THE MT VOID
Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
11/11/11 -- Vol. 30, No. 20, Whole Number 1675


Heckle: Mark Leeper, mleeper@optonline.net
Jekyll: Evelyn Leeper, eleeper@optonline.net
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Topics:
        Costco (comments by Mark R. Leeper)
        The Game of Decimal Patterns (comments by Mark R. Leeper)
        Spanish Words We Need in English (comments
                by Evelyn C. Leeper)
        THE WINDS OF DUNE by Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson
                (book review by Joe Karpierz)
        THE WAY (film review by Mark R. Leeper)
        Naked Mole Rats (letter of comment by Andre Kuzniarek)
        MONEYBALL and Sabermetrics (letter of comment by Jerry Ryan)
        This Week's Reading (HENRY IV and THE STORY OF ONE HUNDRED
                GREAT COMPOSERS) (book comments by Evelyn C. Leeper)

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

TOPIC: Costco (comments by Mark R. Leeper)

We have a new Costco that opened near us.  For me that feels like
good news.  I just like going to Costco in a way I don't feel about
Home Depot or Wal-mart.  I realize now that I never really asked
myself why I have this special feeling about Costco.  When I asked
myself why it was I had this attitude the reason became obvious.
It is the food samples they give out.  I am sure if you asked the
corporation why they give food samples they would have a stock
answer that it is just good advertising and it pust the customer in
a good frame of mind to buy the product.  That may be true as far
as it goes but I think that is not the main reason.  It is more a
question of operant conditioning.  Go to a Costco and a food pellet
drops.  [-mrl]

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

TOPIC: The Game of Decimal Patterns (comments by Mark R. Leeper)

Richard Feynman had a fascination with one particular fraction.  He
noticed the fraction 1/243 was interesting when expressed as a
decimal.  It is equal to .004115226337448559...  He was surprised
at the pattern.  Do you see the pattern?  Break these digits into
groups of three and you get

0. 004 115 226 337 448 559 ...

[I put in spaces for readability.]

The pattern will not continue much further since the next triad
will be 670.  It really fits into the pattern but it is what you
would get if the low order digit could be 10.  Carrying in the
process of addition ruins the pattern.    If we could use A to
represent 10 we could express this triad as 66A and the pattern
would continue.

Now some people may know that if one finds the decimal equivalent
of a number that is a ratio of two integers one will always get a
repeating decimal--or what will be a repeating decimal if one
extends it far enough out.

2/15 = .1 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 ...

97/275 = 0.35 27 27 27 27 27 ...

However, that is really not quite like what Feynman had found.

0. 004 115 226 337 448 559 ...

has the digits cycling, but also increasing each cycle.  One could
observe that

0. 004 115 226 337 448 559 ...

is equal to

0. 004 004 004 004 004 004 ... + 0. 000 111 222 333 444 555 ...

We can find a fractional equivalent of each of these two decimals.

Now 0. 004 004 004 004 004 004 ...is certainly a fraction.  It is
in fact equal to 4/999.

But what is the value of 0. 000 111 222 333 444 555 666 ...?

Well, it turns out this is 1/8991.

Notice how often 9s show up in these denominators.  In fact 8991 is
nine times 999.   So 4/999 is really 36/8991.  And Feynman's number
1/243 is 4/999 + 1/8991 = (36+1)/8991 = 37/8991 = 1/243.

Why do 9s show up so much?  Well consider the number .777....  Let
us call it X.  We will have some temporary problems dealing with X
because it has an infinitely long tail.  That really says we don't
immediately know the exact value of X since it is
7/10 + 7/100 + 7/1000 + 7/10000 + ...

But if X = .777...  Then 10x is 7.777... which also has that same
inconvenient infinitely-long tail.

But X is just the value of the tail itself.  So
9X = (10x - x) = 7.777... - 0.777... = 7, and so 9X = 7.  So X = 7/9.

The 9 showed up because it was (10 - 1).

You could use a similar technique to show 0.0707070 = 7/99.  If you
understand that, you also understand why above it turned out that

0. 004 004 004 004 ... is 4/999 as we said before or more usefully

0. 001 001 001 001 ... = 1/999.

