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By Sheila Lennon
'
Bottom-up' journalism from the pros


Journal photo / Sandor Bodo
Convergence art: Steel and Light by architects Barbara Macauly and Bob Hogan involves turning the Fox Point Hurricane Barrier into a giant outdoor movie screen Saturday and Sunday from 8 p.m. to midnight. Robert Mapplethorpe's Self Portrait 1980 is projected above. This is one of the works in Providence's Convergence 2002 Arts Festival's final weekend; street painting, Saturday, is another.

 


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September 18, 2002 - Last week's weblog

Letter from Larry: Onetime New Bedford Standard Times reporter Larry Novick and his wife Victoria left Providence in May, retiring to Victoria's native Cape Verde. Victoria died Sept. 1. We have been publishing the expat's dispatches.

Sudden death in Cape Verde

It's been two weeks since we lost Victoria and, ever so slowly, I've begun to accept the void in my life. I've been so fortunate that people here, the majority of whom I've known only briefly, have been so supportive.

I've just returned from a long talk with Cesaria. (Cesaria Evora, an internationally acclaimed Cape Verdean singer, is Victoria's cousin.) She has been the strongest part of my life during these past sad days. Her spiritual and emotional support are beyond description. Every word she speaks comes from deep in her heart and every word makes absolute sense. It is no wonder that she is loved by so many all over the world. Today, she sat and talked of the strength and beauty in the love Victoria and I had for each other. "But," she said, "we all only have one life to live and you must continue yours with force and courage."

The funeral and mourning period have been a multicultural melange. Victoria's coffin was brought to the house within four hours of her death -- there is no embalming in this tropical country -- and placed on a stand in the living room which is devoid of all decoration. Her body has been bathed, dressed and covered in a simple shroud. There are two candles in glass sconces at the head of the coffin. All the windows and doors are opened to allow the elements of pain and suffering to escape. I sit with the coffin along with mourners and continual cups of black coffee.

At 4:30 p.m. the next day, the musicians who will accompany Victoria to the grave are outside tuning their instruments. At 5 p.m, the hearse arrives and the two-mile final walk to the cemetery begins, accompanied by a cross section of Cape Verdean society: the deputy to the National Assembly, the director of the local census bureau, bakers and shopkeepers, stevedores and prostitutes. I am supported by a good friend, a wafer-thin Renaissance man who plays a soul-stirring guitar and can construct a computer from discarded parts from anywhere in the European Union. There are no priests, no black ties and, in many cases, no shoes, just a slow dirge and a steady drumroll. It started to rain during the procession, a good sign in a country where drought is so prevalent.

Final serenade: Senhor Tomar plays a predawn tribute to Victoria Novick at Larginha Beach, Sao Vicente, Cape Verde.

About 200 yards from the cemetery, the hearse stops; the coffin is removed and hand-carried to the grave. It is an honor to be a pallbearer and, every ten yards or so, the carriers switch. I am not allowed past the cemetery gates. Tradition says that if I approach the open grave, the soul of the deceased would pull me in and I would die within a year.

There is no service, no eulogy, just a quick interment and an emolument to the grave diggers. The seven-day mourning period is relentless, with a steady stream of keeners and wailers (no "3-5, 7-9 and ciao" here, folks). Because obituaries don't exist, word of mouth is the source of news and the farther away you get from the center of town, the longer it takes to get the word.

I lose it a couple of times but I guess that's to be expected. I manage to sleep a few hours each night but a chronic fatigue and malaise starts after a few days. It feels like sensory deprivation but some how I keep on (force and courage).

On the seventh day, the mourning period officially ends. At the exact hour of death (7:35 p.m.), there is a simple toast to the departed and the food and drink are laid out. Feijaoada ,a bean-based stew, (recipe attached ), canja (a hearty chicken soup) and grogue, a raw sugar-cane based liquor, are the staples, and their consumption goes on well past midnight.

The week ends as it began, with music. As the house empties in the pre-dawn hours, a few of us go to the beach for a final serenade to one who was so loved by so many. The morna (lament) Hora de Bai (Time of Departure) by the most famous of Cape Verdean poets, Eugenio Tavares, is sung.

The instruments are packed away; I am talked out of a sunrise swim and life goes on with force and courage.

Love to all, Larry

{Tell all to continue e-mails, they are a great source of strength.)

