Instead of a search, here's four years and 140 pages of old stuff from GL the Mag.

MODERN LOVE
The crazy little thing called love section includes "Love is a verb," notable for its disclosing of the gigolo's secret, and the theory of the out-of-town girlfriend.

FEATURE STORIES
The Punkin Chunkin in lower slower Delaware, Charles Schulz and the day Charlie Brown got to be a hero; and a column on the casting call for the first Survivor.

POLITICS
When I wrote about Trent Lott, it was Day Four of his crisis and I thought he'd get away with it; found Howard Dean intriguing back in December, 2002.

There's an old piece on John McCain, an older piece on the myth of the Reform Party, and an even earlier piece written about Jerry Springer.

Cobweb Alert
GL the Mag hasn't been updated in two years (since the blog came online in early 2003). This page is designed to present highlights and keep search engine spiders happy.

Urban Forestry: Pictures Don't Lie
(Timeless) You won't believe how fast urban trees are disappearing. I did this low-cost educational project on a state contract, and reprint it here to promote the importance of urban forestry. For the impatient, skip straight to these pictures (slides eight through 11).

Dream Catchers
(2-26-03) Some nice-planet vibes translated into little pieces of environmental art that seems to both please and puzzle people. A look at a trend and a mystery.

On War
(2-22-03) Lots of military types are throwing the name Clausewitz around like road salt. So did they actually pay attention to what he said?

Cowboy Capitalism
(1-30-03) The proprietor specializes in recent history, and he wonders if this whole trickle-down thing has lived up to the hype.

The American Candidate
(12-22-02) A reality TV show based on running for president. Is it an evil Marshall McLuhan prophecy come true, or Survivor with debates instead of bugs? All I can say is sign me up.

That Pesky Word Thing
I'm a militaristic peacenik. Here's one thing, then another, I fired out about the U.S. and the bloody Balkans mess way back when

Favorite Old Columns
Four years old: a column on my doppelganger on the other side of the world. Five years old: an essay on Kathleen Willey that generated more positive email than any other single GL the Mag item.

April Fools editions of Broznews, the best weblog of its IT kind.

There's an old Cosmo parity, including the quiz and the bedside astrologer.

There's an homage to the Harpers Almanac.

There's an Auto Biography that people have found amusing in the past.

BACKGROUND:
G.L. Marshall, who uses italics when referring to himself in the third person, spent 16 years in the news business before getting a 1995 hunch this Web thing might take off.

Since entering the IT world, Mr. Marshall has tried to promote concise writing, clear information architecture and intuitive Web usability. He's been involved in roughly 100 Web sites and his work experience ranges from giant corporations to trendy dot bomb Web boutiques.