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Majoring in the unusual

From n+1, at its best, El Malpensante exhibits not only the critical rigor that is expected of a publication of its sort, but also a touch of youthful perversity and mischief, now adult in its methods and motivations. Here are 7 superpowers the world can do without. Strange News: The origin of sex are pinned down — on wild strawberries. It's Living Room 2.0: Boxee, the open-source software that puts the Internet on your TV, is poised to revolutionize how and what we watch; could it reunite the family, too? A chance to join the world: Neal Ascherson on a future for Abkhazia. A weakened economy needs strengthened humanities: Economic freedom has turned toxic because we lack the cultural maturity that the humanities used to provide. Roger Kimball on tenured radicals: Still tenured, still radical. From Mother Jones, an interview with Frank Rich. How much hoops analysis is too much? A review of Free Darko's The Macrophenomenal Pro Basketball Almanac. A look at how publishing is displaying its split personality. On giant piles of trash left by a generation of New Yorkers, landscape architect James Corner is building a park that has the power to change the way we see the past and the future of the city. Majoring in the unusual: “Out of the box” college programs for Generation Y. More on The Lost Art of Walking by Geoff Nicholson.