THE MT VOID
Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
03/25/05 -- Vol. 23, No. 39 (Whole Number 1275)

El Presidente: Mark Leeper, mleeper@optonline.net
The Power Behind El Pres: Evelyn Leeper, eleeper@optonline.net
Back issues at http://www.geocities.com/evelynleeper
All material copyright by author unless otherwise noted.
All comments sent will be assumed authorized for inclusion
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Topics:
	Loving Care for the MT VOID (comments by Mark R. Leeper)
	High Energy on the Cheap: And a Little Shrimp Shall
		Lead Them (comments by Mark R. Leeper)
	Olympics and Jumps (letter of comment by David Goldfarb)
	SPRINGTIME IN THE ROCKIES (film review by Mark R. Leeper)
	This Week's Reading (INTRODUCING EVOLUTIONARY PSYCHOLOGY
		and THE SIGN AND THE SEAL) (book comments
		by Evelyn C. Leeper)

===================================================================

TOPIC: Loving Care for the MT VOID (comments by Mark R. Leeper)

At the World Science Fiction Convention they were honoring one of
the great old fanzine writers of science fiction.  They wanted to
attendees to know that when he wrote an article for his fanzine he
qould personally set the type by hand.  This apparently shows the
loving care he lavished on his fanzine.  I never thought of this
as that much of a virtue.  But in case it matters to our readers I
want them to know that when I write an article for the VOID I also
personally go to that extra bit of effort to set the type by
hand.  (And before you ask, the type I usually select is ".txt".)
[-mrl]

===================================================================

TOPIC: High Energy on the Cheap: And a Little Shrimp Shall Lead
Them (comments by Mark R. Leeper)

There is a growing excitement in parts of the physics community
these days.  And you may have read about it here first.  Back on
September 27, 2002, I published in the MT VOID the following
article on Snapping Shrimp.

"Department of Odd Science Facts: I was a little taken aback when
I read an article about the Snapping Shrimp.  This little
character is really a candidate for Ripley's "Believe it or Not."
It seems he (or she) has an unusual defense mechanism.  The
shrimp has a big claw and he snaps it shut.  Just by the
cavitation of the moving claw it creates a little bubble that
pops and startles its prey.  Whole submarines can hide the sound
of their engines from sonar from just the popping bubbles from
these shrimp.  Isn't that something?  No?  Ya' say ya' not
satisfied that this is an interesting creature?  How about if I
said that the bubble actually gives off light?  It does, you
know.  Still not impressed?  How about if I said that the bubble
also gets hot?  How hot?  Something like 25,000 degrees
Fahrenheit.  Other sources I read made the temperature estimate
considerably higher.  [A now-defunct URL from ABC News] makes the
temperature something like the temperature in the sun.  This is
one shrimp I would not want to mess with.  It could end up frying
me."

When I said this, I got people responding that they did not get
the joke.  Mostly the article was ignored.  It sounds ridiculous
on the face of it.  In fact we are talking about a water
phenomenon called sonoluminescence.  For a long time it was just
associated with the propulsion methods of submarines.  I think it
was during World War II that it was discovered that there was a
glowing around the propellers of submarines.  The phenomenon is
that imploding bubbles in a liquid when excited by sound give off
light and even create heat.  I mean a lot of heat.

As Kenneth Chang reports in the science section of the New York
Times, "When the force of sound waves implode tiny bubbles within
a liquid at room temperature, the surface of the bubble can reach
temperatures at least 25,000 degrees Fahrenheit, more than twice
as hot as the surface of the sun, scientists reported this
month...  The scientists, at the University of Illinois, did not
speculate just how hot the bubble became, but said they had
managed to create a state of matter called plasma inside the
bubble. In it, some of the electrons have been stripped off the
atoms.  'This is the first definitive proof of the existence of a
plasma' during this kind of bubble implosion, said one of the
scientists, Dr. Kenneth S. Suslick, a professor of chemistry at
Illinois.  Their finding supports the intriguing notion that it
may be possible to compress these bubbles so violently that vapor
molecules in them are heated to multimillion-degree
temperatures."  http://tinyurl.com/475pz

What are we talking about here?  Little tiny points of immense
heat.  The points are too small to cause any damage.  In fact
though shrimp have been creating these bubble for a long time,
nobody ever noticed the heat.  They just knew the bubbles the
snapping shrimp create put on a cool sound and light show.  And I
mean cool.  Now how might the ability to create super-high
temperatures in very small areas be useful?  Do the words "cold
fusion" come to mind?

Chang goes on to say, "In 2002, scientists performing an
experiment at Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Tennessee even
reported that they had used the technique to fuse hydrogen atoms
into helium - the process that powers the sun. That experiment
did not measure the bubble temperatures, but detected byproducts
of fusion."  OK, so cold fusion is no longer a possibility, but
is already an accomplished fact.  Or may be.  The scientists are
still farbling about it, trying to figure out what they have.
People have announced cold fusion in the past and the tide of
scientific opinion has been against it.  However, the resistance
to accept is becoming weaker as Chang reports.

