Trivia Questions

June 20, 2006

Some random questions that I found in another forum…

1. Name the one sport in which neither the spectators nor the participants know the score or the leader until the contest ends.

2. What famous North American landmark is constantly moving backward?

3. Of all vegetables, only two can live to produce on their own for several growing seasons. All other vegetables must be replanted every year. What are the only two perennial vegetables?

4. What fruit has its seeds on the outside?

5. In many liquor stores, you can buy pear brandy, with a real pear inside the bottle. The pear is whole and ripe, and the bottle is genuine; it hasn’t been cut in any way. How did the pear get inside the bottle?

6. Only three words in standard English begin with the letters “dw” and they are all common words. Name two of them.

7. There are 14 punctuation marks in English grammar. Can you name at least half of them?

8. Name the only vegetable or fruit that is never sold frozen, canned, processed, cooked, or in any other form except fresh.

9. Name 6 or more things that you can wear on your feet beginning with the letter “S.”

Answers are below: (more…)

Make a Difference in Science Education

June 19, 2006

Scienceblogs.com has launched a fundraising challenge via DonorsChoose, “a nonprofit website that raises funds for public school teachers to spend on classroom projects.” Nineteen of the science bloggers have sorted out their favorite science-related proposals from teachers around the country. SEED media group has promised to match readers’ contributions to the DonorsChoose drive up to $10,000–potentially giving your donation even more leverage.

Check it out

Scandal at WHO: Bowing to US Threats

June 17, 2006

Since I haven’t seen this reported in MSM, thought I would pass along this news from CPTech’s IP-health listserv (from AsiaTimes):

It seems that director general Lee Jong-wook (who died suddenly last month of a cerebral hemorrhage) bowed to US pressure this past March by removing William Addis from his post as WHO’s country representative to Thailand, because he had written editorials highlighting the damaging consequences of Thailand signing an FTA with the US.

Aldis had made the mistake of penning a critical opinion piece in the Bangkok Post newspaper in February that argued in consonance with WHO positions that Thailand should carefully consider before surrendering its sovereign right to produce or import generic life- saving medicines as allowed by the World Trade Organization (WTO) in exchange for a bilateral free-trade agreement (FTA) with the United States, which is currently under negotiation.

Notice that it was “in consonance with WHO positions”– apparently when the US is concerned, it’s dangerous to publicly espouse the official opinions of your own institution!

This comes after a previous scandal, in which an early draft of WHO’s special report on intellectual property rights and public health was apparently leaked to pharmaceutical industry reps for vetting (“[I]n autumn 2005, comments from a pharmaceutical industry representative appeared in the text of a portion of the draft report. . . . In an electronic version of draft report text, the tracking record revealed that comments were made directly into the text by Eric Noehrenberg, a lobbyist with the International Federation of Pharmaceutical Manufacturers and Associations in Geneva.”).

More on the Aldis removal:

The WHO official also wrote that the stricter intellectual-property protection measures in the proposed US-Thai FTA would inevitably lead to higher drug prices and thereby jeopardize the lives of “hundreds of thousands” of Thai citizens who now depend on access to locally produced cheap medicines to survive. He noted too that the Thai government’s current production of generic treatments had allowed the country to reduce AIDS-related deaths by a whopping 79%.

(more…)

DNA Reuniting War-Torn Families

June 15, 2006

The California Justice Department and the University of California, Berkeley, Human Rights Center have created a DNA database to reunite families torn apart by El Salvador’s civil war:

DNA Data May Reunite War-Torn Families

Hundreds of children disappeared in El Salvador during the country’s 1980-92 civil war, some stolen, some voluntarily put up for adoption.

…It is not the first time DNA has been used to reunite families separated by war. It has been done in North and South Korea and in Guatemala.

