|
ghosthouse
|
read my profile
sign my guestbook
Name: Charles Country: United States State: New York Birthday: 4/28/1962 Gender: Male
Interests: Reading. Writing. Stories, poems, plays, essays, novels. Hiking the Appalachian Trail. Listening to music before everyone else discovers it. Still listening to it after everyone finally discovers it. Watching incredibly cool movies, regardless of the original language spoken. Rejecting political and social extremism of whatever kind. Seeking Truth wherever it may be found.
Message: message meEmail: email me
Member Since:
2/25/2006
|
|
| Independence DayWatched some of the NYC official fireworks display on channel 4 this
evening, the first year I've actually been sitting at home in front of
the TV and remembered to switch the station in time to catch the
display, which was this year the biggest in the nation, I think. Lit up
the entire lower Manhattan skyline. Impressive stuff, even if I wasn't
exactly enthused about the music accompanying the fireworks. What
happened to playing patriotic songs and leaving it at that? Hmmm. . . .
As
of tonight, 4113 American soldiers have died in Iraq, 281 from the NYC
metro area. Another 29,451 have been injured. I believe in honoring our
brave men and women who have risked their lives and who have sacrificed
their lives to defend this nation: they have been, are now, and always
will be heroes. But I find it difficult to respect the political
leadership who disrespects these soldiers' service and sacrifice by
cutting their pay and benefits, by shortchanging the medical and
therapeutic care of wounded soldiers, by refusing to reward their
service with further educational opportunities following their term of
duty, by requiring them to continue serving even when their terms of
duty have been successfully completed, by sending them to fight in a
war which did not involve any enemies of the American people, and by
failing to give them the equipment and the material support necessary
to complete the mission speedily and safely. The fact that on this
Independence Day we have to grieve for more of our brave soldier-heroes
causes me to grieve deeply.
There has been much rhetoric about
the soldiers' who have given their lives having done so in vain if we
do not "win" the Iraq war. Under that logic, John McCain would still be
sitting in a Hanoi prison and we'd still be napalming the jungles of
Southeast Asia. To be honest, we "won" the Iraq war: we whupped Saddam
Hussein and his vaunted Republican Guard in less than six weeks. What
we have failed to do is to "win" the peace. The Pentagon and White
House experts understood how to "shock and awe" a Third World nation's
army into submission and retreat, but they had no clue what to do when
they had cleared the battlefield.
It is up to the Iraqis to
win the peace: we cannot do it for them. We need to bring our soldiers
home from Iraq yesterday. It is the only way we can honor the soldiers
who serve there now. There is no disgrace in coming home without having
achieved total eradication of every gun-toting radical in Iraq. If the
eradication of every gun-toting radical is a top priority, the US
military will need to get busy in Texas, Tennessee, North Carolina,
Kentucky, etc. (I'm just kidding, folks.)
***************************************************
This
evening, I read a play by James Schevill entitled The Black President.
It was the title play of a three (really four) play collection
originally published in 1965. I found it on 13 June while I was
browsing the 12th Street Used Book Store in Manhattan prior to the NY
CS Lewis Society meeting that night. The play The Black President is
set duringt he civil rights movement of the 1960s and operates on
several levels, calling into question racial attitudes (whites to
blacks and blacks to whites), nationalism, African independence, the
legacy of slavery, and many other related topics. Schevill incorporates
music and film in the play, and I would probably have to see a
production to be able to determine whether the piece succeeds as a
play: there is just so much going on that it is difficult to take it
all in when reading the page.
The title, of course, caught my
eye because of the possibility that in January 2009, forty-four years
after Schevill wrote his play, we may actually have a "black President"
here in the United States of America. Toward the end of the play, the
leader of the protest movement, Moses Jackburn, envisions for a moment
his triumphant return to the USA (most of the play's action takes place
in London, at the House of Commons) and his running for President. For
a moment, the dream seems possible, before he comes back to reality to
recognize that, in 1965, the nation is not yet ready for such a
campaign or such a president. Throughout the play, I had a strong sense
of the prophetic nature of Schevill's drama, even though he at the time
did not probably understand how his play was being prophetic. For
instance, there's a scene when Nelson Mandela (or an actor playing him)
delivers his testimony/speech to the South African court just prior to
being sentenced to life in prison (in 1964), in which Mandela is
defending his actions to bring about justice for the black majority in
South Africa. The use of that speech is ironic because, after his
release from prison in the early 1990s, Nelson Mandela became South
Africa's first black President.
Finding information about the
author, however, proved somewhat of a challenge. Wikipedia has no
article on James Schevill, and some of the more reliable biography
sites didn't have one either. (I normally don't trust Wikipedia any
further than I could throw it, but sometimes it does have the basic
info correct. I just don't allow any of my students to use it as a
source for college-level research papers. Using Wikipedia in those
papers is about the same as using a brand new roll of toilet paper in
them, except that the toilet paper still has a good purpose ahead of it
when the research paper has been written.)
James Schevill was
born on June 10, 1920, was married twice, had a couple fo children,
taught at the university level (most recently at the University of
Rhode Island, I believe), wrote poetry, and opposed totalitarianism of
any kind. Online, there's a photo of a letter that in 1950 he sent the
then-president of the University of California, explaining why he would
not sign the "loyalty oath" being required of many public servants in
those anticommunist paranoia years (which have many parallels to our
antiterrorist paranoia years). "Loyalty," he says, "is not a matter of
signature." And he points to the United States' attitude toward German
prisoners of war who had signed loyalty oaths to Hitler (not all German
soldiers evidently did so). During WWII those who did NOT sign those
loyalty oaths were respected by the United States, while those who
signed them were not. Schevill questions the contradiction in the use
of loyalty oaths here after the war: did we learn nothing from our
experience in WWII?
I'm intrigued to discover that Schevill--who
appears to be still alive, from what information I found
online--produced and published a number of other plays over the next
couple of decades. I will have to track them down and see if they are
as fascinating as the three (really four) I found in this volume, one
of the best $3 purchases I've made in awhile.
Here's a poem of Schevill's I found online:
A Screamer Discusses Methods of Screaming
We all scream, most of us inside. Outside is another world. A neighbor fills her television dinner With too much pepper and screams. One woman stabs her door with a sword. Another, overweight, steps in the shower And screams, "Fat! Fat! Fat!" A man who takes flying lessons Soars high in the clouds to scream. Another dives to the bottom of his pool Where he screams underwater. A friend cleans his gun, screaming, "Assassin!" I like an interior, smiling scream. When you walk past me on the street I nod my head to you, and smiling, scream. You never hear me through the smile. The inside scream has no echo.
--James Schevill
*********************************************************
Today,
the evening news was filled with tributes to former US Senator Jesse
Helms, who for 30 years was the chief conservative standard bearer in
the Senate and the man that liberals loved to hate. I have to admit to
feeling nothing for or against the man. He's one of the main reasons I
stopped considering myself a conservative in my college years, mostly
because his expression of cdnservative was often couched in divisive,
racially- or socially-charged language. He voted consistently against
minorities and against homosexuals, refusing to support funding for
AIDS research because it was a "gay disease." I find it difficult to
comprehend how a person can allow his biases to overshadow any sense of
compassion for others. As much as Helms' attitudes disgusted me and
helped alienate me from the conservatism of my youth (which is
diametrically opposed to what passes today for conservatism), I know
that his family and friends are grieving his loss, and I pause to
respect their grief. We are always diminished by the loss of anyone,
even someone whose ideas and beliefs we consider hostile to our own. | | |
| Those Side-Column AdsI've been noticing those side-column ads on my Xanga page lately, mostly because many times they have been ads for John McCain for President. Obviously, those ads are placed there by random computer programming, because his campaign staff couldn't be so entirely clueless (though sometimes I wonder. . . .) to have deliberately placed ads FOR his candidacy alongside a blog that points out to America why a John McCain presidency is about the worst thing that could happen to the United States of America, outside of a Supreme Court decision requiring George W. Bush to stay in office past 20 January 2009 (hey, that court put him in the White House in the first place, and the majority of judges on that court are paid partisans of the Republican party establishment).