Larry Novick's email address is quill2@earthlink.net; earlier Letters from Larry: August 22, August 5, June 25, May 23, Sept. 3
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Crop circle #6 seems to represent a magnetic field.

Intelligent crop circles? It began as an email from a reader attempting to find an author cited in a wire story. The story was about crop circles, and he wrote,

My name is Tom Sutter, I am now retired. But during my working career I was involved with both mechanical and electrical design techniques. My whole life has been dedicated to resolving complex issues in both fields....

Your recent article, Leslie Kean: Origin of crop circles baffles scientists (09/16/2002) Caught my attention. Though I am not involved with research delving into how crop circles are created. I may very well have ascertained why they are created and what they represent. In fact, I am pretty doggone sure that I have.

And he gave a link to a photo presentation site where he has placed 51 slides. Intrigued, I clicked to it, and found photos of circles such as the one at right that seem to depict water molecules, microwaves and more; others contain text only. I wrote to Mr. Sutter, asking him to explain briefly for SHENEWS readers "why they are created and what they represent."

Here's what he wrote:

The "what" of crop circles lies in the fact that our society has progressed to the point where we ought to recognize these graphics. They represent the highest limits of our advancing technology. A more advanced society will know what our society will innovate next & these renderings depict those devices both in schematical format &/or in the operand thereof. Our most advanced research laboratories ought to be able to duplicate what is depicted in those formations. By very careful study of every detail rendered in the crop formations I have studied, I have ascertained that there are 8 distinct devices rendered. That site explains 5 of them in terms that are easily understandable. And I have employed the crop formations themselves in place of schematical drawings. Please have a person versed in physics view them & comment on them for you.


Lucy Pringle
Crop circle #51, which Sutter calls an "alien" face.

As for the "why," contingent to the fact that crop circles exist. Simply use logic. Whenever we ourselves come into contact with any newly discovered species we endeavor to examine it. & So it is with other intelligent societies. Now rationalize a scenario whereby two intelligent societies discover each other. One far more technologically advanced then the other and also very different in appearance then the other. How would they meet? The two cultural histories are radically different. The foods & preferences of each are radically different. And the values of each are very different. The ONLY things in common that can be used as a conveyance to initiate relations is the table of elements. The periodic table. And the fact that all intelligent societies will draft very similar schematical renderings of devices. I.E. - A schematic drawing of an internal combustion engine will be recognized as such by all regardless of the culture or the language or the country employed at its inception. Such all encompassing graphics are what crop circles depict. We have an advanced society knocking at our door right now. THAT’S what crop circles are all about. - A medium used as a means of establishing friendly/formal contact between two very different societies.

The images are stunning, the hypothesis intriguing, a visit to Sutter's site will stretch the imagination; our physicist-readers will have to evaluate the quality of the science. More of his thoughts about how such a multi-species drama might play out are also laid out on Sutter's site.
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Blog school: Last night, OJR's JD Lasica, the Seattle Times' Dan Gillmor, blogbook authors Rebecca Blood and Meg Hourihan and Scott Rosenberg of Salon participated in a 90-minute panel before Paul Grabowicz's and John Battelle's students at the UC Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism. (You may recall that Berkeley has launched a course on weblogs.) JD blogs it, and offers links to others' perspectives.
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Tempting: The Roomba intelligent floor vacuum -- a household robot. $199. This is a good sign -- can intelligent bathroom-cleaner robots be far behind? via John Robb's Radio Weblog
A review of the Roomba: PC Magazine watches a demo, tries it out. Pros: Works pretty well, easy to use, it's the prototype and it's cool. Cons: Doesn't understand "clean," so won't go over spots twice, tiny dirt cup, five times slower than you.
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I'm taking a few days off. If I blog, it will be on my personal site, which has been dormant for a month. Otherwise, next edition will be late Monday.

