![]() |
“If you happen to be reasonably close to one of the Earth’s magnetic poles, the next time there’s a particularly intense aurora, go outside. Get as far as you can from sources of noise – traffic, barking dogs, TVs – and listen. Listen carefully.
If conditions are right, you may hear some unusual noises. Earwitnesses have said the sound is like radio static, a small animal rustling through dry grass and leaves, or the crinkling of a cellophane wrapper. Inuit folklore says it’s the sound of the spirits of the dead, either playing a game or trying to communicate with the living. It’s the sound of the aurora itself. And the cause is currently unknown. Understanding the phenomenon is made more difficult by the fact that though there are many anecdotal reports, the sound has yet to be recorded.” (Damn Interesting) |
Category Archives: Uncategorized
James Randi’s Million Dollar Challenge to be Discontinued
The James Randi Educational Foundation (JREF)‘s offer of a million dollars to anyone who can demonstrate psychic powers under rigorously controlled observation has gone unclaimed for a decade. Now, they have announced that they will withdraw the prize offer in two years, I guess feeling as if twelve years would have been enough for soemone to come up with something credible. So hurry up and get your demonstration developed!
What would really happen if you were the last person on Earth?
| Punchline first:
“It is intriguing (and makes a good movie) to contemplate being the last survivor. What fun one could have! In reality, once the practicalities had been dealt with, he or she would almost certainly descend into madness.” (The Daily Mail via boing boing)
|
![]() |
Court Hears Lethal Injection Case
Does current lethal injection procedure equal cruel and unusual punishment?
In their first day on the bench after a holiday break, the justices are hearing arguments in a case that challenges Kentucky’s method of executing prisoners using a three-drug cocktail. Three dozen states use similar procedures.
The court’s decision to step into the case has brought about a halt in executions that is likely to last at least until the summer.” (San Franciscon Chronicle )
The current method of execution by lethal injection involves three phases. First the prisoner is put to sleep with a powerful barbiturate, then the muscles are paralyzed with pancuronium, and finally the heart is stopped with an infusion of potassium chloride. Opponents argue that if the procedure is botched the victim may be essentially awake and aware, but paralyzed and unable to signify that they are suffering because paralyzed. Under the influence of pancuronium, people can feel as if they are suffocating. The potassium chloride injection can be excruciating, making them feel that their body is on fire. The success of such a complex three-step procedure depends upon its proper execution by medically trained personnel, and opponents argue that there are substantial possibilities for error in the formulation, dosage or administration of the agents. For example, if the intravenous needle misses a vein, the medication will be infused under the skin instead and not circulate through the system. Because no medical personnel are in the death chamber during the procedure, the assurances that it will be done properly cannot be offered.
Veterinarians have long since given up on a similar three-drug procedure for such reasons. When animals large or small are euthanized, they are merely “put to sleep” with massive barbiturate dosages. For those opponents of the current method of execution by lethal injection who are not opponents of execution overall, the adoption of the veterinary one-agent method would meet many of the pending legal challenges to lethal injection. Moving to this procedure has thus been proposed in several states, but none have moved on the proposals. Expressed reluctance is about being an outlyer and first adopter of an untested methodology.
However, I think the real reluctance to abandoning the three-substance method of lethal injection is all about how unpleasant it is to watch a dying body twitch and convulse if it is not paralyzed first. Proponents concede it would be very difficult for those who witness executions otherwise. In essence, we are protecting observers from the inherent barbarity of humans putting other humans to death with a veneer of civility achieved through the use of pancuronium. Absurdly, as long as it is not like “putting down” an animal, as long as it appears peaceful and undistressing, we as members of society can console ourselves that we are not complicit with “cruel and unusual punishment”.
Some of the most bloodthirsty, vengeful proponents of the death penalty have it right in a sense, arguing that it is absurd to be so concerned about the suffering of someone you are putting to death in another few moments. At least this constitutes a recognition of the inherent barbarity, which the rest of the advocates of execution are comfortably able to ignore.
Benoit Mandelbrot Fractal Art Contest 2007
Free drug samples go to wealthy, insured: U.S. study
Free prescription samples are popular with doctors who want to try new drugs, and the pharmaceutical industry contends that such samples also help the low income and the uninsured.
But the study of prescription use of nearly 33,000 U.S. residents during 2003 found the neediest are least likely to get free samples.
‘Our findings suggest the free samples serve as a marketing tool, not a safety net,’ said Dr. Sarah Cutrona, co-author of the report to be published in the February issue of the American Journal of Public Health.” (Yahoo! News)
My practice group and I have a policy of taking no free samples (indeed, not accepting visits from pharmaceutical representatives). From time to time I have toyed with the idea of receiving samples and creating a stockpile expressly for the indigent, but it still serves the interests of Big Pharma, facilitating the creation of a new customer they hope will remain a captive audience when their physician can no longer provide the medication for free. And, because samples are of the latest greatest medications, they are also the most expensive. We do a service for our patients when we resist the hype about the newest drugs, which are usually no better than old standby agents available generically or at least priced much more reasonably. This is true regardless of the patient’s prescription drug insurance or their ability to afford expensive medications.
Your responsibility as a patient is to question your prescriber’s reasoning in prescribing the latest and greatest rather than an old standby. S/he ought to be able to explain convincingly why the newer (more expensive) medication is worth the extra cost; otherwise, tell them the responsible thing to do would be to prescribe the medication that is less profitable for the manufacturer.
2007’s best photos (39 pics)
From (//STATiC). I don’t know by whose criteria these are “best”, but there are some incredible, arresting and disturbing images here.
‘Excuse Me. May I Have Your Seat?’
Replication of a famous Stanley Milgrim experiment in social psychology, which turned out to be far harder for the investigators than the subjects. (New York Times )
"The Next Crisis is Moments Away!"
Dropping Out of Electoral College
How to Follow Iowa Caucus Results Tonight
So the best ‘poll’ to watch this evening would be the actual caucus results, which will be broadcast live online and on digital billboards in Iowa.
‘We expect the bulk of the results to be in by 9.30 pm to 10 ,’ says Chris Allen, the Iowa Democratic Party’s press secretary. (A Republican party representative couldn’t be reached at the time of this posting.)
Both the Iowa Democratic party and the Republican Party of Iowa have partnered with Google to broadcast the phoned-in results visually online via Google Maps. It looks as if the Democrats’ site will report the phoned-in results of its precincts live online, while the Republicans will report aggregated county results.” (Wired News)
Top 17 Most Bizarre Sights on Google Earth
Memento Mori
Notable Deaths of 2007 (New York Times)
The United State of Pop
Thanks to Boing Boing, a mashup of the Billboard top 25 songs of 2007, to stream or download. (DJ Earworm) I love mashups; the essence of artistic bricolage. In this case, I wish the artist had had better material to work with in the first place, but considering that it is not half-bad.
Trackstick
“The Trackstick II is the perfect fit for personal GPS tracking. Bring it on vacation to keep a satellite scrapbook of all your travels and record your explorations. You can carry it along on all your regular outings from home to get a better sense of your daily surroundings through Google™ Earth’s cohesive 3D maps of your community. With Trackstick II™ a computer screen can guide your family and friends on a virtual tour of your vacation. Take it fishing and mark the catch spots to discover feeding patterns over time. Find a good camping spot and leave it to Trackstick to remember where it is and the path you took to get there. It’s a fun and immersive way to show others where you’ve been. You’ll even enjoy seeing the normal routes of your day breathe new life as you view them like never before with Google™ Earth’s 3D model of the planet.”
Professor’s little helper
![]() |
Barbara Sahakian and Sharon Morein-Zamir in Nature argue that the use of cognitive-enhancing drugs by both ill and healthy individuals raises ethical questions that should not be ignored.
|
Digital Dilemma
The paper addresses a perennial Long Now concern: the ephemeral nature of digital preservation. How digital media are short lived, and liable for early extinction. There are some new and interesting facts suggested by the reports. In a December 23, 2007 article called ‘The Afterlife is Expensive for Digital Movies’ the Times claims that the crux of the preservation dilemma is that analog, while less desirable is much cheaper: ‘To store a digital master record of a movie costs about $12,514 a year, versus the $1,059 it costs to keep a conventional film master.'” (Kevin Kelly’s Lifestream)
Karen Norberg’s Knitted Brain
Snorting a Brain Chemical Could Replace Sleep
A nasal spray containing a naturally occurring brain hormone called orexin A reversed the effects of sleep deprivation in monkeys, allowing them to perform like well-rested monkeys on cognitive tests. The discovery’s first application will probably be in treatment of the severe sleep disorder narcolepsy.” (Wired News)
It is worth noting that the other hot topic in post-stimulants, modafinil, is also thought to work through the orexin system.
Eh, WoT®?
Sir Ken Macdonald said terrorist fanatics were not soldiers fighting a war but simply members of an aimless ‘death cult.’
The Director of Public Prosecutions said: ‘We resist the language of warfare, and I think the government has moved on this. It no longer uses this sort of language.’
London is not a battlefield, he said.” (Military.Com)
As FmH readers will recognize, I have long considered the War on Terror to be a brand name, which I have signified by referring to it as ‘WoT®’. I guess the brand is just not selling in the UK anymore. I predict the US s well will rebrand its antiterrorism efforts aunder the next, Democratic, administration.
Lobster

Journal of parapolitics, intelligence and State Research: “Lobster was first published in 1983. It investigates state espionage, government conspiracies, the abuse of governmental power, and the influence of the intelligence and security agencies on contemporary history and politics.
