মঙ্গলবার, ২৫ জুন, ২০১৩

Melissa McCarthy: 'I've been every size'

Celebs

1 hour ago

IMAGE: Melissa McCarthy

Yu Tsai for More 2013

Melissa McCarthy on the cover of More magazine.

Actress Melissa McCarthy's weight was an issue for movie critic Rex Reed, who called the actress "tractor-sized" when she starred in "Identity Thief." But it's not an issue for McCarthy, she tells More magazine in the July/August issue, on newsstands June 25.

"I've been every size in the world," she said. "Parts of my twenties, I was in great shape, but I didn't appreciate it. If I was a 6 or an 8, I thought, 'Why aren't I a 2 or a 4'?

But McCarthy can see beyond dress sizes to realize how lucky she is -- with a happy marriage to writer-actor Ben Falcone, two young daughters, and a lively movie career. And she hears from fans, some in the field themselves, who may not be a size zero.

"The letters I really love are from young actresses who were worried they had to fit a certain look," she tells the magazine. "They say I've opened it up. And I don't just mean plus-size girls. You can push things now. With all the great performances in 'Bridesmaids,' it changed how people see funny women."

McCarthy stars with Sandra Bullock in "The Heat," a rare buddy comedy that involves two women, not men. She says that a scene in which she sticks a straw up Bullock's nose to dislodge a peanut helped the two bond.

"But the peanut was so far up," McCarthy remembers. "I was nervous for Sandy that something was going to go terribly wrong and we're gonna end up in a hospital. I was literally up her sinus cavity. It was a very bonding moment. After that, you're friends for life."

"The Heat" opens June 28.

Source: http://www.today.com/entertainment/melissa-mccarthy-ive-been-every-size-world-6C10435395

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বুধবার, ১৯ জুন, ২০১৩

This Awesome Credit Card-Sized iPhone Tripod Blew Me Away

Sometimes the simplest things are the most useful, but rarely something makes me shake my head at how clever and cool it is like the Pocket Tripod 360? has. I keep thinking "why didn't someone do this before" and "what a great idea that I wish I'd thought of." I'm still blown away that the angle is adjustable like that.

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Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/jJwZSwoxGmA/this-awesome-credit-card-sized-iphone-tripod-blew-me-aw-514029545

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The Crazy New Subatomic Particle That May Rewrite the Rules of Matter

The Crazy New Subatomic Particle That May Rewrite the Rules of Matter

Two teams of physicists have stumbled across a weird new subatomic particle that's unlike anything else we've ever seen?and it could rewrite the rules of matter as we know them.

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Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/tpGvgn1HNkM/the-crazy-new-subatomic-particle-that-may-rewrite-the-r-513996146

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The Future of Civil Disobedience Online

The Future of Civil Disobedience Online

Familiar political tools like petitions, fundraisers, mass letter-writing, call-in campaigns now have online equivalents. But what about protest tactics like street marches, picket lines, sit-ins, and occupations? Where is the room on the internet for civil disobedience?

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Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/_nWub4dvs0o/the-future-of-civil-disobedience-online-512193648

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বৃহস্পতিবার, ১৩ জুন, ২০১৩

Pa. girl's double-lung transplant deemed success

Sharon Ruddock, the aunt of Sarah Murnaghan, talks to reporters outside the Children?s Hospital of Philadelphia after the 10-year-old underwent a six-hour double-lung transplant as a result of her severe cystic fibrosis, Wednesday, June 12, 2013. Ruddock said her niece never would have received the transplant without a judge?s ruling that made her eligible for adult donor lungs. (AP Photo/Keith Collins)

Sharon Ruddock, the aunt of Sarah Murnaghan, talks to reporters outside the Children?s Hospital of Philadelphia after the 10-year-old underwent a six-hour double-lung transplant as a result of her severe cystic fibrosis, Wednesday, June 12, 2013. Ruddock said her niece never would have received the transplant without a judge?s ruling that made her eligible for adult donor lungs. (AP Photo/Keith Collins)

FILE - In this May 30, 2013 file photo provided by the Murnaghan family, Sarah Murnaghan, center, celebrates the 100th day of her stay in Children's Hospital of Philadelphia with her father, Fran, left, and mother, Janet. The 10-year-old suburban Philadelphia girl received a lung transplant there Wednesday, June 12, 2013, her family said. (AP Photo/Murnaghan Family, File)

FILE - In this May 30, 2013 file photo provided by the Murnaghan family, Sarah Murnaghan, left, lies in her hospital bed next to adopted sister Ella on the 100th day of her stay in Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. Murnaghen, whose efforts to qualify for an organ donation drew public debate over how donated lungs are allocated was getting a transplant Wednesday, June 12, 2013, at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, her family said. (AP Photo/Murnaghan Family, File)

(AP) ? A 10-year-old girl whose efforts to qualify for an organ donation spurred public debate over how organs are allocated underwent a successful double-lung transplant on Wednesday, the girl's family said.

Sarah Murnaghan, who suffers from severe cystic fibrosis, received new lungs from an adult donor at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, spokeswoman Tracy Simon said.

The Murnaghan family said it was "thrilled" to share the news that Sarah was out of surgery.

"Her doctors are very pleased with both her progress during the procedure and her prognosis for recovery," the family said in a statement.

During double-lung transplants, surgeons must open up the patient's chest. Complications can include rejection of the new lungs and infection.

Sarah went into surgery around 11 a.m. Wednesday, and the procedure lasted about six hours, her family said.

"The surgeons had no challenges resizing and transplanting the donor lungs ? the surgery went smoothly, and Sarah did extremely well," it said. "She is in the process of getting settled in the ICU and now her recovery begins. We expect it will be a long road, but we're not going for easy, we're going for possible."

Sarah's family and the family of another cystic fibrosis patient at the same hospital challenged transplant policy that made children under 12 wait for pediatric lungs to become available or be offered lungs donated by adults only after adolescents and adults on the waiting list had been considered. They said pediatric lungs are rarely donated.

Sarah's aunt, Sharon Ruddock, said the donor lungs came in through normal channels as a result of being on the adult donor list.

"It was a direct result of the ruling that allowed her to be put on the adult list," Ruddock said. "It was not pediatric lungs, she would have never gotten these lungs otherwise." Before the ruling, Ruddock said, Sarah was "very close to the end. Maybe a week. Maybe two."

No other details about the donor lungs are known.