September 17, 2002

Providence Journal told to restore benefits to reporters, editors
In a 45-page decision that follows last spring's NLRB-prosecuted trial, an administrative law judge has ordered the Belo-owned Providence Journal to restore many benefits that have been eliminated in the past two years. Staffers have worked without a contract for nearly three years. (Associated Press) -- Jim Romenesko's Media News

Here's the ruling (pdf) (48 pages, 3.8 megs)
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Peace One Day update: There's a preview here -- an audio clip -- of the Peace One Day song by reggae legend Jimmy Cliff and former Eurythmic Dave Stewart (featuring the Nadz). The full song may be downloaded Sept. 19 (Thursday). The organizers write, "We have approached radio stations all over the world and we expect the song to ride a wave of radio play as each time zone hits 12 noon on 21st September 2002."
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We're way beyond switchboards: Doc Searls gets to the meat of an essay, The Recording Industry is Tryng to Kill the Goose that Lays te Golden Egg by Dan Bricklin, who conceived the first electronic spreadsheet, VisiCalc, while a student at MIT in 1978:

The entertainment industry is trying to turn Peer-to-Peer into a bad name. This is wrong. Fax machines are Peer-to-Peer. Telephones are Peer-to-Peer. Email is Peer-to-Peer. Cell phones are Peer-to-Peer. As we see here, maybe the Peer-to-Peer systems they should be complaining about are sold by AT&T Wireless, Verizon, and Voicestream.

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Young and dating in NYC: Take one email from a cute new guy, comment on it (cynically) and and casually forward it to a friend... oops, that was the reply icon, not the forward button. This email has been more places than a chain letter. Read from the bottom! And we thought the guy who complained about modern dating by "The Rules" might have been exaggerating.
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Pyramid bust: Too hokey. AP reports,

CAIRO, Egypt (AP) -- Researchers are planning more exploration after their high-tech probe into an ancient pyramid Tuesday solved one puzzle and introduced another.

Before a live, international television audience Tuesday, the Pyramid Rover -- a robot the size of a toy train -- took two hours to crawl through a narrow shaft in the Great Pyramid outside Cairo, drill through a door at the end and push through a camera to reveal: another door.

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I'm a loser: The Online News Association named its finalists for its annual awards yesterday, and Providence's NBC TV affiliate, Channel 10, is in the running, for its Plunder Dome coverage. (Congratulations, neighbors!)

JD Lasica explains the competition further and points to some of his favorites. He set off a discussion here when he wrote, "Nary a blog to be seen -- though Dan Gillmor's eJournal and James Taranto's OpinionJournal.com were nominated for best online commentary." Is Dan Gillmor a blogger? Or a columnist?

Dave Winer writes, "With almost 2.5 million page reads in the last year, Scripting News would not qualify for the small-flow categories in the Online Journalism Awards. Their cutoff is 200,000 visits per month. We did more than that. " I don't think he means he actually applied -- formal application is required, and fees average $100 per entry -- just pointing out that his site gets more hits than many formal online news sites.

But projo.com did enter this blog in the contest, so I'm now publicly and officially chopped liver. Oh, well...
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September 16, 2002

Convergence art: Textured Gear by Rob Lorenson of Middleboro, Mass., installed on the Providence Riverwalk, is one of the works in the Convergence 2002 Arts Festival 's outdoor sculpture exhibit.

Bush planned Iraq 'regime change' before becoming President: The Glasgow (Scotland) Sunday Herald reports,

A SECRET blueprint for US global domination reveals that President Bush and his cabinet were planning a premeditated attack on Iraq to secure 'regime change' even before he took power in January 2001.

The blueprint, uncovered by the Sunday Herald, for the creation of a 'global Pax Americana' was drawn up for Dick Cheney (now vice- president), Donald Rumsfeld (defence secretary), Paul Wolfowitz (Rumsfeld's deputy), George W Bush's younger brother Jeb and Lewis Libby (Cheney's chief of staff). The document, entitled Rebuilding America's Defences: Strategies, Forces And Resources For A New Century, was written in September 2000 by the neo-conservative think-tank Project for the New American Century (PNAC).

The plan shows Bush's cabinet intended to take military control of the Gulf region whether or not Saddam Hussein was in power. It says: 'The United States has for decades sought to play a more permanent role in Gulf regional security. While the unresolved conflict with Iraq provides the immediate justification, the need for a substantial American force presence in the Gulf transcends the issue of the regime of Saddam Hussein.'

China is also slated for "regime change." Yikes. The September, 2000, "blueprint" is not secret now, if it ever was. Here it is.

