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Holistics by Phil Cutrara
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Sunday, 20 February 2005
The Vegetarian Handbook by Gary Null

Gary Null Site

Gary Null Articles
AIDS: A SECOND OPINION
This article gives a voice to AIDS experts who disagree with the mainstream view that "HIV" automatically equals "AIDS."

Anti-Aging: Reclaim Your Youth
Long before "Anti-Aging" had become a popular topic of conversation, Gary let people know that they were not helpless against the ravages of age, that they could protect and optimize their health and vitality.

Anti-Oxidant Vitamin: Vitamin C
This document explains what Vitamin C is and how it contributes to the healthy functioning of the human body.

Are You Tired? Low Thyroid May be the Culprit
Gary collaborates with Dr. Martin Feldman to discuss hidden health problems of the complex thyroid system.

Biomagnetic Healing
This paper presents the issues and scientific research relating to the efficacy of biomagnetic healing.

Caffeine: A Pilot Study
Eleven volunteers participated in this double-blind crossover study that identifies some physiological and psychological effects of caffeine

Caffeine: PSYCHOLOGICAL EFFECTS
Gary Null & Sanford Bolton, PhD, view caffeine as the most widely used habit- forming drug.

Clearer, Cleaner, Safer, Greener
Once scoffed at and rejected as a figment of an overly indulgent imagination, a wide variety of health problems are now being attributed by health authorities to the poor quality of the air inside our homes and office buildings.

The Dangers of Prozac
This paper discusses the adverse side effects of Prozac, including akathisia (a compulsion to move about), permanent neurological damage, suicidal obsession and acts of violence.

Electroconvulsive Therapy: A Second Opinion
This document presents an extensive outline of "talking points" on the side-effects of electro-convulsive therapy, compiled by Gary Null from peer-reviewed journals.

Fatal Fallout
This research paper examines the dangers of radiation in medical procedures, such as X-rays, CT scans and mammograms.

Fluoride: A Deadly Legacy
For many years, Americans have accepted water fluoridation as a safe, healthful process, but Gary brings to light information that indicates otherwise.

The Gulf War's Troubling Legacy
What made veterans returning from the Gulf War of 1991 so sick? Their exposure to unprecedented environmental hazards, chemical and biological warfare agents, pesticides, experimental vaccines and weapons made from depleted uranium caused troubling symptoms that the government, at first, tried to ignore.

The Hidden Side of Psychiatry
People seeking help from the mental health industry are often misdiagnosed, wrongfully treated, and abused. Others are deceptively lured to psychiatric facilities, or even kidnapped.
Iatrogenic Illness: The Downside of Modern Medicine
During the past century, a medical establishment has evolved that has made itself the exclusive provider of so-called scientific, evidence-based therapies; but now nontoxic, noninvasive, preventative approaches to health care are presenting a strong challenge to this medical paradigm.
Maximizing immune fitness: why it matters
Gary Null explains the concept of the immune system and describes how to optimize the body's defenses to protect against disease.

Mercury Dental Amalgams: the Debate
While orthodox dentistry continues to assure us that the mercury in our mouths is safe, evidence to the contrary abounds in medical journals.

IMMUNE AUGMENTATION THERAPY FOR GULF WAR SYNDROME
Gary Null addresses the thousands of veterans who were ignored by the US government after developing symptoms from exposure to harmful substances during the Gulf War conflict of 1991.

MEAT AND PROTEIN: DISPELLING THE MYTHS
In this 4 part series, Gary Null presents an in-depth look at the political, ethical and health issues that surround the consumption of animal flesh.

Native American Healing
Learn about the sacred healing and transformational rituals of Native Americans.

Natural Therapies for Menopause
Long before the orthodox medical community admitted that Hormone Replacement Therapy could have devastating side effects, Gary Null and Dr. Martin Feldman warned women of the dangers of HRT and advised them to turn to more natural therapies.

Nice and easy
Gary gives his radio audience tips on how to get in shape to run a marathon.

Pathologizing Life
Forty million Americans are diagnosed as having depression. An increasing number of these are children, the elderly and African-Americans. But is this new epidemic a matter of greed?

VACCINES: A SECOND OPINION
Gary Null explores the interplay of economic, legal and political forces that affect vaccine policy and presents extensive scientific evidence that vaccines may not be as safe as we have been told.

Women's Health Risks
Dozens of research summaries reveal that many orthodox medical treatments to which women are routinely subjected do not deliver the expected benefits and, in fact, may increase the risk of health disorders or even death.

click here for a list of Gary's published articles

Gary Null, Ph.D., is a nationally syndicated radio talk show host as well as producer of PBS specials. He is a New York Times best-selling author of over fifty books and documentary filmmaker whose investigations and humanitarian work have affected the lives of millions.

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Posted by philcutrara1 at 5:33 AM EST
Updated: Sunday, 20 February 2005 5:47 AM EST
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Saturday, 19 February 2005
Seven Million Dollar Millennium Problems

In order to celebrate mathematics in the new millennium, The Clay Mathematics Institute of Cambridge, Massachusetts (CMI) has named seven Prize Problems. The Scientific Advisory Board of CMI selected these problems, focusing on important classic questions that have resisted solution over the years. The Board of Directors of CMI designated a $7 million prize fund for the solution to these problems, with $1 million allocated to each. During the Millennium Meeting held on May 24, 2000 at the College de France, Timothy Gowers presented a lecture entitled The Importance of Mathematics, aimed for the general public, while John Tate and Michael Atiyah spoke on the problems. The CMI invited specialists to formulate each problem.

