Barney & Clyde by Gene Weingarten; Dan Weingarten & David Clark for February 03, 2023

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    gammaguy  almost 2 years ago

    Yep, there’s something on her mind… Cynthia’s usual behavior.

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    uniquename  almost 2 years ago

    Good answer Cynthia.

    And how is the myth of Pandora similar to the story of Eve? Because they both gave into temptation? Mythology and the bible are full of stories of both men and women giving into temptation. I don’t think women are always getting the blame.

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    JudyAz  almost 2 years ago

    I thought Pandora had a box, not a jar.

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    fritzoid Premium Member almost 2 years ago

    The version of the story that makes most sense to me is that what remained in the jar (or box) was knowledge of the future. Given the other sufferings human beings are prone to (including, of course, death), if we knew the future we’d walk around in utter despair all the time. Since we DON’T know, we are able to hope.

    (And yes, the Greeks considered such an ability an “ill;” prophecies rarely turned out well for those who received them, and since Fate was inescapable there was no way to change what was coming.)

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    Stephen Gilberg  almost 2 years ago

    Mrs. Olsen wouldn’t dare try to guess what Caulfield is about to ask.

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    T...  almost 2 years ago

    That’s the kind of teacher the school system hires…

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    cdward  almost 2 years ago

    Son of a gun, Cynthia had a straight answer.

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