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Craig Duff
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If I Were Oprah…

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If I were Oprah Winfrey, I’d recommend to this book to millions of people: But I’m not Oprah, so instead I’ll suggest that the dozens of you who read this blog go out and buy my pal Katherine Lanpher‘s book of funny and poignant essays about her life and her move to New York City […]

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Faith Versus Farmland

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Before I left for Cairo, I had the great pleasure of working with New York Times reporter Diana B. Henriques. I produced video segments to complement her year-long investigation into ways federal law trumps local and state regulations as exemptions for churches and other religious organizations grow. The first of Ms. Henriques’s series appeared in

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A Stroll Through Medieval Cairo

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Here are some photos from my walk through the old Islamic quarter of Cairo. Its rustic streets and alleyways were the city’s main thoroughfares for a thousand years after the Fatimids conquered Egypt in 969 AD. Today, a stroll along the dusty paths that crisscross among the historic mosques and crumbling walls is quite a

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A New October 6th War

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October 6th is a national holiday in Egypt. It was on this day, in 1973, that President Anwar Al-Sadat launched a surprise attack, crossing the Suez into the Sinai, starting – with Syria attacking simultaneously in the Golan Heights – the Yom Kippur War. It was also on October 6th, 1981, during a military parade

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Ramadan Kareem

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It’s about 5:30 and I know I am on a fool’s errand. I want to find a school notebook and some index cards so I can rewrite the notes from today’s Arabic class and make flash cards to learn my numbers. But during Ramadan at this time of day, you can see the lights going

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The Truman Show: Cairo Edition

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Some of you have heard me talk lately about my suspicion that I’m the main character on some kind of Truman Show. You may remember the 1998 Jim Carrey movie, where a man’s entire life, from birth, is a reality television soap opera and everyone he knows is just an actor on the series. I

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Dodging a Mullet in Cairo

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For the near-sighted, getting a haircut is often an act of faith. Once the glasses come off, you are at the mercy of the guy with the scissors and clippers as you gaze hopefully into your own fuzzy visage in the mirror. Add language and cultural barriers, and you end up in your own Lasik

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The Obligatory, Yet Extraordinary, Pyramid Trip

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Thursday night, as the driver brought me home from a shopping spree at the French supermarket Carrefour, we drove from the eastern outskirts of Cairo toward the sunset and the area of Giza. With the sun dipping below the horizon, the orange light silhouetted the great pyramids, making them visible through the city’s haze. It

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Old Cairo and the New Campus

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Yesterday, I went on a tour of greater Cairo with other new AUC faculty members. The bus meandered through the streets of various Cairo neighborhoods, with a running commentary provided by Associate Provost John Swanson. Here’s the view from the cliffs overlooking Cairo. Swanson says on a clear day you can see the pyramids. But

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At Least the Cats are Curious

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In my nearly two weeks at The American University, I’ve noticed something about the campus:  The place is full of cats.  I think the cat to student ratio rivals the faculty-to-student ratio by a wide margin.   The well-fed felines lounge on chairs and hang out below tables and munch on the piles of cat food dumped on

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