One hundred years earlier, on August 8, 1900, David Hilbert delivered his famous lecture about open mathematical problems at the second International Congress of Mathematicians in Paris. This influenced our decision to announce the millennium problems as the central theme of a Paris meeting.

The rules for the award of the prize have the endorsement of the CMI Scientific Advisory Board and the approval of the Directors. The members of these boards have the responsibility to preserve the nature, the integrity, and the spirit of this prize.

Paris, May 24, 2000

Please send inquiries regarding the Millennium Prize Problems to prize.problems@claymath.org.
Birch and Swinnerton-Dyer Conjecture
Hodge Conjecture
Navier-Stokes Equations
P vs NP
Poincare Conjecture
Riemann Hypothesis
Yang-Mills Theory

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Rules
Millennium Meeting Videos

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Riemann Hypothesis
Formulated in his 1859 paper, the Riemann hypothesis in effect says that the primes are distributed as regularly as possible given their seemingly random occurrence on the number line. Riemann's work gave an 'explicit' formula for the number of primes less than x in terms of the zeros of the zeta function. The first term is x/log(x). The Riemann hypothesis is equivalent to the assertion that other terms are bounded by a constant times log(x) times the square root of x. The Riemann hypothesis asserts that all the 'non-obvious' zeros of the zeta function are complex numbers with real part 1/2.

Posted by philcutrara1 at 7:32 PM EST
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August La Mantia's Family Baptism Picture 1913




PHOTO 1913 THE CHRISTENING OF AUGUST LAMANTIA OF HOMER CITY IN BLAIRSVILLE, PA. 1ST ROW: Gertrude Larkin (office clerk), Josephine Delisi (1898-1971 d/o JF Delisi married Jos. DeMaria), Mary Calderone (1896-1963 d/o Rocco:.married John LaMantia of Indiana, PA. Ines Delisi 1895-1971, d/o Joseph F. Delisi: married Joseph P. Delisi. Sophie Calderone. (1898-1957) d/o Rocco.married A. Giunta, brother of Marino Giunta. Rose LaMantia,(1886-1972), d/o John LaMantia. Married Marino Giunta. BABY: Salvatore Giunta. Mattea Battaglia (1885-1934),married Dom LaMantia, parents of the christened baby, August born Oct. 15, 1912. Josephine Dinovo. Married A.LaMantia (Baby Rose LaMantia born 1913. Married to John Gabelli.) Phillippa LaMantia d/o John. Married to A. Calderone. (Baby John Calderone married to Annette Calderone.) Cosima, 2nd wife of Rocco Calderone. Josephine LaMantia (1872-1918.) Married to Joseph F. Delisi. (Baby Samuel Delisi (1912-1993)
2nd ROW: Mr. Brown (Hired man) Dominic LaMantia (!878-1954. (Baby: Elsie LaMantia.) Marino Giunta (1882-1938) Charles Giunta Born 1911. A. Calderone married Phillipa LaMantia. A. LaMantia married to Josephine Dinovo. Vincent LaMantia called Zio Veeshey) brother of Josephine LaMantia.Sal Catanzaro. Sal Calderone (died 1932 of Apollo, PA.) Rocco Calderone (1864-1937) Joseph F. Delisi (1866-1937) married to Josephine LaMantia. Sam Catanzaro, son of Sal. Rose LaMantia of Homer City, PA. Still living in 2001. 3rd Row: Andy DeMeo, A. LaMantia (1906-1948) Dominic LaMantia (1908-1934) Phillip LaMantia (!909- (?) Rocco Calderone. Rose Calderone of Vandergrift, PA (1909-1980) Married to J. Calderazzo (tailor) John Calderone of Vandergrift (1902- )Josephine Calderone (1903 )d/o Rocco Married to McCoy. Lil Calderone d/o Rocco Married to J. Cascio. Mary Calderone (1904- )d/o Tony Married to J. Lombardi. (?) Sam LaMantia, Brother of Elsie of Homer City, PA.. (?)

Back Row: J. Battaglia of Derby PA. Vincent LaMantia of Blairsville. Married Marie LaMantia. Paul LaMantia .Sam LaMantia. John LaMantia (1890-1969) Married Mary Calderone. Joseph.L.Delisi (1900-1991). Francesco (Chico) Delisi, (!896-1962), brother of J.P. Delisi Joseph P. Delisi (1888-1968) Married Ines Delisi.


Posted by philcutrara1 at 6:55 PM EST
Updated: Saturday, 19 February 2005 7:19 PM EST
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Seven Million Dollar Prizes

Seven Million Dollar Prizes

Ian Stewart on Minesweeper

It's not often you can win a million dollars by analysing a computer game, but by a curious conjunction of fate, there's a chance that you might. However, you'll only pick up the loot if all the experts are wrong and a problem that they think is extraordinarily hard turns out to be easy. So don't order the Corvette yet.

The prize is one of seven now on offer from the newly founded Clay Mathematics Institute in Cambridge MA, set up by businessman Landon T. Clay to promote the growth and spread of mathematical knowledge, each bearing a million-buck price-tag. The computer game is Minesweeper, which is included in Microsoft's Windows? operating system, and involves locating hidden mines on a grid by making guesses about where they are located and using clues provided by the computer. And the problem is one of the most notorious open questions in mathematics, which rejoices in the name 'P=NP?'.

The connection between the game and the prize problem was explained by Richard Kaye of the University of Birmingham, England ('Minesweeper is NP-complete', Mathematical Intelligencer volume 22 number 4, 2000, pages 9-15). And before anyone gets too excited, you won't win the prize by winning the game. To win the prize, you will have to find a really slick method to answer questions about Minesweeper when it's played on gigantic grids and all the evidence suggests that there isn't a slick method. In fact, if you can prove that there isn't one, you can win the prize that way too.

