All posts by Peter Terezakis
0 for Nature, 1 for Man and Technology
Mid-October I came down with the swine flu. A couple days later I was up
and around after two dosages of Tamiflu. My first treatment by an anti-viral
drug was amazing. If this is portent of medical technology to come, I’m
impressed. On the flip side, I have yet to regain my aerobic endurance nearly
two full months later due to what my doctor termed “post-inflammatory bronchitis.”
So while the Tamiflu nailed the Influenza, I had to tough out a secondary infection.
Shellapples?
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Found a bag of apples at Windmill Farms (our local health food market) which possessed some interesting information regarding its contents: |
Remembering that shellac was produced from the lac beetle |
I asked the store manager what the best way to remove this coating was prior to eating. He hadn’t see the notice before, didn’t know how to remove the coating, and brought the produce manager over. He didn’t know either but suggested hot water. You would think that the people who are selling apples coated with wax made from ground up beetles would know how to remove the compound. Looks like they don’t. |
OnSITE
TRUE WEST
There are only two more performances of this production at Hillcrest’s Urban Grind Cafe located at 797 Park Boulevard, San Diego, CA 92103.
I was invited to do the lighting and to mount some photographs.
Last two nights of the show are this Friday and Saturday, (the 19 and 20th, 2010) at 9pm. My exhibition will come down just after Thanksgiving.
Help support the arts by experiencing theater in this unexpected place!
OnSite @ UCSD
Free events at the University of California, San Diego November 18 – 20, 2010. Within the events of OnSITE, there will be video, an installation of Heart Beats Light, and the playing of some musical instruments I have built. Click on the image above for detailed information.
Geisel Library, UCSD
Heart Beats Light: Geisel Library, UCSD November 2010
Click image or text for QuickTime
predictions…
““Where books are burned in the end people will burn.” —Heinrich Heine, 1797 – 1856
works in progress
“He allowed himself to be swayed by his conviction that human beings are not born once and for all on the day their mothers give birth to them, but that life obliges them over and over again to give birth to themselves.”
Gabriel Garcia Marquez – Love in the Time of Cholera
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