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The Soul of Money

June 13, 2006

Right now I’m reading a book– the Soul of Money, by Lynne Twist– that should be required reading for law students. Out of almost any profession, law is arguably the one that has the most potential for provoking and amplifying unhealthy relationships with money. This is largely, but not merely, a result of enormous debt (national average, $80k; personally I’ll have rather more than that, a concept I’ve had to wrestle a lot with this year), coupled with the carrot of large salaries. It is also a by-product of the sense of scarcity built into the law school system (as well as the big law hiring system it feeds into) at every turn, from the strict curve to the limited slots for law review. It is easy to forget that this scarcity is an artificial construct, not a faithful microcosmic representation of “how the world works.” I think that such an intense emphasis on scarcity must itself, even apart from students’ actual financial constraints/prospects, tend to engender significant changes in law students’ relationships with money.

(On that note: it has been nice to follow 1L year with an internship this summer in a very different environement. My time out here so far has served as a pleasant reminder of how satisfying it is to take on cooperative projects. It’s also nice to be doing something that is not being taken on by several hundred others, and yet which produces something of meaningful value to the world precisely because there are not hundreds others redundantly tackling the same parameters– but more on my summer in a later post).

Anyway. By way of introduction, Lynne Twist is a renowned guru in the field of fund-raising for philanthropic causes. The Soul of Money aims to prompt people to reexamine the emotional and spiritual role that money plays in their lives.

An excerpt:

“[The] mind-set of scarcity . . . lives at the very heart of our jealousies, our greed, our prejudice, and our arguments with life, and it is deeply embedded in our relationship with money. In the mind-set of scarcity, our relationship with money is an expression of fear; a fear that drives us into an endless and unfulfilling chase for more, or into compromises that promise a way out of the chase or discomfort around money. In the chase or in the compromises we break from our wholeness and natural integrity. . . . We find ourselves trapped in a cycle of disconnection and dissatisfaction.”


She then addresses the the idea “that scarcity is the true, natural and inevitable basis for our relationship with money and resources.” In rebuttal, she cites author Bernard Lietaer, former senior officer of the Belgian Central Bank and a chief architect behind the Euro currency:

“[Lietaer] says that greed and fear of scarcity are programmed; they do not exist in nature, not even in human nature. They are built into the money system in which we swim, and we’ve been swimming in it so long that these shadows have become almost completely transparent to us. We have learned to consider them normal and legitimate behavior. He concludes that Adam Smith’s system of economics could more accurately be described as the allocation of scarce resources through the process of individual greed. The whole process of Smith’s ‘modern’ economics actually has its roots in primitive fears of scarcity, greed, and the implementation tool — the process by which this became real — was money.”

Twist maintains that scarcity is a lie, a product of psychology in reaction to a particular system:

“It would be logical to assume that people with excess wealth do not live with the fear of scarcity at the center of their lives, but I have seen that scarcity is as oppressive in those lives as it is for people who are living at the margins and barely making ends meet. It is so illogical that people who have tremendous excess would be thinking they don’t have enough, that as I encountered this time and again, I began to question the source of their concerns. Nothing in their actual circumstances justified it. I began to wonder if this anxiety over having enough was based on a set of assumptions, rather than circumstances. The more I examined these ideas and the more I interacted with individuals in a broad range of circumstances and a broad range of cultures and ethics, the more I saw that the fundamental assumptsion of scarcity was all-pervasive. The myths and the language of scarcity were the dominant voice in nearly every culture, often overriding logic and evidence, and the mind-set of scarcity created distorted, even irrational, attitudes and behaviors, especially around money.”

No Conquering, Per Se

June 4, 2006

Speaking of Genghis Khan, if Douglas Adams were still alive he would no doubt be tickled by the news that a DNA search for a modern descendant of Genghis Khan “from outside the Mongolian warlord’s ancient empire” has turned up… an accountant.

Well, accounting professor to be exact. With, as the article points out, a receding hairline.

The professor was quoted as saying, “I think I do have a certain number of administrative skills,” but “I haven’t done any conquering, per se.”

Curiously, the article notes that “No one has tested Genghis’ actual DNA because his tomb has never been found.” So it’s not clear what they’re basing the comparison off of. His sons? Common markers in the regions he ruled? The article doesn’t spell it out.

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