Sarah's health was deteriorating when a judge intervened in her case last week, giving her a chance at the much larger list of organs from adult donors. U.S. District Judge Michael Baylson ruled June 5 that Sarah and 11-year-old Javier Acosta, of New York City, should be eligible for adult lungs.

Critics warned there could be a downside to having judges intervene in the organ transplant system's established procedures. Lung transplants are difficult procedures, and some experts say child patients tend to have more trouble with them than adults do.

Sarah's relatives, who are from Newtown Square, just west of Philadelphia, were "beyond excited" about her new lungs but were "keeping in mind that someone had to lose a family member and they're very aware of that and very appreciative," family spokeswoman Maureen Garrity said earlier Wednesday.

The Murnaghan family noted that Sarah's successful surgery was the result of another family's loss.

"We are elated this day has come, but we also know our good news is another family's tragedy. That family made the decision to give Sarah the gift of life ? and they are the true heroes today," Sarah's family said in their statement.

The national organization that manages organ transplants, the Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network, added Sarah to the adult waiting list after the judge's ruling. Her transplant came two days before a hearing was scheduled on the family's request for a broader injunction.

The network has said 31 children under age 11 are on the waiting list for a lung transplant. Its executive committee held an emergency meeting this week but resisted making emergency rule changes for children under 12 who are waiting on lungs, instead creating a special appeal and review system to hear such cases.

Sarah's family "did have a legitimate complaint" about the rule that limited her access to adult lungs, said medical ethicist Arthur Caplan, of the NYU Langone Medical Center in New York.

"When the transplant community met, they didn't want to change that rule without really thinking carefully about it," he said. The appeals process that was established this week, he said, was "built on evidence, not on influence."

He added: "In general, the road to a transplant is still to let the system decide who will do best with scarce, lifesaving organs. And it's important that people understand that money, visibility, being photogenic ... are factors that have to be kept to a minimum if we're going to get the best use out of the scarce supply of donated cadaver organs."

___

AP Science Writer Malcolm Ritter reported from New York.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-06-13-Lung%20Transplant-Pennsylvania/id-a694c0d04d444f9fb960b72539508e45

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Ringo Starr writes 'Octopus' Garden' as kids' book

NEW YORK (AP) ? Ringo Starr is turning an old Beatles favorite into a children's book.

The drummer has a deal with Simon & Schuster's Children Books for "Octopus' Garden," based on one of the few songs the drummer wrote and sang while with the Beatles. The publisher announced Tuesday that the book will come out in Britain this fall and in the U.S. in early 2014. The book will be illustrated by Ben Cort, whose credits include "Aliens Love Underpants."

Starr, who turns 73 next month, first wrote the song while on Peter Sellers' yacht in 1968. Starr and Sellers co-starred in the film "The Magic Christian."

"Octopus' Garden" first appeared on the Beatles' "Abbey Road" album, released in 1969.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ringo-starr-writes-octopus-garden-kids-book-165923656.html

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Presidential cyberwar directive gives Pentagon long-awaited marching orders

The 18-page, Top Secret 'Presidential Policy Directive 20' instructs the Pentagon to draw up a cyberwar target list and to protect US infrastructure from foreign cyberattack.

By Mark Clayton,?Staff writer / June 10, 2013

President Barack Obama discusses defense strategic guidance at the Pentagon in Washington, January 2012. The Top Secret 'Presidential Policy Directive 20' instructs the Pentagon to draw up a cyberwar target list and to protect US infrastructure from foreign cyberattack.

Pablo Martinez Monsivais / AP / File

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The US Defense Department has been given a bright green light to draw up a global cyberattack target list at which it can deploy digital weapons with ?little or no warning to the adversary or the target,? according to a Top Secret policy document leaked to the press.

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The policy document, dubbed ?Presidential Policy Directive 20? or PPD-20, is an 18-page cyberpolicy roadmap for the Pentagon that directs it to get on with the business of defending the US and its critical infrastructure, such as the power grid and financial sector, from foreign cyberattack.

While the existence of the document and its broad outlines were revealed in news reports last fall, and a ?fact sheet? on PPD-20 was released in January, the detailed policy document leaked at week?s end shows the unleashing of a military juggernaught.

Military use of cyberweapons had been paused for about three years, waiting for the end of an intense policy debate and for orders to move ahead with force into cyberspace, cybersecurity experts say.

?What this document does is lay out authority for the US Cyber Command and Joint Chiefs to use cyberweapons,? says James Lewis, a senior fellow with the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington. ?It lays out how and when you would use these weapons, what you would target, and how you would do so in ways consistent with the Laws of Armed Conflict, rather than just shooting at random.?

Couched in legalistic language, the document authorizes development of offensive and defensive cybersystems that are consistent with the US Constitution, US law, and the international Law of Armed Conflict ? and of a target list to hit with them.

For instance, ?Offensive Cyber Effects Operations,? or OCEO, is defined in the document as authorizing digital weapons for ?manipulation, disruption, denial, degradation, or destruction? of? ?physical or virtual? computer systems.

The document says OCEO ?can offer unique and unconventional capabilities to advance US national objectives around the world with little or no warning to the adversary or target and with potential effects ranging from subtle to severely damaging.?

Under the heading "Policy Reviews and Preparation," the document states that: "The secretary of defense, the DNI [Director of National Intelligence], and the director of the CIA ? shall prepare for approval by the president through the National Security Advisor a plan that identifies potential systems, processes and infrastructure against which the United States should establish and maintain OCEO capabilities."

Most cyberattacks must be authorized by the president, but because attacks happen in milliseconds, the document authorizes the military and other agencies to respond to the threat of an imminent attack or an emergency situation.

Protecting critical infrastructure in the US also is outlined in the document.

Despite years of wrangling, Congress has still not approved legislation addressing cybersecurity for the nation?s infrastructure, and the document does not permit the Pentagon to intrude into networks of domestic companies, such as utilities, and install defenses within computer networks that control the power grid.

But it does allow the military to defend the infrastructure from outside those networks ? by identifying and undermining or destroying the attacking system and its key infrastructure. It allows government agencies, not just the military, to take ?anticipatory action ? against imminent threats? to infrastructure or other systems vital to the US or to US foreign policy.

The procedures outlined in the directive are consistent with the US Constitution, including the president?s role as commander-in-chief, and other applicable law and policies, the White House said in a statement.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/_-CgCju_RYE/Presidential-cyberwar-directive-gives-Pentagon-long-awaited-marching-orders

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সোমবার, ১০ জুন, ২০১৩

RonDoids: Apple No. 1 in paid digital music sales.