If you generally accept the government line, that there is a ‘national interest’, and believe what you read in the newspapers, then Lobster is probably not for you.” Originating in the UK, Lobster, requires a paid subscription, but there are a number of free articles to whet your appetite at the site.
Using FOIA
Rummaging in the Governments attic makes available “materials unavailable elsewhere”, obtained via the Freedom of Information Act.
And Get My FBI File “helps you generate the letters you need to send to the FBI to get a copy of your own FBI file. We can help you get your files from other “three-letter agencies” (CIA, NSA, DIA, …) too. It’s quick, it’s easy, and best of all, it’s free!”
Winter Blues
I was assked to write an “Ask the Doctor” newspaper column in my community in response to a reader question about whether there really is such a thing as “Winter Blues.” Here is my first draft of a response. What do you think?
For millennia, humans have reacted with discomfort to the waning of the light and the shortening of the days as we slide into winter each year. It is no accident that many, if not most, cultures have a celebration of rebirth and affirmation of hope around the winter solstice. When we lived closer to nature, there was arguably nothing wrong with ramping down, reducing activity and conserving energy and resources to get through the cold dark nights, to which one writer has referred as “winterizing the soul”. Even if not an annual event for most people, the “winter blues” are common – and distressing. Going to ground, slowing down the pace and enjoying quietude can cause tensions in a modern non-agrarian society that expects activity, outwardness and productivity with no regard to seasonal rhythms. Beyond the biological factors, of course, the wintertime may be hard for other, strictly emotional reasons. Many people have a difficult time around the holidays, which are supposed to be so warm and congenial for us all but often are anything but.
Beyond just feeling down, however, an estimated 15 million Americans experience a full-blown medical syndrome called seasonal affective disorder (SAD) during the colder, shorter days of winter. Most SAD sufferers experience normal mental health through much of the year but experience wintertime symptoms including depression, social withdrawal, excessive sleeping, overeating and weight gain, difficulty with motivation and energy and problems taking care of themselves and those for whom they are responsible . SAD may be severe enough to require psychiatric hospitalization. Women tend to report the condition far more than men, reflecting either hormonal issues or men’s greater reluctance to admit to feeling down.
Seasonal mood variations are believed to be biologically related to decreased light exposure. They vary with the latitude, with higher incidence in the Scandinavian countries and Arctic regions, and also with the typical degree of cloud cover in an area’s climate. Many sufferers can extinguish their symptoms with lifestyle measures such as increased exercise and outdoor activity, especially on sunny days. Light therapy, with specially designed lights many times brighter than normal indoor lighting, is perhaps the most effective specific treatment. Many patients, however, stop the treatment because of the inconvenience, since they must sit close to the light with their eyes open for 30-60 minutes at a consistent time of day each day. Benefits are often apparent only after several weeks. Many antidepressants have also been shown to be beneficial in serious SAD symptoms.
The vulnerability to SAD may be at least partly genetic, and it may be genetically related to manic depressive illness (bipolar disorder), as it tends to cluster in the same families. In fact, some psychiatrists consider SAD (as well as postpartum and perimenstrual mood disorders in women) to be a form of bipolar disorder, which may lead to treatment with lithium or other mood stabilizers.
Stephen Zunes on Hillary Clinton on International Law
Ironically, the current front-runner for the Democratic nomination for president shares much of President Bush’s dangerous attitudes toward international law and human rights.” (Foreign Policy in Focus)
Stephen Zunes is the Foreign Policy In Focus Middle East editor. He is a professor of politics at the University of San Francisco and the author of Tinderbox: U.S. Middle East Policy and the Roots of Terrorism (Common Courage Press, 2003).
Wake Up With a Yawn
|
(Really): “Never mind that stifling a yawn is the polite thing to do. The next time you feel the urge, open wide. Yawning drives away drowsiness by activating certain muscles to increase heart rate. It also appears to have a cooling effect on the brain, which heightens attentiveness, according to a recent study at the State University of New York-Albany.” (US News and World Report)
|
![]() |
N.Y. Law Raises Issues of States’ Reach in Patient Care
Everyone knows that mentally ill patients who meet certain criteria can be committed involuntarily to psychiatric hospitals. But is outpatient commitment an idea with a future?
But because of a New York state law, Wezel hasn’t been hospitalized in more than a year. She doesn’t wander the streets alone at night anymore. She takes her medication willingly. She even has plans to follow her dream of singing at a neighborhood nightspot, something that was unthinkable 18 months ago.
Wezel and her caseworker agree that the transformation occurred because of the law, which allowed officials to force Wezel into an outpatient treatment program after she was discharged from a hospital.” (Washington Post )
Bye-Bye, Bottled Water
Make this a New Year’s resolution?
Understanding the Borderline Mother
Helping Her Children Transcend the Intense, Unpredictable, and Volatile Relationship: This book, by Christine Ann Lawson, prompted my thinking when it appeared on another behavioral health practitioner‘s best-of-2007 list. In my own career, grappling with the borderline concept has been a crucial and controversial struggle. I am convinced that the borderline personality structure is a pervasive condition of our time and a hidden cause of much suffering. Ironically, there is a taboo more powerful than nearly any other against discussing it openly in mental health fields. This is because diagnosing someone with the disorder has come to be seen as pejorative and clinically useless. One esteemed American psychiatrist gave a talk to new trainees that was all the rage on the grand rounds circuits for awhile, titled something like “The Beginning of Wisdom: Stop Diagnosing Your Patients as Borderline.” I emphatically disagree, and give the name to the thing whenever I see it, often met with embarrassed silence from colleagues. I will not say they are always merely politically correct and wrong to be uncomfortable, but that is often the case.
A recurrent theme here in FmH, it is true, is the damage that incorrect diagnosis can cause, but let us not throw the baby out with the bathwater. The reason to be apprehensive when diagnosing someone with this seemingly pejorative term is that it is often done in a knee-jerk fashion, based only on our feeling averse or hateful toward a patient who paralyzes us with their neediness, offends us with their manipulativeness, and stings us with their rage. All of these are attributes of the borderline, and in the craft of mental health we must use ourselves as a diagnostic instrument and our reactions to people as evidence about them… but only if we are clear about what it is that they bring to an interaction and what it is that we bring. If we diagnose only on the basis of our gut-level reactions to a patient, we are always vulnerable to the possibility that our slips are showing — that we have revealed only our prejudices and foibles as human beings rather than using our best interpersonal skills as clinicians. We do the latter when we remember to diagnose and formulate our patients in a responsible and systematic way, employing but also transcending our gut-reactions.
Here are diagnostic criteria for the boderline personality disorder, from the ‘bible’ of psychiatric diagnostics, the DSM-IV of the American Psychiatric Association:
A pervasive pattern of instability of interpersonal relationships, self-image, and affects, and marked impulsivity beginning by early adulthood and present in a variety of contexts, as indicated by five (or more) of the following:
(1) frantic efforts to avoid real or imagined abandonment. Note: Do not include suicidal or self-mutilating behavior covered in Criterion 5.
(2) a pattern of unstable and intense interpersonal relationships characterized by alternating between extremes of idealization and devaluation.
(3) identity disturbance: markedly and persistently unstable self-image of sense of self
(4) impulsivity in at least two areas that are potentially self-damaging (e.g., spending, sex, substance abuse, reckless driving, binge eating). Note: Do not include suicidal or self-mutilating behavior covered in Criterion 5.
(5) recurrent suicidal behaviors, gestures, or threats, or self-mutilating behavior
(6) affective instability due to a marked reactivity of mood (e.g., intense episodic dysphoria, irritability, or anxiety usually lasting a few hours and only rarely more than a few days)
(7) chronic feelings of emptiness
(8) inappropriate, intense anger or difficulty controlling anger (e.g., frequent displays of temper, constant anger, recurrent physical fights)
(9) transient, stress-related paranoid ideation or severe dissociative symptoms
So why is the borderline concept important? Patients only come to our attention, and get diagnosed with the disorder, when their pathology is dramatically disturbing to themselves or those around them (usually when criterion 5, self-destructiveness, manifests itself). Modern psychiatric diagnostics are descriptive; they depend on observation of outward manifestations and behaviors, i.e. symptoms. There is a deeper, classical tradition in psychology and psychiatry of formulation, i.e. using the outward manifestations to understand a person’s inward dynamics, the forces that make them do business with the world as they do, the construction of their selves. The diagnostic criteria are only the outward manifestations of a core, damaged, way of being and interacting.
I am convinced that many are walking around with damaged selves in the manner the borderline concept gets at, and that that damage is intimately related to the conditions of modern life which facilitate exploitative, unempathic relationships between people — the erosion of personal freedom, the refinement of authoritarian control by the political and corporate forces dominating us, the atomization of family and community, the loss of contact with our personal and cultural heritages as well as our connection with the natural world and our biological selves, the lost arts of forgiveness and apology in modern life. I am convinced that the borderline way of being is at the root of the self-perpetuating cycle through which damage is done to children by narcissistic childrearing; that children raised that way, in turn, raise their own children in a similar way. This is a central means of understanding and explaining the pervasive and inexorable way in which the victim becomes the perpetrator and the crippling of the capacity for mutuality and empathy in modern relationships. The borderline construction of the self, conceptualized in this broader way, is in many ways at the root of modern violence. The brilliant but largely neglected psychological writer, Alice Miller, campaigned against the damage done by broken childrearing practices in a series of books several decades ago, epitomizing our understanding of these processes. Crucially, she recognized our failure to address these issues as a core betrayal of our children. Similarly, I recognize the political correctness that makes us reluctant to use the borderline concept a core betrayal of our patients.