We can get another interesting pattern with 1/9801.  This is equal
to

0. 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 ..

If we want to start with 1 in the first digit pair we can multiply
by 100.

if 1/9801 = 0. 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11...

100/9801 = 0. 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 ..

1/998001 = 0. 000 001 002 003 004 005 006

111/998001 simplifies to 1/8991 and equals

0. 000 111 222 333 444 555 666

And 1000/8991 is

0. 111 222 333 444 555 666 777

Now for next week here is a tough puzzle for our readers.  I will
publish the names of anyone getting me the answer by next Thursday.
Find the fraction in lowest terms that is equal to the following
decimals with patterns (which admittedly may eventually break down
because of carrying).  What fraction in the form X/Y is equal to:

1)  .0123210123210123210...

2) .012 123 234 345 456 567 678 789 ..

[-mrl]

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

TOPIC: Words We Need in English (comments by Evelyn C. Leeper)

I just read a couple of articles about words in other languages
that we have no corresponding word in English (though obviously we
can express the idea, or the article would be pretty useless.  I
was particularly interested in the Spanish words, but noticed that
a couple of my favorites were not included.

One that was mentioned, but possibly does not count is "simpatico/-
a", simply because it seems to have been adopted into English (much
as the German word "schadenfreude" has been).

But my (current) top ten are:

1. Tertulia: A group of friends who meet regularly at a cafe for
discussions.  I love this one: it was perfect for the group that my
father was in that met daily (and later twice a week) at McDonald's
for decades.

2. Consuegro/-a: My child's spouse's father/mother.  In Yiddish,
the corresponding word is "mishpochah".

3. Concunado/-a: Either the spouse of one's spouse's sibling, or
the sibling of one's sibling's spouse.  The (non-)word "brother-in-
law-in-law" would be the equivalent.

4. Friolero/-a: Someone who is always cold.

5. Cotisuelto (in Caribbean Spanish): One who wears the shirt tail
outside of his trousers.

6. Tocayo/-a: Someone who shares the same name, usually just the
first.  (Unlike "namesake", this person needn't be named after the
other).  Evelyn Waugh es mi tocayo.  (I assume it is "tocayo"
because he is male, rather than "tocaya" because I am female.)

7. Ajeno/-a: Belonging to someone else or concerning other people.

8. Amanecer: For dawn to break; to become morning.

9. Caldito de habichuelas: Bean sauce.  This is not a thick gravy,
but a liquid of a more soup-like consistency you get when you cook
Puerto Rican beans.  My father always used to ask for more of this.

10. Pasado manana, anteayer, anteanoche: The day after tomorrow,
the day before yesterday, and the evening of the day before
yesterday (actually the night before last, but usually referring to
the evening).  The first two are reasonably compactly expressed in
English, but not the last.  Ironically, the last is probably most
useful to Jews, who on a Sunday might want to refer to something
Friday evening connected with the start of the Sabbath, e.g.,
"Encendi las velas anteanoche."

There are lots of words having to do with cooking, of which I have
included only "caldito".  For example, there is "alcaparrado", a
mixture of capers and sliced stuffed olives used in cooking.  There
is "pegao", the crispy and tasty rice that sticks to thåçe bottom of
the pot in various rice dishes.  There are "sofrito" and "recaito",
tomato- and cilantro-based seasoning sauces.  And there is "adobo",
which is basically salt and garlic powder, with various optional
additional ingredients (e.g. cumin or pepper).  This is not be
confused with the Filipino "adobo" which is a dish of meat
marinated and cooked in vinegar, soy sauce, and garlic.  [-ecl]

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

TOPIC: THE WINDS OF DUNE by Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson
(copyright 2009, Tor, 448pp, $27.99, ISBN-10: 0-7653-2272-2, ISBN-
13: 978-0-7653-2272-2) (book review by Joe Karpierz)

I read these so you don't have to.

That's not quite fair, I suppose.  No matter what the various
Anderson-bashers residing all over the Internet have to say, this,
and the other, "Dune" novels are not poorly written.  Neither are
they well-written.  They are ... written.