Let's start with Minesweeper. The computer starts the game by showing you a blank grid of squares. Some squares conceal mines; the rest are safe. Your task is to work out where the mines are without detonating any of them. You do this by choosing a square. If there's a mine underneath it, the mine is detonated and the game ends--- with a loss for you, of course. If there is no mine, however, the computer writes a number in that square, telling you how many mines there are in the eight immediately adjacent squares (horizontally, vertically, and diagonally).

If your first guess hits a mine, you're unlucky: you get no information except that you've lost. If it doesn't, though, then you get partial information about the location of nearby mines. You use this information to influence your next choice of square, and again either you detonate a mine and lose, or you gain information about the positions of nearby mines. If you wish, you can choose to mark a square as containing a mine: if you're wrong, you lose. Proceeding in this way, you can win the game by locating and marking all the mines.


Fig.1 A Typical Minesweeper Position

For instance, after a few moves you might reach the position shown in Fig.1. Here a flag shows a known mine (position already deduced), the numbers are the information you've gotten from the computer, and the letters mark squares whose status is as yet untested. With a little thought, you can deduce that the squares marked A must contain mines, because of the 2's just below them. The squares marked B must also contain mines, because of the 4's and 5's nearby. In the same way, C must contain a mine; and it then follows that D and E do not. The status of F can then be deduced, after a few moves, by uncovering D and seeing what number appears.

Now, the P=NP? problem. Recall that an algorithm is a procedure for solving some problem that can be run by a computer: every step is specified by some program. A central question in the mathematics of computation is: how efficiently can an algorithm solve a given problem? How does the running time--- the number of computations needed to get the answer--- depend on the initial data? For theoretical purposes the main distinction is between problems that are of type P--- polynomial time --- and those that are not. A problem is of type P if it can be solved using an algorithm whose running time grows no faster than some fixed power of the number of symbols required to specify the initial data. Otherwise the problem is non-P. Intuitively, problems in P can be solved efficiently, whereas non-P problems cannot be solved algorithmically in any practical manner because any algorithm will take a ridiculously long time to get an answer. Problems of type P are easy, non-P problems are hard. Of course it's not quite as simple as that, but it's a good rule of thumb.

You can prove that a problem is of type P by exhibiting an algorithm that solves it in polynomial time. For example, sorting a list of numbers into numerical order is a type P problem, which is why commercial databases can sort data; and searching a string for some sequence of symbols is also a type P problem, which is why commercial wordprocessors can carry out search-and-replace operations. In contrast, the Travelling Salesman Problem--- find the shortest route whereby a salesman can visit every city on some itinerary--- is widely believed to be non-P, but this has never been proved. Finding the prime factors of a given integer is also widely believed to be non-P, too, but this has never been proved either. The security of certain cryptosystems, some of which are used to send personal data such as credit card numbers over the Internet, depends upon this belief being correct.

Why is it so hard to prove that a problem is non-P? Because you can't do that by analysing any particular algorithm. You have to contemplate all possible algorithms and show that none of them can solve the problem in polynomial time. This is a mindboggling task. The best that has been done to date is to prove that a broad class of candidate non-P problems are all on the same footing--- if any one of them can be solved in polynomial time, then they all can. The problems involved here are said to have 'nondeterministic polynomial' running time: type NP.

NP is not the same as non-P. A problem is NP if you can check whether a proposed solution actually is a solution in polynomial time. This is --- or at least, seems to be --- a much less stringent condition than being able to find that solution in polynomial time. My favourite example here is a jigsaw puzzle. Solving the puzzle can be very hard, but if someone claims they've solved it, it usually takes no more than a quick glance to check whether they're right. To get a quantitative estimate of the running time, just look at each piece in turn and make sure that it fits the limited number of neighbours that adjoin it. The number of calculations required to do this is roughly proportional to the number of pieces, so the check runs in polynomial time. But you can't solve the puzzle that way. Neither can you try every potential solution in turn and check each as you go along, because the number of potential solutions grows much faster than any fixed power of the number of pieces.

It turns out that a lot of NP problems have 'equivalent' running times. Specifically, an NP problem is said to be NP-complete if the existence of a polynomial time solution for that problem implies that all NP problems have a polynomial time solution. Solve one in polynomial time, and you've solved them all in polynomial time. A vast range of problems are known to be NP-complete. The P=NP? problem asks whether types P and NP are (despite all appearances to the contrary) the same. The expected answer is 'no'. However, if any NP-complete problem turns out to be of type P--- to have a polynomial time solution--- than NP must equal P. We therefore expect all NP-complete problems to be non-P, but no one can yet prove this.

One of the simplest known NP-complete problems is SAT, the logical satisfiability of a Boolean condition. Boolean circuits are built from logic gates with names like AND, OR and NOT. The inputs to these circuits are either T (true) or F (false). Each gate accepts a number of inputs, and outputs the logical value of that combination. For instance an AND gate takes inputs p, q and outputs p AND q, which is T provided p and q are both T, and F otherwise. A NOT gate turns input T into output F and input F into output T. The SAT problem asks, for a given Boolean circuit, whether there exist choices of inputs that produce the output T. If this sounds easy, don't forget that a circuit may contain huge numbers of gates and have huge numbers of inputs.


Fig.2 Impossible Minesweeper position.

The link to the computer game comes when we introduce the Minesweeper Consistency Problem. This is not to find the mines, but to determine whether a given state of what purports to be a Minesweeper game is or is not logically consistent. For example, if during the state of play you encountered Fig.2, you would know that the programmer had made a mistake: there is no allocation of mines consistent with the information shown. Kaye proves that Minesweeper is equivalent to SAT, in the following sense. The SAT problem for a given Boolean circuit can be 'encoded' as a Minesweeper Consistency Problem for some position in the game, using a code procedure that runs in polynomial time. Therefore, if you could solve the Minesweeper Consistency Problem in polynomial time, you would have solved the SAT problem for that circuit in polynomial time. In other words, Minesweeper is NP-complete. So, if some bright spark finds a polynomial-time solution to Minesweeper, or alternately proves that no such solution exists, then the P=NP? problem is solved (one way or the other).


Fig.3 A Minesweeper wire.

Kaye's proof involves a systematic procedure for converting Boolean circuits into Minesweeper positions. Here a grid square has state T if it contains a mine, and F if not. The first step involves not gates, but the wires that connect them. Fig.3 shows a Minesweeper wire. All squares marked x either contain a mine (T) or do not contain a mine (F), but we don't know which. All squares marked x' do the opposite of x. You should check that all the numbers shown are correct whether x is T or F. The effect of the wire is to 'propagate' the signal T or F along its length, ready to be input into a gate.

Fig.4 shows a NOT gate. The numbers marked on the block in the middle force an interchange of x and x' on the exit wire, compared to the input wire.


Fig.4 The NOT gate.

The AND gate (Fig. 5) is more complicated.


Fig. 5 The AND gate.

It has two input wires U, V, and one output W. To establish that this is an AND gate, we assume that the output is T and show that both inputs have to be T as well. Since the output is T, every symbol t must indicate a mine and every t' a non-mine. Now the 3 above and below a3 implies that a2 and a3 are mines, so a1 is not a mine, so s is a mine. Similarly, r is a mine. Then the central 4 already has four mines as neighbours, which implies that u' and v' are non-mines, so u and v are mines -- and this means that U and V have truth-value T. Conversely, if U and V have value T then so does W. In short, we have an AND gate as claimed.

There's more to Minesweeper electronics than this -- for example, we need to be able to bend wires, split them, join them, or make them cross without connecting. Kaye solves all these problems, and other more subtle ones, in his article. The upshot is that solving the Minesweeper Consistency Problem is algorithmically equivalent to the SAT problem, and is thus NP-complete. To virtually every mathematician and computer scientist, this means that the Minesweeper Consistency Problem must be inherently hard. It is astonishing that such a simple game should have such intractable consequences, but mathematical games are like that.

If you're interested in those million-dollar prizes, a word of warning. The Clay Institute imposes strict rules before it will accept a solution as being valid. In particular, it must be published by a major refereed journal, and it must have been 'generally accepted' by the mathematical community within two years of publication. But even if you're not going to tackle anything as daunting as that, you can have a lot of fun playing Minesweeper, secure in the knowledge that it encompasses one of the great unsolved problems of our age.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The Clay Mathematics Institute thanks Ian Stewart for permission to post this article on our web site.

More information on the connection between Minesweeper and the P=NP? problem is available at the personal web site of Richard Kaye at the University of Birmingham, UK, located at the internet address http://web. mat.bham.ac.uk/R.W.Kaye/minesw/minesw.htm. Richard Kaye's site contains, in particular, his companion paper, Some Minesweeper Configurations.

Posted by philcutrara1 at 6:50 PM EST
Updated: Saturday, 19 February 2005 7:09 PM EST
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Sunday, 13 February 2005
Health Nut Seeks Immortality
Famed Inventor Claims Immortality is Possible
By JAY LINDSAY, AP

WELLESLEY, Mass. (Feb. 12) - Ray Kurzweil doesn't tailgate. A man who plans to live forever doesn't take chances with his health on the highway, or anywhere else.



Author and inventor Ray Kurzweil says in the future blood cell-sized robots will repair our bodies internally and genetic upgrades will be available over the Internet.

AP AOL Science NewsAs part of his daily routine, Kurzweil ingests 250 supplements, eight to 10 glasses of alkaline water and 10 cups of green tea. He also periodically tracks 40 to 50 fitness indicators, down to his "tactile sensitivity." Adjustments are made as needed.

"I do actually fine-tune my programming," he said.

The famed inventor and computer scientist is serious about his health because if it fails him he might not live long enough to see humanity achieve immortality, a seismic development he predicts in his new book is no more than 20 years away.

It's a blink of an eye in history, but long enough for the 56-year-old Kurzweil to pay close heed to his fitness. He urges others to do the same in "Fantastic Voyage: Live Long Enough to Live Forever."

The book is partly a health guide so people can live to benefit from a coming explosion in technology he predicts will make infinite life spans possible.

Kurzweil writes of millions of blood cell-sized robots, which he calls "nanobots," that will keep us forever young by swarming through the body, repairing bones, muscles, arteries and brain cells. Improvements to our genetic coding will be downloaded via the Internet. We won't even need a heart.

The claims are fantastic, but Kurzweil is no crank. He's a recipient of the $500,000 Lemelson-MIT prize, which is billed as a sort of Academy Award for inventors, and he won the 1999 National Medal of Technology Award. He has written on the emergence of intelligent machines in publications ranging from Wired to Time magazine. The Christian Science Monitor has called him a "modern Edison." He was inducted into the Inventors Hall of Fame in 2002. Perhaps the MIT graduate's most famous inventions is the first reading machine for the blind that could read any typeface.

During a recent interview in his company offices, Kurzweil sipped green tea and spoke of humanity's coming immortality as if it's as good as done. He sees human intelligence not only conquering its biological limits, including death, but completely mastering the natural world.

"In my view, we are not another animal, subject to nature's whim," he said.