I love my country, but its leaders leave very much to be desired. It is truly a kakistocracy, in which the sewage has risen to the top of the barrel. . . .
| | |
| Happy Birthday USA!Happy 232nd Birthday, United States of America! You sometimes make
incredibly bad relationship choices, and half the time you're
abso0lutely coked out of your head (or at least you behave that way!),
but, baby, I still love you!
Oh, and if today is truly "Independence Day," we haven't finished that job yet since we still need independence from all sorts of things: big oil, Chinese-made products, alcohol and tobacco addictions, pharmaceutical companies, Republicans, Democrats, politicians of all sorts, bad theology, televangelists, those nasty bitter people sitting in the back pews, bureaucrats of all kinds, taxes, death, bad drivers from New Jersey (do they come from any other state? hmmm. . . .), French Quebeckers (who also drive badly and behave arrogantly, forgetting that they are only French lite), and a whole lot of things I probably will think of later.
Let's declare our independence--and get busy freeing ourselves from today's postmodern dependencies!
| | |
| A Smattering of News and CommentaryAs we head toward the celebration(s) of the 232nd birthday of the
United States of America--and as I realize how many years have passed
since the absolutely fantastic Bicentennial of 1976!--it is time to
share thoughts and articles that have been accumulating in my head
and/or my in-box during the past week or so.
*********************************************************
First
of all, can anyone please explain Oprah to me? I mean, why do so many
people follow her every word and swallow everything she says, hook,
line, and sinker? I don't mean this in any derogatory sense, but she's
just one person. She has a TV show. Yet so many people buy into her
philosophy and her worldview that it almost seems like a cult, except
she's never had them drink Kool-Aid. OK, so that's over the top, but
you get what I mean. Anything she recommends becomes a bestseller. And
her thoughts on faith and life, as vague and amorphous as they may be,
influence a lot of people's thinking.
It just doesn't make
sense to me. Oprah is a successful entrepreneur, and I respect her for
attaining her goals and becoming a financial and social presence. But
when she speaks about faith and life stuff, she's way out of her
league, and her smattering of ideas from a variety of incompatible
sources make a really shallow thought-soup to base your life on.
I'm just saying. . . .
**********************************************************
It
amuses me that evangelical Christians struggle over whether to support
John McCain, who on the surface says the things they think they want to
hear, while Barack Obama actually represents values far closer to the
teachings of the New Testament--the whole caring for your neighbor
stuff that isn't popular in most politicized evangelical groups and
which folks like Pat Robertson, James Dobson, and the whole TBN crew
seem to have entirely forgotten.
But many evangelicals won't
consider voting for Obama because of a couple of peripheral things,
like abortion, about which the President has nothing to do. Nor will
any Republican president seek to ban abortion, even though the last
three decades each GOP hopeful has made that promise. (But we know how
good a politician's word is, especially if he's a Republican. Remember
George W. Bush's claim that he was a "uniter, not a divider"? I can't
recall a time when the nation has been this polarized and divided.)
And
underlying the evangelical opposition to Obama, creeping into ther
background of the discussion, is the simple fact that Obama is black.
Unfortunately, some evangelicals have residual prejudices, and that
kind of prejudice was what motivated the whole "rock music is of the
devil" nonsense that was propagated for nearly half a century. The
original argument against rock music wasn't its demonic nature or
influences--influences which largely included music performed and
composed by African Americans--but the simple fact that such music
brought black and white teens together in social settings, and that
couldn't be tolerated by a segregated South (or North, for that
matter). If Obama were white, the animosity being directed at him by
many pseudoconservative and evangelical sources would not be as bitter,
nor would it target such things as his upbringing, his religious faith,
or similar stuff.
Let's call out those racists and bigots from
the churches and the political party backrooms and the Fox News
broadcast studios--and name them for what they are: the true enemies of
intelligent and meaningful political discourse in America. Not to
mention the fact that they are liars, cheats, people who pervert
language, and entirely lacking in fairness and common sense.
Conservative evangelicals discuss backing McCain By ERIC GORSKI The Associated Press Wednesday, July 2, 2008; 9:05 PM
Conservative
evangelical leaders met privately this week to discuss putting aside
their misgivings about John McCain and coalescing around the
Republican's presidential bid while urging him to consider social
conservative favorite Mike Huckabee as a running mate.
About 90
of the movement's leading activists gathered Tuesday night in Denver
for a meeting convened by Mathew Staver, who heads the Florida-based
legal advocacy group Liberty Counsel.
Many evangelical leaders
backed other GOP candidates early on and remain wary of McCain's
commitment to their causes and his previous criticisms of movement
leaders. But with the presidential field now set, many evangelical
leaders are taking a more pragmatic view, realizing also that the
Democratic candidate, Barack Obama, is making a strong play for
evangelical voters and talking freely about his faith.
"Our
shared core values compel us to unite and choose the presidential
candidate that best advances those values," said Staver, who previously
backed Huckabee's bid. "That obvious choice is Sen. John McCain. I
think people left the meeting in unity the likes of which have not been
evident through the primaries."
The group also agreed to sign a
letter urging the McCain campaign to consider Huckabee, a former
Arkansas governor and Southern Baptist minister, as his vice
presidential choice, said another participant, Phil Burress. Burress,
who heads an Ohio group that helped pass an anti-gay marriage measure in that state in 2004, was among a group of conservative Christian leaders who met with McCain last week.
Burress characterized the Huckabee overture as a "suggestion, not a demand."
"This
is a man you don't threaten," Burress said of McCain. "His principles
are his principles. The last thing you want to do is try to force him
to do something he doesn't want to do because he'd probably do the
opposite."
Burress said that while Huckabee is a favorite of
Christian conservatives, the most important thing is that McCain's
running mate be "pro-life and pro-family." Huckabee isn't a favorite of
all evangelical leaders, either; some dislike his populist message,
emphasis on the environment and economic positions.
The leaders
meeting in Denver included Phyllis Schlafly, head of the Eagle Forum; Left Behind co-author Tim LaHaye and his wife, Beverly, founder of
Concerned Women for America; David Barton, founder of WallBuilders;
Rick Scarborough of Vision America; and Don Hodel, a former interior
secretary and former president of Colorado Springs-based Focus on the
Family, according to Staver.
James Dobson, the founder of Focus
on the Family and a fan of neither McCain nor Obama, did not attend.
Dobson has been in California working on a new book, aides have said.
[Why would he be working on a new book? He doesn't have anything
meaningful to say, as his public statements in recent years have
demonstrated.]
Time magazine first reported on the meeting on its Web site Wednesday.
Staver
said the result will be more leaders "energizing their base" and
targeted efforts in battleground states and states with anti-gay
marriage ballot initiatives this fall such as Florida and California.
"Obama
is a considerable threat to our values," Staver said. "At the same
time, Sen. McCain recently has been reaching out to evangelicals and
conservative voters that we represent."
Even so, Burress said
that at this point, conservative Christians are motivated more out of
opposition to Obama than enthusiasm for McCain.
"People are not
saying, 'Let's all go out and support John McCain,'" Burress said.
"It's more like, 'We have to do what we have to do for our country.'
Basically, that boiled down to John McCain."
Although McCain
opposes abortion rights, his support for embryonic stem cell research
and opposition to a federal amendment prohibiting gay marriage clashes
with the widely held social conservative view.
Obama this week
called for expanding White House efforts to steer social service
dollars to religious groups, and he has developed campaign events
targeting religious voters. But the Democrat's support for abortion
rights and gay rights calls into question how many evangelical votes he
can win.
"The only evangelicals that will support Obama are the
ones who haven't read their Bible," Burress said. "The more and more we
learn about Obama, the closer and closer we get to McCain." [Actually,
the ones who support Obama have read their Bibles, and they know a fool
when they hear one, Mr. Burress. The Bible is about more than abortion
or homosexualitry, and it you haven't discovered that, I would suggest
obtaining a translation from the past century and/or learning to read.
Anyone who could suggest that caring for our neighbor is less important
than ensuring that homosexuals cannot marry has never ever understood
anything written between Genesis and Revelation--and thus, properly
speaking, could not accurately be called "an evangelical Christian."]
"We
have agreed," he said, "that we'll be working hard the next few
months." [That's what Bush said during the 2004 presidential debates.
Yet he has already taken more vacation days as president than the
previous record holder for presidential slackerness, Ronald Wilson
Reagan.]