Cold fusion, which now seems tantalizingly close, would be a
source of--dare I say it--almost limitless very cheap energy.
This does not mean that it will be usable.  I frankly do not know
if it would be safer and cheaper to generate than fission energy.
But it does begin to feel like it is almost within our grasp.
[-mrl]

===================================================================

TOPIC: Olympics and Jumps (letter of comment by David Goldfarb)

David Goldfarb responds to Dan Cox's letter on weather
forecasting in the 03/18/05 issue, where Dan said in part:
      you can't win Olympic(tm) figure skating no matter how
      good your single-axle jumps are.
      ...
      (Olympic, Olympics, and the 5-ringed Olympic flag are
      trademarks of some organization.  That organization has
      lawyers and knows how to use them.  The use of this
      word to describe other events, athletic or not, is
      forbidden without permission.  There is no confirmation
      that the government of Greece has been asked to
      rename a certain mountain.)  [-dtc]

David notes, "If you're going to be that picky about 'Olympic',
then I'm going to go ahead and correct you about the name of the
jump.  It's named after its originator, Axel Paulsen.  The word
'Axel' (note spelling!) should be capitalized, and the phrase
should not be hyphenated: 'single Axel', 'triple Axel', and so
on.  [-dg]

===================================================================

TOPIC: SPRINGTIME IN THE ROCKIES (film review by Mark R. Leeper)

CAPSULE: This is a sparkling musical comedy of the year 1942.  A
dance team who are romantic on-again-off-again patch up their
differences at Lake Louise in the Canadian Rockies.  The
supporting cast is a lot more interesting than the main leads.
Some great comic turns by Carmen Miranda and especially the great
Edward Everett Horton.  Rating: high +1 (-4 to +4) or 6/10

This film reminds me of a smile sticker in a jewel-studded frame.
The supporting cast is just excellent.  We have people like
Edward Everett Horton, Carmen Miranda, Harry James, Cesar Romero,
Charlotte Greenwood, and Jackie Gleason in a musical comedy about
whether Betty Grable and John Payne will patch up their
differences and get together.  Betty Grable was, of course, the
national sweetheart during World War II due in very large part to
a famous swimsuit pinup photograph that just about every GI knew
well.  (Note the references to Grable in STALAG 17.)  She was
(for me) a moderately attractive lady and not a particularly
interesting actor.  Her romantic lead was John Payne who may be
best remembered as the bland nice-guy suitor and lawyer in
MIRACLE ON 34TH STREET.  That sort of leaves a hole right in the
middle of this film where the central characters should be.

Betty Grable plays Vicky Lane and John Payne is Dan Christy.
Lane and Christy are a popular Broadway dance team who seem
destined to marry, though Christy still has eyes for other women
and Lane always assumes the worst.  The film's first showpiece is
a nice number with the two on stage singing their love to each
other while Lane takes every opportunity to kick or hit Christy
when she thinks the audience will not see it.  After the
performance Lane heads out to a vacation in Lake Louise in
Alberta's Rocky Mountains.  Christy gets drunk and awakes also at
Lake Louise with a whole entourage he has no memory of hiring on
his bender.  Included is the valet McTavish (played by Edward
Everett Horton) and secretary Rosita Murphy (played by Carmen
Miranda).  Lane decides to use suitor Victor Prince (played by
Cesar Romero) to make Christy jealous and Christy retaliates
using Rosita Murphy.  But Rosita on her own decides she is more
interested in helping Lane and Christy patch things up.

I have never been fond of Carmen Miranda, but had never seen much
of her, and I do not remember ever seeing her act.  This film is
ideal to show off her irrepressible personality.  She glitters
literally and figuratively.  Also along is Charlotte Greenwood
who plays a servant of Lane who seems around in the story mostly
do an eye-poppingly limber dance.  But the real scene-stealer is
Horton.  I remember years ago seeing him play off Peter Falk in A
POCKET FULL OF MIRACLES, thinking what a shame it was that they
Horton and Falk were not in more films together.  They would have
made a great comic team.  In this film I saw him with Carmen
Miranda and found myself thinking how good they were together.  I
think Horton mixes with any other good comic actor to make a
great comic team.  Cesar Romero is okay in the film but does not
get a lot of chance to make scenes his own.  The real problem
with the film is that Grable's magnetic attraction has passed
with time.  And I am not sure Payne ever had a lot of appeal as
an actor.  The center of this film just does not hold.  I found
myself wanting their relationship to work out just because that
was what the peripheral characters wanted.

The script by Walter Bullock and Ken Englund flags a little in
the second half, but overall is quite good and still
entertaining.  This kind of musical comedy is not generally my
cup of tea, but it made for an enjoyable afternoon.  I rate
SPRINGTIME IN THE ROCKIES a high +1 on the -4 to +4 scale or
6/10.  [-mrl]

===================================================================

TOPIC: This Week's Reading (book comments by Evelyn C. Leeper)

Dylan Evans and Oscar Zarate's INTRODUCING EVOLUTIONARY
PSYCHOLOGY (ISBN 1-84046-043-1) is yet another in the Totem
graphic book series, but this one has an interesting backstory as
well.  Apparently the first edition of the book had a caricature
of psychologist Steven Rose on page 155 with a word bubble
saying, "Whether you become a genius or an idiot depends entirely
on what environment you live in."  Rose vehemently objected to
this, and the new version says, "Genes aren't everything; the
environment matters too".  (http://www.dylan.org.uk/brown.html
has more information about this.)

But page 117 is perhaps even more interesting.  This has a
picture of a page of personal ads ("Beautiful, intelligent,
outgoing women ... seeks LTR with good-looking, sociable,
professional male" sort of thing.  Evans's claim is that these
ads show that people are seeking the characteristics that would
make someone a good parent ("kindness, patience, generosity and
trustworthiness").  The illustration shows someone with a big
black pen has circled some of the ads.  But curiously the same
black pen seems also to have crossed out certain words.  The words
are "gay", "gay female", and "gay woman".  Now why would they do
that?  It seems unlikely it was done simply as censorship of
something people might find objectionable--there are drawings in
the book that are certainly more explicit.  More likely they
actually contradict the author's' point about mating
characteristics, so they are simply and crudely crossed out.
Perhaps the authors' did not notice the ads on the first pass.
These ads could be pointed at as an example of looking for
partners without parenting in mind (though of course many gay
people are parents).  But why include a page that has these ads
and then black them out?  Why not find a page without
them?  With all the pages of personal ads in the world, certainly
one page could be found that does not include references to gays.
The whole thing almost looks as though Evans and Zarate
*wanted* people to call attention to the existence of
contradictory evidence.  Without asking the authors we may never
know.

A friend recommended Graham Hancock's THE SIGN AND THE SEAL (ISBN
0-7493-0186-4), which postulates that 1) the Ark of the Covenant
is being kept in the church of Saint Mary of Zion in Axum,
Ethiopia, and 2) the Ark itself is an amazing technological
weapon. powered by tablets made of some radioactive material.  I
will state up-front that I went into this book skeptical, and that
may have colored my reading.  I found the book overly long and
complicated, with too much time being spent on describing
Hancock's travels and all his "amazing insights" (e.g., "What I
found most exciting of all about the obelisk was that it was
intact--not rusting and crumbling--and that it was covered with
fresh red primer paint.  Someone, clearly, was still taking an
interest in the explorer...." [page 185]).  I also thought he was
too quick to grasp at what would support his theories and to
dismiss conflicting evidence.  For example, he makes much of the
fact that Moses spent forty days on Mount Sinai: it should not
take God that long to write two tablets, so Moses must have been
building something (page 347ff).  But he does not deal with all
the other occurrences of "forty days" or "forty years" in the
Torah:
- Forty days of rain in the Flood (Genesis 7:4)
- Forty years in the desert (Exodus 16:35)
- Forty days for Moses on Mount Sinai (Exodus 24:18)
- Forty days of spying out Canaan (Numbers 13:25)

Why forty?  I could just as easily argue that many of those could
be connected to gematria: "40" is the number for the verb "lamed-
heh-heh" meaning to wander or to err.  And all of these are
connecting with wandering, or the erring of the Israelites, or
both.  Even if it was 42 or 38 days, perhaps there would still be
something to explain, but there is no evidence to support the
conclusions that Hancock draws.

Or when he proposes three possible explanations to account for
the powers attributed to the Ark:
1) The Old Testament was right, and the Ark contains Divine
powers.
2) The Old Testament was wrong, and the Israelites were "victims
of a collective mass hallucination that lasted for several
hundred years."
3) A little bit of both: the Ark possessed powers which were not
Divine, but were man-made.  (pg. 285ff)

Hancock seems to ignore a fourth possibility:
4) Various phenomena were misinterpreted, elaborated on, etc., to
fit in with the myth of Divine power in the Ark, or perhaps just
to make a good story that helped to justify devotion.

If you don't allow number 4, then applying Hancock's three limited
possibilities to, say, various relics of the Catholic Church, says
that if you do not accept that the relics have divine powers then
you must think that Christians have been the victims of mass
hallucinations or that the relics have some natural power,
neither of which seems credible to most skeptics.

On the whole, while some of Hancock's ideas are interesting, I
found the book too convoluted and unconvincing to recommend.

(Thanks to Mark for helping me figure out how to phrase some of
this, particularly in trying to describe the visuals on page 117
of the first book.  Truly a picture is worth a thousand words!)

[-ecl]

===================================================================

                                           Mark Leeper
                                           mleeper@optonline.net


            Justice, n. A commodity which in a more or less
            adulterated condition the State sells to the
            citizen as a reward for his allegiance, taxes,
            and personal service.
                                           --Ambrose Bierce