Dear Alex, In an hour and seven minutes I must leave for the airport to meet Klemens who will be arriving from Minneapolis on SY 255 scheduled to arrive at 11:55 p.m. That won't be enough time for me to finish this letter, but more than enough time for me to get myself into trouble. That's what happened in 1946, when for reasons unknown to me, my freshman adviser asked me to submit to a psychological examination. That's where "voyeurism" first got me in trouble. One of the pictures on which they asked my comments was that of a seductively (un)dressed young woman, an issue which I dispatched by quoting Matthew 5:28 King James Version (KJV) 28 But I say unto you, That whosoever looketh on a woman to lust after her hath committed adultery with her already in his heart. I've long been convinced that my excursion into Biblical scholarship did me in. They diagnosed me (perhaps rightly) as on the threshold of madness and that's why they didn't give me a Fulbright. Elliot Perkins let the cat out of the bag when he told me I should go work with my hands (rather than with my mind) or it would be a case of "Up like a rocket, down like a stick." It turns out that after a fashion, I survived. The classic description of voyeurism is in Daniel 13: