Notelets for 2006.04.01

I'm currently reading Parker Palmer's A Hidden Wholeness : The Journey Toward an Undivided Life. He is writing about a crucial and timely theme for me -- the need for and challenges of living a whole, integrated life.

Tomorrow at First Pres Berkeley, we will be encouraging folks to send
postcards to President Bush urging him to take further action on
Darfur. I just read the lastest weekly news update. Great fors ome encouraging news. What should we be asking of George Bush? The wording to the president on A Million Voices for Darfur still stands:

    I urge you to live up to
    those words by using the power of your office to support a stronger
    multi-national force to protect the civilians of Darfur.

After posting Hypotyposis on a Good Day: countdown -- the book, I found and listened to The Connection.org : Beautiful Minds about the Mathematical Olympiad.

I'm not the only one having problems uploading pictures to Flickr this morning: Flickr: Forums: FlickrBugs: New Uploads Hang on "Processing".

Notelets for 2006.01.13

eastbayexpress.com | News & Features | City of Warts | Let the Bulldozing Commence | 2006-01-11:

    On to the California Department of Health Services
    laboratory, at the corner of Shattuck Avenue and Berkeley Way. On one
    end, you have the Gourmet Ghetto. On the other end, you have downtown
    Berkeley's movie theaters, restaurants, and nightclubs. But for some
    reason, there's an eerie no-man's-land that keeps the two from becoming
    one grand boulevard of eateries and nightlife. That'd be the
    intervening parking lot and hideous eight-story monolith, where worker
    bees once toiled in research laboratories run by the state Department
    of Health Services.

Yes, tear it down -- but just keep the parking lots!

More Companies Ending Promises for Retirement - New York Times.
Another story about how companies (even companies that are doing really
well) are moving away from their pension plans, shifting the long-term
risk to employees.

Last weekend, I learned about the Jewish concept of Lashon hara, making me more conscious of my own need for good talk.

Notelets for 2006.01.02

Professors' Politics Draw Lawmakers Into the Fray
is on David Horowitz's efforts to push for "academic freedom"
legislation. I am sympathetic to those who feel that academia as a
whole has a lot of liberal biases and that academics often don't even
understand their own predilections. (They aren't as fair and open
minded as they often believe they are.) Legislation is not the answer,
and Horowitz's effort is clearly motivated for partisan conservative
ends.

I jus saw an interview on CNN with Stanley Renshon, the author of The 50% American: Immmigration And National Identity in an Age of Terror.
I wasn't impressed with either the author or CNN. I was surprised by
the shared, unquestioned, and blatant assumption that in order to be
loyal to the USA, one has to detach completely from other countries.
There doesn't seem to be any room for being both fond and critical of
the country. That is the gist of what I got, but I could be wrong. Important questions on immigration – but wrong answers confirms my impressions though.

Often, I need encouragement -- even a kick in the pants -- to pursue
the biggest ideas and problems that intrigue me. I found such
encouragement in Paul Graham's latest Good and Bad Procrastination that points to Richard Hamming: You and Your Research.
Hamming would go around asking fellow Bell Labs staffers what the most
important problems were in their respective fields, whether they were
working on said problems, and if not, then why.

Don't Think Twice, It's All Right. Thinking is overrated. (inside joke)

Twenty Years Later, Buying a House Is Less of a Bite:

    In high-profile places like New York and Los
    Angeles, home to many of the people who study and write about real
    estate, families buying their first home often must spend more than
    half of their income on mortgage payments, far more than they once did.
    But the places that have become less affordable over the last
    generation account for only a quarter of the country's population.

On Sunday morning, I read The New York Review of Books: The Strange Case of Chaplain Yee, a review of For God And Country: Faith and Patriotism Under Fire.
It astounds me and saddens me that such egregious abuse of power is
tolerated in this country. You can listen to an interview with James
Yee at NPR : Muslim Army Chaplain Recalls Guantanamo Ordeal.

Notelets for 2005.12.15

Digital Photos Even a Miser Can Enjoy - New York Times:

    Twelve manufacturers entered this fifth annual
    camera cook-off. Each submitted the one sub-$300 camera (online price)
    that it felt took the best pictures.