The originating think tank, Project for a New American Century, lists Gary J. Schmitt as Executive Director. The bylines on the report are Donald Kagan and Gary Schmitt, Project Co-Chairmen and Thomas Donnelly, Principal Author.
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Saddam Hussein music videos: Iraqi television broadcasts nightly one of its "Sadddam Hussein music videos." PBS posts two of them.
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Truly mobile, free Wi-Fi access as a public service: A car offering free Wi-Fi access can park near public events -- permitting live blogging -- or next to a Starbucks, providing a free alternative to commercial access. ZDnet reports (WiFi "hot spot" in the fast lane?),

Public hot-spot operators have a weapon in their protest against the growth of commercial Wi-Fi networks: Michael Oh's "war car."

The 1997 Saturn has enough Wi-Fi equipment installed on its bumper and rooftop to create a 150-foot wireless network, said Oh, who helps run a free wireless network covering two Boston city blocks and is one of hundreds of so-called public hot-spot operators who believe Wi-Fi networks and the Internet access they offer should remain free.

The war car's first sortie was nine days ago to a Starbucks cafe, where Wi-Fi access is sold by the minute.

Oh parked the car outside the cafe and fired up the network. Because the vehicle was close enough to the shop, laptop users inside the Starbucks -- which charges up to $2.50 for 15 minutes of access -- could use his free network. "A couple of people logged on," he said.

Here's how to do it yourself: Oh has released a way to assemble the war car from commercially available Wi-Fi equipment.
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Musicians take on RIAA record labels: Slashdot sums it up nicely: "USA Today has an article [Rights issue rocks the music world] about the growing friction between recording artists and the 5 major labels which make up the RIAA. Many issues are covered, including copyright reform, fraudulent accounting on the part of record labels, and how selling a quarter million albums can leave you owing your label $14,000."

Ironically, music file-sharing advocates played a major role in bring to light the policies which have left musicians without health insurance, owing money after a blockbuster tour, and dying penniless; file-sharing itself brought RIAA to prominence.

Here's to top of the USA Today story:

Record companies see it as mutiny. Musicians call it an overdue rebellion. Either way, the artists' rights movement has set the stage for combat that could revolutionize the music industry.

What started as a classic David-and-Goliath skirmish over contractual terms could be tilting toward a level battlefield as opposition on a wide range of issues swells against an industry mired in a sales slump.

"The record business is in rough enough shape that something might actually change," says Craig Marks, editor of Blender magazine. "If things weren't so uncertain, so bleak and in such disarray, the industry would be immovable, even with a gun to its head. If there was ever a set of circumstances that could lead to artists making inroads, it's now."

Clinging to the status quo are the world's five major record conglomerates: Universal, Sony, Time Warner, EMI/Virgin and Bertelsmann, represented by a powerful trade group, the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA). They face challenges from increasingly vocal performers supporting the Recording Artists' Coalition (RAC), whose diverse roster of 150 members includes Bruce Springsteen, Sting, R.E.M., Bonnie Raitt, Madonna, Eric Clapton, Dave Matthews, Billy Joel, Elton John, Linkin Park, Aimee Mann, No Doubt, Puddle of Mudd, Staind and Static-X.

Related: Boycott-RIAA.com
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Cornell publication provides lab-tested ways to remove 250 different stains from clothes and textiles:

A new publication by textile experts at Cornell University -- also available online in Adobe Acrobat format -- provides laboratory-tested details on removing almost 250 different stains, from adhesive tape and antiperspirant to wax crayon and wine with products that can be found in most grocery stores or pharmacies. via Robot Wisdom

There's an Adobe page that will convert .pdfs to html for you. Just paste in the url of the .pdf.
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Scripps Howard Creates J-School, Aims To Bolster Newsroom Diversity: Editor & Publisher reports,

New York -- Proponents of newsroom diversity last week hailed as a giant step forward the Scripps Howard Foundation's creation of a new media school at historically black Hampton University in Hampton, Va.

The Scripps Howard School of Journalism and Communications, set to be dedicated Sept. 25, is believed to be the first industry-created j-school at a historically black college and the biggest dollar commitment going to a single racial-diversity program.

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Updates:

Robot to explore pyramid: National Geographic Channel Presents Pyramids Live: Secret Chambers Revealed, is the name of the show tonight 8 p.m. on Fox.

A mooovement grows in Barrington reports on the rally to save the blue cow in Barrington. (Yes, ever bovine pun is covered here.)

Subterranean Homepage News
by Sheila Lennon
features & interactive producer of projo.com

 

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