SAN FRANCISCO ? Apple is known for making some of the finest hardware in the world, but one of its biggest stumbling blocks has been services that rely on an Internet connection.

Apple?s iTunes software on a MacBook Air. The program?s 500 million users make Apple No. 1 in paid digital music sales.

Apple?s Maps app for iPhones was initially so bad the company apologized. Ping, Apple?s social network for discovering songs, was killed because hardly anyone used it. And iCloud, its service for synchronizing user data across devices, has been criticized for being unreliable, though it has not had as many glitches as its predecessor MobileMe, which had an e-mail blackout that disconnected thousands of customers for days.

Now, Apple is giving online services another try, in an area where it has long been the leader: music. On Monday, at the opening of its annual developers conference in San Francisco, the company is expected to unveil an Internet radio service that will stream songs over a data connection instead of storing them on a device, according to people briefed on the negotiations. The service is expected to be free, but supported by ads.

With its Internet radio service, Apple will be following other online music services, like Pandora, Spotify and Rdio. But it could spread this type of music consumption further into the mainstream, some analysts say.

?The genius of iTunes 10 years ago was that they made the mainstream consumer understand what digital music was, and how it all worked,? said Russ Crupnik, an analyst at NPD Group who studies the digital music market. He said Pandora was mainstream, with 200 million registered users, but it was not a dominant global player, and that a similar service from Apple would expose more people to online radio.

The company is also expected to introduce new Mac notebooks and a redesign of iOS, its software operating system for iPhones and iPads, at the four-day developers conference. The conference includes seminars where software developers can get training on the latest Apple software development tools so they can start making apps.

The new operating system will be the first mobile software system made under the company?s lead hardware designer, Jony Ive. Mr. Ive was put in charge of software design after the company fired Scott Forstall, the former head of mobile software development, amid the flurry of negative news reports surrounding Apple?s mapping software.

Before taking over software design, Mr. Ive made it known in the company that he did not like some of the visual ornamentations in Apple?s mobile software, particularly the use of textures representing physical materials. Under his direction, elements like the yellow-notepad inspired Notes app and the leather borders in the Calendar app for the iPad are expected to be removed from the software. The overall look will be smoother and less ostentatious, according to a person briefed on the company?s plans, who asked not to be named.

For Apple, the expansion into streaming music underscores a competitive issue: one of its chief rivals, Google, has long had robust Internet services, like Gmail and Google Apps, while over the years it has gotten better at designing the software and hardware for its phones and tablets.

But while Apple struggles with Internet services, its stock is down about 37 percent after peaking at a little more than $700 in the fall. The company is still selling tens of millions of iPhones and iPads, but investors are concerned about its growth slowing and profit margins getting tighter. A shift into services like Internet radio could present new opportunities to make money.

But James McQuivey, an analyst at Forrester Research, says he thinks Apple is too late in this game. The company has to present an Internet radio service that is better than what is out there, he said, or people will continue to just buy its hardware and use other companies? services.

?It?s going to have to innovate,? Mr. McQuivey said. ?It can?t just be Pandora with an ?i? in front of it or Spotify with an ?i? in front of it.?

In the late 1990s, the music industry was in turmoil because many Internet users quickly learned they could download their favorite songs for free instead of paying for albums. Steven P. Jobs, Apple?s late chief, approached the music labels with the idea of a store offering the ability to download songs a la carte for 99 cents a download.

?When we first approached the labels, the online music business was a disaster,? Mr. Jobs was quoted as saying in the book ?The Perfect Thing: How the iPod Shuffles Commerce, Culture and Coolness.? ?Nobody had ever sold a song for 99 cents. Nobody really ever sold a song. And we walked in, and we said: ?We want to sell songs ? la carte. We want to sell albums, too, but we want to sell songs individually.? They thought that would be the death of the album.??

? In 2003, Apple was the first company to legitimize digital music when it opened the iTunes Store, a legal way for people to download and purchase digital songs. Now digital music has grown far beyond the traditional album. Many companies offer the ability to stream music over a data connection.

Spotify, for example, based in London, lets people search for songs and immediately stream them over the Internet on their smartphones and computers; a free version of the service plays ads every few songs, but paying $5 a month will skip the ads.

Rdio, another music streaming service, costs at least $5 a month to stream songs from a computer, but it has an emphasis on social networking, or discovering music by looking at what friends are listening to.

And Pandora, launched 8 years ago, lets users create their own stations by entering an artist and then automatically playing songs similar to that artist. Its ad-free upgrade is $4 a month.

But online streaming services are not as popular as iTunes, which counts about 500 million customers with their credit cards on file. Apple is still No. 1 in the paid digital music market with a 63 percent share, followed by Amazon at 22 percent, according to NPD Group.

In a study, NPD said it found that 44 million Americans bought at least one song or album download last year, a number that has remained stable despite the growth of Pandora and music streaming services. A separate NPD study found that people who stream music are much more likely to buy music downloads.

When Apple enters online radio, it will be difficult for companies like Spotify and Pandora to compete, said Laurence Isaac Balter, chief market strategist at Oracle Investment Research, which has clients that own Apple shares. He said Apple will be at an advantage because it will have deeper control of the iPhone software and hardware, as well as more data about its own customers, than outside companies would, so that it can make smarter music recommendations for customers. Streaming music will also give customers a chance to listen to music they would otherwise never have heard before, and then perhaps buy the songs in iTunes, Mr. Balter said.

Mr. Balter added that Apple could potentially leverage the user data it gets from streaming radio and expand it into a future Apple television, where people could find video content about their favorite bands or even purchase concert tickets on the bigger screen.

?There?s so much of a white canvas here for Apple to paint on,? Mr. Balter said. ?It?s refreshing to see them start to think in this area.?

As Apple expands its product lines to include cheaper products, like the iPad Mini and a rumored cheaper iPhone, its profit margins will decrease. That is when the importance of online services will become even greater for Apple because they will provide more ways to make money, Mr. McQuivey said.

?If Apple doesn?t make this shift to services,? he said, ?they won?t be left with a leg to stand on.?

Source: http://rondoids.blogspot.com/2013/06/apple-no-1-in-paid-digital-music-sales.html

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WEATHER ALERT: Strong Storms With Heavy Rain, High Winds Moving Across The DFW Area Now

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Source: http://dfw.cbslocal.com/2013/06/09/weather-alert-strong-storms-with-heavy-rain-high-winds-moving-across-the-dfw-area-now/

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Marathon victim throws out 1st pitch for White Sox

CHICAGO (AP) ? A victim of the Boston Marathon bombings has thrown out the first pitch at a Chicago White Sox game, thanks to an assist from the Oval Office.