© 2008 The Associated Press
**************************************************************
Oh,
the merits of Lewis Carroll! What other poet could have so accurately
described the nonsense (otherwise known as bovine feces) that is the
Bush administration?
Court cites nonsense poem in ruling for Gitmo detainee From Bill Mears CNN
WASHINGTON
(CNN) -- A federal appeals court has slammed the reliability of U.S.
government intelligence documents, saying just because officials keep
repeating their assertions does not make them true.
A
three-judge panel from the U.S. Court of Appeals in Washington likened
the Bush administration's case to a line in an 1876 nonsense poem by
Lewis Carroll: "I have said it thrice: What I tell you three times is
true."
Portions of the court's findings were released a week
ago, including a ruling that a Chinese Muslim accused of being a
foreign fighter was wrongly imprisoned. The full ruling was released
Monday.
Hazaifa Parhat is being held by the U.S. military at the
Guantanamo Bay Navy base in Cuba. In its ruling, the court ordered that
Parhat be released or transferred, or that a hearing be held quickly to
determine whether he is being held properly.
The judges
criticized the government for offering unsubstantiated evidence, and
referred to Carroll's poem,"The Hunting of the Snark," in which the
line is uttered by a pompous character called the Bellman.
"The
government suggests that several of the assertions in the intelligence
documents are reliable because they are made in at least three
different documents," wrote Judge Merrick Garland. "We are not
persuaded. Lewis Carroll notwithstanding, the fact the government has
'said it thrice' does not make the allegation true. In fact we have no
basis for concluding that there are independent sources for the
documents' thrice-made assertions."
The court also ruled the
military improperly labeled Parhat as an "enemy combatant," marking the
first time a Guantanamo Bay detainee has been given an opportunity in a
civilian court to seek his release. The decision throws into serious
doubt the underlying reasons for keeping Parhat in custody for more
than six years.
The Carroll poem is similar to many of his other
works, nonsensical in nature, described by the author as an account of
"the impossible voyage of an improbable crew to find an inconceivable
creature." Carroll, who lived from 1832 to 1898, is best known for the
children's fantasy "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland."
The
ruling came 18 days after the Supreme Court concluded that the
approximately 270 men held at Guantanamo have a basic constitutional
right to challenge their detention in federal courts, another setback
for the Bush administration's anti-terror and war policies.
A
different panel from the federal appeals court in Washington concluded
last July that the U.S. military could not limit what information the
courts hear when foreign detainees are challenging their imprisonment.
The
government had argued national security concerns gave the military the
discretion to decide what documents were pertinent for judicial review.
Lawyers for the Justice Department also claimed the lower court
decision would "impose extraordinary compliance burdens."
About
180 detainees have appealed their continued imprisonment and complained
the government is unfairly restricting access to evidence that could
clear them of wrongdoing -- evidence the men may not even know exists.
Hearings
known as combatant status review tribunals determine whether a prisoner
can be designated an "enemy combatant," and prosecuted by the military.
Some legal and military analysts have likened them to civilian grand
jury proceedings.
Those who are designated as enemy combatants
have restricted ability to challenge tribunal procedures and findings
before the D.C. Circuit federal appeals court under a federal law
passed in 2006, the Detainee Treatment Act.
The legal issues
surrounding the foreign nationals held in U.S. custody have reached
greater urgency in recent months. Many of the men are in their seventh
year of detention, and several have already had pretrial hearings
before the military tribunal.
Parhat, a Muslim of ethnic Uighur
descent, is accused of attending a terror training camp in Afghanistan
at the time of the September 11, 2001, attacks. He denies the charge.
The
Supreme Court on three occasions since 2004 has limited the
government's power to detain and prosecute foreign nationals held at
Guantanamo. Federal judges in Washington have met with the prisoners'
lawyers in recent days, trying to coordinate an expected flood of
appeals in the wake of the high court's June 12 ruling. Those judges
are expected to meet privately among themselves, probably this week.
The
government has promised to comply with the justices' latest ruling, but
President Bush said he would still consider proposing further
legislation limiting the power of federal courts to oversee appeals
from enemy combatants.
The case is Parhat v. Gates (06-1397).
Find this article at: http://www.cnn.com/2008/POLITICS/06/30/court.poem/index.html?eref=rss_topstories
******************************************************
Man Auctions His Life for $380,000 Reuters Posted: 2008-06-30 13:17:45
SYDNEY
(June 29) - A man who put his life up for auction on eBay found it
wasn't worth quite as much as he thought when he settled for around
$100,000 less than his target price.
Ian Usher, 44, held the
seven-day auction of all his belongings, including his three-bedroom
home in the west Australian city of Perth and a trial for his job at a
rug store, after the break-up of his five-year marriage.
Bids
had reached as high as $2.2 million Australian dollars, only for Usher
to discover there had been a glitch on eBay's system which allowed the
participation of non-registered bidders who had put in bogus offers.
In
the end, the winning bidder agreed to pay $399,300 Australian dollars,
or $380,286 U.S., for all of Usher's worldly goods, which also include
his friends, a motorcycle and a jetski. According to the eBay website,
the mystery buyer, whose user name is "mslmcc," is in Australia and has
a 100 percent feedback score.
Usher, who gave regular updates on the auction on his Web site www.alife4sale.com, now plans to travel in search of a new life.
He's not the first person to put his life on the block.
American
John Freyer started All My Life For Sale (www.allmylifeforsale.com) in
2001 and sold everything he owned on eBay, later visiting the people
who bought his things.
Adam Burtle, a 20-year-old U.S.
university student, offered his soul for sale on eBay in 2001, with
bidding hitting $400 before eBay called it off, saying there had to be
something tangible to sell. Burtle later admitted he was a bored geek.
Copyright 2008 Reuters Limited.
2008-06-30 09:44:24
************************************************************************
This student would have received the zero that this answer deserved, had he/she been in MY class.
Student Gets Credit for Expletive on Exam AP Posted: 2008-06-30 14:33:25
LONDON
(June 30) - A British high school student received credit for writing
nothing but a two-word obscenity on an exam paper because the phrase
expressed meaning and was spelled correctly.
The Times newspaper
on Monday quoted examiner Peter Buckroyd as saying he gave the student
- who wrote an expletive starting with f, followed by the word "off" -
two points out of a possible 27 for the English paper.
"It would
be wicked to give it zero because it does show some very basic skills
we are looking for, like conveying some meaning and some spelling,"
Buckroyd was quoted as saying.
"It's better than someone that doesn't write anything at all."
Buckroyd said the student would have received a higher mark if the phrase had been punctuated.
Buckroyd
is a senior examiner for the Assessment and Qualifications Alliance,
one of several bodies that grade British high school exams.
He said the expletive was used in 2006 by a student in response to the question: "Describe the room you are sitting in."
The
alliance confirmed the newspaper's story was accurate, but said
Buckroyd's decision to award the student marks was not official policy.
"The
example cited was unique in the experience of the senior examiner
concerned and was used in a pre-training session to emphasize the
importance of adhering to the mark scheme: i.e. if a candidate makes
any sort of response to a question then it must be at least given
consideration to be awarded a mark," the company said in a statement.
It
said obscenities on exam papers "should either be disregarded, or
action will be taken against the candidate, depending on the
seriousness of the case."
Copyright 2008 The Associated Press.
2008-06-30 14:15:56
What do you think of the examiner's decision to give credit for the swear words? Thumbs down 69% Thumbs up 31% Total Votes: 2,949
Have you ever filled out a form or exam using expletives? No 91% Yes 9% Total Votes: 2,571
**************************************************************
Here's
the story of someone about whom I'd never heard before, but who seems
to have had a meaningful and significant life, impacting the world she
lived in.
Sister Joan Bland, 90; Professor Started Effort To Train Lay Pastors By Patricia Sullivan Washington Post Staff Writer Thursday, July 3, 2008; B07
Joan
Bland, a Catholic nun who was known worldwide for increasing the role
of laypersons in the Catholic Church, died of a massive stroke June 29
at St. Vincent Care Center in Emmitsburg, a day before her 91st
birthday.
A member of the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur, Sister
Joan founded the Education for Parish Service in 1978, a program
credited with training thousands of men and women in theological,
scriptural and pastoral education.
Inspired by Vatican II,
Sister Joan started EPS to provide motivated rank-and-file church
members with a grounding in the study of scripture, theology, church
history, spirituality and pastoral ministry. Those who pass the
college-level course of study receive a certificate.
" 'Lay
minister' was a term that was never used in the church before the
Second Vatican Council," said Margaret Wilson McCarty, the first lay
EPS president. "Now, a growing number of lay people are professionals
in the church, and these lay ecclesiastical ministers, who number more
than 30,000, owe their career to the likes of Sister Joan Bland."
Sister
Joan, a former history professor, department chairwoman and vice
president for development of what is now Trinity Washington University,
"had a presence and enthusiasm for life that was contagious," McCarty
said, and she inspired at least 15 of her female students in the late
1950s and early 1960s to earn doctoral degrees in history and related
disciplines.
She was "a true Trinity legend," Patricia McGuire,
the university president, said in a message to the school. In addition
to founding the parish service program, Sister Joan's "formidable
intellectual acumen" led her to edit books and contribute numerous
articles to the New Catholic Encyclopedia, the Catholic Historical
Review, Commonweal and other Catholic publications.
"I will miss
Sr. Joan's delightful presence around campus," McGuire wrote. "As I
came to know her in her later years, she was always generous with her
words of wisdom and insight, while unfailing in her ability to see the
best in all situations."
Sister Joan was born in Boulder, Colo.,
graduated from what was then Trinity College in 1938 and immediately
entered the Congregation of the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur in
Ilchester. She taught for seven years in Philadelphia's Catholic
schools and then joined the Trinity faculty.
She received a
master's degree in European history from Villanova University in 1945
and a doctorate in U.S. history from Catholic University in 1951.
As
chairwoman of the Trinity history department from 1951 to 1963, Sister
Joan expanded and modernized the curriculum, introducing a global
perspective to the courses.
She lived most of her adult life at
Trinity, except for six years when she was in Rome establishing an
association for religious sisters in scripture and theology and three
years when she worked on a project to finance the education of nuns.
She also served on multiple international commissions.
Among her
awards were the papal medal Pro Ecclesia et Pontifice in 1991, Catholic
University's Alumni Achievement Award in 1989 and the Empowerment Award
from the Associated Catholic Charities of the Washington Archdiocese in
1988.
She loved classical music, reading mysteries and swimming
at least three times a week, usually at the Trinity Center for Women
and Girls, where she thoroughly enjoyed the company of her Brookland
neighbors.
Sister Joan's survivors include a half sister.
**********************************************************
My father sent this to me from the New York Times:
The 11 Best Foods You Aren't Eating June 30, 2008, 8:50 am
Nutritionist
and author Jonny Bowden has created several lists of healthful foods
people should be eating but aren't. But some of his favorites, like
purslane, guava and goji berries, aren't always available at regular
grocery stores. I asked Dr. Bowden, author of "The 150 Healthiest Foods
on Earth," to update his list with some favorite foods that are easy to
find but don't always find their way into our shopping carts. Here's
his advice.
1. Beets: Think of beets as red spinach, Dr. Bowden
said, because they are a rich source of folate as well as natural red
pigments that may be cancer fighters. How to eat: Fresh, raw and grated to make a salad. Heating decreases the antioxidant power.
2. Cabbage: Loaded with nutrients like sulforaphane, a chemical said to boost cancer-fighting enzymes. How to eat: Asian-style slaw or as a crunchy topping on burgers and sandwiches.
3. Swiss chard: A leafy green vegetable packed with carotenoids that protect aging eyes. How to eat it: Chop and saute in olive oil.
4. Cinnamon: Helps control blood sugar and cholesterol. How to eat it: Sprinkle on coffee or oatmeal.
5. Pomegranate juice: Appears to lower blood pressure and loaded with antioxidants. How to eat: Just drink it.
6. Dried plums: Okay, so they are really prunes, but packed with cancer-fighting antioxidants. How to eat: Wrapped in prosciutto and baked.
7. Pumpkin seeds: The most nutritious part of the pumpkin and packed
with magnesium; high levels of the mineral are associated with lower
risk for early death. How to eat: Roasted as a snack, or sprinkled on salad.
8. Sardines: Dr. Bowden calls them "health food in a can.'' They are
high in omega-3's, contain virtually no mercury and are loaded with
calcium. They also contain iron, magnesium, phosphorus, potassium,
zinc, copper and manganese as well as a full complement of B vitamins. How to eat: Choose sardines packed in olive or sardine oil. Eat plain,
mixed with salad, on toast, or mashed with dijon mustard and onions as
a spread.
9. Turmeric: The "superstar of spices,'' it has anti-inflammatory and anti-cancer properties. How to eat: Mix with scrambled eggs or in any vegetable dish.
10. Frozen blueberries: Even though freezing can degrade some of the
nutrients in fruits and vegetables, frozen blueberries are available
year-round and don't spoil; associated with better memory in animal
studies. How to eat: Blended with yogurt or chocolate soy milk and sprinkled with crushed almonds.
11. Canned pumpkin: A low-calorie vegetable that is high in fiber and
immune-stimulating vitamin A; fills you up on very few calories. How to eat: Mix with a little butter, cinnamon and nutmeg.
You can find more details and recipes on the Men's Health Web site, which published the original version of the list last year.
In
my own house, I only have two of these items — pumpkin seeds, which I
often roast and put on salads, and frozen blueberries, which I mix with
milk, yogurt and other fruits for morning smoothies. How about you?
Have any of these foods found their way into your shopping cart?
http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/06/30/the-11-best-foods-you-arent-eating/?em&ex=1214971200&en=49df64e89ad8654e&ei=5070
********************************************************
Here's one on the "climate crisis." I don't personally care much for weeds, but I'm just a stubborn gardener. . . .
June 29, 2008 Can Weeds Help Solve the Climate Crisis? By TOM CHRISTOPHER
Lewis
Ziska, a lanky, sandy-haired weed ecologist with the Agriculture
Research Service of the U.S. Department of Agriculture, matches a dry
sense of humor with tired eyes. The humor is essential to Ziska's
exploration of what global climate change could do to mankind's
relationship with weeds; there are many days, he confesses, when his
goal becomes nothing more than not ending up in a fetal position
beneath his battleship gray, government-issue desk. Yet he speaks of
weeds with admiration as well as apprehension, and even with hope.
It
is easy to share the admiration and apprehension when you consider the
site that Ziska planted with weeds in downtown Baltimore in the spring
of 2002. Tucked in next to the city's inner harbor, the site is part of
a barren expanse of turf rolled out over a reclaimed industrial
landscape. This unfertile scrap seems an unlikely choice for growing
anything, but Ziska saw in it, ominously perhaps, a model of where the
global habitat as a whole is headed.
"Ingenuity," Ziska says,
"may be the mother of invention, but poverty is definitely the father."
For some time, he had wanted to create in a laboratory setting the
elevated temperatures and increased concentrations of atmospheric CO2
predicted for the mid-21st century by the Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change, the leading international scientific authority on the
subject. Carbon dioxide has received a lot of attention as a greenhouse
gas, a major cause of global warming. But it is also, along with water,
light and nutrients, one of the four essential resources for plant
growth. The effect that boosting this gas's concentration in the
atmosphere will have on plants is very poorly understood.
The
facilities for testing the effects of CO2 enrichment in Ziska's lab on
the U.S.D.A. research campus in Beltsville, Md., were limited. His best
option there was a growth chamber, essentially an airtight,
climate-controlled, artificially lighted aluminum box about as spacious
as a walk-in closet. Ziska had something more ambitious in mind, but
his budget, which has been cut repeatedly by an administration
seemingly intent on minimizing attention to global climate change (his
lab has been reduced to 3 researchers who study climate change and
agriculture, from 10 in 1999), wouldn't support the construction of
special facilities. Then it occurred to Ziska that the complaints made
by residents of nearby Baltimore about summer in their city — the
exhaust-laden air and the way in which buildings and pavement soak up
solar energy to create an abnormally warm "heat island" — could be put
to good use. When he checked, he found that in fact the temperatures in
Baltimore run 3 to 4 degrees Fahrenheit warmer on average than those of
the surrounding countryside, and the concentration of CO2 in the local
atmosphere (440 to 450 p.p.m., or parts per million by volume) is well
above the current global average. This, coincidentally, matched almost
exactly what the panel on climate change predicted for the planet as a
whole 30 to 50 years in the future in its "B2 scenario," a
middle-of-the-road projection that envisions continuing greenhouse gas
increases but also some success in abatement programs.