THE WINDS OF DUNE bills itself as the direct sequel to DUNE
MESSIAH.  I suppose it is.  The events it relates happens between
the ending of DUNE MESSIAH, when Paul walked off into the desert,
and the beginning of CHILDREN OF DUNE.  Alia is Regent, and is
trying to cement her hold on the Imperium. She is romantically
linked to the ghola of Duncan Idaho (no, I'm not going to summarize
all of that stuff from DUNE MESSIAH--sorry).  The Jihad is over,
more or less.  Jessica is now living as the Duchess of House
Atreides on Caladan.

The book begins with a ship coming to Caladan to inform Jessica
that Paul has gone into the desert, the conspirators involved in an
attempt on Paul's life have been rounded up and executed, and
Bronso of Ix is spreading his stories about Paul throughout the
Imperium, in an attempt to show that Paul was a man, not a god.

Who?

Bronso Vernius was a childhood friend of Paul's, mirroring the
friendship between House Atreides and House Vernius (refer to some
of the other "Dune" novels written by Anderson and Herbert).
However, something has come between Paul and Bronso, and now Bronso
is spreading his version of things, his viewpoint, saying that Paul
is just a flawed man, nothing more.

Which, of course, is directly opposite of what Alia wants written
about Paul, and in fact what Alia has  instructed Irulan to write
about Paul.  So, Alia's ticked--and we all know how messed up she
got. Jessica is trying to get to the root of all this political
madness, and performs a delicate balancing act when she does indeed
find out what's going on.

Like PAUL OF DUNE, this novel goes back in time and tells some of
the backstory of Paul and Bronso, and how everything came down to
where it is today.  The flashbacks are nowhere near as interesting
as what is happening in the present, but for the present to make
sense we have to know about the past.

Bronso of Ix.  Hmm.  We all know there were only six original
"Dune" novels written by Frank Herbert, and while my memory isn't
what it used to be, let me tell you that I do not remember a
character by that name.  I even Googled him.  If the Internet has
no reference to him, does he really exist (that's yet another
question for another day, and on a different topic entirely)?
Which brings us to the point of it all.

That there isn't one.

Like PAUL OF DUNE, THE WINDS OF DUNE really doesn't add anything to
the overarching mythos of the Dune universe. It's really self-
contained in that characters and events are introduced that didn't
exist in the original books. If this book wasn't written, no one
would know the difference.  At all.  End of statement.  Things
happen here that get wrapped up by the end such that it's like a
black box.  Pull it out and it doesn't matter.

So, what's the point?  To make money, of course.  Why do I read
these things?  Two reasons, I suppose.  First, I'm a silly
completist.  And two, well, I read them so you don't have to.
[-jak]

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

TOPIC: THE WAY (film review by Mark R. Leeper)

CAPSULE: Emilio Estevez produces, writes, directs, and even acts in
this film starring his father, Martin Sheen.  Tom Avery (Sheen),
an American eye doctor travels to France to pick up the body of his
son (Estevez) who died on the first day of making a pilgrimage.
The route he was to take was the Camino de Santiago, a Christian
pilgrimage road more than a millennium old.  It goes from the
Pyrenees in France into Spain and ends in Santiago de Compostela in
Galicia.  Tom decides to complete the pilgrimage for his son,
distributing his son's ashes along the way.  One at a time, three
other pilgrims join him.  They travel together and get to know each
other.  This is a quiet, warm film that some will find actually
spiritual.  Rating: +2 (-4 to +4) or 7/10

Actor Martin Sheen had heard since he was a boy about the road that
Christian pilgrims have taken for more than a thousand years to
visit the remains of St. James.  The road winds through the hills
of France and Spain with beautiful scenery and old inns along the
way.  In 2003 Sheen had walked part of the Camino and found it a
transcendent experience.  He suggested to his son Emilio Estevez
(the son who is not so frequently in the news) that he might make a
film about or set on the road.  Emilio wrote, produced, directed,
and even appeared in the resulting film.

