Month: July 2021

Other Mammals Face Bigger Problems

By Dr. Robert Thorson The deafening crescendo of political din is done. What a relief! Perhaps now we will be able to hear the cries from the other animal species on Earth that didn’t have a chance to vote. Assuming that you will not be moved to compassion by bug-eyed insects, slimy mollusks or slithering […]

Canst Thou Hear Me Now?

By Dr. Robert Thorson God must want us to have cellphone conversations. How do I know? Because the beautiful landmark steeple of Storrs Congregational Church at the gateway to the University of Connecticut campus will soon be leased as a cellphone tower. What will the good Lord think of next? Move over, church bells. Make […]

‘Enjoy the Solstice.’ Brighter Days Are Ahead

By Dr. Robert Thorson Today at 11:28 a.m., our annual descent into darkness will be over. The following days will be brighter, longer and warmer. Though this astronomical turnabout is the psychological bedrock of our seasonal celebrations, American mass culture treats it either indifferently or as something pagans do. Last week, and for the first […]

The Goose That Escaped Lake’s Icy Grasp

By Dr. Robert Thorson Aesop’s Fables are allegories from ancient Greece in which animals often stand in for humans. Had these stories been gathered farther north, they might have included one about a solitary goose frozen into a pond. To “The Hare and the Tortoise” and “The Fox and the Grapes,” I would add the […]

Under A Cloud: Bomb’s Roots Deep Within Our Nature

By Dr. Robert Thorson Mushroom clouds. Hiroshima and Nagasaki. How terrible. How strangely beautiful. Though most can appreciate the visual similarity between mushrooms and mushroom clouds, very few appreciate how similar they are in other ways. Each common mushroom is the fleeting surface expression of a much larger and more powerful entity living within the […]

Science At The Wheel

By Dr. Robert Thorson The driving force of all modern life is not politics, celebrity or God, but science. So says David Baltimore, who assumed the presidency of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, our nation’s premier scientific organization, on Feb. 19. My purpose is not to praise Baltimore, but to dissect and […]

Winter Nor’Easters Washing Cape Cod Away

By Dr. Robert Thorson Nourishing beaches with sand to keep the tourists happy is like nourishing your body with food. It’s a temporary fix. Before you know it, the ocean is hungry again. And the ocean has been particularly hungry this year. Four powerful nor’easters slammed the New England coast this winter. Waves exceeded 40 […]

There’s no Big E at the Science Center

By Dr. Robert Thorson Excited kids. Exhausted parents. Urgent play. Scurrying from exhibit to exhibit. That’s what I saw when I made my first visit to the Connecticut Science Center earlier this summer on an otherwise normal Tuesday afternoon. At long last, downtown Hartford has a child-friendly, enthusiasm-generating place. Congratulations to the visionaries, sponsors, politicians, […]

That Sinking Feeling in New Orleans

By Dr. Robert Thorson Let bayous be bayous. If the land beneath New Orleans wants to be a bayou, then I suggest we let the levees, dikes and pumps fail. Let Old Man River do its delta thing. Let the City of Jazz become the wonderful swamp that nature intended. All that’s necessary is for […]