There are additional reasons the borderline personality disorder diagnosis has been seen as inappropriate and politically incorrect. First, it is particularly susceptible to what we call “medical student syndrome”, in which an inexperienced or fledgling clinician reading a list of diagnostic criteria for a condition easily sees the disorder in themselves or those near and dear to them. Subjectivity needs to be tempered with sophistication to make this call responsibly and accurately. Indeed, the core narcissism of our society damages all our selves, so that there is something there to recognize. But it is complicated to understand the implications and subtleties of the borderline formulation.
Also, the borderline notion as commonly employed is gender-biased, rarely applied to men. It is important to recognize that the effects of narcissistic damage in raising boys manifests differently but no less profoundly. Formulating rather than diagnosing (understanding the inward construction of the self rather than how many descriptive criteria a patient meets) can help us to help our male patients as well.
Taking the effort to help my patients understand the borderline concept would in fact be little more than pejorative if it merely condemned them to going through life with a damaged self. Modern psychiatric medicine, focused almost exclusively on biological factors and quick fixes through pharmacology, offers temporary symptom amelioration at best to someone who is living with the implications of a borderline personality structure. I am not going to make this essay a treatise on borderline treatment, but suffice it to say that many of us who still understand the value of psychodynamic formulation and of healing patients through entering into longer-term instrumental relationships with them, talking with them, know that, with a concerted, informed and careful treatment approach, the borderline state is remediable. It is clear that there is decreasing support for this effort both from within the current paradigm of mental health care and, certainly, from the insurance carriers who manage care delivery through bestowing and withholding reimbursement in accordance with unfair and ill-informed notions of what is worth paying for. To my way of thinking, it is centrally important to my patients to help them to understand and forgive what was done to them and empower them to govern their own behavior differently. And centrally important to empower the current generation of therapists and social critics to continue to subvert the dominant paradigm.
New Year’s Day History, Custom and Tradition
This, my annual New Year’s post, is a tradition I started on FmH years ago:
I once ran across a January 1st Boston Globe article compiling folkloric beliefs about what to do, what to eat, etc. on New Year’s Day to bring good fortune for the year to come. I’ve regretted since — I usually think of it around once a year (grin) — not clipping out and saving the article. Especially since we’ve had children, I’m interested in enduring traditions that go beyond getting drunk [although some comment that this is a profound enactment of the interdigitation of chaos and order appropriate to the New Year’s celebration — FmH], watching the bowl games and making resolutions.
A web search brought me this, less elaborate than what I recall from the Globe but to the same point. It is weighted toward eating traditions, which is odd because, unlike most other major holidays, the celebration of New Year’s in 21st century America does not seem to be centered at all around thinking about what we eat (except in the sense of the traditional weight-loss resolutions!) and certainly not around a festive meal. But…
Traditionally, it was thought that one could affect the luck they would have throughout the coming year by what they did or ate on the first day of the year. For that reason, it has become common for folks to celebrate the first few minutes of a brand new year in the company of family and friends. Parties often last into the middle of the night after the ringing in of a new year. It was once believed that the first visitor on New Year’s Day would bring either good luck or bad luck the rest of the year. It was particularly lucky if that visitor happened to be a tall dark-haired man.
“Traditional New Year foods are also thought to bring luck. Many cultures believe that anything in the shape of a ring is good luck, because it symbolizes “coming full circle,” completing a year’s cycle. For that reason, the Dutch believe that eating donuts on New Year’s Day will bring good fortune.
“Many parts of the U.S. celebrate the new year by consuming black-eyed peas. These legumes are typically accompanied by either hog jowls or ham. Black-eyed peas and other legumes have been considered good luck in many cultures. The hog, and thus its meat, is considered lucky because it symbolizes prosperity. Cabbage is another ‘good luck’ vegetable that is consumed on New Year’s Day by many. Cabbage leaves are also considered a sign of prosperity, being representative of paper currency. In some regions, rice is a lucky food that is eaten on New Year’s Day.”
The further north one travels in the British Isles, the more the year-end festivities focus on New Year’s. The Scottish observance of Hogmanay has many elements of warming heart and hearth, welcoming strangers and making a good beginning:
“Three cornered biscuits called hogmanays are eaten. Other special foods are: wine, ginger cordial, cheese, bread, shortbread, oatcake, carol or carl cake, currant loaf, and a pastry called scones. After sunset people collect juniper and water to purify the home. Divining rituals are done according to the directions of the winds, which are assigned their own colors. First Footing:The first person who comes to the door on midnight New Year’s Eve should be a dark-haired or dark-complected man with gifts for luck. Seeing a cat, dog, woman, red-head or beggar is unlucky. The person brings a gift (handsel) of coal or whiskey to ensure prosperity in the New Year. Mummer’s Plays are also performed. The actors called the White Boys of Yule are all dressed in white, except for one dressed as the devil in black. It is bad luck to engage in marriage proposals, break glass, spin flax, sweep or carry out rubbish on New Year’s Eve.”
Here’s why we clink our glasses when we drink our New Year’s toasts, no matter where we are. Of course, sometimes the midnight cacophony is louder than just clinking glassware, to create a ‘devil-chasing din’.
In Georgia, eat black eyed peas and turnip greens on New Year’s Day for luck and prosperity in the year to come, supposedly because they symbolize coppers and currency. Hoppin’ John, a concoction of peas, onion, bacon and rice, is also a southern New Year’s tradition, as is wearing yellow to find true love (in Peru, yellow underwear, apparently!) or carrying silver for prosperity. In some instances, a dollar bill is thrown in with the other ingredients of the New Year’s meal to bring prosperity. In Greece, there is a traditional New Year’s Day sweetbread with a silver coin baked into it. All guests get a slice of the bread and whoever receives the slice with the coin is destined for good fortune for the year. At Italian tables, lentils, oranges and olives are served. The lentils, looking like coins, will bring prosperity; the oranges are for love; and the olives, symbolic of the wealth of the land, represent good fortune for the year to come.
A New Year’s meal in Norway also includes dried cod, “lutefisk.” The Pennsylvania Dutch make sure to include sauerkraut in their holiday meal, also for prosperity.
In Spain, you would cram twelve grapes in your mouth at midnight, one each time the clock chimed, for good luck for the twelve months to come. (If any of the grapes happens to be sour, the corresponding month will not be one of your most fortunate in the coming year.) The U. S. version of this custom, for some reason, involves standing on a chair as you pop the grapes. In Denmark, jumping off a chair at the stroke of midnight signifies leaping into the New Year. In Rio, you would be plunging into the sea en masse at midnight, wearing white and bearing offerings. In many northern hemisphere cities near bodies of water, they will have a tradition of people plunging into the cold water on New Year’s Day. The Coney Island Polar Bears Club in New York is the oldest cold-water swimming club in the United States. They have had groups of people enter the chilly surf since 1903.
Ecuadorian families make scarecrows stuffed with newspaper and firecrackers and place them outside their homes. The dummies represent misfortunes of the prior year, which are then burned in effigy at the stroke of midnight to forget the old year. Bolivian families make beautiful little wood or straw dolls to hang outside their homes on New Year’s Eve to bring good luck.
In China, homes are cleaned spotless to appease the Kitchen God, and papercuttings of red paper are hung in the windows to scare away evil spirits who might enter the house and bring misfortune. Large papier mache dragon heads with long fabric bodies are maneuvered through the streets during the Dragon Dance festival, and families open their front doors to let the dragon bring good luck into their homes. The Indian Diwali festival, welcoming in the autumnal season, also involves attracting good fortune with lights. Children make small clay lamps, dipas, thousands of which might adorn a given home. In Thailand, one pours fragrant water over the hands of elders on New Year’s Day to show them respect.
- a stack of pancakes for the New Year’s breakfast in France.
- banging on friends’ doors in Denmark to “smash in” the New Year, where it is also a good sign to find your doorstep heaped with broken dishes on New Year’s morning. Old dishes are saved all years to throw at your friends’ homes on New Year’s Eve.
- going in the front door and out the back door at midnight in Ireland.
- making sure the First Footer, the first person through your door in the New Year in Scotland, is a tall dark haired visitor.
- water out the window at midnight in Puerto Rico rids the home of evil spirits.
- cleanse your soul in Japan at the New Year by listening to a gong tolling 108 times, one for every sin
- it is Swiss good luck to let a drop of cream fall on the floor on New Year’s Day.
- Belgian farmers wish their animals a Happy New Year for blessings.
- In Germany and Austria, lead pouring” (das Bleigießen) is an old divining practice using molten lead like tea leaves. A small amount of lead is melted in a tablespoon (by holding a flame under the spoon) and then poured into a bowl or bucket of water. The resulting pattern is interpreted to predict the coming year. For instance, if the lead forms a ball (der Ball), that means luck will roll your way. The shape of an anchor (der Anker) means help in need. But a cross (das Kreuz) signifies death.
- “It’s a bit bizarre when you think about it. A short British cabaret sketch from the 1920s has become a German New Year’s tradition. Yet, although The 90th Birthday or Dinner for One is a famous cult classic in Germany and several other European countries, it is virtually unknown in the English-speaking world, including Britain, its birthplace.”
