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I've signed up as a scientist. Have you? "It’s a 'nationwide initiative,' a collaboration between government and more than 200 public- and-private sector organizations that aims to connect students in grades 6-12 with project-based learning experiences." Wish I could help out this teacher: "One ambitious project looking for a scientist in the classroom is based in Coeur D Alene, Idaho. The description reads: 'I would like to build a working model of a river watershed in my classroom.'"
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A good round-up of current 3d mapping technology. Everyone jump on the 3D, high-level-of-detail bandwagon now when you wouldn't a year ago!
Monthly Archives: November 2009
Commence The Hostilidays
It’s that time of year again. You have Black Friday. We NOLA Bloggers have the Hostilidays, a.k.a. the annual bad holiday video war.
Loki, sometimes I seriously doubt your commitment to Sparkle Motion the Hostilidays: a Cthulhu Christmas video? Don’t you know real chicks love the tentacles? As a registered HinJew, however, I dig Liprap going all farkakte on us! Oy!
Until the Suspect D emerges, I guess it’s up to me to bring the weirdness. Dear bishes, it is ON!
Aftermath
Unspoken is that D’s mother passed away four years ago today. I love and miss her more each passing season. Our guests have left, the house is a mess and I have yet to pack tonight to leave tomorrow, conference-bound as usual. I feel like the turkey carcass looks – devastated and unable to enjoy all this tryptophan in me.
On the bright side, while American football “pundits” treat high-ranking quarterback Aaron Rodgers like he doesn’t exist, Donald Driver, Charles Woodson and he played their hearts out to beat the Detroit Lions. Also, Dennis and Else gave me the brightest smiles while volunteering as bell ringers in the cold outside the grocery store last night. Smiles that light a small fire in my heart.
There are irreplaceable people, smiles, words, deeds that stay with you always. This permanence cuts both ways.
Forget Thanks. Just Give.
Folse writes the long, reflective, annual post about selective culture straddling and syncretism in modern-day America so I don’t have to.
My wife takes the whole thing a bit more seriously, will brook no discussion of the Pilgrims as an American proto-Taliban and insist someone Say Grace. It will likely fall to me, who has no use for modern Christianity in any flavor and who is hosting an old friend who is a devout Pagan, to come up with some suitable words.
… Reading the paper lately makes the entire idea of thankful a bit challenging until I remember those ne’er-do-well Protestants – sitting in their little stockade, in a place as alien as any distant planet, starving their way into winter – managed to have themselves a good time, after their fashion. Still, the challenges of living in New Orleans gives me pause when I stop to rehearse my thankful list.
So, too, this post was poised to turn into paragraphs and eye rolls about the cultural shades of grey in which the only carnivore in her orthodox-vegetarian-Hindu family prepares to host The Third Annual Real Turkey, Bacon Stuffing, Made-From-Scratch Cranberry Relish, Red Wine and Honest-To-Goodness Pumpkin Pie ExtravaganzaTM to which are invited Catholic, Protestant and irreligious friends from Wisconsin who had might as well be family. How I am very much Hindu but will invite a friend’s mother to Say Grace in my home because it only feels right. How thankful I am to have many families, not just the ones I was born and married into – in Ohio, Wisconsin, New Orleans, India – who treat me as a sister, a daughter. How simultaneously lonely and embraced I feel to be this cultural pivot: a product of millenia of pure-breeding (more or less) who has no hold on one, traditional identity but is a walking troupe of the conventions, languages, thoughts, values and pathologies of encountered people and places. How I ponder whether it is normal (or, at least, not cause to internally strain) to have these parallel, compartmentalized lives that seldom overlap due to the constraints of space, time and culture.

Oh, don’t you worry, I’ve subjected you to weeks of a witty statement relating to these sentiments. It’s the banner above, which none of you took a stab at. *pouts* In front of a globe (because I’m a geo-nerd) positioned to show Europe in the east and America in the west, a lone Indian eats turkey with a bunch of white folks. Think about it, for if I have to explain further, we’re both in trouble. Behind the globe, a large, glowing Space Turkey comes in to dock (because I’m a sci-fi nerd as well). In the upcoming battle, will we eat the turkey? Or will the turkey eat us?
Still, like Folse, the challenges of living in this nation give me pause. As my big, fat turkey brines and prepares to enter a warm oven, there are more and more Americans, especially in the South but even in this Yankee state of Ohio, who have nothing to eat. From The Philadelphia Inquirer:
49 million people – 17 million of them children – last year [were] unable to consistently get enough food to eat, according to a report released … by the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
… Of those 49 million, 12 million adults and 5.2 million children reported experiencing the country’s most severe hunger, possibly going days without eating. Among the children, nearly half a million in the developmentally critical years under age 6 were going hungry. That’s three times the number in 2006.
