The BBC reports on Bacteria with a silver lining. “A strain of bacteria that can manufacture

tiny crystals of silver has been reported

by Swedish scientists. This skill may

eventually prove useful to engineers who

want to fabricate extremely small optical

and electronic devices.”

Tragic Irony: Psychiatrist dies after alleged attack by her daughter: Dr Katherine Thomsen-Hall, a distinguished forensic psychiatrist at UMass Medical School (where I taught until 1994) was allegedly murdered by her 16-year-old daughter Valerie on Sunday night. The girl apparently is in treatment for bipolar disorder; friends of the family are quoted as reporting that there was little more than normal tension between mother and daughter, although the police had been called to their home once previously after an altercation. Dr Thomsen-Hall worked treating the often violent inmates of the Framingham Women’s Prison, Massachusetts’ only facility for the detention of female convicts. She had given up a thriving private practice and mental health advocacy work in Little Rock to attend a one-year forensic psychiatry fellowship at UMass in 1997, and then decided to remain on the faculty.

I was impressed by something that receives scant notice in the news story. A friend commented that Valerie had “appeared a little mellow. She told me she was on a new prescription that was supposed to keep her calm.” One of my ongoing concerns and teaching points in my work is that psychiatrists do not more readily recognize the disinhibiting properties of the benzodiazepine anti-anxiety sedative medications (e.g. clonazepam [Klonopin], diazepam [Valium], alprazolam [Xanax], lorazepam [Ativan]) prescribed with such impunity for agitation, anxiety, sleep, etc. I began to speculate that the new medication Valerie had started on “to calm her” was one of these and that, untested on her, it may have lowered her barriers against acting out her anger. Think of it as akin to becoming uncharacteristically violent when drunk, which happens in a small proportion of drinkers (we psychiatrists have a diagnosis for it: “pathological intoxication”); the effect on the CNS is very similar. I don’t suppose we’ll ever know in this case…

Coincident with the item below about the corporatization of weblogging is this review in today’s Slate on The Rise of the Newsportal  by Chris Suellentrop. Discusses six of these, which are essentially political news blogs, right?

Jupiter’s terrible tides: “Powerful tidal forces from Jupiter have molded two of the solar system’s

most bizarre worlds, fiery Io and icy Europa. Images released this week

reveal new details of tidal action on the two moons.” [from the SpaceScience.com mailserver]

The Corporatization of weblogging?? “…will probably be fine

with many of the thousands of independent Webloggers

who pioneered the concept. Romenesko says as

Weblogging becomes more widespread among

corporations, there’s likely to be some resentment from

the pioneers who see it as an anti-corporate concept.

Cooper, meanwhile, thinks Weblogs make sense in the

corporate environment, and suggests that they would be a

useful feature of company intranets. A Weblog pioneer

herself, Cooper says that when she announced she would

be taking the Weblog concept to Star Tribune Online, the

reaction from the Weblog community was overwhelmingly

supportive.” [E&P]

Down at the bottom left of the page you’ll see this:

<>
I just joined the webloggers webring. You can navigate to other blogs in the ring as follows:


KEY


  • <<

    – takes you to the previous

    site in the webring

  • ?



    takes you to a random

    site in the webring

  • 5



    shows you the previous

    5
    sites

  • webloggers

    takes you to the webloggers webring

    page

  • #

    – takes you to a complete list

    of sites in the webring

  • 5

    – shows you the next

    5
    sites

  • >>

    – takes you to the next

    site in the webring
  • Do you more appreciate the digest function of this ‘blog (telling you what I’ve read so that you don’t have to) or the pointing function (suggesting what might be interesting for you to read)? In other words, should the posts generally be long or short?

    Of course, the defendant could have used the argument from biological imperative. A Natural History of Rape : Biological Bases of Sexual Coercion by Randy Thornhill (University of New Mexico) and Craig T. Palmer (University of Colorado), takes an evolutionary perspective critical of the prevailing view that rape is a crime of violence and power. They suggest that sexual coercion evolved to increase the reproductive fitness of those men who would otherwise be poor competitors as mates, and that it was therefore selected for. The authors suggest that women dress conservatively and that school curriculums teach alternate ways to channel this natural urge. A review by two scientists, Jerry Coyne of Chicago and Andrew Berry of Harvard, in tomorrow’s issue of the journal Nature accuses the authors of scientific shabbiness. I agree.