Some history; documentation of observance of the new year dates back at least 4000 years to the Babylonians, who also made the first new year’s resolutions (reportedly voews to return borrowed farm equipment were very popular), although their holiday was observed at the vernal equinox. The Babylonian festivities lasted eleven days, each day with its own particular mode of celebration. The traditional Persian Norouz festival of spring continues to be considered the advent of the new year among Persians, Kurds and other peoples throughout Central Asia, and dates back at least 3000 years, deeply rooted in Zooastrian traditions.Modern Bahá’í’s celebrate Norouz (“Naw Ruz”) as the end of a Nineteen Day Fast. Rosh Hashanah (“head of the year”), the Jewish New Year, the first day of the lunar month of Tishri, falls between September and early October. Muslim New Year is the first day of Muharram, and Chinese New Year falls between Jan. 10th and Feb. 19th of the Gregorian calendar.
The classical Roman New Year’s celebration was also in the spring although the calendar went out of synchrony with the sun. January 1st became the first day of the year by proclamation of the Roman Senate in 153 BC, reinforced even more strongly when Julius Caesar established what came to be known as the Julian calendar in 46 BC. The early Christian Church condemned new year’s festivities as pagan but created parallel festivities concurrently. New Year’s Day is still observed as the Feast of Christ’s Circumcision in some denominations. Church opposition to a new year’s observance reasserted itself during the Middle Ages, and Western nations have only celebrated January 1 as a holidy for about the last 400 years. The custom of New Year’s gift exchange among Druidic pagans in 7th century Flanders was deplored by Saint Eligius, who warned them, “[Do not] make vetulas, [little figures of the Old Woman], little deer or iotticos or set tables [for the house-elf] at night or exchange New Year gifts or supply superfluous drinks [another Yule custom].” (Wikipedia)
The tradition of the New Year’s Baby signifying the new year began with the Greek tradition of parading a baby in a basket during the Dionysian rites celebrating the annual rebirth of that god as a symbol of fertility. The baby was also a symbol of rebirth among early Egyptians. Again, the Church was forced to modify its denunciation of the practice as pagan because of the popularity of the rebirth symbolism, finally allowing its members to cellebrate the new year with a baby although assimilating it to a celebration of the birth of the baby Jesus. The addition of Father Time (the “Old Year”) wearing a sash across his chest withthe previous year on it, and the banner carried or worn by the New Year’s Baby, immigrated from Germany. Interestingly, January 1st is not a legal holiday in Israel, officially because of its historic origins as a Christian feast day.
Auld Lang Syne (literally ‘old long ago’ in the Scottish dialect) is sung or played at the stroke of midnight throughout the English-speaking world (although I prefer George Harrison’s “Ring Out the Old”). Versions of the song have been part of the New Year’s festivities since the 17th century but Robert Burns was inspired to compose a modern rendition, which was published after his death in 1796. (It took Guy Lombardo, however, to make it popular…)
Should auld acquaintance be forgot
and never brought to mind?
Should auld acquaintance be forgot
and days of auld lang syne?
For auld lang syne, my dear,
for auld lang syne,
we’ll take a cup of kindness yet,
for auld lang syne.Should auld acquaintance be forgot
and never brought to mind?
Should auld acquaintance be forgot
and days of auld lang syne?
And here’s a hand, my trusty friend
And gie’s a hand o’ thine
We’ll tak’ a cup o’ kindness yet
For auld lang syne
Here’s how to wish someone a Happy New Year around the world:
- Arabic: Kul ‘aam u antum salimoun
- Brazilian: Boas Festas e Feliz Ano Novo means “Good Parties and Happy New Year”
- Chinese: Chu Shen Tan
- Czechoslavakia: Scastny Novy Rok
- Dutch: Gullukkig Niuw Jaar
- Finnish: Onnellista Uutta Vuotta
- French: Bonne Annee
- German: Prosit Neujahr
- Greek: Eftecheezmaenos o Kaenooryos hronos
- Hebrew: L’Shannah Tovah Tikatevu
- Hindi: Niya Saa Moobaarak
- Irish (Gaelic): Bliain nua fe mhaise dhuit
- Italian: Buon Capodanno
- Khmer: Sua Sdei tfnam tmei
- Laotian: Sabai dee pee mai
- Polish: Szczesliwego Nowego Roku
- Portuguese: Feliz Ano Novo
- Russian: S Novim Godom
- Serbo-Croatian: Scecna nova godina
- Spanish: Feliz Ano Neuvo
- Prospero Ano Nuevo
- Turkish: Yeni Yiliniz Kutlu Olsun
- Vietnamese: Cung-Chuc Tan-Xuan
However you’re going to celebrate, my warmest wishes for the year to come… and eat hearty! [thanks to Bruce Umbaugh for research assistance]
New Year’s Day History, Custom and Tradition
This, my annual New Year’s post, is a tradition I started on FmH years ago:
I once ran across a January 1st Boston Globe article compiling folkloric beliefs about what to do, what to eat, etc. on New Year’s Day to bring good fortune for the year to come. I’ve regretted since — I usually think of it around once a year (grin) — not clipping out and saving the article. Especially since we’ve had children, I’m interested in enduring traditions that go beyond getting drunk [although some comment that this is a profound enactment of the interdigitation of chaos and order appropriate to the New Year’s celebration — FmH], watching the bowl games and making resolutions.
A web search brought me this, less elaborate than what I recall from the Globe but to the same point. It is weighted toward eating traditions, which is odd because, unlike most other major holidays, the celebration of New Year’s in 21st century America does not seem to be centered at all around thinking about what we eat (except in the sense of the traditional weight-loss resolutions!) and certainly not around a festive meal. But…
Traditionally, it was thought that one could affect the luck they would have throughout the coming year by what they did or ate on the first day of the year. For that reason, it has become common for folks to celebrate the first few minutes of a brand new year in the company of family and friends. Parties often last into the middle of the night after the ringing in of a new year. It was once believed that the first visitor on New Year’s Day would bring either good luck or bad luck the rest of the year. It was particularly lucky if that visitor happened to be a tall dark-haired man.
“Traditional New Year foods are also thought to bring luck. Many cultures believe that anything in the shape of a ring is good luck, because it symbolizes “coming full circle,” completing a year’s cycle. For that reason, the Dutch believe that eating donuts on New Year’s Day will bring good fortune.
“Many parts of the U.S. celebrate the new year by consuming black-eyed peas. These legumes are typically accompanied by either hog jowls or ham. Black-eyed peas and other legumes have been considered good luck in many cultures. The hog, and thus its meat, is considered lucky because it symbolizes prosperity. Cabbage is another ‘good luck’ vegetable that is consumed on New Year’s Day by many. Cabbage leaves are also considered a sign of prosperity, being representative of paper currency. In some regions, rice is a lucky food that is eaten on New Year’s Day.”
The further north one travels in the British Isles, the more the year-end festivities focus on New Year’s. The Scottish observance of Hogmanay has many elements of warming heart and hearth, welcoming strangers and making a good beginning:
“Three cornered biscuits called hogmanays are eaten. Other special foods are: wine, ginger cordial, cheese, bread, shortbread, oatcake, carol or carl cake, currant loaf, and a pastry called scones. After sunset people collect juniper and water to purify the home. Divining rituals are done according to the directions of the winds, which are assigned their own colors. First Footing:The first person who comes to the door on midnight New Year’s Eve should be a dark-haired or dark-complected man with gifts for luck. Seeing a cat, dog, woman, red-head or beggar is unlucky. The person brings a gift (handsel) of coal or whiskey to ensure prosperity in the New Year. Mummer’s Plays are also performed. The actors called the White Boys of Yule are all dressed in white, except for one dressed as the devil in black. It is bad luck to engage in marriage proposals, break glass, spin flax, sweep or carry out rubbish on New Year’s Eve.”
Here’s why we clink our glasses when we drink our New Year’s toasts, no matter where we are. Of course, sometimes the midnight cacophony is louder than just clinking glassware, to create a ‘devil-chasing din’.
In Georgia, eat black eyed peas and turnip greens on New Year’s Day for luck and prosperity in the year to come, supposedly because they symbolize coppers and currency. Hoppin’ John, a concoction of peas, onion, bacon and rice, is also a southern New Year’s tradition, as is wearing yellow to find true love (in Peru, yellow underwear, apparently!) or carrying silver for prosperity. In some instances, a dollar bill is thrown in with the other ingredients of the New Year’s meal to bring prosperity. In Greece, there is a traditional New Year’s Day sweetbread with a silver coin baked into it. All guests get a slice of the bread and whoever receives the slice with the coin is destined for good fortune for the year. At Italian tables, lentils, oranges and olives are served. The lentils, looking like coins, will bring prosperity; the oranges are for love; and the olives, symbolic of the wealth of the land, represent good fortune for the year to come.
A New Year’s meal in Norway also includes dried cod, “lutefisk.” The Pennsylvania Dutch make sure to include sauerkraut in their holiday meal, also for prosperity.
In Spain, you would cram twelve grapes in your mouth at midnight, one each time the clock chimed, for good luck for the twelve months to come. (If any of the grapes happens to be sour, the corresponding month will not be one of your most fortunate in the coming year.) The U. S. version of this custom, for some reason, involves standing on a chair as you pop the grapes. In Denmark, jumping off a chair at the stroke of midnight signifies leaping into the New Year. In Rio, you would be plunging into the sea en masse at midnight, wearing white and bearing offerings. In many northern hemisphere cities near bodies of water, they will have a tradition of people plunging into the cold water on New Year’s Day. The Coney Island Polar Bears Club in New York is the oldest cold-water swimming club in the United States. They have had groups of people enter the chilly surf since 1903.
Ecuadorian families make scarecrows stuffed with newspaper and firecrackers and place them outside their homes. The dummies represent misfortunes of the prior year, which are then burned in effigy at the stroke of midnight to forget the old year. Bolivian families make beautiful little wood or straw dolls to hang outside their homes on New Year’s Eve to bring good luck.
In China, homes are cleaned spotless to appease the Kitchen God, and papercuttings of red paper are hung in the windows to scare away evil spirits who might enter the house and bring misfortune. Large papier mache dragon heads with long fabric bodies are maneuvered through the streets during the Dragon Dance festival, and families open their front doors to let the dragon bring good luck into their homes. The Indian Diwali festival, welcoming in the autumnal season, also involves attracting good fortune with lights. Children make small clay lamps, dipas, thousands of which might adorn a given home. In Thailand, one pours fragrant water over the hands of elders on New Year’s Day to show them respect.
- a stack of pancakes for the New Year’s breakfast in France.
- banging on friends’ doors in Denmark to “smash in” the New Year, where it is also a good sign to find your doorstep heaped with broken dishes on New Year’s morning. Old dishes are saved all years to throw at your friends’ homes on New Year’s Eve.
- going in the front door and out the back door at midnight in Ireland.
- making sure the First Footer, the first person through your door in the New Year in Scotland, is a tall dark haired visitor.
- water out the window at midnight in Puerto Rico rids the home of evil spirits.
- cleanse your soul in Japan at the New Year by listening to a gong tolling 108 times, one for every sin
- it is Swiss good luck to let a drop of cream fall on the floor on New Year’s Day.
- Belgian farmers wish their animals a Happy New Year for blessings.
- In Germany and Austria, lead pouring” (das Bleigießen) is an old divining practice using molten lead like tea leaves. A small amount of lead is melted in a tablespoon (by holding a flame under the spoon) and then poured into a bowl or bucket of water. The resulting pattern is interpreted to predict the coming year. For instance, if the lead forms a ball (der Ball), that means luck will roll your way. The shape of an anchor (der Anker) means help in need. But a cross (das Kreuz) signifies death.
- “It’s a bit bizarre when you think about it. A short British cabaret sketch from the 1920s has become a German New Year’s tradition. Yet, although The 90th Birthday or Dinner for One is a famous cult classic in Germany and several other European countries, it is virtually unknown in the English-speaking world, including Britain, its birthplace.”
Some history; documentation of observance of the new year dates back at least 4000 years to the Babylonians, who also made the first new year’s resolutions (reportedly voews to return borrowed farm equipment were very popular), although their holiday was observed at the vernal equinox. The Babylonian festivities lasted eleven days, each day with its own particular mode of celebration. The traditional Persian Norouz festival of spring continues to be considered the advent of the new year among Persians, Kurds and other peoples throughout Central Asia, and dates back at least 3000 years, deeply rooted in Zooastrian traditions.Modern Bahá’í’s celebrate Norouz (“Naw Ruz”) as the end of a Nineteen Day Fast. Rosh Hashanah (“head of the year”), the Jewish New Year, the first day of the lunar month of Tishri, falls between September and early October. Muslim New Year is the first day of Muharram, and Chinese New Year falls between Jan. 10th and Feb. 19th of the Gregorian calendar.
The classical Roman New Year’s celebration was also in the spring although the calendar went out of synchrony with the sun. January 1st became the first day of the year by proclamation of the Roman Senate in 153 BC, reinforced even more strongly when Julius Caesar established what came to be known as the Julian calendar in 46 BC. The early Christian Church condemned new year’s festivities as pagan but created parallel festivities concurrently. New Year’s Day is still observed as the Feast of Christ’s Circumcision in some denominations. Church opposition to a new year’s observance reasserted itself during the Middle Ages, and Western nations have only celebrated January 1 as a holidy for about the last 400 years. The custom of New Year’s gift exchange among Druidic pagans in 7th century Flanders was deplored by Saint Eligius, who warned them, “[Do not] make vetulas, [little figures of the Old Woman], little deer or iotticos or set tables [for the house-elf] at night or exchange New Year gifts or supply superfluous drinks [another Yule custom].” (Wikipedia)
The tradition of the New Year’s Baby signifying the new year began with the Greek tradition of parading a baby in a basket during the Dionysian rites celebrating the annual rebirth of that god as a symbol of fertility. The baby was also a symbol of rebirth among early Egyptians. Again, the Church was forced to modify its denunciation of the practice as pagan because of the popularity of the rebirth symbolism, finally allowing its members to cellebrate the new year with a baby although assimilating it to a celebration of the birth of the baby Jesus. The addition of Father Time (the “Old Year”) wearing a sash across his chest withthe previous year on it, and the banner carried or worn by the New Year’s Baby, immigrated from Germany. Interestingly, January 1st is not a legal holiday in Israel, officially because of its historic origins as a Christian feast day.
Auld Lang Syne (literally ‘old long ago’ in the Scottish dialect) is sung or played at the stroke of midnight throughout the English-speaking world (although I prefer George Harrison’s “Ring Out the Old”). Versions of the song have been part of the New Year’s festivities since the 17th century but Robert Burns was inspired to compose a modern rendition, which was published after his death in 1796. (It took Guy Lombardo, however, to make it popular…)
Should auld acquaintance be forgot
and never brought to mind?
Should auld acquaintance be forgot
and days of auld lang syne?
For auld lang syne, my dear,
for auld lang syne,
we’ll take a cup of kindness yet,
for auld lang syne.Should auld acquaintance be forgot
and never brought to mind?
Should auld acquaintance be forgot
and days of auld lang syne?
And here’s a hand, my trusty friend
And gie’s a hand o’ thine
We’ll tak’ a cup o’ kindness yet
For auld lang syne
Here’s how to wish someone a Happy New Year around the world:
- Arabic: Kul ‘aam u antum salimoun
- Brazilian: Boas Festas e Feliz Ano Novo means “Good Parties and Happy New Year”
- Chinese: Chu Shen Tan
- Czechoslavakia: Scastny Novy Rok
- Dutch: Gullukkig Niuw Jaar
- Finnish: Onnellista Uutta Vuotta
- French: Bonne Annee
- German: Prosit Neujahr
- Greek: Eftecheezmaenos o Kaenooryos hronos
- Hebrew: L’Shannah Tovah Tikatevu
- Hindi: Niya Saa Moobaarak
- Irish (Gaelic): Bliain nua fe mhaise dhuit
- Italian: Buon Capodanno
- Khmer: Sua Sdei tfnam tmei
- Laotian: Sabai dee pee mai
- Polish: Szczesliwego Nowego Roku
- Portuguese: Feliz Ano Novo
- Russian: S Novim Godom
- Serbo-Croatian: Scecna nova godina
- Spanish: Feliz Ano Neuvo
- Prospero Ano Nuevo
- Turkish: Yeni Yiliniz Kutlu Olsun
- Vietnamese: Cung-Chuc Tan-Xuan
However you’re going to celebrate, my warmest wishes for the year to come… and eat hearty! [thanks to Bruce Umbaugh for research assistance]
A book-related meme
Adapted from David Brake. These are the top 106 books most often marked as “unread” by LibraryThing’s users. Now, be honest. Bold what you have read, italicize those you started but couldn’t finish, strikethrough for books you have no desire to read, a question mark in front for books you never heard of and X in front of what you couldn’t stand. Add an asterisk to those you’ve read more than once. Underline those on your to-read list. Choose up to five favorites from among those you have read on the list and preface them with an exclamation point.
- Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell
- Anna Karenina
- Crime and Punishment
- Catch-22
- One Hundred Years of Solitude
- Wuthering Heights
- The Silmarillion
- Life of Pi : a novel
- The Name of the Rose
- Don Quixote
- ! Moby Dick *
- ! Ulysses *
- The Odyssey
- Pride and Prejudice
- Jane Eyre
- A Tale of Two Cities *
- The Brothers Karamazov
- Guns, Germs, and Steel: the fates of human societies
- War and Peace
- Vanity Fair
- The Time Traveler’s Wife
- The Iliad
- Emma
- ? The Blind Assassin
- The Kite Runner
- Mrs. Dalloway
- Great Expectations
- American Gods
- Atlas Shrugged
- Reading Lolita in Tehran: a memoir in books
- Memoirs of a Geisha
- Middlesex
- ! Quicksilver
- Wicked: the life and times of the wicked witch of the West
- The Canterbury Tales
- ? The Historian: a novel
- A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man
- Love in the Time of Cholera
- Brave New World
- The Fountainhead
- Foucault’s Pendulum
- Middlemarch
- Frankenstein
- The Count of Monte Cristo
- Dracula
- A Clockwork Orange
- Anansi Boys
- The Once and Future King
- The Grapes of Wrath
- The Poisonwood Bible: a novel
- 1984 *
Angels & Demons- The Inferno
- The Satanic Verses
- Sense and Sensibility
- The Picture of Dorian Gray
- ? Mansfield Park
- One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest
- To the Lighthouse
- Tess of the D’Urbervilles
- Oliver Twist
- Gulliver’s Travels
- Les Misérables
The Corrections- The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay
- The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time
- Dune
- The Prince
- The Sound and the Fury
Angela’s Ashes : A Memoir- The God of Small Things
- A People’s History of the United States: 1492-present
- Cryptonomicon
- Neverwhere
- A Confederacy of Dunces
A Short History of Nearly Everything- Dubliners
- The Unbearable Lightness of Being
Beloved- Slaughterhouse-Five
- The Scarlet Letter
- Eats, Shoots & Leaves
The Mists of Avalon- Oryx and Crake: a novel
- Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed
- Cloud Atlas
- The Confusion
- Lolita
- Persuasion
- ? Northanger Abbey
- The Catcher in the Rye
- On the Road
- The Hunchback of Notre Dame
- Freakonomics: a Rogue Economist Explores the Hidden Side of Everything
- ! Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance
- The Aeneid
Watership Down- Gravity’s Rainbow
- The Hobbit
- White Teeth
- Treasure Island
- David Copperfield
Please place a comment below if you are spreading the meme onward by posting your list on your site.