By
comparing three sites — an organic farm in western Maryland, a park in
a Baltimore suburb and the one by the inner harbor — Ziska planned to
study three circumstances: the present (on the organic farm), the
mid-century future as predicted by the climate-change panel (in
Baltimore) and something in between (the suburban site). He took soil
from the organic farm, which already contained seeds of 35 common
weeds, and with it created uniform beds at each of the sites, urban,
suburban and rural, so that the growing medium and weed population
would be the same throughout. What happened over the next five growing
seasons surprised even him.
Not only did the weeds grow much
larger in hotter, CO2-enriched plots — a weed called lambs-quarters, or
Chenopodium album, grew to an impressive 6 to 8 feet on the farm but to
a frightening 10 to 12 feet in the city — but the urban, futuristic
weeds also produced more pollen. Even more alarming was the way that
the increased heat and CO2 accelerated and perverted the succession of
species within the plots. Typically, a cleared area in the Eastern
United States, if left to itself, returns to native woodland. This
process varies with the site and circumstances, but in its archetypical
form fast-growing annual weeds cover the soil first, playing the role
of what ecologists classify as "pioneer plants." These gradually give
way to longer-lived perennial weeds, which are in turn replaced by
shrubs and trees.
In the natural version of this process, the
pioneers and their successors are species indigenous to the area, and
the woodland's restoration takes decades. But what Ziska observed in
his urban plots was ecology on amphetamines, a nearly completed
succession to trees by the end of five years, with a domination by
invasive weed trees of the most troublesome sort: ailanthus, Norway
maples and mulberries. Five years after the creation of the plots, the
biggest ailanthus in the rural test site measured about five feet tall.
The city site boasted a 20-footer. The suburban plot was following the
city's lead, though it lagged a couple of years behind.
As a
scientist, Ziska was excited by his experiment's striking outcome. As
someone who has spent his career battling weeds, though, he was
frightened by the implications. Weeds already cost U.S. farmers about
12 percent of their harvest, exacting an estimated annual loss of $33
billion. What would be the additional cost in the future, not only to
farmers but also to foresters, land managers and gardeners, of beating
back supercharged weeds? Still, even as he contemplated this, Ziska
says he couldn't repress a certain admiration. He traces his interest
in weeds to an epiphany during his undergraduate years at the
University of California at Riverside: noticing a weed springing up
through a crack in the Southern California pavement, he was suddenly
struck with wonder at any organism that could flourish in such a hot,
dry, hostile environment. That may become an essential talent, it
occurred to Ziska, given the way our planet is going.
Taking the
long view, it becomes apparent that the events in Ziska's plots were
just another twist in the more than 10,000 years of joint history, ours
and the weeds'. We have been intimately linked since Neolithic times,
for in a fundamental sense weeds are a human creation. "Weed" is a
subjective label applied as a matter of personal judgment, a point that
becomes obvious when you consider how many "noxious weeds" — plants now
marked for destruction by federal, state or county authorities — were
deliberately introduced into North America by individuals convinced of
their beauty or utility. The ailanthus tree, for example, currently
regarded as one of the most troublesome weeds of our urban habitats,
was brought from China to eastern North America in the 19th century for
use as a fast-growing shade tree and is said to have been introduced
into California by Chinese immigrants who valued its medicinal
properties.
There are countless definitions of weeds, ranging
from the hardheaded one necessarily observed by farmers, that a weed is
any plant that interferes with profit, to the aesthetic (a popular
gardener's definition of a weed is "a plant out of place"), to Ralph
Waldo Emerson's sanctimonious assertion that a weed is "a plant whose
virtues have not yet been discovered." But all agree on the central
criterion: to qualify as a weed, the plant in question must be viewed
with disfavor by humanity. Simply put, any plant, if we dislike it,
becomes an intruder in our landscape and so a weed.
Arguably,
then, there was no such thing as a weed until mankind developed the
need to discriminate, which came with the development of agriculture in
the Neolithic era, around 9,000 B.C. In fact, many of the wild grains
like red rice or wild oats that are among our most troublesome
agricultural weeds today were valued food sources until we graduated
from the hunter-gatherer stage of our existence.
Much has been
made of our scientific triumph in breeding modern crop plants from
those wild ancestors. The transformation of an east Asian wild grass
(red rice) into the crop that provides 20 percent of humanity's caloric
intake is extraordinary. What generally goes unrecognized, though,
except among weed scientists, is the extent to which we also made weeds
what they are.
Coexistence with mankind has given rise to the
sort of tough plants that flourish despite the worst we can do —
hoeing, pulling, burning and, more recently, spraying the fields with
herbicidal chemicals. Weeds have adapted to every means we used to
exterminate them, even turning the treatments to their own advantage.
Attacking a Canada thistle (actually of Eurasian origin and a regular
entry in "worst weeds of North America" lists) with hoe or plow, for
example, may destroy the plant's aboveground growth but leaves the soil
full of severed bits of fleshy root, each of which may sprout a new
plant.
A result of this history is that crops and weeds embody
diametrically opposed genetic strategies. Over the centuries, we have
deliberately bred the genetic diversity out of our crop plants.
Creating crop populations composed of clones or near clones was an
essential step in achieving higher yields and the sort of uniform
growth that makes large-scale, mechanized cultivation and harvesting
possible. Because weed populations live as opportunists, however, they
must include individuals with the ability to flourish in whatever type
of habitat we make available. They also need diversity to cope with the
wide range of punishments we inflict. A patch of Canada thistles, if it
is to survive when the farmer switches from hoeing to herbicides, must
include individuals that develop a resistance to the chemicals over
time. Weed populations that lacked the necessary genetic diversity
faded from our fields, lawns and waste places; historians of
agriculture can cite many such casualties.
The survivors are an
astonishingly plastic group of plants. James Bunce, a plant
physiologist with an office down the hall from Ziska's, has been
studying the effect on dandelions (that nemesis of the suburban
greenskeeper) of atmospheres artificially enriched with CO2. He found
in a series of trials that populations of the familiar weed evolve,
changing physically to take advantage of this sort of resource
enhancement, within the space of one growing season.
"When you
change a resource in the environment," Ziska said recently, sitting in
his compact office, "you are going to, in effect, favor the weed over
the crop. There is always going to be a weed poised genetically to
benefit from almost any change."
Ziska, together with Bunce, has
been testing the effects of changing CO2 concentrations on a range of
crop and weed species. Wending his way through a basement full of
pumps, filters and boxlike aluminum growth chambers, Ziska showed
himself to be a connoisseur of atmospheres. Peering at the instrument
panel outside one growth chamber, he noted a CO2 concentration of 310
p.p.m. "That's a 1957 atmosphere, the year of my birth," he said. What
he and his colleagues have found, he said, is that weeds benefit far
more than crop plants from the changes in CO2 and that the implications
of this for agriculture and public health are grave.
Tests with
common agricultural weeds like Canada thistle and quack grass found
them more resistant to herbicides when grown in higher concentrations
of CO2, making them harder to control. Ziska hypothesizes that this may
be a result of faster growth; the weeds mature more rapidly, leaving
behind more quickly the seedling stage during which they are most
vulnerable. This promises to be an expensive problem for farmers, who
will have to spend more on chemicals and other anti-weed measures to
protect their crops. (Herbicides already cost farmers more than $10
billion annually worldwide.)
But enhancing CO2 levels, Ziska has
found, not only augments the growth rate of many common weeds,
increasing their size and bulk; it also changes their chemical
composition. When he grew ragweed plants in an atmosphere with 600
p.p.m. of CO2 (the level projected for the end of this century in that
same climate-change panel "B2 scenario"), they produced twice as much
pollen as plants grown in an atmosphere with 370 p.p.m. (the ambient
level in the year 1998). This is bad news for allergy sufferers,
especially since the pollen harvested from the CO2-enriched chamber
proved far richer in the protein that causes the allergic reaction.
Poison ivy has also demonstrated not only more vigorous growth at
higher levels of CO2 but also a more virulent form of urushiol, the oil
in its tissue that provokes a rash.
According to Ziska, the
steady increase in atmospheric CO2 since the beginning of the
Industrial Revolution may have already had a major impact on the growth
of at least one supremely costly weed. Cheatgrass (Bromus tectorum), a
native of central Asia, is believed to have been introduced into the
United States accidentally, as seeds in soil used to ballast ships or
as a contaminant in agricultural seed, in the mid-1800s. Since then,
its ability to flourish in dry habitats and its prolific seed
production (a single plant can bear as many as 5,000 seeds) has helped
it to overrun 100 million acres of Western rangeland, an area larger
than the state of Wyoming. In doing so, cheatgrass has displaced more
nutritious native grasses, reducing the quantity of livestock a given
acreage can support. Cheatgrass has also diminished the land's value to
wildlife, which also finds the introduced plant unpalatable.
The
spread of cheatgrass has been widely attributed to the degradation of
native grasslands by overgrazing — cattle prefer and selectively eat
the native grasses — and more especially to its exceptional
combustibility. Periodic fires are an integral part of the rangeland
ecology, but when the rangeland is still dominated by native grasses,
fires occur in some areas at average intervals of every 60 to 110
years. In areas overrun by cheatgrass, however, fire sweeps through
every three to five years. While cheatgrass can tolerate such frequent
burns, the native flora cannot.
Cheatgrass's combustibility is
inherent in the plant's pattern of growth. Sprouting in the fall, it
resumes growth at winter's end to mature and set seed in early summer,
whereupon the plant dies, leaving a tuft of dry, highly flammable
leaves through the following dry season. Ziska and his colleagues
discovered, though, that the weed's flammability seems to have been
greatly augmented by the increases in atmospheric CO2 that occurred
during the period of cheatgrass's spread through the West.
The
scientists grew the plant at four concentrations of CO2: at 270 p.p.m.
(the ambient level at the beginning of the 19th century, before the
Industrial Revolution), at 320 p.p.m. (a 1960s level), 370 p.p.m. (a
1990s level) and 420 p.p.m. (the approximate level predicted for 2020
in all the climate-change panel's estimates). What they found was that
an increase of CO2 equivalent to that occurring from 1800 until today
raised the total mass of material (the biomass) each cheatgrass plant
produced by almost 70 percent. In addition, the composition of the
cheatgrass changed as the CO2 level increased, the tissues becoming
more carbon-rich so that the plant leaves and stems are less
susceptible to decay. In a natural setting, this would mean that the
dead material would persist longer, adding yet more fuel for wildfire.
More
fuel, with a longer life — Ziska says that the rise in greenhouse gases
we have already achieved may have played a decisive role in the spread
of a weed that has already transformed the ecology of the Western
United States. The situation seems likely to worsen too. The cheatgrass
that Ziska grew at the CO2 level equal to that projected for 2020
increased the plant's biomass by another 18 percent above current
levels. Global climate change, it seems, will further stoke the
rangeland wildfires.
"There's no such thing as natural
selection," Ziska confides. He is not, he hastens to explain, a
creationist. He is merely pointing out that the original 19th-century
view of evolution, the one presented by Charles Darwin and Alfred
Wallace, is obsolete. Their model presented evolution as a process
taking place in a nature independent of human interference. That is
almost never the situation today — even at sea, where less than 4
percent of the oceans remain unaffected by human activity, according to
a recent article in the journal Science. This interference with nature
has set the stage for the success of a growing category of weeds, one
exemplified by cheatgrass: invasive plant species.
These are
plants that evolved outside a local or regional ecosystem but were at
some point released into it, typically by human action. Some invasives,
like cheatgrass, arrived as hitchhikers and stowaways; others, like
kudzu, were introduced deliberately. (A Japanese species, kudzu was
planted by state and federal agencies to control soil erosion
throughout the Southern states in the 1930s and '40s.) In any case, the
invasive plant species share a quality of aggressive, explosive growth
in their new homes and the ability to outcompete the native vegetation
of forests, grasslands and wetlands — areas that we are accustomed to
think of as outside the sphere of human influence.
Popular
opinion has treated the invasive plants as botanical illegal aliens.
The Environmental Protection Agency has labeled them as the
second-greatest threat to the continent's biodiversity, exceeded in
their impact only by outright destruction of habitat. Major resources
have been devoted to the spraying and rooting-out of invasive plants in
the belief that their removal would enable an ecological revival.
Roughly $45 million, for example, is spent every year in the
unsuccessful attempt to stop the spread of a single European wetland
weed, purple loosestrife (Lythrum salicaria).
New research,
however, suggests that invasive species, at least in some instances,
aren't so much the causes of environmental degradation as
eco-opportunists taking advantage of disturbed habitats. Or, as the
biologist Andrew MacDougall of the University of Guelph, Ontario, puts
it, the invasives may behave more as "passengers" than as "drivers."
This is the conclusion he reached in a pair of studies, one of an oak
savanna in British Columbia and the other of degraded prairie in
southwestern Saskatchewan.
MacDougall had not intended to focus
on invasive plants when he began studying a Nature Conservancy Canada
property on Vancouver Island. An 86 acre remnant of oak-studded
grassland, this sanctuary exemplified a type of open savanna habitat
that was once common in the area but that was nearly eliminated by
agriculture and sprawl. MacDougall's original interest was in the
native flora; this Nature Conservancy sanctuary is a biodiversity hot
spot, hosting more than 100 species of plants and animals at risk in
British Columbia or nationally.
Despite this land's protected
status, MacDougall found that the native plant community was failing,
the rarities becoming rarer. The young ecologist blamed an invasion by
several foreign grasses for this decline. Initially, he supposed that
simply removing the foreigners would prompt a renaissance of the native
grasses and wildflowers.
The actual response was quite
different. For three years MacDougall removed the invasive grasses from
plots he outlined within the reserve. In some plots, he did this by
mowing or burning; in others, he removed the weeds entirely. Yet the
native flora didn't rebound significantly. In some cases, the decline
of the native plant species instead accelerated, and the fundamental
character of the flora within the plots began to change, with woody
plants encroaching on the formerly open, grassy areas.
MacDougall
concluded that rather than serving as drivers of change, the foreign
grasses were functioning more in the role of passengers, merely filling
in as the natives disappeared. In fact, the foreigners seemed to be
serving a stabilizing role. By blocking light from reaching the soil,
they inhibited the germination of tree and shrub seeds. Keeping the
brush at bay in this fashion preserved the open character of the
savanna habitat so that the remnants of the original savanna
wildflowers, grasses and wildlife could at least survive. In light of
these findings, MacDougall says, he came to believe that the primary
cause of the native flora's decline was human intervention. Before
European settlement, fire periodically cleansed the soil surface of
dead plant material. Suppression of fire since settlement had allowed a
thick layer of litter to accumulate, and the foreign grasses cope
better with this than do the natives.
The relevance of this
discovery to an era of global climate change has become apparent in
MacDougall's subsequent research in the Saskatchewan prairie. These
grasslands were infiltrated with crested wheatgrass, a species from the
Eurasian steppe. Again, the foreign grass was blamed as the driver in
the decline of the native flora. MacDougall, however, says he believes
the invader's success is largely derived from climatic change over the
last half-century. Weather records reveal that spring warmth in this
semiarid region is coming earlier than it used to, and the season's
rain is more consistent. The wheatgrass, which awakens from winter
dormancy earlier than the native grass species, has gained a
competitive advantage from this change.
MacDougall says he
believes that a North American grass species could be found that could
compete successfully in the altered climate and would also (unlike the
exotic) interact beneficially with native wildlife. He admits, though,
that replanting this prairie would be a big endeavor, that it would
require as much effort as the 19th-century pioneers gave to taming the
prairie habitat. Whether the will and resources exist for this seems
questionable, especially as habitat disturbance spreads around the
globe, creating many similar situations.
MacDougall says he is
hopeful that the climatic changes projected for this century won't
exceed the tolerance of most native plant species. He admits, though,
that the spread of the exotics suggests that they are more genetically
diverse and thus better able to cope with environmental change.
MacDougall clearly doesn't like the prospect, but he admits he can
imagine a future so generally disturbed that we may well be grateful
for what he calls the "positive services" — the aggressive adaptability
— of the botanical aliens.
It was a Tuesday in early January,
but the temperature in center city Philadelphia had reached 65 degrees,
and rosettes of dandelion leaves were starting to sprout flower buds in
the neat bed of mulch outside the Sheraton Society Hill hotel. Inside,
in a meeting room set up with chairs, screen and PowerPoint projector,
the membership of the Northeastern Weed Science Society was equally
disturbed. These are, by necessity, conservative people. A mixture of
university researchers, county agents and representatives of the
herbicide industry, the attendees had the look of farmers or foresters
temporarily off their land — clean-cut, tanned, tending toward the
wiry. Most looked distinctly uncomfortable in crisp sport jackets and
polyester blazers that, you suspected, had spent the 12 months since
the last annual meeting in a closet. If the members looked like
farmers, that was because it is farmers they serve, and they had
clearly absorbed the wary ethic of that profession in which sudden
change, whether of weather, markets or government policies, is almost
always for the worse.
The day's news surely confirmed that
prejudice. The second day of this year's annual meeting was devoted to
a symposium on weeds and global climate change, and the speakers were
outlining a future in which many of the members' current strategies
will be irrelevant or ineffective.
The keynote speaker, Cameron
Wake of the University of New Hampshire's Climate Change Research
Center, did little to put the audience at ease. Wake is a charismatic
man who has traveled the colder regions of the world — the Canadian
arctic, the Greenland ice sheet, Antarctica and the high mountains of
Central Asia. On these trips, he collects ice cores, whose analysis
enables him to reconstruct histories of past atmospheric and climatic
changes. His soul patch, pink shirt and pink tie made him a minority of
one in this room. He dealt firmly with an audience member who asserted
that the climatic warming is nothing new, that records from imperial
Rome indicate that citrus and other warm-weather crops were then far to
the north of their current ranges. Wake pointed out that local
archaeology can't change the global data set, which proves that the
level of CO2 in the atmosphere is at its highest point in more than
650,000 years and that the rate of increase is accelerating.
Subsequent
speakers got down to cases. Andrew McDonald, an agricultural scientist
at Cornell University, had used the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change's high projections for CO2 levels at the middle and end of the
century to create an atlas of potential weed migrations in cornfields
in the Eastern United States. If these projections prove accurate,
Kentucky, by the end of the next one to three decades, should have a
climate (and weed flora) resembling that of present-day North Carolina;
by century's end, it will have shifted to a regime more like that of
Louisiana. Delaware, over the same period, will be transformed to
something first like North Carolina and then Georgia, while
Pennsylvania will metamorphose into West Virginia and then North
Carolina. Florida will become something unprecedented in this country.
Field observations indicate that these transformations are already
under way: another speaker pointed out that kudzu, "the weed that ate
the South," has already migrated up to central Illinois and by 2015
could be extending its tendrils into Michigan's Upper Peninsula.
Even
more sobering were the figures that the biologist Brent Helliker of the
University of Pennsylvania flashed on the screen. First, he used maps
taken from an ecology textbook to show the way the last ice age drove
various forest types southward. Then came a map Helliker created,
suggesting that the current warming seems most likely to change the
ranges to which forest trees are adapted — the areas where the black
spruce, for example, grows now, are likely to become better suited to
broadleaf trees. He asked the question that was on the lips of every
one of his listeners: Can the forest adapt so drastically in a space of
just decades? Helliker announced that he had no answer to that
question, and his talk was over.
During a break between talks,
Lewis Ziska was surprisingly upbeat. With the challenges, he insisted,
come opportunities. Kudzu, for instance: Ziska has been seeking
financing to study its potential as a source of biofuel. Kudzu roots,
as much as 50 percent starch by weight, seem ideal for ethanol
production, while the plant's supercharged vines, which can grow a foot
a day, would be an abundant source of alternative energy. This would be
win-win: we develop an alternative to fossil fuels and, at the same
time, create a financial incentive to root out a particularly
troublesome weed.
Developing techniques for managing weeds in a
time of global climate change will be essential to the world's
agricultural future, and the U.S.D.A. researchers, though they have
been starved of essential financing, lead the world in this field.
(There is one exception, Ziska admits; his Web searches have revealed
that marijuana growers have an amazingly detailed knowledge of how CO2
enrichment affects their crop. But as Ziska points out, they don't
publish in scientific journals.) Possession of this expertise could be
a great economic asset to the United States, both for the protection it
could provide to our own harvests and as an intellectual export that is
sure to be much in demand in other countries.
Ziska says that he
worries about mankind's ability to feed itself in a fast-changing
future. Paradoxically, it is weeds, he says, that can provide
solutions. They have helped us deal with lesser crises in the past.
When diseases and pests overwhelmed our domesticated food crops, it was
to their wild relatives — plants that mankind has been battling for
millennia — that plant breeders turned. Because weeds have more diverse
genomes, it is easier to find one with the proper genetic resistance to
a given threat — and then to create a new hybrid by breeding it with
existing crops. An answer to the Irish potato blight of 1845-6 was
eventually found among the potato's wild and weedy relatives; a wild
oat found in Israel in the 1960s helped spawn a more robust,
disease-resistant strain of domesticated oats.
Weedy ancestors
of our food crops, Ziska predicts, will cope far better with coming
climatic changes than their domesticated descendants. Coping, after
all, is what weeds have always done best. As last year's climate-
change panel report, Climate Change 2007, made clear, we have already
set in motion far-reaching and unstoppable changes in regional
temperatures and precipitation and in the composition of our
atmosphere. No matter what actions we take, these changes will continue
for decades. If we are to avoid disaster, experts agree, we will need
to be tenacious but flexible, ready to identify and exploit any
opportunity in what will be a challenging, even hostile situation. In
this new world that we have made, weeds, our old adversaries, could be
not only tools but mentors. At which point, if Ralph Waldo Emerson is
to be believed, weeds by definition will cease to exist.
Tom Christopher writes frequently about horticultural and environmental topics.
*********************************************************
The
reason I'm ignoring the Beijing Olympics this summer is that I oppose
the illegal occupation of Tibet, a sovereign nation, by the
imperialistic armies and bureaucracy of China. Here's the latest news,
as the Dalai Lama--who remains the rightful head of state of the nation
of Tibet--sent representatives to Beijing to seek to help the situation
faced by many Tibetans (who are being neutralized and culturally
sabotaged in their own homeland).
Dalai Lama's Envoys in Beijing for Tibet Talks By Jill Drew Washington Post Foreign Service Tuesday, July 1, 2008; A07
BEIJING,
June 30 -- Envoys of the Dalai Lama arrived in Beijing on Monday to
open a new round of formal talks with Chinese officials on easing
tensions over Tibet.
No agenda was released for the talks, set
for Tuesday and Wednesday. Indications are that the delegations will
focus on reestablishing calm and improving conditions for Tibetans
across the Himalayan plateau before the Aug. 8 start of the Summer
Olympics in Beijing.
"The Dalai Lama has instructed the envoys
to make every effort to bring about tangible progress to alleviate the
difficult situation for Tibetans in their homeland," said a statement
issued by his government-in-exile in Dharmsala, India.
China has
come under harsh international criticism for its crackdown after the
March 14 rioting in the Tibetan capital, Lhasa. Authorities arrested
thousands and sealed off large portions of several western provinces
where the population is largely ethnic Tibetan. Exile groups say there
have been at least 125 protests since March against Chinese rule, the most significant unrest in nearly 20 years.
Although
Chinese officials continue to publicly vilify the Dalai Lama -- on
Sunday, the state-run New China News Agency published a commentary that
called him a "flunky" -- a spokesman for the Dalai Lama said he was
heartened by reports that China has released about 1,000 Tibetans
arrested after the protests. He said he was also encouraged by
President Hu Jintao's recent comments that he was serious about the
Tibetan dialogue.
It is unclear how many Tibetans remain in
Chinese custody, but exile groups say thousands remain unaccounted for
in a climate of fear.
This will be the seventh round of talks
since formal discussions began in 2002 between China and the Dalai
Lama, the spiritual leader who fled Tibet in 1959 after an unsuccessful
armed uprising against Chinese Communist rule. Previous rounds ended
with little progress on bedrock issues such as what constitutes
autonomy for people in a "Greater Tibet" and under what conditions the
Dalai Lama could return.