    New York woman charged after staking claim to thousands in bank error. The woman said she thought the mistaken $700,000 deposit, which occurred because her bank account number was one digit off from a United Nations account, was her winnings in a lottery. Her credit card records failed to substantiate her alleged lottery ticket purchases (Why didn’t she report having paid cash??)The deposits were made between February 1998 and October 1999 by the governments of France, Italy, Belgium, Turkey, Namibia, Uruguay,

    St. Kitts and Dominica, according to court papers. By the time the error was discovered last fall and the assets in the account frozen, only $450,000 remained. If convicted, she faces a maximum 30-yr sentence and a $1 million fine. (Let’s hope some of the missing funds were transferred to her attorney’s account as a retainer…) [Nando Times]

    There’s this scurrilous piece of psychiatric humor I get emailed to me, or psychiatric mailing lists in which I participate, with regularity, likening web use to a mental illness and “diagnosing” it in DSM-IV terms. May not be so scurrilous. Caught in the web: UF/Cincinnati study shows internet addicts suffer from mental illness. Twenty interviewees self-selected because their web use was problematic — with problems including marital strife or loss, work or school failure, going without sleep, shirking family responsibility, isolation, and consequent social and legal consequences — were found to have a variety of diagnosable psychiatric problems. “Every study participant’s Internet use met established diagnostic criteria for the family of psychiatric

    illnesses known as impulse control disorders, which include kleptomania, a recurrent failure to resist impulses to shoplift, and

    trichotillomania, the recurrent pulling out of one’s hair…” Most qualified as well for diagnosis with various other psychiatric disorders including manic depressive disorder, other psychotic disorders, anxiety disorders, substance abuse problems, other impulse control disorders and eating disorders. Participants described spending over 30 hrs./wk. online in such puruits as chatrooms and MUDs. (When you think about it, as internet use becomes more pervasive, people with psychiatric illnesses will of course be a segment of those online. Why would we anticipate that their web use would be any less difficult for them than other spheres of their life? Indeed, the convenience and anonymity of use make it so attractive that pathological web use may become disproportionate.)

    The BBC reports on Bacteria with a silver lining. “A strain of bacteria that can manufacture

    tiny crystals of silver has been reported

    by Swedish scientists. This skill may

    eventually prove useful to engineers who

    want to fabricate extremely small optical

    and electronic devices.”

    “It just spoils the fun of it,”

    said a spokesperson for the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences of the Wall Street Journal‘s push to do a political-style poll of Academy members to forecast the Oscar winners. “The Academy Awards are important to the people who win, and they’re important to the

    people who don’t win, but it’s not like electing a president, and part of the fun of it is waiting until they open the envelopes to see

    who wins.”

    Coincident with the item below about the corporatization of weblogging is this review in today’s Slate on The Rise of the Newsportal  by Chris Suellentrop. Discusses six of these, which are essentially political news blogs, right?

    Jupiter’s terrible tides: “Powerful tidal forces from Jupiter have molded two of the solar system’s

    most bizarre worlds, fiery Io and icy Europa. Images released this week

    reveal new details of tidal action on the two moons.” [from the SpaceScience.com mailserver]

    The Corporatization of weblogging?? “…will probably be fine

    with many of the thousands of independent Webloggers

    who pioneered the concept. Romenesko says as

    Weblogging becomes more widespread among

    corporations, there’s likely to be some resentment from

    the pioneers who see it as an anti-corporate concept.

    Cooper, meanwhile, thinks Weblogs make sense in the

    corporate environment, and suggests that they would be a

    useful feature of company intranets. A Weblog pioneer

    herself, Cooper says that when she announced she would

    be taking the Weblog concept to Star Tribune Online, the

    reaction from the Weblog community was overwhelmingly

    supportive.” [E&P]

    “It just spoils the fun of it,”

    said a spokesperson for the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences of the Wall Street Journal‘s push to do a political-style poll of Academy members to forecast the Oscar winners. “The Academy Awards are important to the people who win, and they’re important to the

    people who don’t win, but it’s not like electing a president, and part of the fun of it is waiting until they open the envelopes to see

    who wins.”

    An archive of New Yorker articles by Malcolm Gladwell, author of the recent book The Tipping Point. Without even being aware until recently of who this author is, I realize scanning the list of articles in this collection that it has been his writing that has recently been the most compelling in my intermittnet relationship with the New Yorker. Among other topics, he writes about: fads, “spin”, public opinion and mass psychology, “who decides what’s cool”, the “six degrees of separation”, the Belgian Coca Cola hysteria, whether parenting matters… I’m sure you’ll find something you’ll want to read. Update: summary of critics’ opinions about The Tipping Point here, from Slate.