Ophthalmologist Tom Avery (Sheen) does not like how his son Danny
(Estevez) is not interested in living a prosperous life.  Against
Tom's advice Danny is going to travel, see the world, and take in
another lifestyle.  Then bad news comes from France.  Danny had
started to walk the Camino de Santiago, but was caught in a storm
after only one day and was killed.  Tom travels to France to pick
up the body and bring it home.  But as a final gift to his son
instead, he has it cremated and intends to spread the ashes along
the Camino.  In a dark mood he sets out to walk the route and
spread ashes.  At first he keeps running into Joost (Yorick van
Wageningen), a Dutch traveler walking the route.  Soon there are
others and he cannot get rid of them.  There is Sarah (Deborah Kara
Unger), an ill-tempered Canadian who smokes too much.  And there is
Jack (James Nesbitt), a strange Irish writer collecting stories for
a book about his journey.  They walk the road by day amongst
beautiful hill-country scenery.  They visit churches to admire the
medieval splendor.  They talk.  They confess to each other.  At
night they camp or stay in simple inns and enjoy the local cuisine.
The four travelers talk; they argue; they even come to blows.  But
not much happens.  This is an adventure film, but not an action
film.  You will come to know (or think you know) four people very
well.  It is just about how walking the pilgrimage changes each.
This is a "road picture" if there ever was one.  Watching the film
is much like just putting your mind to rest and taking the road.

Just as there is no doubt where the four are going, there is little
doubt where the film is going.  The four squabbling travelers will
transform into four spiritual pilgrims who will share a life-long
bond.  The travelers will face their own preconceptions and
prejudices.  Everything about the film is peaceful or leads to
peace.  Even the colors are a little muted to not be too strident.
Estevez based the film on stories by author Jack Hitt, and it is
probably no coincidence that the writer-character is named Jack.

There is a deep quiet in this film, a mood that will not be found
in any other film this year.  The viewer will come away feeling
connected to France, Spain, history, and humanity.  I rate THE WAY
+2 on the -4 to +4 scale or 7/10.

Film Credits: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1441912/

What others are saying:
http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/the_way_2011/

[-mrl]

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

TOPIC: Naked Mole Rats (letter of comment by Andre Kuzniarek)

In response to Mark's comments on animated films in the 11/04/11
issue of the MT VOID, Andre Kuzniarek writes:

[You wrote,] "I think that by 2014 we will be down to cockroaches
and naked mole rats."  Already covered by "Kim Possible" (naked
mole rats that is).

Evelyn adds:

Apparently "Kim Possible" is an animated Disney series with a team
of crime-fighters, led by Kim Possible, and including Rufus, a
naked mole rate who (according to Wikipedia) "goes on nearly all
missions and, due to his small size, often proves useful."  [-ecl]

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

TOPIC: MONEYBALL and Sabermetrics (letter of comment by Jerry Ryan)

In response to Mark's comments on regression analysis and MONEYBALL
in the 11/04/11 issue of the MT VOID, Jerry Ryan writes:

I'm a big baseball fan, and enjoyed the MONEYBALL book very much.
Haven't gotten to the movie yet, but I plan to.

I think your discussion about sabermetrics and regression analysis
in baseball might be missing a subtle point.  Let me take a crack
at this.

The critical message in MONEYBALL (the book) was that some teams
were over-valuing certain player traits, and under-valuing others.
Bill James and Paul DePodesta theorized that since wins are
important, runs are important (because you need runs to win games),
and since runs are important, a statistic called "On Base
Percentage" is important.  On Base Percentage measures how often
you get on base as a percentage of your plate appearances.

[Switching into baseball statistics geek mode for a moment: your
batting average measures hits per "at bats".  If you draw a walk,
or reach base because you were hit by a pitch, or because an error
was committed, or because someone chose to let you reach first base
to make a play elsewhere, that does not count as an "at bat" so
does not affect your batting average.  So, while your Batting
Average measures how well you hit given all of your chances to make
a hit, your On Base Percentage measures how often you get on base,
hitting the ball or not.]

One of the important observations was that the market for baseball
players was undervaluing On Base Percentage (among other
statistical measures).  Because of that, players that got on base
more often could actually be purchased for a relatively smaller
amount of money.  The A's saw bargains and bought them.