Critics say Kurzweil's predictions of immortality are wild fantasies based on unjustifiable leaps from current technology.

"I'm not calling Ray a quack, but I am calling his message about immortality in line with the claims of other quacks that are out there." said Thomas Perls, a Boston University aging specialist who studies the genetics of centenarians.

Sherwin Nuland, a bioethics professor at Yale University's School of Medicine, calls Kurzweil a "genius" but also says he's a product of a narcissistic age when brilliant people are becoming obsessed with their longevity.

"They've forgotten they're acting on the basic biological fear of death and extinction, and it distorts their rational approach to the human condition," Nuland said.

Kurzweil says his critics often fail to appreciate the exponential nature of technological advance, with knowledge doubling year by year so that amazing progress eventually occurs in short periods.

His predictions, Kurzweil said, are based on carefully constructed scientific models that have proven accurate. For instance, in his 1990 book, "The Age of Intelligent Machines," Kurzweil predicted the development of a worldwide computer network and of a computer that could beat a chess champion.

"It's not just guesses," he said. "There's a methodology to this."

Kurzweil's been thinking big ever since he was little. At age 8, he developed a miniature theater in which a robotic device moved the scenery. By 16, the Queens, N.Y., native built his own computer and programmed it to compose original melodies.

His interest in health developed out of concern about his own future. Kurzweil's grandfather and father suffered from heart disease, his father dying when Kurzweil was 22. Kurzweil was diagnosed with Type 2 diabetes in his mid-30s.

After insulin treatments were ineffective, Kurzweil devised his own solution, including a drastic cut in fat consumption, allowing him to control his diabetes without insulin.

His rigorous health regimen is not excessive, just effective, he says, adding that his worst sickness in the last several years has been mild nasal congestion.

In the past decade, Kurzweil's interests in technology and health sciences have merged as scientists have discovered similarities.

"All the genes we have, the 20,000 to 30,000 genes, are little software programs," Kurzweil said.

In his latest book, Kurzweil defines what he calls his three bridges to immortality. The "First Bridge" is the health regimen he describes with co-author Dr. Terry Grossman to keep people fit enough to cross the "Second Bridge," a biotechnological revolution.

Kurzweil writes that humanity is on the verge of controlling how genes express themselves and ultimately changing the genes. With such technology, humanity could block disease-causing genes and introduce new ones that would slow or stop the aging process.

The "Third Bridge" is the nanotechnology and artificial intelligence revolution, which Kurzweil predicts will deliver the nanobots that work like repaving crews in our bloodstreams and brains. These intelligent machines will destroy disease, rebuild organs and obliterate known limits on human intelligence, he believes.

Immortality would leave little standing in current society, in which the inevitability of death is foundational to everything from religion to retirement planning. The planet's natural resources would be greatly stressed, and the social order shaken.

Kurzweil says he believes new technology will emerge to meet increasing human needs. And he said society will be able to control the advances he predicts as long as it makes decisions openly and democratically, without excessive government interference.

But there are no guarantees, he adds.

Meanwhile, Kurzweil refuses to concede the inevitably of his own death, even if science doesn't advance as quickly as he predicts.

"Death is a tragedy," a process of suffering that rids the world of its most tested, experienced members - people whose contributions to science and the arts could only multiply with agelessness, he said.

Kurzweil said he's no "cheerleader" for unlimited scientific progress and added he knows science can't answer questions about why eternal lives are worth living. That's left for philosophers and theologians, he said.

But to him there's no question of huge advances in things that make life worth living, such as art, cultural, music and science.

"Biological evolution passed the baton of progress to human cultural and technological development," he said.

Lee Silver, a Princeton biologist, said he'd love to believe in the future as Kurzweil sees it, but the problem is, humans are involved.

The instinct to preserve individuality, and to gain advantage for yourself and children, would survive any breakthrough into biological immortality - which Silver doesn't think is possible. The gap between the haves and have-nots would widen and Kurzweil's vision of a united humanity would become ever more elusive, he said.

"I think it would require a change in human nature," Silver said, "and I don't think people want to do that."

AP AOL Science News http://aolsvc.news.aol.com/news/article.adp?id=20050212192909990005

Posted by philcutrara1 at 4:20 PM EST
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Friday, 11 February 2005
Manifest for SS Argentina Sailing from Palermo, Sicily 1920

Photo: Richard Faber Collection

Built by Russell & Company, Port Glasgow,
Scotland, 1907. 5,526 gross tons; 390 (bp) feet
long; 48 feet wide. Steam triple expansion
engines, twin screw. Service speed 15 knots.
1,450 passengers (45 first class, 175 second
class, 1,230 third class).

Built for Austro-Americana Line, Austrian flag, in
1907 and named Argentina. Trieste-South America
and Trieste-New York Service service. Used as a
hospital ship in 1918. Sold to Cosulich Line,
Italian flag, in 1919. Mediterranean-New York
service. Sold to Florio Line, Italian flag, in
1926. Sold to Tirrenia Line, Italian flag, in
1932. Scrapped in 1960.