    An archive of New Yorker articles by Malcolm Gladwell, author of the recent book The Tipping Point. Without even being aware until recently of who this author is, I realize scanning the list of articles in this collection that it has been his writing that has recently been the most compelling in my intermittnet relationship with the New Yorker. Among other topics, he writes about: fads, “spin”, public opinion and mass psychology, “who decides what’s cool”, the “six degrees of separation”, the Belgian Coca Cola hysteria, whether parenting matters… I’m sure you’ll find something you’ll want to read. Update: summary of critics’ opinions about The Tipping Point here, from Slate.

    “The American Museum of Natural History

    yesterday bluntly refused to give back a

    10,000-year-old, 15-ton meteorite to the Oregon

    Indian tribes who say their ancestors once treated the

    behemoth as a sacred object.

    In papers filed in Manhattan federal court to block

    the Indians’ claim to the “Willamette Meteorite” —

    one of the museum’s oldest treasures and a

    centerpiece of its renovated planetarium — the

    museum argued the extraterrestrial isn’t covered by

    federal law that allows Indians to “repatriate” some

    cultural items.” [New York Post]

    Banned in Turkey:

    The Turkish government confiscated all available copies of Jonathan Ames’ novel The Extra Man last week, and

    will try both his translator, Fatih Ozguven, and his publisher in Istanbul, Iletisim, on charges that the book is

    “corrupt and harmful to the morality of Turkish readers,” according to a fax Ames’ international rights agent

    Rosalie Siegel received from Istanbul. The book had been out a few months, and had been submitted to

    government censors for approval before publishing, as is required in Turkey. [New York Press]

    Before he died, “Peanuts” creator Charles M. Schultz told his

    family he didn’t want anyone else drawing his strip, and that

    animated shows based on the characters should end as well. But

    when Schultz began the strip in the 1950s cartoonists routinely

    gave up their copyrights to distributors. United Media owns the

    “Peanuts” copyright and it got 61 percent of its $84.9 million in

    1998 revenues from the comics, TV shows and licensing deals.

    Think they’ll let the franchise go dark? [SF Examiner]

    “The American Museum of Natural History

    yesterday bluntly refused to give back a

    10,000-year-old, 15-ton meteorite to the Oregon

    Indian tribes who say their ancestors once treated the

    behemoth as a sacred object.

    In papers filed in Manhattan federal court to block

    the Indians’ claim to the “Willamette Meteorite” —

    one of the museum’s oldest treasures and a

    centerpiece of its renovated planetarium — the

    museum argued the extraterrestrial isn’t covered by

    federal law that allows Indians to “repatriate” some

    cultural items.” [New York Post]

    Banned in Turkey:

    The Turkish government confiscated all available copies of Jonathan Ames’ novel The Extra Man last week, and

    will try both his translator, Fatih Ozguven, and his publisher in Istanbul, Iletisim, on charges that the book is

    “corrupt and harmful to the morality of Turkish readers,” according to a fax Ames’ international rights agent

    Rosalie Siegel received from Istanbul. The book had been out a few months, and had been submitted to

    government censors for approval before publishing, as is required in Turkey. [New York Press]

    Before he died, “Peanuts” creator Charles M. Schultz told his

    family he didn’t want anyone else drawing his strip, and that

    animated shows based on the characters should end as well. But

    when Schultz began the strip in the 1950s cartoonists routinely

    gave up their copyrights to distributors. United Media owns the

    “Peanuts” copyright and it got 61 percent of its $84.9 million in

    1998 revenues from the comics, TV shows and licensing deals.

    Think they’ll let the franchise go dark? [SF Examiner]

    Arianna S. Huffington remixes the Slate 60 list of top philanthropists, ” Last June, I criticized “The Slate 60″ for treating every philanthropic dollar the same. I was appalled to find the Slate 60 citation that winemaker Robert G. Mondavi had dropped $20 million on the American Center for Wine, Food and the Arts in his hometown of Napa, Calif., only a click away from the news that Ron Burkle, Ted Fortsmann, and John Walton gave $30 million to the Children’s Scholarship Fund for low-income children. This overemphasis on raw dollars implies some sort of equivalence between these acts of generosity, when we know the Mondavi gift shouldn’t be mentioned in the same breath as the one from Burkle et al. One gift advances the giver’s personal interests, the other addresses a pressing social need. ”

    Aurora Alert for northern US and Canada. “Residents of Canada and the northern United States should be on the alert for aurora borealis during the night of March 5 and morning of March 6. The best time to view aurorae is usually around local midnight. Tonight’s new moon will make even faint activity easy to see. Early on March 5, 2000, the interplanetary magnetic field measured by NASA’s ACE spacecraft developed a significant southward-directed component. This condition often means that solar wind plasma can penetrate Earth’s magnetosphere and trigger aurorae. …If this high level of activity continues, auroral displays could be visible as far south as the Great Lakes states and in New England.”

