Thursday, March 27, 2008

perspective - again



12% of the world's people have access to a high school education and some people want that education so badly, that they go through this (from the bbc...march 27/08):

Crocodile crossing for SA pupils
By Alice Lander BBC News, Kwazulu-Natal
A South African village is demanding that a bridge be built across a crocodile-infested river to stop children swimming it to get to school.
Students as young as seven have been making the crossing for two months since the community's boat was stolen.
"There are about 70 households on that side of the river but there are no buses and no-one owns a car," a Kwazulu-Natal local councillor said.
To cross safely would require a 20km (12 miles) detour to get to the school.
I worry all the time. There are dangerous animals in there, especially crocodiles, Headmistress Hlengiwe Mthembu
On school days, 150 children from Sahlumbe village in the heart of rural Zululand swim across the river in their underwear using rubber tyres and buckets to keep afloat and to keep their school uniforms and books dry.
The older ones help the small ones who cling to the tyres.
"I worry all the time. There are dangerous animals in there, especially crocodiles," says Thuthukani Primary School headmistress Hlengiwe Mthembu.
The children, some of whom also attend Mabizela High School, often arrive tired and unable to concentrate, she says.
"They sit in class and shiver because of the cold and they can't study well because they are worrying about how they are going to get home.
"It is very hard for them. After heavy rains the river gets very full. It can take up to 10 minutes to cross."
Drowning
Local councillor Sibusiso Nbatha says most of the families moved to the area three years ago after being evicted from the land they were on.
He says many parents have no choice but to let their children make the dangerous crossing.
"Not all the children can swim so some ride on the tires or their parents carry them across. The river is too deep for the adults to walk across and not all of them can swim," Mr Nbatha says.
It is not only children who have to face the fast-flowing Tugela River.
The only hospital in the area is also situated on the far bank. In 2003 a pregnant woman battling to reach the opposite bank drowned.
It's very frustrating. You can see the school from the opposite bank but you just can't reach it Local councillor Sibusiso Nbatha
In 2005, two children from the same family were also taken by the river and drowned.
Mr Nbatha says even the stolen boat was not safe and he wants a bridge built in the area.
"It was old and full of holes. There was only one boat and it was used by the whole community."
He says he has pleaded with the department of transport for five years.
"They just keep us waiting," he says.
"It's very frustrating. You can see the school from the opposite bank but you just can't reach it."

Wednesday, March 26, 2008

more mystery/ the unexplained- today's news

D.B. Cooper mystery

The Associated Press

Amboy, Wash. — A tattered, half-buried parachute unearthed by kids had D.B. Cooper country chattering Wednesday over the fate of the skyjacker, who leaped from a plane 36 years ago and into the lore of the Pacific Northwest.

The parachute is about all most people in this neck of the southwestern Washington woods ever expected would be found as evidence of Mr. Cooper's daredevil escape attempt.

“Hunters are all through here,” Idy Gilbert said Wednesday as she served drinks at Nick's Bar and Grill. “They find lots of bodies up here all the time, people who are missing. They would have found some bones. All they found was a chute.”

In November 1971, a man identifying himself as Dan Cooper, later mistakenly identified as D.B. Cooper, hijacked a Northwest Orient flight, claiming he had a bomb. He demanded and got $200,000 (U.S.), then jumped out the back of the plane somewhere near the Oregon line.

He might have landed in the area where children playing outside their home near Amboy found fabric sticking up from the ground where their father had been grading a road, FBI agent Larry Carr said Tuesday.

The children, responding to a publicity campaign, urged their father to call the FBI, Mr. Carr said, and when their find became public this week, it reignited talk of the region's favourite folk hero.

In Ariel, about 20 miles northwest of Amboy, the Ariel Store has an annual D.B. Cooper party.

Dona Elliot, owner of the store, said Wednesday she thinks Mr. Cooper hid out in brush and trees for an accomplice to take him to the airport in Portland, about 90 kilometres south.

“It's the perfect place; no one would have looked for him there,” she said.