Karen Rand of Somerville, Mass., did the honors Saturday before the game against the Oakland Athletics, less than two months after she lost her left leg in the explosions. From a wheelchair about halfway between the mound and the plate she tossed the ball to White Sox pitcher Chris Sale.

It was a moment that President Barack Obama helped set up.

Obama had visited her in the hospital. According to the team, her boyfriend, Kevin McWatters, told him they like going to Chicago. Obama is a White Sox fan, and the White House and Mayor Rahm Emanuel's office helped arrange the trip.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/marathon-victim-throws-1st-pitch-white-sox-213838700.html

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Operator in Philly collapse deaths turns self in

PHILADELPHIA (AP) ? A heavy equipment operator with a lengthy rap sheet who is accused of being high on marijuana when a downtown building collapsed onto a thrift store, killing six people, surrendered Saturday to face charges in the deaths, police said.

Sean Benschop faces six counts of involuntary manslaughter, 13 counts of recklessly endangering another person and one count of risking a catastrophe. A warrant had been issued for his arrest and police had been searching for him.

Authorities believe the 42-year-old Benschop had been using an excavator Wednesday when the remains of the four-story building gave way and toppled onto an attached Salvation Army thrift store, killing two employees and four customers and injuring 13 others.

Deputy Mayor Everett Gillison said a toxicology report showed evidence that Benschop was high on marijuana. That finding, combined with witness statements and evidence from the scene, led to the decision Friday to raid his North Philadelphia home and later seek an arrest warrant, he said.

Benschop didn't return phone messages left by The Associated Press at numbers listed in his name.

Benschop, who also goes by the name Kary Roberts, has been arrested at least 11 times since 1994 on charges ranging from drugs to theft to weapons possession, according to court records. He was twice sentenced to prison in the 1990s after being convicted on drug trafficking charges. Benschop's last arrest, on a charge of aggravated assault, came in January 2012, but the case was dismissed for lack of evidence.

As the criminal investigation heated up, at least two survivors sued the demolition contractor and building owner, alleging gross recklessness at the job site.

The city, meanwhile, promised to crack down on the demolition industry.

"We can do much better," Mayor Michael Nutter said at a news conference Friday. "We will not accept the status quo in the face of this tragedy."

Nutter's reform plan for construction sites includes random drug testing on heavy equipment operators.

"If that's a factor here, that certainly takes things in a very different direction," he said hours before the charges against Benschop were confirmed.

The mayor also pledged to adopt tougher background requirements for demolition contractors, including information about each worker's experience, and more frequent site inspections when demolitions are underway.

His plan could run into resistance from builders who say they're already highly regulated.

"I think that before we do anything, before we rush to any judgment about how to fix what happened, we have to have all the facts," said Steven Lakin, executive managing director of the General Building Contractors Association, a trade group representing Philadelphia-area contractors. "Everybody wants to regulate demolition contractors, but I'm not so sure that's the answer."

Lawyers for the two survivors who have sued accuse demolition contractor Griffin Campbell ? who has a criminal background and has filed for bankruptcy twice ? of violating federal safety regulations. They say building owner Richard Basciano should have picked a more qualified and competent contractor to do the work.

No one answered the phone at a listing for Campbell on Saturday, and the voice mailbox was full.

Plaintiff Linda Bell, a 50-year-old mother of three, was shopping at the thrift store when the building came down on top of her. She fell into the basement and was covered by rubble for more than an hour.

"She's still shook up real bad, sore, swollen up," Bell's brother, Keith Bell, told the AP on Friday. She's also suffering mental anguish from "seeing other people getting killed," he said.

Construction engineers have said the thrift store should have been evacuated during critical phases of the demolition project next door.

The Salvation Army was concerned enough about the demolition that its attorneys reached out to a lawyer for building owner STB Investments Corp., a company linked to prominent businessman and developer Richard Basciano.

"There was communication between The Salvation Army and the attorney of the neighboring building's owner, pertaining to the demolition. The neighbor assured The Salvation Army that they would be taking proper precautions," Maj. Robert W. Dixon, director of operations of The Salvation Army of Greater Philadelphia, said in a statement Friday afternoon.

"These discussions were never finalized," he said.

___

Rubinkam reported from northeastern Pennsylvania. Associated Press writer Keith Collins contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/operator-philly-collapse-deaths-turns-self-214931287.html

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বুধবার, ৫ জুন, ২০১৩

Spanish village returns dog poop to owners who didn't pick it up ...

While any bit of improperly disposed of waste can mar a pristine pedestrian pathway, nothing taints the sole quite like a pile uncollected dog poop. With that in mind, one small village in Spain has found a novel new way of calling out dog-owners for not picking up after their pets -- and it's getting some amazing results.

The local council of Brunete recently initiated a program they hoped would make their village sidewalks cleaner. Twenty volunteers were instructed to keep a lookout for people not cleaning their dog's messes. Afterwards, they would then strike-up a conversation with the offender, casually asking them their pet's breed and name. With that information, the pet-owner's home address could be uncovered in the local registry.

Then comes the justice.

Later on, the volunteers are dispatched to hand-deliver the dog's foul smelling deposit back to the owner, saying they are returning 'lost property'.

According to ThinkSpain, the program has so far been a resounding success. Brunete's uncollected dog poop problem has been reduced 70 percent!

?We're not sure whether that's because they're more afraid of getting their dogs' excrement delivered back to them than of being fined,? said one council spokesperson. ?In general, the campaign has been well-accepted, although a lot of people have called for designated areas to be set up where dogs can do their 'bits and bobs' ? like everything, there are opinions for all tastes.?

Most people would agree that public spaces should be free of other people's waste, especially poop, but keeping things clean requires that everyone do their part. And perhaps there is no better way to remind someone of their civic duty than a hand-delivered pile of their dog's doody.

Source: http://www.treehugger.com/culture/village-returns-uncollected-dog-poop-pet-owners-reduce-problem-70-percent.html

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Commercial Real Estate Fundamentals Improving, Lending Tight for ...

With vacancy rates modestly falling and rents moderately rising in commercial real estate sectors, market fundamentals have improved, but financing remains a challenge for small business, according to the National Association of Realtors? quarterly commercial real estate forecast.

Lawrence Yun, NAR chief economist, said the market is showing an uneven recovery.? ?The wheels appear to be greased for the big players, but not so much for small business,? he said.? ?Overall, the commercial sectors are firming nicely, with multifamily continuing to show the best performance.?