    Arianna S. Huffington remixes the Slate 60 list of top philanthropists, ” Last June, I criticized “The Slate 60″ for treating every philanthropic dollar the same. I was appalled to find the Slate 60 citation that winemaker Robert G. Mondavi had dropped $20 million on the American Center for Wine, Food and the Arts in his hometown of Napa, Calif., only a click away from the news that Ron Burkle, Ted Fortsmann, and John Walton gave $30 million to the Children’s Scholarship Fund for low-income children. This overemphasis on raw dollars implies some sort of equivalence between these acts of generosity, when we know the Mondavi gift shouldn’t be mentioned in the same breath as the one from Burkle et al. One gift advances the giver’s personal interests, the other addresses a pressing social need. ”

    Aurora Alert for northern US and Canada. “Residents of Canada and the northern United States should be on the alert for aurora borealis during the night of March 5 and morning of March 6. The best time to view aurorae is usually around local midnight. Tonight’s new moon will make even faint activity easy to see. Early on March 5, 2000, the interplanetary magnetic field measured by NASA’s ACE spacecraft developed a significant southward-directed component. This condition often means that solar wind plasma can penetrate Earth’s magnetosphere and trigger aurorae. …If this high level of activity continues, auroral displays could be visible as far south as the Great Lakes states and in New England.”

    Where’s George? Interesting idea, not sure if it will work, but I tried it. You go to this site, enter the serial number of one or more bills of any denomination in your pocket, and write the URL of the site on the bill. If anyone who subsequently receives the bill notices the URL, logs on and enters their location, you’re notified by email and can track the meanderings of the currency. They report that they’re tracking over $2,000,000 in currency entered by over 175,000 registrants.

    Friends of the late blues singer Screamin’ Jay Hawkins are searching for the 57 children he’s pretty sure he fathered but couldn’t keep track of.

    ebpd – The ebay password daemon by Richard Fromm: “This script sniffs traffic on the network watching for ebay userids and passwords. This is only possible because (as of this writing), ebay does not encrypt passwords — they are sent in the clear. It is hoped that the writing and dissemination of this program causes this situation to change. (Repeated attempts at resolution of the situation through other means, prior to the posting of this script, failed.). This isn’t rocket science. I don’t pretend to have discovered anything fundamental or new here. It’s a simple little script that countless

    other people could have written. The pitfalls of sending passwords in the clear have been recognized for many years. The only surprising

    thing is that too many people still don’t take security seriously and continue to repeat the same mistakes over and over again.”

    [via Phil Agre]

    Report on the Privacy Policies and Practices of Health Web Sites from the Health Privacy Project at Georgetown University: “Although health Web sites now provide a wide range of clinical and diagnostic information; opportunities to purchase products and services; interactions among consumers, patients, and health care professionals; and the capability to build a personalized health record, they have not matured enough to guarantee the quality of the information, protect consumers from product fraud or inappropriate prescribing, or guarantee the privacy of individuals’ information. This last point is the subject of this report. Health care Web sites have access to an unprecedented amount of personal information about consumers. What are their policies about the privacy of that information? How easily can consumers find and understand them? Do they afford sufficient protection? And do the actual practices of the health sites reflect their stated policies?” [via Phil Agre]

    Where’s George? Interesting idea, not sure if it will work, but I tried it. You go to this site, enter the serial number of one or more bills of any denomination in your pocket, and write the URL of the site on the bill. If anyone who subsequently receives the bill notices the URL, logs on and enters their location, you’re notified by email and can track the meanderings of the currency. They report that they’re tracking over $2,000,000 in currency entered by over 175,000 registrants.