The T-shirt for this year's party will have a parachute theme, she said, even though she's skeptical that the artifact the kids found is Mr. Cooper's.

“It will be 37 years in November,” she said. “There can't be too much left of that parachute.”

The FBI doesn't want to excavate the property until it confirms, either through an expert's examination or scientific analysis of the fabric, whether the chute is the right kind.

If it is Mr. Cooper's parachute, that will solve one mystery — where he apparently landed — but it will raise another, Mr. Carr said.

In 1980, a family on a picnic found $5,880 of Mr. Cooper's money in a bag on a Columbia River beach, near Vancouver, Wash. Some investigators believed it might have been washed down to the beach by the Washougal River. But if Mr. Cooper landed near Amboy and stashed the money bag there, there's no way it could have naturally reached the Washougal.

“If this is D.B. Cooper's parachute, the money could not have arrived at its discovery location by natural means,” Mr. Carr said. “That whole theory is out the window.”

The FBI doubts Cooper survived because conditions were poor and the terrain was rough, but few signs of his fate have been found.

Locals prefer to think he made it.

“I think he's out there enjoying his money,” Ms. Gilbert said. “Most people here say they think he made it. We may never know.”

perspective - all pretty cool in their own way

http://www.miniature-earth.com/me_english.htm


dothetest.co.uk


http://micro.magnet.fsu.edu/primer/java/scienceopticsu/powersof10/

Tuesday, March 25, 2008

neat "puzzle/mystery solved story"...check it out

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080320/ap_on_re_mi_ea/israel_math_riddle&printer=1;_ylt=A0WTcVdA8uhH1aUAuBcUewgF

After 38 years, Israeli solves math code
By ARON HELLER, Associated Press WriterThu Mar 20, 3:33 PM ET
A mathematical puzzle that baffled the top minds in the esoteric field of symbolic dynamics for nearly four decades has been cracked — by a 63-year-old immigrant who once had to work as a security guard.
Avraham Trahtman, a mathematician who also toiled as a laborer after moving to Israel from Russia, succeeded where dozens failed, solving the elusive "Road Coloring Problem."
The conjecture essentially assumed it's possible to create a "universal map" that can direct people to arrive at a certain destination, at the same time, regardless of starting point. Experts say the proposition could have real-life applications in mapping and computer science.
The "Road Coloring Problem" was first posed in 1970 by Benjamin Weiss, an Israeli-American mathematician, and a colleague, Roy Adler, who worked at IBM at the time.
For eight years, Weiss tried to prove his theory. Over the next 30 years, some 100 other scientists attempted as well. All failed, until Trahtman came along and, in eight short pages, jotted the solution down in pencil last year.
"The solution is not that complicated. It's hard, but it is not that complicated," Trahtman said in heavily accented Hebrew. "Some people think they need to be complicated. I think they need to be nice and simple."
Weiss said it gave him great joy to see someone solve his problem.
Stuart Margolis, a mathematician who recruited Trahtman to teach at Bar Ilan University near Tel Aviv, called the solution one of the "beautiful results." But he said what makes the result especially remarkable is Trahtman's age and background.
"Math is usually a younger person's game, like music and the arts," Margolis said. "Usually you do your better work in your mid 20s and early 30s. He certainly came up with a good one at age 63."
Adding to the excitement is Trahtman's personal triumph in finally finding work as a mathematician after immigrating from Russia. "The first time I met him he was wearing a night watchman's uniform," Margolis said.
Originally from Yekaterinburg, Russia, Trahtman was an accomplished mathematician when he came to Israel in 1992, at age 48. But like many immigrants in the wave that followed the breakup of the Soviet Union, he struggled to find work in the Jewish state and was forced into stints working maintenance and security before landing a teaching position at Bar Ilan in 1995.
The soft-spoken Trahtman declined to talk about his odyssey, calling that the "old days." He said he felt "lucky" to be recognized for his solution, and played down the achievement as a "matter for mathematicians," saying it hasn't changed him a bit.
The puzzle tackled by Trahtman wasn't the longest-standing open problem to be solved recently. In 1994, British mathematician Andrew Wiles solved Fermat's last theorem, which had been open for more than 300 years.
Trahtman's solution is available on the Internet and is to be published soon in the Israel Journal of Mathematics.
Joel Friedman, a math professor at the University of British Columbia, said probably everyone in the field of symbolic dynamics had tried to solve the problem at some point, including himself. He said people in the related disciplines of graph theory, discrete math and theoretical computer science also tried.
"The solution to this problem has definitely generated excitement in the mathematical community," he said in an e-mail.
Margolis said the solution could have many applications.
"Say you've lost an e-mail and you want to get it back — it would be guaranteed," he said. "Let's say you are lost in a town you have never been in before and you have to get to a friend's house and there are no street signs — the directions will work no matter what."
___
On the Net:
Trahtman's solution: http://arxiv.org/abs/0709.0099

