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Author: admin

More icony goodness

Posted on May 6, 2005 By admin 3 Comments on More icony goodness

it's friday 5PM and I'm going home :D

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Hmmmmm, muffins!

Posted on May 6, 2005 By admin

I've just discovered that the muffins in the cafeteria are allergy-friendly certified nut free.

This makes me happy.

You can even send me muffins by mail.

Come on, you know you want to

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Why am I not surprised

Posted on May 6, 2005 By admin 1 Comment on Why am I not surprised


By Pamela R. Winnick
Weekly Standard | May 5, 2005

Several centuries ago, some “very light-skinned” people were shipwrecked on a tropical island. After “many years under the tropical sun,” this light-skinned population became “dark-skinned,” says Biology: The Study of Life, a high-school textbook published in 1998 by Prentice Hall, an imprint of Pearson Education.

“Downright bizarre,” says Nina Jablonski, who holds the Irvine chair of anthropology at the California Academy of Sciences. Jablonski, an expert in the evolution of skin color, says it takes at least 15,000 years for skin color to evolve from black to white or vice versa. That sure is “many years.” The suggestion that skin color can change in a few generations has no basis in science.

Pearson Education spokesperson Wendy Spiegel admits the error in describing the evolution of skin color, but says the teacher's manual explains the phenomenon correctly. Just why teachers are given accurate information while students are misled remains unclear.

But then there's lots that's puzzling about the science textbooks used in American classrooms. A sloppy way with facts, a preference for the politically correct over the scientifically sound, and sheer faddism characterize their content. It's as if their authors had decided above all not to expose students to the intellectual rigor that is the lifeblood of science.

Thus, a chapter on climate in a fifth-grade science textbook in the Discovery Works series, published by Houghton Mifflin (2000), opens with a Native American explanation for the changing seasons: “Crow moon is the name given to spring because that is when the crows return. April is the month of Sprouting Grass Moon.” Students meander through three pages of Algonquin lore before they learn that climate is affected by the rotation and tilt of Earth–not by the return of the crows.

Houghton Mifflin spokesman Collin Earnst says such tales are included in order to “connect science to culture.” He might more precisely have said to connect science to certain preferred, non-Western, or primitive cultures. Were a connection drawn to, say, a Bible story, the outcry would be heard around the world.

Affirmative action for women and minorities is similarly pervasive in science textbooks, to absurd effect. Al Roker, the affable black NBC weatherman, is hailed as a great scientist in one book in the Discovery Works series. It is common to find Marie Curie given a picture and half a page of text, but her husband, Pierre, who shared a Nobel Prize with her, relegated to the role of supportive spouse. In the same series, Thomas Edison, inventor of the light bulb, is shown next to black scientist Lewis Latimer, who improved the light bulb by adding a carbon filament. Edison's picture is smaller.

Jews have been awarded 22 percent of all Nobel Prizes in science, but readers of Houghton Mifflin's fifth-grade textbooks won't get wind of that. Navajo physicist Fred Begay, however, merits half a page for his study of Navajo medicine. Albert Einstein isn't mentioned. Biologist Clifton Poodry has made no noteworthy scientific discoveries, but he was born on the Tonawanda Seneca Indian reservation, so his picture is shown in Glenco/McGraw-Hill's Life Science (2002), a middle-school biology textbook. The head of the Human Genome Project, Francis Collins, and Nobel Laureates James Watson, Maurice H.F. Wilkins, and Francis Crick aren't named.

Addison-Wesley, another imprint of Pearson Education, is so keen on political correctness that it lists a multicultural review board of nonscientists in its Science Insights: Exploring Matter and Energy, published in 1994 but still in use. Houghton Mifflin says it overemphasizes minorities and women to “encourage” students from these groups. A spokesman for Pearson Education blames the states for demanding multiculturalism.

If it's the states that impose multiculturalism, however, they're only doing the bidding of the National Academy of Sciences. In 1995, the academy published the National Science Education Standards, which, according to academy president Bruce Alberts, “represent the best thinking . . . about what is best for our nation's students.” The standards (which explicitly place religion on a par with “myth and superstition”) counsel school boards to modify “assessments” for students with “limited English proficiency” by, for example, raising their scores. They tell teachers to be “sensitive” to students who are “economically deprived, female, have disabilities, or [come] from populations underrepresented in the sciences.” Teachers should especially encourage “women and girls, students of color and students with disabilities.”

