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Exposing Hollywood's anti-German agenda

I'm not ashamed to be religious or a liberal

'Beat Me with a Stick' Elmo and other great toys

Making a difference: why I do what I do

Telemarketing ban has ended a great pastime

I don't rule the world, and that's fine with me

Making the journey from prejudice to understanding

There's no comparing genocide and killing geese

All that's left is an empty feeling

An unrequited love for some really neat words

Foster dads offer hands and hearts ... for the time being.

Thanksgiving dinner and other forms of ritual madness.

Zen and the art of not getting run over by a Mack truck

A lifetime of regrets as another year goes down the tubes

Reform Party Convention ends in shoot-out

Virtual immortality isn't all it's cracked up to be

Insider's look at the Republican National Convention turns up many surprises

Car Repair for Dummies, Part One: This is a Car

Sadness marks the passing of a beloved mattress

At last, something worse than 'Jane Eyre'

Every town has a story. Tombstone has a fixation.

Forget the Trekkies, the real nutcases are on the Luce

Chalk one up for the faceless restaurant customers

Feeling sick? Maybe it's time to get a shave.

Guest Writer: Toto, I don't think we're in Mayberry anymore

Guest Writer: The need for speed

Does this mean we won't get free popcorn anymore?

Out of the way, Martha Stewart -- I'm in the kitchen now

How I'm surviving my brush with 'Jane Eyre'

First blizzard of the year evokes frivolous memories, no deep thoughts

Isn't it time to jump on the bandwagon with the Real Thing?

Forward this column and you can turn e-mail into $300!

Trips to the moon, disaster figure in mildew prognostications

True confessions (more or less) of a closet survivalist

Who understands what dreams may come?

Hey, everyone, look -- it's an elephant!

Wouldn't 'Senator Learn' have a nice ring?

To my little girl: while you're sleeping . . .

Special Report: Entering the Baby Zone

Battling the suburban white whale

Wanted: Politician to tackle key issues

Something else to worry about this fall

Wanted: Dumber Mice and Better Mouse Traps

One More Stop on the Road to Adulthood

Follow the fashion leads of the journalist from Krypton

This is why naming children by committee never caught on

Psoriasis may be ugly, but at least it doesn't leave scars

Another casualty of the ancient family curse

Quest for baby names too big to handle

How the seniors taught me to get down

And don't forget your scarf when you go inside

Guest Writer: No room for Paradise as vandals force Dew Drop Inn to close

The samba of the mad Vulcan

Maybe I could be directed by Spielberg

The aliens in Rhode Island don't want you to read this

Voice of nostalgia is a call to destruction

My wife is having the baby, but I look pregnant

The end of the world as we know it

Run for the hills - Y2K’s a’comin’ fast

What's in a name? Shakespeare had no idea

Don't waste your energy on the 'gas out'

Career choice leaves a lasting mark

One Easter leftover, hold the ham please

 
  Trips to the moon, disaster figure in mildew prognostications

Some people, when they want to know the future, consult the stars. Others shuffle a deck of Tarot cards, and still others have their palms read.

Not me. When my curiosity about the new millennium got the better of me recently, I turned to the mildew that has started to grow on the walls of our shower at home, and studied it to divine the course the future will take.

Among my discoveries were the winning numbers to New Jersey's Powerball lottery, a remarkable likeness of Andy Kaufman, the results of the upcoming presidential election, and much more.

So, without further ado, here is what the next century holds for us all. Remember, you read it here first.

2000. Yosemite Sam wins the presidency on Nov. 7 as the result of a protest vote by Americans who want real candidates for a change. The U.S. Supreme Court orders all votes for "President Horny Toads" stricken, and gives the office to runner-up Tinky Winky.

2001. The Society for Anal Retentive Behavior celebrates the start of the new millennium, carefully explaining that 2000 wasn't really the start of the millennium because there was no Year 0. No one else cares.

2003. Religious activist-turned-politician Gary Bauer has a brain aneurysm when several gay- and women's-rights groups straightfacedly endorse his latest bid for presidency, calling him "a man of vision -- just what America needs for the 21st century."

2008. Former President Bill Clinton, in a statement to The NY Journal News, angrily declares, "I did not have an affair with that cleaning lady."