    Friends of the late blues singer Screamin’ Jay Hawkins are searching for the 57 children he’s pretty sure he fathered but couldn’t keep track of.

    ebpd – The ebay password daemon by Richard Fromm: “This script sniffs traffic on the network watching for ebay userids and passwords. This is only possible because (as of this writing), ebay does not encrypt passwords — they are sent in the clear. It is hoped that the writing and dissemination of this program causes this situation to change. (Repeated attempts at resolution of the situation through other means, prior to the posting of this script, failed.). This isn’t rocket science. I don’t pretend to have discovered anything fundamental or new here. It’s a simple little script that countless

    other people could have written. The pitfalls of sending passwords in the clear have been recognized for many years. The only surprising

    thing is that too many people still don’t take security seriously and continue to repeat the same mistakes over and over again.”

    [via Phil Agre]

    Report on the Privacy Policies and Practices of Health Web Sites from the Health Privacy Project at Georgetown University: “Although health Web sites now provide a wide range of clinical and diagnostic information; opportunities to purchase products and services; interactions among consumers, patients, and health care professionals; and the capability to build a personalized health record, they have not matured enough to guarantee the quality of the information, protect consumers from product fraud or inappropriate prescribing, or guarantee the privacy of individuals’ information. This last point is the subject of this report. Health care Web sites have access to an unprecedented amount of personal information about consumers. What are their policies about the privacy of that information? How easily can consumers find and understand them? Do they afford sufficient protection? And do the actual practices of the health sites reflect their stated policies?” [via Phil Agre]

    ZDNet: News: Intuit scrambles to plug Quicken leaks

    “A design quirk in some e-commerce Web sites allows

    sensitive information that consumers provide about their

    personal habits, tastes or finances to be attached to Web

    page location codes used by third parties such as

    ad-placement companies. In the case of Intuit (Nasdaq:

    INTU), both a mortgage calculator and a

    credit-assessment feature on its Quicken site collect

    information from customers regarding income, assets and

    debt, and then send the data to DoubleClick Inc.

    (Nasdaq: DCLK), a company that sells and places

    advertising on Web sites. DoubleClick says it doesn’t

    keep any of the data it receives.”


    From BBC News: Satellite snaps a mighty sandstorm The satellite photo shows a giant sandstorm the size of Spain, off the west African coast. “Such storms, combined with rising warm air,

    can lift dust 4,500 metres (15,000 feet) above

    the desert and then out over the Atlantic. The

    dust can reach right across the ocean to the

    Caribbean where local weather forecasters

    sometimes have to issue air pollution alerts.”

    ZDNet: News: Intuit scrambles to plug Quicken leaks

    “A design quirk in some e-commerce Web sites allows

    sensitive information that consumers provide about their

    personal habits, tastes or finances to be attached to Web

    page location codes used by third parties such as

    ad-placement companies. In the case of Intuit (Nasdaq:

    INTU), both a mortgage calculator and a

    credit-assessment feature on its Quicken site collect

    information from customers regarding income, assets and

    debt, and then send the data to DoubleClick Inc.

    (Nasdaq: DCLK), a company that sells and places

    advertising on Web sites. DoubleClick says it doesn’t

    keep any of the data it receives.”


    From BBC News: Satellite snaps a mighty sandstorm The satellite photo shows a giant sandstorm the size of Spain, off the west African coast. “Such storms, combined with rising warm air,

    can lift dust 4,500 metres (15,000 feet) above

    the desert and then out over the Atlantic. The

    dust can reach right across the ocean to the

    Caribbean where local weather forecasters

    sometimes have to issue air pollution alerts.”

    From CNN.com: US – Death row inmate whose lawyer slept at trial to stay in jail. Calvin Burdine’s murder conviction had been thrown out because his lawyer had allegedly slept through long segments of his trial. The state of Texas missed a deadline to file an appeal and on Wednesday a federal judge ordered him released. The Texas AG called the missed deadline for a new trial a “regrettable mistake.” But he said the error does not justify “releasing a convicted murderer.” Two days later, an appeals court has agreed and is blocking his release. Texas Gov. George W. Bush says, “He’s a really violent person. I hope he gets retried soon.”

    Consider Mr. Death, a fascinating documentary by Errol Morris and its subject Fred Leuchter Jr. Leuchter, an engineer from Malden, Mass., was a self-taught expert on methods of execution and a consultant to a variety of states with the death penalty. In 1988, he was commissioned by Ernst Zündel, a neo-Nazi being prosecuted in a highly-publicized trial in Canada for publishing literature claiming that the Holocaust had never occurred, to conduct a forensic investigation into the Nazi use of poison gas in the WWII death camps. He claimed to have “proven” that the Holocaust had never happened by failing to find traces of poisonous substances in brick and mortar samples he had obtained illegally from the walls of the Auschwitz gas chambers. “The Leuchter Report is out there in dozens of languages, and I would dare say in millions of copies. We will not go down in history as being a nation of genocidal maniacs. We will not. We can, with historical truth, detoxify a poisoned planet,” said Zündel.