They also did something interesting: they refused to hire players
that had not finished college.  The claim was that this allowed for
four years of solid unbiased statistics on a player ... though I
think an argument could be made for only hiring more mature
players.

I think the analogy with wine falls down at this point.  You can
curve-fit a lot of data about wines and growing characteristics and
do a regression analysis. The analysis showed a different, more
structured approach to evaluating what would be a good wine.  Both
analyses--statistical and wine-expert--came to the same conclusion.

The MONEYBALL story is different. There, they did an analysis of
available data and came up with a different result than the experts
did. They leveraged that different result to purchase bargains and
won division championships.

It's instructive to note that sabermetrics has really pervaded the
game of baseball now.  It's no longer the case that a high OBP is
undervalued.  Beane and DePodesta and Theo Epstein have been in
other places and spread the sabermetrics religion ... and since
they have, the small market teams like the A's have no longer been
able to exploit differences in information and analysis to buy
undervalued players.  [-gwr]

Mark responds:

I had thought that the regression analysis also helped you choose
the most important statistics.  On Base Percentage is one of many
factors they could have looked at.  You may be right, but I thought
that the regression analysis helped point to that as an important
statistic.  [-mrl]

Evelyn adds:

By the way, in case you were wondering, James devised the name
sabermetrics "to honor" SABR, the Society for American Baseball
Research (according to an interview with Chris Jaffe).  [-ecl]

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

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

I have been watching the British television mini-series
"Shakespeare's Age of Kings", broadcast in 1960 in fifteen parts
with a really amazing cast: Sean Connery as Harry Percy (a.k.a.
Hotspur), Judi Dench as Princess Katherine of France, Julian Glover
as King Edward IV, and Frank Pettingell as Sir John Falstaff.

In "Henry IV, Part 2", King Henry V makes the following speech to
the Lord Chief Justice when Henry becomes king after his father's
(Henry IV's) death:
        You shall be as a father to my youth:
        My voice shall sound as you do prompt mine ear,        
        And I will stoop and humble my intents
        To your well-practised wise directions.
        And, princes all, believe me, I beseech you;
        My father is gone wild into his grave,
        For in his tomb lie my affections;
        And with his spirit sadly I survive,
        To mock the expectation of the world,
        To frustrate prophecies and to raze out
        Rotten opinion, who hath writ me down
        After my seeming. The tide of blood in me
        Hath proudly flow'd in vanity till now:
        Now doth it turn and ebb back to the sea,
        Where it shall mingle with the state of floods
        And flow henceforth in formal majesty.

And later, when speaking to Falstaff:
        Presume not that I am the thing I was;
        For God doth know, so shall the world perceive,
        That I have turn'd away my former self;
        So will I those that kept me company.
        When thou dost hear I am as I have been,
        Approach me, and thou shalt be as thou wast,
        The tutor and the feeder of my riots:
        Till then, I banish thee, on pain of death,
        As I have done the rest of my misleaders,
        Not to come near our person by ten mile.
        For competence of life I will allow you,
        That lack of means enforce you not to evil:
        And, as we hear you do reform yourselves,
        We will, according to your strengths and qualities,
        Give you advancement. Be it your charge, my lord,
        To see perform'd the tenor of our word. Set on.

This seems merely an elaboration upon I Corinthians 13:11: "When I
was a child, I spake as a child, I understood as a child, I thought
as a child: but when I became a man, I put away childish things."

I also ran across a small volume titled THE STORY OF ONE HUNDRED
GREAT COMPOSERS by Helen L. Kaufmann (no isbn).  Published in 1943,
possibly under paper rationing restrictions, it is 5.25 inches
high, 3.75 inches wide, and a half inch thick.  One the dust jacket
flap it says, "How convenient to have at hand a little book like
this--to supply us with al the interesting facts of the lives and
careers of one hundred of the great composers of all time.  It is
made to fit your pocket or your purse, so the information will be
available when you want it most."  I'm just trying to envision a
world in which people are so enamored of concert music that they
would carry around this book the way some people carry around a
Bible or New Testament.  [-ecl]

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

                                           Mark Leeper
mleeper@optonline.net


           No question is so difficult to answer as that
           to which the answer is obvious.
                                           --George Bernard Shaw