This “best thinking” of the nation's scientific elite is being used by nearly all the 50 states as they centralize their science standards. With 22 states now requiring statewide adoption of textbooks, big-state textbook markets are the prizes for which publishers compete.

A study commissioned by the David and Lucile Packard Foundation in 2001 found 500 pages of scientific error in 12 middle-school textbooks used by 85 percent of the students in the country. One misstates Newton's first law of motion. Another says humans can't hear elephants. Another confuses “gravity” with “gravitational acceleration.” Another shows the equator running through the United States. Individual scientists draft segments of these books, but reviewing the final product is sometimes left to multicultural committees who have no expertise in science.

“Thousands of teachers are saddled with error-filled physical science textbooks,” wrote John Hubisz, a physics professor at North Carolina State University at Raleigh and the author of the report. “Political correctness is often more important than scientific accuracy. Middle-school text publishers now employ more people to censor books than they do to check facts.”

The aim of President Bill Clinton's Goals 2000 project, enacted nine years ago, was to make American students first in science literacy. It didn't happen. A study by the National Assessment governing board in 2000 found that only 12 percent of graduating seniors were proficient in science. International surveys continue to show that American high school seniors rank 19th among seniors surveyed in 21 countries.

Members of the scientific elite are occasionally heard blaming religion for the sorry state of science education. But it isn't priests, rabbis, or mullahs who write the textbooks that misrepresent evolution, condescend to disadvantaged groups, misstate key concepts of physics, show the equator running through the United States, and come close to excising white males from the history of science. Young Americans need to learn science, and they need to distinguish it clearly from Algonquin myth.

Original link here: http://www.weeklystandard.com/Content/Public/Articles/000/000/005/563mgsyh.asp

Emphasis mine.

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I feel like this right now :)

Posted on May 5, 2005 By admin 1 Comment on I feel like this right now :)

IT isn't sure what's happening with my laptop, so I can't really do much but wait until they get back to me, joy.

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Not having the best of days

Posted on May 5, 2005 By admin 1 Comment on Not having the best of days

My work laptop is evil and should be punished for being naughty. In the past 2 days, it has refused to properly read disks (but, of course, according to Murphy's Hardware law, it worked perfectly when the IT guy came and tested it out) and since last night, all the data on my secondary data partition has gotten corrupted. Nothing major, the file table got currupted. I can rebuild it and should be able to get back most if not all the data; it's just a pain in the ass that a new laptop should be so problematic. It's not too important right now, cause there's nothing irreplaceable on it, but I hope this isn't a sign on things to come.

OK, ranting aside, things are pretty good at work right now. I'm getting to know the people I'll be working with and they seem to be a pretty good bunch. I'm enjoying waking up and going to the office. For most of you reading this who know me well, you'll know that that hasn't happened in a long time. Hell, I get up at 6:45 with Katy and I'm always on time for work!!! That hasn't happened in… close to 3 years. Hopefully, things will stay on that track for a while.

Speaking of the girl, send her some love cause she's in a bit of a low these days. Her work situation is going from annoying to really problematic. She hasn't been paid in close to 3 weeks (she's supposed to get paid weekly), the administrativia monkeys keep losing her forms and paperwork (though all of her coworkers are also not getting paid – it's at the point where some people are forfeiting their rent and her boss is giving money to people out of his own pocket). I feel realy bad for her these days, just cause she sees me with enthusiasm for my new job and she's getting the short end of a stick she really, really doesn't deserve. Hopefully she's going to be getting a ton of overdue good karma, cause lord knows she's had a heap of bad one recently :( I'm doing my best to give her love and comfort and reassurances that everything is going to be ok. I just hope it's enough to get her through this rough patch :(

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Gaaaaaaaah!

Posted on May 4, 2005 By admin 9 Comments on Gaaaaaaaah!

The burger war is growing. Literally. Denny's Beer Barrel Pub, which lost its crown as the home of the world's biggest burger earlier this year, is now offering a new burger that weighs a whopping 15 pounds.

Dubbed the Beer Barrel Belly Buster, the burger comes with 10.5 pounds of ground beef, 25 slices of cheese, a head of lettuce, three tomatoes, two onions, a cup-and-a-half each of mayonnaise, relish, ketchup, mustard and banana peppers — and a bun. It costs $30.