the cilice....the discipline, Good Friday etc.

Philippine devotees nailed to the cross in Good Friday rites
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS





Melchor Montoya stays nailed to the cross for a few minutes during the reenactment of the crucifixion of Jesus Christ on Good Friday March 21, 2008, at Sta Lucia, Pampanga province north of Manila, Philippines. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS/Bullit Marquez
Christian pilgrims mark Good Friday in Jerusalem's Old City
Thousands of Kurds celebrate spring festival in southeastern Turkey
SAN FERNANDO, Philippines - Philippine devotees re-enacted Jesus Christ's suffering today by having themselves nailed to crosses in rites frowned upon by Roman Catholic church leaders.
Thirty-seven-year-old Fernando Mamangon was among the first of some 30 men scheduled to go through the Good Friday rites in three villages in northern Pampanga province's San Fernando city.
Five other devotees, including a woman, were nailed to crosses in nearby Bulacan province.
It was Mamangon's 13th straight year for the rite, which penitents endure to fulfil a vow or pray for a cure for illnesses.
The yearly tradition has become a tourist attraction, especially in San Fernando's San Pedro Cutud village, which sometimes draws thousands of local and foreign tourists.
On Wednesday, Archbishop Paciano Aniceto of San Fernando city urged devotees not to turn Holy Week into a "circus."


for picture, see:
http://cnews.canoe.ca/CNEWS/World/2008/03/21/5069041-ap.html

Tuesday, March 18, 2008

so....dan brown....

great premise....neat opening...a murder ...a mystery......who doesn't like that?....but quelle fromage aussi.....so much cheese..."his voice is "chocolate for the ears".....and all that.....why the phenomenon?....all of this fits very nicely with our age's questioning spirit....what is true?...who can you trust?....are institutions really what they say they are?......all of this questioning of course has a cumulative effect on society methinks.....over time, people aren't connected to anything: to church, to state, to school, to the police.........nothing......is this why there is such angst/dislocation/vague fellings of unhappiness in our prozac nation?......obviously not advocating slavish obedience to institutuions without thought or critical thinking.....but what price is paid....so back to the book....much controversy....the catholic church doesn't like it...masons don't like it ...albinos don't like it...the French...well....they don't care .....opus dei...definitely don't like it.....the cilice....what a great name for that ritual....the discipline......that would be a great name for a wrestler ....or a rapper........Paris..what a great setting.....the louvre...the eiffel tower...the bois de boulogne......smart cars.......imagine an american hero driving a smart car,,,,,,,james dean driving a smart car......the dukes of hazzard.....general lee as an envirinmentally friendly four speed....he's very coy and a little deceptive how he handles the vittoria vetra thing.....a bit swarmy.......their playful promise to meet in a romantic spot ever six months....who live like this? harvard symbolosists I guess....Harrison Ford in tweed.....Mitterand and the 666 that's weird.....pg 22 "I'm trapped in a Salvador Dali painting" that's funny.....it's all a bit far-fteched though isn't it.......makes Parisian justice sund like something they just make up......that's the first three chapters...so mcuh to think about here

Sunday, March 2, 2008

connor's blog

now at: http://connorsblog92.blogspot.com/