If that isn’t enough, as we look forward to sink into our sofas, loosen our belts and watch that Thursday football game, our president is ordering more young Americans into a bloody imperial war zone. How do you think those women and men and their families feel? It seems we as a nation can’t afford much, but we can still give and give love, support, our humanity.
After you’re done with tomorrow’s meal, especially when feeling the inevitable guilt of having eaten so much, attack your closet, pantry and storage. Pull out all of the clothes, coats and shoes you’ve never worn or will never wear again and those cans of soup and vegetables you keep promising you’ll eat. Take them down to the closest shelter or food bank. When you shop on Friday or this weekend, please drop cash in the Salvation Army buckets whenever possible and buy a toy or a book for your local Toys For Tots Christmas program. Please write a check to that person in your neighborhood or workplace who is collecting non-perishable food and supplies for our soldiers. Tomorrow is also the first anniversary of the horrific attacks on Mumbai. Many in India can use our help, too.
If you can read this, anywhere on this globe, you obviously have internet access: do a search for any local, trustworthy charity and give. Be it through your place of worship, bank or library, give. Give whenever you can, how ever much you can, but please just give. Where we want, they need. Where we are doing badly, they are doing worse. Give.
After you’ve given, volunteer. Teach.
I give thanks to Rama, Lakshma, Jesus, Allah, Odin, Ashe, the almighty FSM, any and every guiding spirit that my husband and I can put hearty and spicy food on our plates, have good friends who will eat it and can give. If this is where my travels and experiences have brought me, if this is my disparate, diverse, “confused” identity, so be it. I can’t ask for more.
Currying Favor*
The Hindustan Times reports on the White House State Dinner for Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh. Sounds like a bad mishmash of my wedding and Project Runway: “[It] has turned into the most sought after ticket in the US capital, but with officials keeping mum on the guest list, it’s not known who is in and who is out.”
Obama Foodorama presents the austere yet yummy-sounding menu. So glad the chef isn’t attempting soft poached squash ki sabji or heirloom arugula ka halwa. I’d hate to have to kick someone. Update: Rumor circulating that “chocolate-dipped fruit” is instead chocolate-dipped jalebi. Not sure about this.
* Title stolen from Sepia Mutiny who a) stole the title themselves from the oh-so-original media and b) have all the goods on this latest episode of Obama India Bhai Bhai.
links for 2009-11-24
“As for your doctrines I am prepared to go to the Stake if requisite … I trust you will not allow yourself to be in any way disgusted or annoyed by the considerable abuse & misrepresentation which unless I greatly mistake is in store for you … And as to the curs which will bark and yelp – you must recollect that some of your friends at any rate are endowed with an amount of combativeness which (though you have often & justly rebuked it) may stand you in good stead – I am sharpening up my claws and beak in readiness.”
–Thomas Henry Huxley (in a letter to Darwin a few days after The Origin of Species dropped)
In honor of the sesquicentennial of the publication of Charles Darwin’s On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life, here are my favorite science links of the day.
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“Today’s the day. It was exactly 150 years ago that Darwin’s Origin of Species was published. Here are a few websites that are recognizing the anniversary.”
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“Smart enough to hack, not sophisticated enough to appreciate the daily give-and-take of how science works – is that how we nonscientists are going to approach critical issues? Maybe we can do better than that.”
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Was it the tip jar? (I’m horrible, yeah.)
How CSI Works
Universities Add Their Own Search of Google Books
From the Chronicle of Higher Education:
Colleges working with Google on the company’s effort to scan millions of library books today unveiled their own search tool to comb the full text of some 500,000 volumes … The killer app: HathiTrust’s search lists every page that contains a user’s search term, while Google’s might return a partial list.
Katrina Negligence Ruling Could Cost Feds
Woke up today to this bit of news. HammHawk is right. This could be big.
[U.S. District Judge Stanwood] Duval sided with six residents and one business who argued the Army Corps’ shoddy oversight of the Mississippi River-Gulf Outlet led to the flooding of New Orleans’ Lower 9th Ward and neighboring St. Bernard Parish. He said, however, the corps couldn’t be held liable for the flooding of eastern New Orleans, where two of the plaintiffs lived.
Cliff has more.
The Art of Tim Burton
Oooh, one for the Chrismanukah/Festivus wish list!

The Art of Tim Burton, a 434-page tome packed with more than 1,000 drawings, doodles, paintings and evocative concept art dating back to Burton’s teen years in Burbank, California … The book also includes commentary from Johnny Depp, Helena Bonham Carter and other actors who have helped bring Burton’s bizarre visions to life on the screen.
Is it now a requirement that anything remotely avant garde or crazy include commentary by Johnny Depp? Not complaining, he is the Sexiest Man Alive (Again), which has (I hope) to do with the fact that the man has a brain as well as good looks. But, when does one cross that line between cool and overexposed?
Anyhow, feel free to buy me the book, okay?