2012. The Titanic II, designed to replicate the original ocean liner in every aspect, disappoints everyone by not striking an iceberg on its maiden voyage. In order to keep his book deal, however, the captain of the boat arranges for a submarine from Finland to torpedo the liner just before it reaches New York.

2016. When some enterprising business owners begin shuttle runs to a new Hilton hotel on the moon for tourist vacations, national Republican and Democratic leaders alike rush to the nearest travel agency to buy each other one-way tickets. Voter turnout quadruples within three years.

2019. Former President Bill Clinton, in a statement delivered from his room at the Happy Acres Retirement Home, angrily declares, "I did not have an affair with the nurse who changes my bedpan."

2021. Somerset Valley Players, a theater based in Neshanic Station, N.J., becomes the third New Jersey theater to win the coveted Tony Award, for its innovative production of the little-known "Batman" musical.

2026. A group of animal-rights activists seize control of an entire barn for 53 tension-filled days. The confrontation finally resolves when government troops burst through one of the walls, knocking down a Coleman lantern and starting a fire that barbecues all the cows.

2032. Developers pave over the last available square inch in New Jersey and set their eyes on New England and rural Pennsylvania.

2037. The Packet Group of newspapers in Princeton, N.J., buys The New York Times, and makes the Hillsborough Beacon and The Manville News its new flagship papers.

2038. Disappointed survivalists abandon their bomb shelters and return to society after the Year 2038 arrives with only minor complications arising from the Y2038 computer bug. Ironically, the next day there is a nuclear attack and none of them reach their shelters in time.

2040. Developer U.S. Home scales back its controversial development The Greenbriar at Mill Lane to include only 2,000 living units. Elected officials promise a resolution to the 50-year-old controversy will be accomplished "soon."

2044. The smallest country in the world splits into two smaller countries when leaders in the reigning military junta disagree over whether the potatoes have enough salt.

2057. Hurricane Archibald hits the East Coast, and causes floods that decimate every municipality from Long Island, N.Y., down to Raleigh, N.C. Developers deny that flooding was exacerbated by excessive building, and instead blame the disaster on an unusually high tide.

2061. A particularly nasty flu virus wipes out all the chickens in the world. Pepsico abandons its entire KFC chain, but not until after the chain jacks prices to $30 a piece because of the bird's new status as a delicacy.

2063. A cult forms in Hillsborough, N.J., worshipping the embalmed head of legendary freelance journalist Minx McCloud.

2065. Developer U.S. Home denies stonewalling the Hillsborough Planning Board as it submits a new application for 3,104 living units. Elected officials assure voters that a resolution is "in the works."

2070. An experiment with tachyons at Brookhaven National Laboratory accidentally causes time to run backward, with the unforeseen consequence that disco becomes popular again. An angry mob storms the lab and, unable to find the responsible scientists, eats all the yellow Zingers in the snack machines.

2075. Humanity's first colony on Mars comes to an unfortunate and untimely end when someone opens a window "to get a little fresh air."

2092. Experts in the computer industry, concerned about falling profits, start to make noise about the "Y2.1K bug."

2097. Hillsborough, N.J., planners finally approve the controversial Greenbriar development, allowing developer U.S. Home to build 2,876 units in ten 23-story buildings and calling it "a victory for open space in Hillsborough."

2098. James Cameron III wins 43 Academy Awards for his movie "Titanic II," which fortunately does not star either Kate Winslet or Leonardo DiCaprio, or anyone who looks remotely like them.

2099. A spry Dick Clark is one of dozens killed during a New Year's Eve party in Times Square when the dropping ball breaks off the pole and plows through the crowds.

2100. Every one of these predictions having come true, there is a renewed interest in the writings of David Learn and in the science of divination through reading mildew. The so-called Wall of Futures, however, is destroyed through an unfortunate accident involving a sponge and a bottle of bathroom cleaner.

David Learn is managing editor of the Hillsborough Beacon. Permission is given to forward this article, but please leave this notice intact.

"Scarred for Life" is written by David Learn, Copyright © 1999 - 2002 and appears here by permission. All technical content of this site is Copyright © 1999 - 2002 by Blair Learn.