“It can feed a family of 10,” said Denny Liegey Sr., the restaurant's owner.

Denny's Beer Barrel Pub had offered a 6-pound burger — with 5 pounds of toppings. In February, a 100-pound female college student became the first to eat the burger within the three-hour time limit. Kate Stelnick, of Princeton, N.J., was awarded a special certificate, a T-shirt and other prizes and Leigey picked up the $23.95 tab for the burger.

One month later, the Clinton Station Diner in Clinton, N.J., introduced a 12.5-pound burger dubbed Zeus. So Liegey responded, and the Belly Buster was born. Over the weekend, four men took the challenge, but couldn't get through the entire burger. They opted for doggie bags, instead.

“It's a little too much for me to handle,” said Steve Hepburn, of Clearfield. “It's like trying to eat half a cow.”

Original link: http://www.thecourierexpress.com

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I'm baaaaaack

Posted on May 3, 2005 By admin 5 Comments on I'm baaaaaack

First day at the office is almost done (I'll be leaving in about 15 minutes) and as first days go, it's a winner. Met the people I'm going to be working with, and they seem like a good bunch. There's a new intern that also started today, so I wasn't the only newbie to be shown around, which is always good for morale :)

We talked a lot about the project and where I'll most likely be working. Had a good high-level architectural discussion about the codebase and I'm chomping at the bit to actually get my hands elbow-deep in code. It feels weird to be actually doing something at work. Now I know this may sound weird, but my last posting at McGill wasn't going to win me any productivity awards, mostly because I was waiting for a certain big blue company to get back to me all the time. I seriously doubt that there will be any of the bureaucracy and latency in getting stuff done. Hell, I got my shiny new laptop just after lunch!

I'm going to be getting the shuttle back to the apartment soon. I had a bit of a workout this morning because I didn't really know where the pick-up point was, but now that I do, things should be a lot more sedate tomorrow morning :) The commute will be about 20 minutes by bus and a 5 minute walk home. I can live with that; it took me longer to get to McGill/Sequence.

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Today was my last unemployed day

Posted on May 3, 2005 By admin 5 Comments on Today was my last unemployed day

Today was a bank holiday here, which meant a day off for the EBI, which means that I start working tomorrow. I fell… too many things to write down in a short blog entry. The main ones are positive, with just a touch of anxiety because I want to make a good impression. I'll be happy to be working again. Goofing off is fun in the short term, but I'm looking forward to have the contented feeling that comes with a hard day's work well done :)

Katy and I took advantage of the glorious weather today to go grocery shopping. We had a big of a grill-up tonight, with bacon mushroom cheeseburgers and onion rings and grilled potatoes. Good, very good, but not to be had too often. A bit of an artery-clogging meal, but good for the soul in moderation :)

Oh, have I mentioned that I'm building a tabletop zen garden?

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Hmmm, curry!

Posted on May 1, 2005 By admin 9 Comments on Hmmm, curry!

Tonight as curry night at the Grogan residence. Chicken curry and cauliflower curry and basmati rice. In a word, NUMMY! We're in Leicester for the weekend, so Katy can bond with Jeff, pick up some more things to bring back to Cambridge and generally cause we felt like it :)

Walked around the city center today. I bought some really loverly wood roses to add a splash of colour to the apartment without the onus of having to actually take care of a living plant. We're going to go to B&Q tomorrow so I can fiddle with a plan to make a tabletop zen garden. Those things are really cute, completely useless and therefore I want one. I will not however pay £20 for basically a box filled with sand; not when I have two hands and half a brain to make my own.

Katy, Rita and I went to see “Hitchhiker's guide to the galazy” at the cinema tonight. Good movie, I'm probably going to buy it when it comes out on DVD cause there are a ton of inside jokes that I know I missed.

Rita is a tough nut to crack. I've been in social situations with her for a few times now and I still don't know if she likes me or not. Hell, I have no idea what she thinks of me. Ever tried to engage somebody in conversation that just doesn't seem interested in talking to you? I do my best, cause she's Katy's best friend, it's just a bit frustrating and I have no idea how to deal with it.

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My apartment

Posted on April 28, 2005 By admin 21 Comments on My apartment

Here are a few pics of my apartment. It's starting to feel hom-E-y. I didn't put any pictures of the bedroom because there's only a clothes rack with my laundry in there right now, but I'll put some more when I get my own furniture.


Edited cause you're all pervs.

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