The Credit Card Prank
Edge Holiday Reading
Instead of having science and technology at the center of the intellectual world—of having a unity in which scholarship includes science and technology along with literature and art—the official culture has kicked them out…
We are pleased to present a list of books published in 2007 by Edge contributors (and others in the science-minded community) for your holiday pleasures and challenges.” — John Brockman (Edge)
15 minutes of fame, unfortunately
Scroll down this 12/14/07 Lewiston Tribune front page to the photo of Michael Millhouse trimming some shop windows with Christmas cheer. Think he’s pleased to make the front page? Think again, since the Tribune also reproduced on that same front page (scroll down abit further) a surveillance photo of a man lifting a woman’s wallet from the counter of a convenience store earlier in the week. Too bad he was wearing the same coat, and that police noticed the similarity. Millhouse was nabbed for the crime… [.pdf via VSL]
UNICEF Photo of the Year
No consolation to you holiday travelers:
They also found no evidence to suggest that making passengers take off their shoes and confiscating small items prevented any incidents.” (Reuters)
Enemies of Thought
“A very public feud between two philosophers involving damning book reviews, professional roastings and personal slights shows how bitter, unforgiving – and unwittingly hilarious – academic spats can be…” (Guardian.UK thanks to walker)
The Year in Celebrity scandals
Can Poetry Matter?
The Lure of Treatments Science Has Dismissed
The studies — at least the good ones — say that none of these treatments work the miracles often claimed for them. And in this contradiction lies the genesis of R. Barker Bausell’s readable, entertaining and immensely educational book, which undertakes to explain exactly why treatments that science says do not work that well are still able — even likely — to work for you.” (New York Times)
Top 10 Scientific Breakthroughs of 2007
Texas is Bucking Execution Trend
The Top 10 New Organisms of 2007
US zoo baffled by tiger’s escape
“Investigators are trying to establish how a tiger escaped from its grotto at San Francisco Zoo and attacked three visitors, killing one.” (BBC) They don’t consider the possibility that the three young male victims had played a foolhardy part in letting the tiger out.
Merry Christmas to all…
Merry Christmas to all of my readers who observe the Holiday. And the joys of the season to all of you, regardless…
Powered by Jott
Moon and Mars
Please do not miss this, say the stargazers at Spaceweather.com: “Tonight, just after sunset, the full Moon and Mars will rise in the east less than 2o apart. These are the two brightest objects in the evening sky; hanging so close together, they’ll look absolutely dynamite. Bundle up and look…”
Moon and Mars
Please do not miss this, say the stargazers at Spaceweather.com: “Tonight, just after sunset, the full Moon and Mars will rise in the east less than 2o apart. These are the two brightest objects in the evening sky; hanging so close together, they’ll look absolutely dynamite. Bundle up and look…”
Why aren’t we all Good Samaritans?
5 dangerous things you should let your kids do
Mich. man learns co-worker is birth mother
Flaig had met Christine Tallady after she started working at Lowe’s several months ago, but it was only recently that the 22-year-old delivery driver figured out she was the woman who had given him up for adoption. It took him a few weeks, and some help from the adoption agency, to give her the news.” (Yahoo!News)
Top Ten Astronomy Pictures of 2007
Still, there’s something to be said for a simple, drop dead gorgeous picture.
So here I present my Top Ten Astronomy Pictures for 2007.” (Bad Astronomy)
15 Most Breathtaking Places to Live
I wish I knew where some of these places were . I wish, at least, I was a friend of someone living in one of these places and got invited to visit…
The next time you see something flapping in the breeze on an overhead power line, squint a little harder
The idea comes from the US Air Force Research Lab (AFRL) in Dayton, Ohio, US, which wants to operate extended surveillance missions using remote-controlled planes with a wingspan of about a metre, but has been struggling to find a way to refuel to extend the plane’s limited flight duration.
So the AFRL is developing an electric motor-powered micro air vehicle (MAV) that can ‘harvest’ energy when needed by attaching itself to a power line. It could even temporarily change its shape to look more like innocuous piece of trash hanging from the cable.” (New Scientist)
Join Rep. Wexler’s Call for Cheney Impeachment Hearings
White House confirms:
Who says troopers don’t have a sense of humor?
(World Topix) thanks to walker
Assault by a Black Hole
This real-life scene, worthy of the most outlandish science fiction, is playing out in a faraway binary galaxy system known as 3C321. Two galaxies are in orbit around one another. A supermassive black hole at the core of the system’s larger galaxy is spewing a jet in the direction of its smaller companion.” (NASA)
Paris Hilton Rendered to Offshore Blackshop
…[A] recent account from a purported former detainee includes tales of being forced to shop in stress positions, dancing to exhaustion in clubs playing music at high volumes, and being incessantly coddled by teams of ominous, hooded figures. “For more than 6 months all I heard was ‘spend, spend, spend,'” explains Frank Fetch, the son of a wealthy Minneapolis publishing family. “They wouldn’t let me sleep. I’d start to nod off, and there’d be another handler with an exclusive Manolo Blahnik sneaker or a tray of cashmere Q-Tips. It was exhausting, mentally draining.”” (futurefeedforward)
N.J. bans death penalty
The bill, approved last week by the state’s Assembly and Senate, replaces the death sentence with life in prison without parole.” (Yahoo! News)
Modern times causing human evolution to accelerate
Our population explosion and rapidly changing lifestyles seem to be the drivers of this acceleration, the discovery of which contradicts the widely held notion that our technological and medical advances have removed most of the selection pressures acting upon us.” (New Scientist)
Terry Pratchett Embuggered
Sad news for the fantasist and his fans: “Folks,
I would have liked to keep this one quiet for a little while, but because of upcoming conventions and of course the need to keep my publishers informed, it seems to me unfair to withhold the news. I have been diagnosed with a very rare form of early
onset Alzheimer’s, which lay behind this year’s phantom ‘stroke’.
We are taking it fairly philosophically down here and possibly with a mild optimism. For now work is continuing on the completion of Nation and the basic notes are already being laid down for Unseen Academicals. All other things being equal, I
expect to meet most current and, as far as possible, future commitments but will discuss things with the various organisers. Frankly, I would prefer it if people kept things cheerful, because I think there’s time for at least a few more books yet :o)
— Terry Pratchett
PS I would just like to draw attention to everyone reading the above that this should be interpreted as ‘I am not dead’. I will, of course, be dead at some future point, as will everybody else. For me, this maybe further off than you think – it’s too soon to tell. I know it’s a very human thing to say ‘Is there anything I can do’, but in this case I would only entertain offers from very high-end experts in brain chemistry.”
Report Says That the Rich Are Getting Richer Faster, Much Faster
Report Says That the Rich Are Getting Richer Faster, Much Faster
What Top Geeks Want
Holiday season wishlists of web celebrities ranging from almost-prosaic to fancifully outlandish (“home-based Large Hadron Collider”). There are a couple of mentions of the Amazon Kindle (has anyone tried one?). (PopSci)
The man who lost his past
But how are we to look at fictitious amnesia presented as factual truth? That question has been haunting me for weeks, ever since I rented the 2006 documentary Unknown White Male. On the film’s official Web site, director Rupert Murray introduces his film as the “startling story of Doug Bruce, a man who, for no apparent reason, lost 37 years of life history, who lost every memory of his friends, his family and every experience he had ever known. This true story follows Doug in the hours and months following his amnesia, as he tries to piece his life back together and has to discover the world anew.” When the film was first released, it received mostly positive reviews. Roger Ebert called it “an intriguing and disturbing film.” Some critics, on the other hand, sensed that it was a hoax.
After having viewed the movie twice, and interviewing Murray, I have little doubt that the movie was made in good faith. Yet Bruce’s condition is medically implausible. To me, the real attraction of the movie is that it transforms a viewer into an armchair neurologist, forced to diagnose a bizarre memory loss that has stumped the experts. I cannot imagine a better medical training film for sorting out a neurological from a psychiatric disease, for determining whether a patient’s condition is real or imagined…” — James Burton (Salon)
The Amphibian Ark

“Working in partnerships to ensure the global survival of amphibians, focusing on those that can not be safeguarded in nature. Amphibian Ark is possible due to your generous support..”