Associated Passenger Date of Arrival Port of Departure Line #
Page # 0967
Cutura, Agostino June 12, 1920 Palermo -

Original page

Manifest for Argentina Sailing from Palermo

Name Gender Age Married Ethnicity Place of Residence

0001. Rizzo, Amalia F 28y W Italian, South Villabate, Palermo
0002. Zarcone, Anna F 70y M Italian, South Villabate, Palermo
0003. Castello, Angela F 19y M Italian, South Villabate, Palermo
0004. Morello, Rosa F 24y S Italian, South Palermo, Palermo
0005. Zarcone, Dorotea F 70y M Italian, South Villabate, Palermo
0006. Castello, Vincenza F 30y M Italian, South Villabate, Palermo
0007. Pelicane, Maria Concetta F Italian, South Villabate, Palermo
0008. Giliberto, Giacomo M 75y M Italian, South Ribera, Girgenti
0009. Fontana, Amedeo M 21 S Italian, South Acquaviva, Caltanissetta
0010. Ganci, Francesco M 49y M Italian, South Valguarnera, Caltanissetta
0011. Ganci, Antonino M 16y S Italian, South Valguarnera, Caltanissetta
0012. Purpura, Francesco M 60y M Italian, South Termini, Palermo
0013. Giuliana, Algio M 27y M Italian, South M.S. Giuliano, Trapani
0014. Cammarata, Caterina F 21y M Italian, South M.S. Giuliano, Trapani
0015. Cassaro, Anna F 25y W Italian, South Ravanusa, Girgenti
0016. Graziano, Rosaria F 25y M Italian, South Naso, Messina
0017. Topscano, Carmela F 6y S Italian, South Naso, Messina
0018. Toscano, Santa F 5y S Italian, South Naso, Messina
0019. Demma, Giuseppe M 36y M Italian, South Termini, Palermo
0020. Lombardo, Rosario M 22y S Italian, South Termini, Palermo
0021. Mazzola, Giuseppe M 34y M Italian, South Aidone, Caltanissetta
0022. Guerrera, Fortunata F 22y M Italian, South Aidona, Caltanissetta
0023. Mazzola, Antonio M 7y S Italian, South Aidona, Caltanissetta
0024. Sicari, Salvatore M 29y S Italian, South S. Giuseppe, Palermo
0025. Buccellato, Angela F 24y M Italian, South Castellam, Trapani
0026. Cutura, Filippo M 30y M Italian, South Termini, Palermo
0027. Balsamo, Maria F 19y M Italian, South Termini, Palermo
0028. Cutura, Agostino M 4y S Italian, South Termini, Palermo
0029. Cutura, Agostino M 2y S Italian, South Termini, Palermo
0030. Cutura, Antonina F 2m S Italian, South Termini, Palermo
==============Corrected Lines============
0026. Cutrara, Filippo M 30y M Italian, South Termini, Palermo (Philip)
0027. Balsamo, Maria F 19y M Italian, South Termini, Palermo (Mary)
0028. Cutrara, Agostino M 4y S Italian, South Termini, Palermo (Gus)
0029. Cutrara, Agostina F 2y S Italian, South Termini, Palermo (Lillie)
0030. Cutrara, Antonina F 2m S Italian, South Termini, Palermo (Lena)

Posted by philcutrara1 at 12:28 PM EST
Updated: Friday, 11 February 2005 12:50 PM EST
Post Comment | Permalink
Thursday, 3 February 2005
M THEORY
Who is Edward Witten who calls this deeper understanding of strings "M theory," with M standing, he says wryly, for "mystery, magic or matrix, my three favorite words?"


Edward Witten bigger than life!

Into the Eleventh Dimension

The quest for a theory linking all matter and all forces led physicists deep into hyperspace, where they got horribly lost. But suddenly the way ahead has become clear, says superstring theorist.

Michio Kaku
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Is there a Final Theory in physics? Will we one day have a complete theory that will explain everything from subatomic particles, atoms and supernovae to the big bang? Einstein spent the last 30 years of his life in a fruitless quest for the fabled unified field theory. His approach has since been written off as futile.

In the 1980s, attention switched to superstring theory as the leading candidate for a final theory. This revolution began when physicists realised that the subatomic particles found in nature, such as electrons and quarks, may not be particles at all, but tiny vibrating strings.

Superstring theory was a stunning breakthrough. It became one of the fastest growing and most exciting areas of theoretical physics, generating a feverish outpouring of thousands of papers. Then, in the early 1990s, progress seemed to grind to a halt. People became discouraged when they failed to find the answers to two key questions: where do strings come from, and is our Universe among the many solutions of superstring theory? But now the Internet is buzzing again as papers pour in to the bulletin board at Los Alamos National laboratory in New Mexico, the official clearing house for superstring papers.

The trigger for this excitement was the discovery of "M-theory", which may answer those two vital questions about superstrings. "I may be biased on this one, but I think it is perhaps the most important development not only in string theory, but also in theoretical physics at least in the past two decades," says Harvard physicist Cumrun Vafa. M-theory led John Schwarz of Caltech, one of the founders of superstring theory, to proclaim a "second superstring revolution". And it inspired a spellbinding three-hour lecture by another leading exponent,Edward Witten of the Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton, New Jersey. The aftershocks of the breakthrough have spread to other disciplines, too. "The excitement I sense in the people in the field and the spin-offs into my own field of mathematics...have really been quite extraordinary," says Phillip Griffiths, director of the Institute for Advanced Study." I feel I've been very privileged to witness this first hand."

In one dazzling stroke, M-theory has come close to solving superstring theory's two long-standing questions , leaving many theoretical physicists (myself included) gasping at its power. M-theory, moreover, may even force string theory to change its name because, although many features of M-theory are still unknown , it does not seem to be a theory purely of strings. Other strange beasts seem to emerge, including various types of membranes. Michael Duff of Texas A&M University is already giving talks with the title " The theory formerly known as strings".