    Several trends emerged. Picture quality continues to improve every
    year, and the megapixel race continues apace; this year, five- and
    six-megapixel cameras are standard. (More megapixels permit bigger
    enlargements and more room to crop, but do not affect photo quality.)

Today, I bought an issue of Stone Soup Magazine as a present for a bright and energetic eight-year old girl. I'm glad for an ad in the New York Review of Books that prompted me into looking at a magazine that I had never heard of before a couple of days ago.

Notelets for 2005.11.30

I'm intrigued that Lynn points to some articles from Wired since I myself am a subscriber to the magazine:

Anyway, Wired had some great articles including "Why $5 gas is good for America"

and

Stan Berenstain, Children's Book Author, Dies at 82 - New York Times. I learned about the Berenstain Bears by hanging out kids the last eight years.

Kansas Prof. Apologizes for E-Mail:

    Mirecki's e-mail was sent Nov. 19 to members of
    the Society of Open-Minded Atheists and Agnostics, a student
    organization for which he serves as faculty adviser.

    "The fundies (fundamentalists) want it all taught in a science class,
    but this will be a nice slap in their big fat face by teaching it as a
    religious studies class under the category mythology."

    Mirecki addressed the message to "my fellow damned" and signed off
    with: "Doing my part to (tick) off the religious right, Evil Dr. P."

Notelets for 2005.11.23

Late yesterday afternoon, my left ankle started to hurt after I got up
from sitting at my desk for an hour. I thought it strange since I
walked a lot yesterday with no problem. Had I sprained my ankle without
even being aware of it? At any rate, I am trying to put into practice
the treatment suggested at Ankle Sprain - treatment and exercise and hope for the best.

Underground, but not unconnected -- BART offers wireless service to riders. I myself wasn't able to connect via the SprintPCS service on Tuesday. Hmmm.

On Sunday, I enjoyed reading:

Salon.com - Daou Report:

THE STRAW MEN OF IRAQ: Ten Pro-War Fallacies
Friday's hastily staged congressional vote on withdrawal from Iraq may have been designed
to embarrass John Murtha, but the raucous session offered valuable
insight into the various rationales for war and the tactics used to
attack Democrats who oppose Bush's Iraq policy. A parade of House
Republicans went after the Dems and laid out a surprisingly weak case
for the invasion and continued occupation of Iraq. Here, in my view,
are ten of the leading pro-war fallacies...

Notelets for 2005.11.01

Why Race Isn't as 'Black' and 'White' as We Think - New York Times:

    The test results underscore what anthropologists
    have said for eons: racial distinctions as applied in this country are
    social categories and not scientific concepts. In addition, those
    categories draw hard, sharp distinctions among groups of people who are
    more alike than they are different. The ultimate point is that none of
    us really know who we are, ancestrally speaking. All we ever really
    know is what our parents and grandparents have told us.

Interesting that the Berkeley Public Library chose The House on Mango Street for "Berkeley Reads Together".

More Notelets for 2005.09.06

Listening right to a CBC Radio piece on the Linda Tillery and the Cultural Heritage Choir. I didn't realize that there is a labour dispute at the CBC right now.

Bush and Congress Announce Inquiries on Government Response - New York Times:


    Bush and Congress Announce Inquiries on Government Response - New York Times]: President Bush and Congressional leaders vowed today to find out what went wrong in the federal response to Hurricane Katrina, with Mr. Bush declaring that "bureaucracy's not going to stand in the way of getting the job done for the people."

I got my Pentax camera back, a month after shipping it to Pentax for repair. It works again -- but I don't think that I will buy another Pentax camera because of the extremely slow repair process.


Branching out the Banyan Tree sounds like an awesome conference, but I'll be in NYC then for Small Tools/Big Ideas.


A quote from C. S. Lewis from Sunday's sermon in relationship to Rev 3:20:


    Imagine yourself as a living house. God comes in to rebuild that house. At first, perhaps, you can understand what he is doing. He is getting the drains right and stopping the leaks in the roof and so on: you knew that those jobs needed doing and so you are not surprised.