National vacancy rates over the coming year are expected to decline 0.1 percentage point in the office market, 0.5 point in industrial, and 0.3 point for retail; however, the average multifamily vacancy rate is forecast to rise 0.2 percentage point, with that sector still showing the tightest availability and biggest rent increases.

A companion report, the Commercial Real Estate 2013 Lending Survey,1 shows widely varying availability of lending capital depending on property size, with a significant disadvantage for buyers of smaller properties.

Commercial sales volume of major properties valued at $2.5 million and above increased 24 percent in 2012 to $294 billion.? The uptrend continued during the first quarter of 2013, with a $72.8 billion volume that is 35 percent above the first quarter of 2012.? Sixteen markets in the first quarter experienced triple digit gains.

Commercial mortgage-backed securities regained market share in 2012, accounting for 22 percent of lending for major commercial properties.? A comparable source was government agencies, followed by national banks, insurance companies and regional banks.

Realtor??commercial members report 85 percent of their clients? transactions are for purchases under $2 million ? generally small businesses.? These transactions are financed largely by private investors, along with local and regional banks, marking a bifurcation in capital availability based on property value.

?Despite the improvement for major commercial properties, 52 percent of Realtors? report they had a commercial transaction fail in the past year due to a lack of financing,? Yun said.? ?In addition, 42 percent of respondents said clients failed to complete a refinancing.? Credit for small business remains unnecessarily tight.?

Commercial members report that new and proposed U.S. legislative and regulatory initiatives, and regulatory uncertainty for financial institutions, account for the lack of capital in commercial lending for smaller properties.

NAR?s latest Commercial Real Estate Outlook2?offers overall projections for four major commercial sectors and analyzes quarterly data in the office, industrial, retail and multifamily markets.? Historic data for metro areas were provided by REIS, Inc.,3 a source of commercial real estate performance information.

Office Markets

Vacancy rates in the office sector should decline from a projected 15.7 percent in the second quarter to 15.6 percent in the second quarter of 2014.

The markets with the lowest office vacancy rates presently (in the second quarter) are Washington, D.C., with a vacancy rate of 9.4 percent; New York City, at 9.9 percent; Little Rock, Ark., 12.0 percent; and Birmingham, Ala., 12.3 percent.

Office rents are likely to increase 2.6 percent this year and 2.8 percent in 2014.? Net absorption of office space in the U.S., which includes the leasing of new space coming on the market as well as space in existing properties, will probably total 31.7 million square feet this year and 42.0 million in 2014.

Industrial Markets?

Industrial vacancy rates are expected to slide from 9.4 percent in the second quarter of this year to 8.9 percent in the second quarter of 2014.

The areas with the lowest industrial vacancy rates currently are Orange County, Calif., with a vacancy rate of 3.9 percent; Los Angeles, 4.1 percent; Miami, 5.8 percent; and Seattle at 6.3 percent.

Annual industrial rents are seen to rise 2.4 percent this year and 2.6 percent in 2014.? Net absorption of industrial space nationally is forecast to total 107.1 million square feet in 2013 and 100.3 million next year.

Retail Markets

Retail vacancy rates are estimated to ease from 10.5 percent in the second quarter of this year to 10.2 percent in the second quarter of 2014.

Presently, markets with the lowest retail vacancy rates include San Francisco, 3.6 percent; Fairfield County, Conn., at 4.1 percent; and Long Island, N.Y., and Orange County, Calif., each at 5.3 percent.

Average retail rents are projected to rise 1.4 percent in 2013 and 2.2 percent next year. ?Net absorption of retail space is anticipated to be 12.5 million square feet in 2013 and 17.4 million next year.

Multifamily Markets

The apartment rental market ? multifamily housing ? should see vacancy rates edge up from 3.9 percent in the second quarter to 4.1 percent in the second quarter of 2014; vacancy rates at less than 5 percent are described as a landlord?s market, with demand justifying higher rents.

Areas with the lowest multifamily vacancy rates currently are New Haven, Conn., at 2.0 percent; New York City, 2.2 percent; and Minneapolis and San Diego, each at 2.3 percent.

Average apartment rents are likely to increase 4.6 percent this year and another 4.6 percent in 2014.? Multifamily net absorption is expected to total 276,300 units in 2013 and 243,800 next year.

The Commercial Real Estate Outlook is published by the NAR Research Division.? NAR?s Commercial Division, formed in 1990, provides targeted products and services to meet the needs of the commercial market and constituency within NAR.

The NAR commercial community includes commercial members; commercial real estate boards; commercial committees, subcommittees and forums; and the NAR commercial affiliate organizations ? CCIM Institute, Institute of Real Estate Management, Realtors? Land Institute, Society of Industrial and Office Realtors?, and Counselors of Real Estate.

Approximately 78,000 NAR and institute affiliate members specialize in commercial brokerage and related services, and an additional 232,000 members offer commercial real estate services as a secondary business.

1Dollar volume is from Real Capital Analytics.

2Additional analyses will be posted under Economists? Outlook in the Research blog section of Realtor.org in coming days at: http://economistsoutlook.blogs.realtor.org/.

3Beginning in the third quarter of 2011, NAR commercial forecasts have been generated based on historical data provided by REIS, Inc., and do not correspond with prior historical information from previous forecasts.? This source permits coverage of more metro areas than were previously covered.

The next commercial real estate forecast and quarterly market report will be released on August 26 at 10:00 a.m. EDT.

Source: http://www.vermontrealtors.com/2013/06/04/commercial-real-estate-fundamentals-improving-lending-tight-for-small-business/

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Spoelstra, Popovich making the right moves

FILE - In this June 1, 2013, file photo, Miami Heat head coach Erik Spoelstra directs his team during the second half of Game 6 of the NBA Eastern Conference basketball finals against the Indiana Pacers in Indianapolis. They're two of the game's best coaches, and now the San Antonio Spurs' Gregg Popovich and the Heat's Spoelstra are about to go head-to-head to decide the NBA title. (AP Photo/Michael Conroy, File)

FILE - In this June 1, 2013, file photo, Miami Heat head coach Erik Spoelstra directs his team during the second half of Game 6 of the NBA Eastern Conference basketball finals against the Indiana Pacers in Indianapolis. They're two of the game's best coaches, and now the San Antonio Spurs' Gregg Popovich and the Heat's Spoelstra are about to go head-to-head to decide the NBA title. (AP Photo/Michael Conroy, File)