Family History and You
Throughout the practice of medicine, the paradigm of standardizing diagnosis — knowing how to recognize when different patients have the same disease process — has allowed standardized treatment by the protocols that have the best statistical evidence of success. But this standardized and evidence-based way of treating patients has been countered by the recognition that individuals differ in their responses to treatment for a variety of reasons. So standardization has begun to be counterbalanced by a new paradigm of personalized medicine, which attempts to further refine treatment choices by analyzing what individual factors in a patient are likely to influence treatment response (although by and large the managed care companies do not like the anecdotal and amorphous nature of the approach). There has been a growing recognition of ethnic, age-related, and gender-based distinctions in disease expression and treatment response. A large part of these individual differences is based in physiological distinctions based in genetic differences, so it is not surprising that the personalized medicine movement is fist-in-glove with the genomics mavens. But even the gene sherpas recognize that, for the foreseeable future, individual genetic testing will be a piecemeal, minor contribution to predicting disease risk and treatment response relative to the more simple and time-honored medical practice of taking a family history.
In the psychiatric field, where I practice, attention to personalizing care has, of course, always been a relatively more important counterbalance to the standardization paradigm that has infected the rest of medicine. One reason, which goes without saying, is that ethnic, cultural, gender, community and family cultural differences shape illness behavior and expectancies and beliefs about treatment responses. The art of psychiatry is in large measure parsing out and mobilizing such individual factors to maximize recovery and empowerment. And genetic/constitutional variables also shape psychiatric treatment response. If you read psychiatric evaluations, you find that the family history section of the write-up is generally more attended to than in other medical fields. Conclusions about what psychiatric disease the presenting symptoms might represent are often strongly shaped by what diagnoses blood relatives have been known to have. Some of us place great stock in factoring the responses of relatives to specific medications (antidepressants, antipsychotics etc.) in choosing which therapies to prescribe to our patients.
But the atomization of communities, attenuation of family structure and dispersal of relatives have crippled our access to and familiarity with our families’ medical histories. The emphasis physicians would like to place on such factors is often defeated by patients’ impoverished awareness of their families’ histories. Deliberate, often daunting, efforts on patients’ parts are necessary to counter this. I’ve seen suggestions that patients use holiday family gatherings as an opportunity to take a detailed health history from their relatives:
While the intention is good, however, the clinical emphasis may not exactly be in keeping with holiday cheer and the clinical interview not exactly one of the joys of the season. You may want to make a point of finding another time, soon, to query relatives about their health histories, especially elderly relatives whose wealth of information could soon be lost. This site from the Dept. of Health and Human Services outliens the Surgeon General’s Family History Initiative and provides online resources for information-gathering.
As we psychiatric practitioners also find when we encourage our patients to contact relatives for their health histories, these conversations are also beneficial in other ways. Nonspecific factors of renewal of contact with family members, facilitation of communication channels, and gaining a mutual appreciation of at least some dimensions of our relatives’ struggles with adversities, are good for the soul, and good for one’s health, in general.
Canadian retail chain pulls plastic water bottles
Scientology Censor Software Cracked
Operation Clambake: “This is the cracked ban lists for the Scientology censorware software (aka ScenioSitter) – all thanks go to the guys at http://fravia.org/saruma1.htm who cracked CyberSitter – and Anti-Cult who found their page. ScenioSitter is still being analyzed by critics of the cult, new information will be added to this site.”
Family History and You
Throughout the practice of medicine, the paradigm of standardizing diagnosis — knowing how to recognize when different patients have the same disease process — has allowed standardized treatment by the protocols that have the best statistical evidence of success. But this standardized and evidence-based way of treating patients has been countered by the recognition that individuals differ in their responses to treatment for a variety of reasons. So standardization has begun to be counterbalanced by a new paradigm of personalized medicine, which attempts to further refine treatment choices by analyzing what individual factors in a patient are likely to influence treatment response (although by and large the managed care companies do not like the anecdotal and amorphous nature of the approach). There has been a growing recognition of ethnic, age-related, and gender-based distinctions in disease expression and treatment response. A large part of these individual differences is based in physiological distinctions based in genetic differences, so it is not surprising that the personalized medicine movement is fist-in-glove with the genomics mavens. But even the gene sherpas recognize that, for the foreseeable future, individual genetic testing will be a piecemeal, minor contribution to predicting disease risk and treatment response relative to the more simple and time-honored medical practice of taking a family history.
In the psychiatric field, where I practice, attention to personalizing care has, of course, always been a relatively more important counterbalance to the standardization paradigm that has infected the rest of medicine. One reason, which goes without saying, is that ethnic, cultural, gender, community and family cultural differences shape illness behavior and expectancies and beliefs about treatment responses. The art of psychiatry is in large measure parsing out and mobilizing such individual factors to maximize recovery and empowerment. And genetic/constitutional variables also shape psychiatric treatment response. If you read psychiatric evaluations, you find that the family history section of the write-up is generally more attended to than in other medical fields. Conclusions about what psychiatric disease the presenting symptoms might represent are often strongly shaped by what diagnoses blood relatives have been known to have. Some of us place great stock in factoring the responses of relatives to specific medications (antidepressants, antipsychotics etc.) in choosing which therapies to prescribe to our patients.
But the atomization of communities, attenuation of family structure and dispersal of relatives have crippled our access to and familiarity with our families’ medical histories. The emphasis physicians would like to place on such factors is often defeated by patients’ impoverished awareness of their families’ histories. Deliberate, often daunting, efforts on patients’ parts are necessary to counter this. I’ve seen suggestions that patients use holiday family gatherings as an opportunity to take a detailed health history from their relatives:
While the intention is good, however, the clinical emphasis may not exactly be in keeping with holiday cheer and the clinical interview not exactly one of the joys of the season. You may want to make a point of finding another time, soon, to query relatives about their health histories, especially elderly relatives whose wealth of information could soon be lost. This site from the Dept. of Health and Human Services outliens the Surgeon General’s Family History Initiative and provides online resources for information-gathering.
As we psychiatric practitioners also find when we encourage our patients to contact relatives for their health histories, these conversations are also beneficial in other ways. Nonspecific factors of renewal of contact with family members, facilitation of communication channels, and gaining a mutual appreciation of at least some dimensions of our relatives’ struggles with adversities, are good for the soul, and good for one’s health, in general.
The Checklist
‘lost’ Woody Guthrie album found
1949 bootleg donated to Guthrie family (Yahoo! News)
Best Meteor Shower of 2007
…Studies of past find the “Gems” have a reputation for being rich both in slow, bright, graceful meteors and fireballs as well as faint meteors, with relatively fewer objects of medium brightness.
…Geminids also stand apart from the other meteor showers in that they seem to have been spawned not by a comet, but by 3200 Phaethon, an Earth-crossing asteroid. Then again, the Geminids may be comet debris after all, for some astronomers consider Phaethon to really be the dead nucleus of a burned-out comet that somehow got trapped into an unusually tight orbit. Interestingly, on December 10, Phaethon will be passing about 11 million miles (18 million kilometers) from Earth, its closest approach since its discovery in 1983.
The Geminids perform excellently in any year, but British meteor astronomer, Alastair McBeath, has categorized 2007 as a ‘great year.'” (Yahoo! News)
Boy’s Brain Impaled by Deerp Antler
L’Etat-C’est-Moi Dept.
Bush has essentially asserted that he determines what is a constitutional exercise of his power, and that the Justice Dept. is bound by his interpretation.
“When fascism comes to America, it will be wrapped in the flag and carrying the cross.” — Sinclair Lewis
How Google helped solve canoeist mystery
The woman, who has not been named, typed “John, Anne, Panama” into the images section of Google, the Internet search engine. Up popped a photo of John and Anne Darwin taken in Panama in July last year, which appeared to refute their claims not to have seen each other since his “death” in 2002.
She emailed the picture to Cleveland Police and the Daily Mirror newspaper, which published it on its front page the next day, beneath the headline “Canoe’s this in Panama?”. When confronted with the photo, Mrs Darwin admitted the man was indeed her husband, and conceded it was time to “face the music”.
She has now left Panama for Britain, where Mr Darwin has been arrested on suspicion of fraud. “My sons are never going to forgive me. They are going to hate me,” she said yesterday. “It looks as if I am going to be left without a husband, a home or a family now.”” (Telegraph.UK)
Romney and Huckabee’s religious intolerance
The Lives They Left Behind:
This is not Romney’s Kennedy moment
Strictly No Photography
Pheromones Identified that Trigger Aggression between Male Mice
A Calmer Iraq: Fragile, and Possibly Fleeting
… Officials attribute the relative calm to a huge increase in the number of Sunni Arab rebels who have turned their guns on jihadists instead of American troops; a six-month halt to military action by the militia of a top Shiite leader, Moktada al-Sadr; and the increased number of American troops on the streets here.
They stress that all of these changes can be reversed, and on relatively short notice. The Americans have already started to reduce troop levels and Mr. Sadr, who has only three months to go on his pledge, has issued increasingly bellicose pronouncements recently.
The Sunni insurgents who turned against the jihadists are now expecting to be rewarded with government jobs. Yet, so far, barely 5 percent of the 77,000 Sunni volunteers have been given jobs in the Iraqi security forces, and the bureaucratic wheels have moved excruciatingly slowly despite government pledges to bring more Sunnis in.” (New York Times)
Peace Is War
A Calmer Iraq: Fragile, and Possibly Fleeting
… Officials attribute the relative calm to a huge increase in the number of Sunni Arab rebels who have turned their guns on jihadists instead of American troops; a six-month halt to military action by the militia of a top Shiite leader, Moktada al-Sadr; and the increased number of American troops on the streets here.
They stress that all of these changes can be reversed, and on relatively short notice. The Americans have already started to reduce troop levels and Mr. Sadr, who has only three months to go on his pledge, has issued increasingly bellicose pronouncements recently.
