Category Archives: Uncategorized

Do You Have The Placebo Gene?

Do You Have The Placebo Gene?
“More generally, it seems like a big step toward understanding the biology of the placebo effect — and other human behaviors”

YouTube: Richard Phillips Feynman – The Last Journey Of A Genius

Richard Phillips Feynman – The Last Journey Of A Genius

Blog: Marginal Revolution: *The Bretton Woods Transcripts*

Blog: THE BOOK–Playing The Percentages In Baseball: Brooklyn Islanders move from Nassau County

Transcript: The Future of Marriage

Transcript: The Future of Marriage
“See, because if I don’t have any doubt, I don’t need you. I should be nice to you out of manners, but I don’t need a relationship with you. I may want you to be available to be lectured by me so that you can come to the correct view and I may want to treat you politely for that reason, but I don’t really need you. As I grow older, I grow in doubt and that’s good. And I feel like that that’s a healthier way to be. And if I am not sure that I have the full truth of the matter, I need you.”

YouTube: So Real it’s Scary

So Real it’s Scary

Learnable Programming

Learnable Programming
“The design principles presented in this essay can be used as a checklist to evaluate a programming system for learning.”

Frans Johansson: how ‘luck’ can be used to enhance success

Frans Johansson: how ‘luck’ can be used to enhance success
“The 10,000 hours practice rule only works in a field like tennis where the rules don’t change.”

Flickr: Crosley Field

Crosley Field
Unfortunately this picture is in horrible condition, but it does give a good idea of what Crosley field looked like from the stands.

Flickr: Crosley Field

Crosley Field
I removed the worst scratches from this photo. It still doesn’t look great, but it is a lot better than it was. Taken by my father over 60 years ago.

Flickr: Iraq

Iraq
Pfc. Preston Snook leans back and waits for his pitch during a pick-up baeball game on Camp Fallujah’s sandlot baseball field. Marines from Regimental Combat Team 5 gather weekly to play ball, a way to releive the stress of being deployed and relive their dreams of one day being a Major League Baseball player.

Photo by: Gunnery Sgt. Mark Oliva
Submitting Unit: 1st Marine Division
Cleared for Release

Flickr: Jackie Robinson, Civil Rights Pioneer (note the epitaph and brief biography)

Jackie Robinson, Civil Rights Pioneer (note the epitaph and brief biography)
Jack Robinson was the first African-American ballplayer in 20th-century Major League Baseball. His contract with the Brooklyn Dodgers ended 80 years of baseball segregation. He endured racial hatred and discrimination throughout his career with great composure and dignity. Robinson’s accomplishments extend far beyond his baseball achievements, however. Some examples:

In John Muir High School , Robinson lettered in four sports. He was a Pacific Coast (California) state tennis champion, a star quarterback in football, a talented guard in basketball and a track-and-field award-winning broad jumper. At Pasadena Junior College he once again was a star in four sports.

At UCLA, Jackie became the first university athlete to letter in four sports and played in the 1939 Rose Bowl against USC, which ended in a 0-0 tie. The 1939 UCLA football team had many African-American players, also a ground-breaking civil rights team.

He was drafted into the Army in 1942 and experienced discrimination almost immediately. being told to move, literally, to the "back of the bus" of a segregated Army transport. Jackie refused and subsequently was put on trial for insubordination (this was during the period when the Armed Services were segregated, prior to 1948). Eventually he was found innocent by an all-white jury. Jackie was released with an Honorable Discharge.

On the Brooklyn Dodgers, Jackie was constantly throughout his career (1947-1957) the victim of race hatred, both on the ball field and by the fans. He had been brought up to the Major Leagues by Branch Rickey, owner of the Dodgers, to add badly needed talent to the team. He was expected to "take it" and have the "guts not to fight back", a difficult burden for this pioneer of civil rights, as pitchers threw speeding baseballs at his head and base runners tried to spike and tackle him on the base paths (Robinson played much of his career at second base). Some fans sent him hate mail and he was under constant threat from them, especially since they were in the stands where he played.

After his baseball career, he was on the Board of Directors for the Chock Full O’ Nuts Coffee Company and a member of the board of other organizations such as the NAACP (National Association for the Advancement of Colored People). Robinson started a construction company to help low-income families, too.

He was a political activist who supported Governor Nelson Rockefeller and – I hesitate to say this – Richard Nixon. Suffice it to say that Jackie was an old-school liberal Republican, and he gets a "pass" from me on it.

Jackie battled health crisis after health crisis throughout his life. This includes fighting diabetes, heart problems and near-blindness. He was saddened by his son’s death as a result of an accident. Jackie Junior died one year before his father and had battled drug problems his whole adult life.

Jackie died, aged just 53, of heart failure. This great man is buried in Cypress Hills Cemetery in Brooklyn, New York, in the same borough where he played ball at Ebbets Field for the Brooklyn Dodgers.

Flickr: Pole Sitter

Pole Sitter
A fan managed to climb on top of a light post in the parking lot of Citizen’s Bank Park. A massive picture of the Phillie Phanatic hangs in the background.

Highest Explore Rank:
No. 84 (11/4/08)

Flickr: Crosley Field

Crosley Field
I don’t know the year, but my guess is 1950 or a year or two earlier. Taken by my father many moons ago.

Flickr: Misty Fall Baseball

Misty Fall Baseball
The mist began to roll in from the outfield during a night baseball game in Tinton Falls, NJ

Flickr: 1979 Chicago Cubs Scorecard

1979 Chicago Cubs Scorecard
August 4, 1979 – Mike Krukow vs. John Denny

Highlights – Dave Kingman hit a 3 run HR, Bruce Sutter recorded a save.

Cubs Won 8-6 (56-48)
29,720 fans.

Flickr: Korean Soccer Players

Korean Soccer Players
Seoul during October 1945. The Koreans played it since the late 19th century, according to some history I just read. Here’s an exerpt;
"Football provided the only channel for the Korean people to release the wrath and hardships under the Japanese colonialism and one of the few means to keep alive the hopes for national independence.&quot

I used a Leica and outdated Ansco film.

;

Flickr: Chicago, Illinois

Chicago, Illinois
The Cubby Bear, across the street from
Wrigley Field, 1060 West Addison St. Chicago USA
Welcome to the friendly confines,
Yashica T4, Ilford FP4 film
Photograph taken 1994

Flickr: Russian Hill, San Francisco

Russian Hill, San Francisco
Chrysler Convertible
Taylor Street, Russian Hill district,
San Francisco 1990

Flickr: AT&T Park site, San Franciso

AT&T Park site, San Franciso
San Francisco Giants ballpark AT&T Park under construction, (then called PacBell Park.) 3rd and King street, San Francisco
1999