maya stone hieroglyphic tablet, and
superimposing them in the computer, so I can compare drawings to photos and
rubbings. Best wishes for a happy new year! Love and peace!! Dick & Loretta Heiser |
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