San Antonio Spurs head coach Gregg Popovich speaks during the post-game news conference after the Spurs defeated the Memphis Grizzlies in Game 4 of the Western Conference finals NBA basketball playoff series in Memphis, Tenn., Monday, May 27, 2013. The Spurs defeated the Grizzlies 93-86 to advance to the NBA finals. (AP Photo/Danny Johnston)

Miami Heat head coach Erik Spoelstra speaks to players against the Indiana Pacers during the first half of Game 7 in their NBA basketball Eastern Conference finals playoff series, Monday, June 3, 2013 in Miami. (AP Photo/Lynne Sladky)

San Antonio Spurs head coach Gregg Popovich screams during the second half in Game 3 of the Western Conference finals NBA basketball playoff series against the Memphis Grizzlies in Memphis, Tenn., Saturday, May 25, 2013. The Spurs defeated the Grizzlies 104-93 in overtime. (AP Photo/Danny Johnston)

(AP) ? Other than being widely known by just the first syllable of their surnames, the coaches who will match wits in these NBA Finals may seem like polar opposites.

Of course, they would probably disagree with that assertion.

Miami's Erik Spoelstra wears sharp suits and is a stats guy; San Antonio's Gregg Popovich often skips the tie and would immeasurably prefer to answer questions about wine than anything about himself. Both are intensely private, but even during an NBA Finals loaded with star power ? the "Big Three" from Miami, the "Big Three" from San Antonio, a four-time MVP in LeBron James, a four-time champion in Tim Duncan ? the coaches will share misery in one way.

To their chagrin, Spo and Pop will be in the spotlight.

"It's easier to talk about how they are similar versus how they are dissimilar," said ESPN analyst Jeff Van Gundy, a former NBA coach who is part of the broadcast team for the series that opens Thursday in Miami. "They are both going to the Hall of Fame. They both have tremendous respect from the coaches they coach against, and they both have a level of humility that I believe shows NBA coaching in the most positive light possible."

Spoelstra is in the finals for the third straight year and is looking for a second consecutive championship. Popovich is going for his fifth title, the last of the ones currently in his collection coming over James and the Cleveland Cavaliers in 2007, and could join Phil Jackson as the only coaches to win championships in three different decades.

So far, only Jackson, Red Auerbach, John Kundla and Pat Riley ? Spoelstra's mentor and boss in Miami ? have five rings as a head coach.

"Maybe I don't show it the way I should, but it's pretty special," Popovich said, in a rare moment of near-sheepishness, after his team beat Memphis and won the West title for a fifth time. "I'm just really proud of the group the way they worked all year long to get there, and I'm sure that we've been a team that's probably been written off like they've had their day."

Spoelstra took over for Riley five seasons ago, has won nearly twice as many games as he's lost, and has endured a constant circus of distractions ever since the Heat acquired James and Chris Bosh to play alongside Dwyane Wade in 2010. San Antonio hasn't had anywhere near that sort of scrutiny; being in a smaller market helps keep the level of attention down.

By now, Spoelstra doesn't even notice what he calls "the noise." Even in the din of an Eastern Conference championship celebration on Monday night ? actually during the trophy presentation ceremony ? Spoelstra found his mind drifting away from the grind of facing the Indiana Pacers and onto the next challenge, this duel with the Spurs for the NBA title.

"It's one of those few times in competitive team sports you're not thinking about tomorrow, you're not thinking about the previous games, you're not thinking about what possibly may happen, you're not thinking about the reward. All you're thinking about is the desperation of that moment," Spoelstra said. "That's a great place to live."

And then ...

"It probably hit me right about then, and it was the 'ohh' type moment," Spoelstra said. "We have to get our act together in the next 48 hours. ... They are a great organization. I think the two organizations from afar have always respected each other for similar foundations and culture."

The coaches have items designed to inspire players in their respective locker rooms, a famous quote about a stonecutter for the Spurs, a replica of the championship trophy with the words "All In" emblazoned on it for the Heat. Both believe in loyalty, proven by the fact neither has changed work addresses in nearly two decades.

Maybe they're not so different after all.

"Both sides have great coaches. A great coaching staff," Wade said. "They're going to get their team prepared as well as they can. Obviously San Antonio has a system. Obviously they have certain players that's featured in the system, that have been featured awhile, many years for them. That's not a surprise.

"We're going to have to make adjustments every game, throughout the series."

There may be no coach in the league with more open disdain for in-game interviews, the ones taking place at the end of the first and third quarters of nationally televised games, than Popovich.

It's not personal. He'd simply rather coach than talk.

"He says what he needs to say and he gets out," Duncan said. "So I guess I've learned that much. ... I think it's hilarious. I think it's awesome. As I said, he's direct. He says what he needs to say and he gets out of there."

Popovich has proven that time and again. In these playoffs alone, some of his interview highlights included calling half-seriously calling Duncan a pain in the butt, talking about wanting to trade Manu Ginobili over poor shot selection, prefacing his response to a question by warning a reporter he was about to receive a trite answer, and offering this gem when asked for his favorite part of the gameday process.

"Dinner," Popovich said.

Spoelstra clearly embraces banter with the media more, though it's almost impossible to get him to reveal much of his innermost thinkings or workings. He rarely has revealed any facet of his personal life. And just this week, when asked about how many hours coaches log in the playoffs, he had a two-word answer.

"That's irrelevant," he said.

What is relevant, more than anything else, is this: Spoelstra and Popovich are the last two coaches standing. And in a few days, one of them is going to cradle the Larry O'Brien Trophy once again.

That action will be worth much more than any words.

"Erik is still in the phase where he gets more blame for their losses than credit for their wins, but he's going to the Hall of Fame. He's that good," Van Gundy said. "His even-keel demeanor, his humility, I think helps him really get the most out of his best players and you know, it's fun to watch his teams, fun to watch Pop's teams. I just love the grace and humility both teams play with."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-06-04-BKN-NBA-Finals/id-d6da85dc3fd442bb89d22282c34e951e

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Razer puts 14-inch Blade up for pre-order

Razer puts 14inch Blade up for preorder

Razer teased us when it unveiled the 14-inch Blade last week: a rare blend of portability with gaming performance, and we couldn't even put money down? Well, we can at least do that now. The smaller of the two Blades is now up for pre-order, with prices ranging from $1,800 to $2,300 depending on the SSD capacity. Whatever the storage level, players are getting the same 14-inch 1,600 x 900 display, quad-core 2.2GHz Core i7 processor, 8GB of RAM and GeForce GTX 765M graphics. Any fresh orders should ship within two to three weeks, which fits just inside of Razer's promised launch schedule -- and just ahead of our summer vacations.