Although the Chinese label him a
"splittist," the Dalai Lama has said repeatedly that he does not seek
Tibet's independence from China. That position was underscored in the
statement released by his office that referred to "the interest of
stability, unity and harmony of all nationalities in the People's
Republic of China."
The United States and the European Union
issued a statement June 10 insisting that the dialogue be "substantive,
constructive and results-oriented," not window dressing to ease
criticism before the Olympics.
Secretary of State Condoleezza
Rice, after meeting Sunday with Chinese Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi,
said the United States continues to be concerned about Tibet and
encourages the dialogue.
Yang, however, continued to use harsh
language. "The Dalai's side should stop his activities designed at
splitting China, and the Dalai side should stop masterminding and
plotting violence and should stop disruptive activities against the
Beijing Olympic Games," he said.
As the Games approach, China is
eager to project that things are calm in Tibet. Authorities last week
reopened Tibet to foreign tour groups, and the Chinese media have
published several stories reporting that Lhasa and other Tibetan areas
have returned to normal.
| | |
| Prepare Rocketships for Departure. . . .I guess we can all start planning our ventures into outer space to save
humanity, right? I mean, with all that we really don't know about the
cosmos, should all of humanity have any real confidence in the
scientists' assurances that this experiment is safe? Then again, maybe
we'll end up with a new tourist attraction in Europe: "The Black Hole
That Once Was France." It might even be an improvement.
Then
again, if we all are sucked into a brand new black hole, we won't have
to worry about the possibility that John McCain could be our next
President.
By the way, about twenty years ago, they were
building one of these monstrosities--only a bigger loop
superconductor--near Waxahachie, Texas, south of the Dallas-Ft Worth
metropolis. I'm not sure of the reasons, but they stopped building it
partway through the project. If even Texans don't want this thing in
their backyard (or frontyard, for that matter), shouldn't that give us
a big hint???
Anyway, here is the article which provoked these
reflections. (For those of you who were worried, my silence has not
been a government conspiracy; I have not been renditioned. I have
merely been spending a week in the presence of my niece and nephew, the
two most wonderful persons on the planet. And I've also been longing
for the end of this Supreme Court session, so we don't have any more
threats to our Constitution or our lives being initiated by the
pseudoconservative activist judges on that out-of-control court.)
Critics Fear Collider Could Doom Earth By DOUGLAS BIRCH, AP Posted: 2008-06-29 23:04:48
MEYRIN, Switzerland (June 29) - The most powerful atom-smasher ever
built could make some bizarre discoveries, such as invisible matter or
extra dimensions in space, after it is switched on in August.
But
some critics fear the Large Hadron Collider could exceed physicists'
wildest conjectures: Will it spawn a black hole that could swallow
Earth? Or spit out particles that could turn the planet into a hot dead
clump?
Ridiculous, say scientists at
the European Organization for Nuclear Research, known by its French
initials CERN - some of whom have been working for a generation on the
$5.8 billion collider, or LHC.
"Obviously, the world will not end when the LHC switches on," said project leader Lyn Evans.
David
Francis, a physicist on the collider's huge ATLAS particle detector,
smiled when asked whether he worried about black holes and hypothetical
killer particles known as strangelets.
"If I thought that this was going to happen, I would be well away from here," he said.
The
collider basically consists of a ring of supercooled magnets 17 miles
in circumference attached to huge barrel-shaped detectors. The ring,
which straddles the French and Swiss border, is buried 330 feet
underground.
The machine, which has been called the largest
scientific experiment in history, isn't expected to begin test runs
until August, and ramping up to full power could take months. But once
it is working, it is expected to produce some startling findings.
Scientists
plan to hunt for signs of the invisible "dark matter" and "dark energy"
that make up more than 96 percent of the universe, and hope to glimpse
the elusive Higgs boson, a so-far undiscovered particle thought to give
matter its mass.
The collider could find evidence of extra
dimensions, a boon for superstring theory, which holds that quarks, the
particles that make up atoms, are infinitesimal vibrating strings.
The
theory could resolve many of physics' unanswered questions, but
requires about 10 dimensions - far more than the three spatial
dimensions our senses experience.
The safety of the collider,
which will generate energies seven times higher than its most powerful
rival, at Fermilab near Chicago, has been debated for years. The
physicist Martin Rees has estimated the chance of an accelerator
producing a global catastrophe at one in 50 million - long odds, to be
sure, but about the same as winning some lotteries.
By contrast,
a CERN team this month issued a report concluding that there is "no
conceivable danger" of a cataclysmic event. The report essentially
confirmed the findings of a 2003 CERN safety report, and a panel of
five prominent scientists not affiliated with CERN, including one Nobel
laureate, endorsed its conclusions.
Critics of the LHC filed a
lawsuit in a Hawaiian court in March seeking to block its startup,
alleging that there was "a significant risk that ... operation of the
Collider may have unintended consequences which could ultimately result
in the destruction of our planet."
One of the plaintiffs, Walter
L. Wagner, a physicist and lawyer, said Wednesday CERN's safety report,
released June 20, "has several major flaws," and his views on the risks
of using the particle accelerator had not changed.
On Tuesday,
U.S. Justice Department lawyers representing the Department of Energy
and the National Science Foundation filed a motion to dismiss the case.
The
two agencies have contributed $531 million to building the collider,
and the NSF has agreed to pay $87 million of its annual operating
costs. Hundreds of American scientists will participate in the research.
The
lawyers called the plaintiffs' allegations "extraordinarily
speculative," and said "there is no basis for any conceivable threat"
from black holes or other objects the LHC might produce. A hearing on
the motion is expected in late July or August.
In rebutting
doomsday scenarios, CERN scientists point out that cosmic rays have
been bombarding the earth, and triggering collisions similar to those
planned for the collider, since the solar system formed 4.5 billion
years ago.
And so far, Earth has survived.
"The LHC is
only going to reproduce what nature does every second, what it has been
doing for billions of years," said John Ellis, a British theoretical
physicist at CERN.
Critics like Wagner have said the collisions caused by accelerators could be more hazardous than those of cosmic rays.
Both
may produce micro black holes, subatomic versions of cosmic black holes
- collapsed stars whose gravity fields are so powerful that they can
suck in planets and other stars.
But micro black holes produced
by cosmic ray collisions would likely be traveling so fast they would
pass harmlessly through the earth.
Micro black holes produced by
a collider, the skeptics theorize, would move more slowly and might be
trapped inside the earth's gravitational field - and eventually
threaten the planet.
Ellis said doomsayers assume that the
collider will create micro black holes in the first place, which he
called unlikely. And even if they appeared, he said, they would
instantly evaporate, as predicted by the British physicist Stephen
Hawking.
As for strangelets, CERN scientists point out that they
have never been proven to exist. They said that even if these particles
formed inside the Collider they would quickly break down.
When
the LHC is finally at full power, two beams of protons will race around
the huge ring 11,000 times a second in opposite directions. They will
travel in two tubes about the width of fire hoses, speeding through a
vacuum that is colder and emptier than outer space.
Their
trajectory will be curved by supercooled magnets - to guide the beams
around the rings and prevent the packets of protons from cutting
through the surrounding magnets like a blowtorch.
The paths of
these beams will cross, and a few of the protons in them will collide,
at a series of cylindrical detectors along the ring. The two largest
detectors are essentially huge digital cameras, each weighing thousands
of tons, capable of taking millions of snapshots a second.
Each
year the detectors will generate 15 petabytes of data, the equivalent
of a stack of CDs 12 miles tall. The data will require a high speed
global network of computers for analysis.
Wagner and others
filed a lawsuit to halt operation of the Relativistic Heavy Ion
Collider, or RHIC, at the Brookhaven National Laboratory in New York
state in 1999. The courts dismissed the suit.
The leafy campus
of CERN, a short drive from the shores of Lake Geneva, hardly seems
like ground zero for doomsday. And locals don't seem overly concerned.
Thousands attended an open house here this spring.
"There is a
huge army of scientists who know what they are talking about and are
sleeping quite soundly as far as concerns the LHC," said project leader
Evans.
Copyright 2008 The Associated Press.
2008-06-28 16:56:55 | | |
|