<div class="page photo" style=""> <article> <header style=" background-image:url(/uploads/548ca3ba4e9a2.JPG); "> <div class="box"> <div class="intro" style="color: #ffffff;"> <h1 style="color: #ffffff !important;">Postscript</h1> <p class="summary">Editor's Thoughts</p> </div> </div> </header> <div class="main"> <div class="container"> <p class="byline">James Rimmer </p> <p>Feeling. That is the thread of the Baird’s tales this issue. Feeling. This is a bit of a change for us, as our early issues focused more on critical, rigorous analysis.</p><p>This shift is born out of a couple factors. Personal experiences is one – numbers seem not do proper justice to the 87 men buried at Martinpuich British Cemetery. But it is also out of a sense of pushes ourselves, trying to write better, more effectively. It is one thing to change minds through cold logic and statistical rigour, to demonstrate truth – it is another writing act all together to change minds through feelings and emotion. </p><p>Thus this <em>Baird’s Tale</em> tells us how buildings – cemeteries, music halls or steel mills – how train windows or waiting cabs, make us feel. </p> </div> </div> </article> </div><!-- /page-->
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Issue 4

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