Time has rendered some of Tannen's examples of inter-gender dialogue quaint, but theīook nonetheless serves as an effective reminder of gender issues we still need to work on. A third owner is implied, unless Mom's given name is Carl.Īlso in the pile was Deborah Tannen's 1990 classic, You Just Don't Understand: Women and Men in Conversation. Mom not only has great penmanship, but a sense of economy (and/or humor), as she recycled Kate's inscription as well the book. The inscriptions on the inside cover reveal that it was twice given as a Christmas gift: to Carl from Kate (who had read and enjoyed it), and to Jonathan from Mom (who also claims to have read it). Right now I'm immersed in Tobias Wolff's memoir This Boy's Life. Recently I scooped up some good ones at the Part of the enjoyment of a used book comes from discovering the If your television provider is other than Mid-Hudson Cable, this link will tell you where to find WMHT : Find WMHT Monday, Dec 29, 8:00PM on WMHT-TV (channel 2 on MHC) Monday Dec 15, 7:30PM on WMHT World (channel 115 on Mid-Hudson cable) *The notices I've come across the web haven't inspired my confidence in their accuracy, but below are the places and times I have found. You can watch a 30 second trailer here, or a longer, more informative pre-release trailer above. According to the filmmakers, the project displacedĩ,000 people, 3,600 households, and more than 1,500 buildings, including 350īusinesses, four churches and 29 taverns. Neighborhood in Albany from its settlement through its demise when the Empire Including tonight-I hope.* The film traces the history of an Italian Which aired last week on WMHT, you have a couple more opportunities to watch it, If you missed Mary Paley and John Romeo's documentary, The Neighborhood That Disappeared,