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Source: Razer

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/ZLohKPCHijM/

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Tiger moths: Mother Nature's fortune tellers

June 3, 2013 ? When it comes to saving its own hide, the tiger moth can predict the future.

A new study by researchers at Wake Forest University shows Bertholdia trigona, a species of tiger moth found in the Arizona desert, can tell if an echo-locating bat is going to attack it well before the predator swoops in for the kill -- making the intuitive, tiny-winged insect a master of self-preservation.

Predators in the night

A bat uses sonar to hunt at night. The small mammal emits a series of ultrasonic cries and listens carefully to the echoes that return. By determining how long it takes the sound to bounce back, the bat can figure out how far away its prey is.

Aaron Corcoran and William Conner of Wake Forest previously discovered Bertholdia trigona defends itself by jamming its predators' sonar. Conner, a professor of biology, said the tiger moth has a blister of cuticle on either side of its thorax called a tymbal. It flexes this structure to create a high-pitched, clicking sound.

The moth emits more than 4,500 clicks per second right when the bat would normally attack, jamming its sonar.

"It is the only animal in the world we know of that can jam its predator's sonar," Conner said. "Bats and tiger moths are in the midst of an evolutionary arms race."

The new study published May 6 in the journal PLOS ONE, shows that tiger moths can tell when it is time to start clicking by listening for a telltale change in the repetition rate of the bat's cries and an increase in sound intensity. The combination of these two factors tells the moth that it has been targeted.

Conner's team used high-speed infrared cameras to create 3D maps of the flight paths of bats attacking tiger moths. They then used an ultrasonic microphone to measure the rate of bat cries and moth clicks.

Normally, a bat attack starts with relatively intermittent cries. As it gets closer to the moth, a bat increases the rate at which it produces cries -- painting a clearer picture of the moth's location.

Conner's team found that soon after the bats detected and targeted their prey, moths increased their rate of clicking dramatically, causing the predators to veer off course. The sonar jamming works 93 percent of the time. When the tymbal is removed, Conner says the bat will catch the tiger moth 83 percent of the time.

He said this is the first quantitative study to show an animal can trigger defensive behaviors by measuring ultrasonic signals provided by predators during an attack.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/HbpajAiReG0/130603142311.htm

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Iron Chef America Tournament of Champions: And the Winner is...

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/06/iron-chef-america-tournament-of-champions-and-the-winner-is/

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সোমবার, ৩ জুন, ২০১৩

The After Math: Internet trends, Apple TVs and Samsung's Finnish triumph

Welcome to The After Math, where we attempt to summarize this week's tech news through numbers, decimal places and percentages.

The After Math Internet trends, Apple TVs and Samsungs Finnish triumph

The launch of the Xbox One may be behind us, but we still have plenty of numbers to crunch. Speaking of ones, this week we saw a record-setting auction for an old Apple 1, a multi-tabbed refresh of our inbox and the release of Mary Meeker's annual Internet Trends Report. Add to that some big names taking the stage at D11, an anti-graffiti drone and a rather bizarre-looking harp, and you have this week's After Math. Join us after the break for the digits.

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/9XmKyK0a_Zw/

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M@h*(pOet)?ica Matheconceptual Poetry

This entry will be my laziest ever. In fact, it may be as lazy an entry as it?s possible even for me to make. That doesn?t mean it won?t be terrific! It begins with:

Invasion

Invasion

This is from Number Poems, a book by Irving Weiss I used my one-man outfit, the Runaway Spoon Press, to publish in 1997. I liked it so much, I had it on the cover, title-page and as the first poem in the book!

As those who have been reading this blog for a while will know, I take its mandate Very Seriousfully to be a concern with Real Mathematics, preferably mathematics in operation, if on non-mathematical material. That which is mathematics, as opposed to that which is about mathematics. Not that I have wholly neglected poetry about mathematics. Indeed, I hope to have more of that here in the future, for I do consider it as valuable as poetry that is mathematics (in my view), just different from it.

Which brings me to Irving?s book. The works in it are not real mathematics by any stretch of the imagination. (Some of them aren?t poems, either!) But I really like them. What?s more, he?s a good friend of mine?not to mention over ninety now which means that featuring him will win me a bunch of anti-gerontophobia brownie points. Ergo, I had to find a way to get them into this entry. Finally (after many weeks of thought, I assure you), I came up with the concept of something I termed ?matheconceptuality.? This I defined as mathematical thinking about non-mathematical subjects. Or: a way of treating reality that is not, strictly speaking, mathematical but is more mathematical than anything else.

To clarify, my impression is that strictly mathematical thinking is used in just two ways: to measure (i.e., applied math), and to perform number theory (i.e., pure math). What Irving?s matheconceptuality results in is not quite either of those, nor is it a kind of discussion of mathematics (like Rita Dove?s poem in my previous entry about the joy of geometry). It?s closest to the use of simple analogies like equating a boulder?s height to some friend?s. The latter, however, seems to me more the use of a kind of ?ur-math,? or the application of math at its most primitive.

Perhaps the best way to get near what Irving?s matheconceptuality is, is to work out what his ?Invasion? does . . . if I can. If only intuitively, and confusingly . . .

First impression: the piece is minimally ?polluted? by sensory reality. As number theory is.

No, it is emphatically involved with the real?with real numeral ones, with the more real hand-printed numerals (because conveying a sense of the person who made them) . . . the color black. But these material elements are employed primarily in a mathematical manner . . .

The apeiron!1 It just occurred to me that a word I got from a piece by Irving coming up may be just what I need here. It is the Greek philosopher Anaximander?s term for what ?space? used to mean before Einstein: the essential nothingness everything in reality is ?in.? I suggest that?at least as a start?we take what Irving has done in ?Invasion? as apeironian number theory.

The premise for the piece (make that my premise for it) is that the universe was once nothing but ones. This, for me, is the first bit of its mathaesthetic magic, for it presents an arresting archetypal locus that is almost minimally complex, yet capable of dropping someone into fascinating questions. Like how a universe can be all ones. It could not be! Or so I was convinced by my belief in the Eternal Dichotomization of Reality (i.e., that nothing exists that lacks an opposite2). I?d love to be hit with any sane, or even insane, argument against that.