    And while we’re on the subject of Holocaust deniers, Salon updates us on British author and Hitler apologist David Irving’s libel suit against Deborah Lipstadt, the Emory University professor of history who has called Irving “one of the most dangerous spokespersons for Holocaust denial.” Irving argues on his own behalf and the presiding judge has given him considerable leeway in presenting his case so as not to present the appearance of putting a person with no legal experience at a disadvantage. Irving thus gets massive exposure for his insidious arguments. To assist Lipstadt in her case, the Israeli government this week decided to release over 600 pages of Adolph Eichmann’s memoirs. Holocaust survivors attending the trial to bear witness are concerned about how much easier it will be for such Hitler apologists to plant seeds of doubt after the last survivors of the Final Solution are gone.

    From Wired: “France Agog, Aghast Over Echelon”, the US- and UK-run surveillance network that can allegedly intercept email, faxes, and phone conversations. This article is full of links to extensive earlier coverage of the Echelon phenomenon, which is becoming a major acute irritant to chronically tense Anglo-French relations.

    Kenyon College examines the rave scene: electronic dance music, its various sub-genres and styles. “As we dance into the next millennium, we must not forget our past. It is my hope that ravers, DJ’s, music critics, students, and anyone else interested in electronic dance music will be able to use this site to learn more about the sounds and subcultures that have provided the style and soundtrack to the end of the 20th century.”

    From CNN.com: US – Death row inmate whose lawyer slept at trial to stay in jail. Calvin Burdine’s murder conviction had been thrown out because his lawyer had allegedly slept through long segments of his trial. The state of Texas missed a deadline to file an appeal and on Wednesday a federal judge ordered him released. The Texas AG called the missed deadline for a new trial a “regrettable mistake.” But he said the error does not justify “releasing a convicted murderer.” Two days later, an appeals court has agreed and is blocking his release. Texas Gov. George W. Bush says, “He’s a really violent person. I hope he gets retried soon.”

    Consider Mr. Death, a fascinating documentary by Errol Morris and its subject Fred Leuchter Jr. Leuchter, an engineer from Malden, Mass., was a self-taught expert on methods of execution and a consultant to a variety of states with the death penalty. In 1988, he was commissioned by Ernst Zündel, a neo-Nazi being prosecuted in a highly-publicized trial in Canada for publishing literature claiming that the Holocaust had never occurred, to conduct a forensic investigation into the Nazi use of poison gas in the WWII death camps. He claimed to have “proven” that the Holocaust had never happened by failing to find traces of poisonous substances in brick and mortar samples he had obtained illegally from the walls of the Auschwitz gas chambers. “The Leuchter Report is out there in dozens of languages, and I would dare say in millions of copies. We will not go down in history as being a nation of genocidal maniacs. We will not. We can, with historical truth, detoxify a poisoned planet,” said Zündel.


    And while we’re on the subject of Holocaust deniers, Salon updates us on British author and Hitler apologist David Irving’s libel suit against Deborah Lipstadt, the Emory University professor of history who has called Irving “one of the most dangerous spokespersons for Holocaust denial.” Irving argues on his own behalf and the presiding judge has given him considerable leeway in presenting his case so as not to present the appearance of putting a person with no legal experience at a disadvantage. Irving thus gets massive exposure for his insidious arguments. To assist Lipstadt in her case, the Israeli government this week decided to release over 600 pages of Adolph Eichmann’s memoirs. Holocaust survivors attending the trial to bear witness are concerned about how much easier it will be for such Hitler apologists to plant seeds of doubt after the last survivors of the Final Solution are gone.

    From Wired: “France Agog, Aghast Over Echelon”, the US- and UK-run surveillance network that can allegedly intercept email, faxes, and phone conversations. This article is full of links to extensive earlier coverage of the Echelon phenomenon, which is becoming a major acute irritant to chronically tense Anglo-French relations.

    Kenyon College examines the rave scene: electronic dance music, its various sub-genres and styles. “As we dance into the next millennium, we must not forget our past. It is my hope that ravers, DJ’s, music critics, students, and anyone else interested in electronic dance music will be able to use this site to learn more about the sounds and subcultures that have provided the style and soundtrack to the end of the 20th century.”