"Nature shows us only the tail of the lion. But I do not doubt that the lion belongs to it even though he cannot at once reveal himself because of his enormous size" - Albert Einstein
M-theory does not prove the final correctness of superstring theory. Not by any means. Proving or disproving its validity may take years more. But it still marks an astonishing breakthrough. Remember that some of the finest minds of this century have been stumped by the problem of creating a "Theory of Everything". Einstein summed up the problem when he said: Nature shows us only the tail of the lion. But I do not doubt that the lion belongs to it even though he cannot at once reveal himself because of his enormous size." The tail" is what we see in nature , which can be described by the four fundamental forces -gravity, electromagnetism and the strong and weak nuclear forces. The lion is the ultimate theory that will unify them in one short equation.

Today, physicists believe that the first force, gravity, can be described by Einstein's general relativity, based on the smooth warping of the fabric of space- time. This is an elegant theory that describes the macroscopic world of black holes, quasars and the big bang. But gravity has stubbornly refused to unite with the other three forces , which are described by quantum theory. Here, instead of the smooth fabric of space-time, we have the discrete world of packets of energy, or quanta.

The form of quantum theory that goes furthest in describing matter and its interactions is the Standard Model, which is based on a bizarre bestiary of particles such as quarks , leptons and bosons (see Diagram). The Standard Model may be one of the most successful theories in science, but it is also one of the ugliest. Its inadequacy is betrayed by some 19 arbitrary constants not derived by any kind of theory that have to be put in "by hand" to make the equations work.

Capturing the "lion", which unites these two great theories, would be a crowning achievement for physics. But while Einstein was first to set off on this noble hunt, tracking the footprints left by the lion, he ultimately lost the trail and wandered off into the wilderness.

Crazy departure
Today, however, physicists are following a different trail-the one leading to superstring theory. Unlike previous proposals, it has survived every blistering mathematical challenge ever hurled at it. Not surprisingly, the theory is a radical-some might say crazy-departure from the past, being based on tiny strings vibrating in 10-dimensional space-time.

"The subatomic particles we see in nature are nothing more than different resonances of the vibrating superstrings!"

To understand how going to higher dimensions can help to unify lower dimensions, think back to how the Romans used to fight wars. Without radio communications and spy planes, battles were horribly confused, raging on many fronts at the same time. That's why the Romans always leapt into "hyperspace"- the third dimension-by seizing a hill- top. From this vantage point, they were able to survey the two-dimensional battlefield as a single, unified whole.

Missing: the Standard Model works well, but still has big gaps. Could superstrings complete the picture?

Leaping to higher dimensions can also simplify the laws of nature. In 1915, Einstein changed completely our notion of gravity by leaping to the extra dimension of time. In 1919, the German mathematician Theodor Kaluza added a fifth dimension and in so doing unified space-time with Maxwell's equations for electromagnetism. This triumph was largely forgotten amid the frenzy of interest generated by quantum mechanics. Only in the 1980s did physicists return to this idea to create superstring theory.

In superstring theory, the subatomic particles we see in nature are nothing more than different resonances of the vibrating superstrings, in the same way that different musical notes emanate from the different modes of vibration of a violin string. (These strings are very small-of the order of 1035 metres.)

Likewise, the laws of physics -the forces between charged particles, for example-are the harmonies of the strings; the Universe is a symphony of vibrating strings. And when strings move in 10-dimensional space-time, they warp the space-time surrounding them in precisely the way predicted by general relativity. So strings simply and elegantly unify the quantum theory of particles and general relativity. Better still, gravity is not an inconvenient add-on. "Unlike conventional quantum field theory, string theory requires gravity," Witten has said. "I regard this fact as one of the greatest insights in science ever made."

But, of course, all this takes place in 10 dimensions. Physicists retrieve our more familiar 4-dimensional Universe by assuming that, during the big bang, 6 of the 10 dimensions curled up (or "compactified") into a tiny ball, while the remaining four expanded explosively, giving us the Universe we see. What has consumed physicists for the past ten years is the task of cataloguing the different ways in which these six dimensions can compactify. Their task has been especially difficult because mathematicians have not worked out the topology and properties of these higher-dimensional universes. The physicists have had to blaze the trail and invent entirely new areas of mathematics. These efforts have revealed millions of compactifications, each of which yields a different pattern of quarks, electrons and so on.

As we have seen, the first frustrating problem with superstring theory is that physicists do not understand where strings come from. To make matters worse, there are five string theories that unify quantum theory with relativity. This is an embarrassment of riches. Each competing theory looks quite different from the others. One, called Type 1 string theory, is based on two types of strings: "open strings", like short strands with two ends, and "closed strings", in which the ends meet to form a ring. The other four have only closed strings. Some, such as Type 2b, generate only left- handed particles, which spin in only one direction [Ref I.Asimov "Left Hand of the Electron"]. Others, such as Type 2a, have left and right-handed particles.

Today's excitement has grown from the finding that if we postulate the existence of a mysterious M-theory in 11 dimensions we can show that the five competing string theories are actually different versions of the same thing. Like a Roman general surveying the battlefield from the third dimension, physicists today stand on the hilltop of the 11th dimension and see the five superstring theories below, unified into a simple, coherent picture, representing different aspects of the same thing.

Tracking lion
The first step towards this advance came two years ago when Witten and Paul Townsend of the University of Cambridge showed that Type 2a string theory in 10 dimensions was equivalent to M-theory in 11 dimensions with one dimension curled up. Since then, all five theories have been shown to be equivalent. So at last physicists know where superstrings come from : they originate in the 11th dimension from M-theory.

M-theory also predicts that strings coexist with membranes of various dimensions. For example , a particle can be defined as a zero-brane (zero-dimensional object). A string is a one-brane, an ordinary membrane like a soap bubble is a two-brane, and so on. (Using p to represent the dimension of the object, one wag dubbed this motley collection "p-branes" ) When these p-branes vibrate or pulsate , they create new resonances , or particles, which were missed in earlier formulations of superstrings. The name "M-theory" was coined by Witten: M perhaps stands for "membrane" or the "mother of all strings", or possibly "mystery" Take your pick.