The Sunni insurgents who turned against the jihadists are now expecting to be rewarded with government jobs. Yet, so far, barely 5 percent of the 77,000 Sunni volunteers have been given jobs in the Iraqi security forces, and the bureaucratic wheels have moved excruciatingly slowly despite government pledges to bring more Sunnis in.” (New York Times)
Progress can kill
Survival International is a worthy charity I support, which works to help indigenous peoples protect their land rights. Here is their report, Progress Can Kill. A press release highlights one horrendous pull-out fact, the dramatic spread of HIV/AIDS among tribal peoples from increased contact with ‘modernity.’
Red, White, and Bleu
|
“Is it possible that meat is now openly enjoying a renaissance —that it’s finally cool to be a carnivore? If so, it has been a long time coming. Meat-eaters, having already ceded the moral ground to vegetarians (no one has ever really come up with a persuasive rejoinder to the claim that a warm-blooded, pain-feeling creature’s life shouldn’t be taken for your supper), have more recently had to accept that their diet is probably the source of much of the world’s heart disease and much of its obesity. That diet is also sustained by an industry that is just flat-out evil: the factory farms, the egregious economies of waste in fast food, the ghastly genetic manipulations of chickens and turkeys, the pigs raised in no-room-to-move confinement, the reckless use of antibiotics and growth hormones (as well as the frightful possible consequences—early breasting in children, difficult-to-defeat superbugs), the contamination of fields and rivers by noxious excrement runoffs from feedlots the size of small nations, the tricks and shortcuts adopted by supermarkets (cheap animals fattened on cheap grain, butchered by high-pressure hose, and packaged at their bloated maximum weight). And yet, at a time when things could not seem worse, there is a generation of people (in their forties or younger) who are thinking hard and philosophically about their food and are prepared to declare: Enough! I’m a meat-eater and proud of it! Three books by authors from three backgrounds—a farmer, a chef, and a pig-slaughtering, bacon-loving descendant of butchers—are remarkably alike in their gleeful chauvinism about being carnivores.” — Bill Buford (New Yorker)
|
![]() |
Never Mind Grendel…
![]() |
|
…Can Beowulf Conquer the 21st-Century Guilt Trip? “Much has been written about how Beowulf looks, but less about what it means, partly because that meaning is difficult to articulate. We live in an age of radically different values than those of the original Beowulf culture, yet it still speaks to us. Many of its explicit statements of power, violence, and gender relations are forbidden to our more gentle, egalitarian, and diplomatic society. But something in the primitive story resonates deeply in the modern audience as well — embarrassingly so (or ironically so) for intellectuals, but more sincerely I suspect for lay audiences.” (The Chronicle of Higher Education)
|
State Quarters Near End of Popular Run
And here’s the part I find hard to believe:
I guess it depends on what your definition of ‘collect’ is.
Research sheds light on why some people can’t handle success
Tipping Point
Good things come to those who wait: “Most expensive ever Guinness advert features large-scale domino game… The advert was shot on location in a remote side village called Iruya, in the Salta region of northern Argentina, with a population of around 1,000 people.” (YouTube) Directed by Nicolai Fuglsig, who had previously created that wonderful Sony Bravia ‘Balls’ commercial.
Pullman/Golden Compass Post Index
from Bill Humphries’ More Like This Weblog. Like Humphries, I am very excited about the arrival of this film, from one of the fantasy series my family has most loved. But we are preparing to be disappointed by its Hollywoodization…
In Quest of the Doomsday Yawn
The end of homeopathy?
There are some aspects of quackery that are harmless – childish even – and there are some that are very serious indeed. On Tuesday, to my great delight, the author Jeanette Winterson launched a scientific defence of homeopathy in these pages. She used words such as “nano” meaninglessly, she suggested that there is a role for homeopathy in the treatment of HIV in Africa, and she said that an article in the Lancet today will call on doctors to tell their patients that homeopathic “medicines” offer no benefit.
The article does not say that, and I should know, because I wrote it. It is not an act of fusty authority, and I claim none: I look about 12, and I’m only a few years out of medical school. This is all good fun, but my adamant stance, that I absolutely lack any authority, is key: because this is not about one man’s opinion, and there is nothing even slightly technical or complicated about the evidence on homeopathy, or indeed anything, when it is clearly explained.” — Ben Goldacre (Bad Science)
The end of homeopathy?
There are some aspects of quackery that are harmless – childish even – and there are some that are very serious indeed. On Tuesday, to my great delight, the author Jeanette Winterson launched a scientific defence of homeopathy in these pages. She used words such as “nano” meaninglessly, she suggested that there is a role for homeopathy in the treatment of HIV in Africa, and she said that an article in the Lancet today will call on doctors to tell their patients that homeopathic “medicines” offer no benefit.
The article does not say that, and I should know, because I wrote it. It is not an act of fusty authority, and I claim none: I look about 12, and I’m only a few years out of medical school. This is all good fun, but my adamant stance, that I absolutely lack any authority, is key: because this is not about one man’s opinion, and there is nothing even slightly technical or complicated about the evidence on homeopathy, or indeed anything, when it is clearly explained.” — Ben Goldacre (Bad Science)
Ability to read others’ emotions can withstand memory loss, study suggests
“It’s encouraging to know that this ability may be more resilient and preserved in us than was first thought,” neuropsychologist Shayna Rosenbaum of the Baycrest Centre’s Rotman Research Institute said in a release Thursday.
The scientists, from the Baycrest institute and York University, tested the assumption that humans rely on their personal recollections, called episodic memory, to make sense of other people’s behaviour. This “theory of mind” is widely accepted in scientific circles.” (CBC)
Babies recognize who’s helpful
Is mathematical pattern the theory of everything?
That hasn’t stopped some leading physicists sitting up and taking notice after Lisi made his theory public on the physics pre-print archive this week. By analysing the most elegant and intricate pattern known to mathematics, Lisi has uncovered a relationship underlying all the universe’s particles and forces, including gravity – or so he hopes. Lee Smolin at the Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics (PI) in Waterloo, Ontario, Canada, describes Lisi’s work as “fabulous”. “It is one of the most compelling unification models I’ve seen in many, many years,” he says.’ (New Scientist thanks to abby)
A shape could describe the cosmos and all it contains
More about Lisi’s work from The Economist.
Man-sized sea scorpion claw found
Race,genes, and intelligence
Art Pepper’s ‘Straight Life’ Goes Straight to YouTube
|
“His career was interrupted by 10 years in prison on narcotics charges, and he died in 1982 at the age of 56. Now his widow, Laurie Pepper, is trying to tell his story on film, doing it one chapter at a time and posting it on YouTube.” (NPR)
|
![]() |
![Bear Lake aurora //www.damninteresting.net/content/Polarlicht_2.jpg' cannot be displayed]](https://i0.wp.com/www.damninteresting.net/content/Polarlicht_2.jpg)
![Will Smith and friend //img.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2008/01_01/IamLegend1_468x679.jpg' cannot be displayed]](https://i0.wp.com/img.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2008/01_01/IamLegend1_468x679.jpg)
![Wake up and smell the modafinil... //www.nature.com/nature/journal/v450/n7173/images/4501157a-i1.0.jpg' cannot be displayed]](https://i0.wp.com/www.nature.com/nature/journal/v450/n7173/images/4501157a-i1.0.jpg)
![Knitted Brain from above //imaginaryfriends.typepad.com/neuroscienceart/images/karen_norberg_1_1.jpg' cannot be displayed]](https://i0.wp.com/imaginaryfriends.typepad.com/neuroscienceart/images/karen_norberg_1_1.jpg)

![Ouroboros //tonos.ru/images/articles/dragon/ouroboros.jpg' cannot be displayed]](https://i0.wp.com/tonos.ru/images/articles/dragon/ouroboros.jpg)
![Wake Up! //www.sfgate.com/chronicle/pictures/2005/02/09/ga_lunar01.jpg' cannot be displayed]](https://i0.wp.com/www.sfgate.com/chronicle/pictures/2005/02/09/ga_lunar01.jpg)
![Ho ho ho (politically incorrect or not)! //www.pachauri.info/blog/wp-content/uploads/2006/12/merry_christmas.jpg' cannot be displayed]](https://i0.wp.com/www.pachauri.info/blog/wp-content/uploads/2006/12/merry_christmas.jpg)

![3C321 and artist's rendition //chandra.harvard.edu/photo/2007/3c321/3c321_2pan_label.jpg' cannot be displayed]](https://i0.wp.com/chandra.harvard.edu/photo/2007/3c321/3c321_2pan_label.jpg)

![Three of a kind? //www.newyorker.com/images/2007/12/03/p233/071203_r16838_p233.jpg' cannot be displayed]](https://i0.wp.com/www.newyorker.com/images/2007/12/03/p233/071203_r16838_p233.jpg)
![Beowulf and Grendel, in happier times... //www.crawfordsworld.com/jaimie/engIIIap/13thWarrior/images/grendel.jpg' cannot be displayed]](https://i0.wp.com/www.crawfordsworld.com/jaimie/engIIIap/13thWarrior/images/grendel.jpg)
![Imagine how good that lobster tail would be! //newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/44252000/gif/_44252282_scorpion203x333.gif' cannot be displayed]](https://i0.wp.com/newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/44252000/gif/_44252282_scorpion203x333.gif)
![Art Pepper //media.npr.org/programs/atc/features/2007/nov/artpepper200x150.jpg' cannot be displayed]](https://i0.wp.com/media.npr.org/programs/atc/features/2007/nov/artpepper200x150.jpg)