In any case, as I see it, Irving?s poem begins in a pre-mathematical apeiron. The introduction of his ones did not begin an exercise in number theory, but began something prior to the possibility of number theory. What followed was a depiction of an ?invasion? by hand-printed numerals?commanded by a zero, it would seem?of the pre-math of a universe of nothing but ones and absences of ones. A binary universe, actually. The hand-printing is not mathematically important but poetically important, for it suggests that the white numerals are giving this too-purely symbolical binary universe life?even personality.

Note, too, the size of the mouthful of invaded universe, and the distance between its numerals compared with the distance between the invaded universe?s ones. That the complicating elements of the invading forces are white is interesting, as well. Light climbing into numbers and leaving nothing behind for the numeral ones to contrast into meaningfulness against. . .

What seems to me the most important result depicted by the poem is that the numerals needed for fullest, uncumbersome number theory?i.e., real mathematics?become available. The poem, a mathematical way of dealing with the universe just short of doing math, has carried pre-math up to but not into math. Numbers not doing anything, but ready to.3 Or so my thoughts about it go. That the work can make such thoughts possible, regardless of how loony they may be, is?I contend?what gives it the high aesthetic?mathaesthetic?value it seems to me vibrantly to have.4

?Invasion? leads smoothly into the next two pieces from Irving?s Number Poems that I?ve chosen. ?Ones,? is the name I?ve given to the first of these:

Ones

Ones

This puts us back before the time of ?Invasion.? To what may be a contradiction of the universe depicted in it, in a way, because it strongly suggests that ones actually are all that are needed for maximal explanatory complexity?just a final simplicity of ones, black or white, can represent any universe, however complex. A pre-mathematical picture of a binary universe. Also a fascinating maze/wilderness (in spite of being about as linear as possible) to wander in . . .

?One More Is One Less? may be a different part of the universe:

One More Is One Less

One More Is One Less

The idea behind it, I think, is that each another of the dots enters the word, ?ONE,? the less ones over-all there are. We are leaving the chaos of a universe of individuals for a final deadness of the single ONE. Entropy.

From this point on Irving?s pieces here are less clearly matheconceptual, but continuing to remind us how inescapable present mathematics is in everything. I think Irving himself best describes them in the preface he wrote for Number Poems, which begins: ?Numbering is inseparable from living. The numbers are there waiting for us in our bodies and in the world of other people and things-the alphabet and ideographic numerals may belong to the educated but everyone can mark and count.-

?The numbers are in the centrality of nose, navel, penis, and vagina; in the symmetry of eyes, ears, hands, and feet; and in all further combinations of odd and even. The decimal system lies in our fingers and toes. And, all peoples invent some kind of calendar to manage the cosmos with.?

An excellent example of how the above translated into texts is Irving?s following musing from his book. It seems mathematical to me only in that it consists of five sets of observations and is placed in a section of Number Poems called ?Fives.? But how entertainingly unusual its wry slants into what it is to be a human being!

Observations Concerning the Human Being

Observations Concerning the Human Being

?Number Poems,? Irving goes on to write, ?is a sequence of visual poems and word-only poems based on our familiar numbering system. Since numbers are an integral part of symbolic thinking, everyone everywhere has some if not many relations to numbers long before a few among us become tabulators, accountants, mathematicians, or numerologists. I, myself, can?t do more than ordinary arithmetic, but my ignorance doesn?t prevent me from having feelings about and attachments to numbers and even from thinking about their mathematical, historical, mystic, mythic, and familiar uses or accidental significance.

?Number Poems originates in my own sense of number experience. The number words used as the page-titles of my poems represent various ways in which a number came into mind as an emblem or marked an occasion or turned up by chance and became fixed without reason in my memory: I construct the poems as imaginative forms or as abstract ideas.?

?Number experience,? as Irving seems to have undergone it, may be quite close to an engagement with apeironian number theory. My thinking here is definitely fuzzy, but I stand by my main point, which is that in his ?number poems,? Irving is generally working out of his mathematical brain as significantly as he is working out of his verbal brain, and that in the process, he provides us with aesthetic pleasure neither alone is capable of providing.

Instant proof of this is one of Irving?s cartoons, with a genuine mathematical poem in it. Unless it?s a mathematical joke. But surely it can be both.

Snoopy-Math

Snoopy-Math

It is from a larger work:

?

Where

Where

I think a full philosophy could by developed from this diagram of what may be the interior that consciousness is inside the exterior that feeds it. Or of a quest for knowledge sleeping into the essential understandings of reality both maximally and minimally mundane. Or simply of ?where? as both place and question . . . Or even a satire on people who would react to it as I now am.

Okay, you?re on your own, now, mine readers. I hope those of my bumbles into Irving?s works I?ve tried to describe will help you to your own at least partially profitable bumbling into the three pieces that follow?which I say have to do with geometry! I hope, that you will later return for new bumbles into the previous ones, too!

Lines

Lines

Line-Square

Line-Square

Risk Grid

Risk Grid

* * * *

1 Apeiron: in the philosophy of Anaximander (610-c.547 B.C.), a limitless, incommensurable, and boundless primary substance; that which precedes everything else.

Here?s more, which is translated from a 1973 Soviet Encyclopedia of all things: ?Anaximander?s concept was a step forward in developing the concept of matter compared to the theories prevailing at that time. These were propounded by Thales and Anaximenes, who held that the primary substance was one ?element? (water or air). Anaximander?s concept was interpreted by Alexander of Aphrodisias as something between water and air or between fire and water or air. The Pythagoreans viewed it as the limitless, formless principle, which with its opposing ?limit? constituted the basic grounds of being.?

2 Or that the structure of our brains makes it impossible for us to imagine anything without an opposite.

3 There is a nice suggestion of Roman Numerals changing to Arabic Numerals, too.

4 I really do try to make sense of the works I write about. Here I only hope I?ve made interesting half-sense.

Previously in this series:

M@h*(pOet)?ica
M@h*(pOet)?ica: Summerthings
M@h*(pOet)?ica?Louis Zukofsky?s Integral
M@h*(pOet)?ica?Scott Helmes
M@h*(pOet)?ica?of Pi and the Circle, Part 1
M@h*(pOet)?ica ? Happy Holidays!
M@h*(pOet)?ica?Circles, Part 3
M@h*(pOet)?ica-?Karl Kempton
M@h*(pOet)?ica ? Mathematics and Love
M@h*(pOet)?ica?Mathekphrastic Poetry
M@h*(pOet)?ica?Mathekphrastic Poetry, Part 2

Source: http://www.scientificamerican.com/blog/post.cfm?id=mhpoetica-matheconceptual-poetry

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