To see how this all fits together, imagine three blind men hot on the trail of Einstein's lion. Hearing it race by, they give chase and desperately grab at it. Hanging onto the tail for dear life, one feels its one-dimensional form and loudly proclaims, "It's a string. The lion is a string." The second man grabs the lion's ear. Feeling a two-dimensional surface , he calls out "No, no, the lion is really a two-brane." The third blind man, hanging on to the lion's leg, senses a three-dimensional solid, and shouts , "You're both wrong. The lion is a three- brane !" They are all right. Just as the tail, ear and leg are different parts of the same lion , the string and various p-branes appear to be different limits of M-theory. Townsend calls it "p-brane democracy".

The acid test for any theory is that it must fit the data. No matter how original and elegant superstring theory is , it will stand or fall on whether it describes the physical Universe. Either it is a Theory of Everything, as its advocates hope , or it is a theory of nothing. There is no in-between. So theoretical physicists must answer the second question : is our Universe, with its strange collection of quarks and subatomic particles, among the solutions of superstring theory? This is where it runs into an embarrassing problem, which is that physicists have been unable to find all its four-dimensional solutions. The mathematics have been fiendishly difficult-too hard for anyone to solve completely.

In general, there are two types of solutions. So far, only the first class, called "perturbative" solutions have been found. Across all branches of physics, theorists faced by an equation they cannot solve reach for well-established ways to find approximate solutions. In superstring theory, millions of these perturbative solutions have been catalogued. Each one corresponds to a different way in which to curl up 6 of the 10 dimensions. However, none of them precisely reproduces the pattern of quarks , leptons and bosons in the Standard Model, although some come close.

"M-theory solves entire classes of problems that were previously thought to be unsolvable . It even gives us valuable details of quantum effects In black holes."

So, many believe that the Standard Model may be found among the second class of solutions, the "non-perturbative" solutions. But non-perturbative solutions are generally among the most difficult of all solutions in physics. Some physicists despaired of ever finding non- perturbative solutions of superstring theory. After all, even the non-perturbative solutions of simple four-dimensional theories are completely unknown , let alone those of a complicated 10-dimensional theory.

How does M-theory help to solve this intractable problem? The answer lies in a startling tool called "duality". Simply put, in M-theory there is a duality, or simple mathematical relationship , between the perturbative and non-perturbative regions. This allows us at last to take a peek at this "forbidden zone".

To see how duality works, consider Maxwell's theory of electricity and magnetism , for example. Physicists have known for decades that if they interchange the electric field E and magnetic field B in Maxwell's equations , and also swap the electric charge e and magnetic charge g, then the equations stay the same. That is, nothing happens to Maxwell's theory if we make the dual transformation: E
Hidden theories
In fact, in Maxwell's theory, the product e times g is a constant: so small e corresponds to large g. This is the key. Suppose an equation includes a mathematical function that depends on g2 and which cannot be solved exactly. The standard mathematical trick is to approximate a solution with a perturbation expansion: g2+ g4 + g6... and so on. So long as g is less than 1, each successive term in the series is smaller than the last, and the overall value converges on a single figure.

But if g is greater than 1 then the total gets larger and larger, and the approximation fails. This is where duality comes in. If g is large, then e is less than 1. Using perturbation , we get the series e2+ e4 + e6 which gives a sensible value. Ultimately, this means that using perturbation on e can solve problems in the non-perturbative region of g.

Duality in Maxwell's theory is rather trivial. But in M-theory, we find another duality: g<1/g. This relationship, though simpler, turns out to be incredibly powerful. When I first saw it, I could hardly believe my eyes. It meant that a string theory defined for large g, which is usually impossible to describe using present-day mathematics, can be shown to be equivalent to another type of string theory for small g, which is easily described using perturbation theory.

Thus, two different string theories can be dual to each other. In the non- perturbative region of string theory was another string theory. This is how, in fact, we prove the equivalence of all five string theories. Altogether, three different types of duality called S, T and U have been discovered , which yield an intricate web of dualities linking string theories of various dimensions and types. At an incredible pace , physicists have now mapped almost all the solutions and dualities that exist in 10, 8 and 6 dimensions.

Before M-theory, finding the non-perturbative solutions in these dimensions would have been considered impossible. Now the problem is trivial. For example , let us say that two theories A and B are dual to each other in 10 dimensions. If we compactify both theories in the same way, then we obtain theories A' and B'. But now we know something new: that A' is also dual to B'. Thus, the non-perturbative behaviour of A' is given by B'. By elaborating this process, we get an almost complete understanding of the different possible universes down to 6 dimensions. Thus, M-theory solves entire classes of problems that were previously thought to be unsolvable. It even gives us valuable new details about quantum effects in black holes.

But there are many loose ends. For example, what precisely is M-theory? So far, we only know fragments of the theory (the low-energy part). We are still waiting for someone to come up with a full description of M-theory Last year, Vafa shocked physicists by announcing that there may be a 12-dimensional theory lurking out there, which he called "F-theory" (F for father).

More important, we are still far from mapping all the dualities of four dimensions. If everything works out as hoped , we should find that one of these four- dimensional universes contains the Standard Model and thus describes the known Universe. But there are millions of these solutions, so sifting through them to find the one we are after will take many years.

So will the final theory be in 10, 11 or 12 dimensions? According to Schwarz, the answer may be none of these. He feels that the true theory may not have a fixed dimensionality, and that 11 dimensions only emerge once we try to solve it. Townsend takes a similar view, saying, " The whole notion of dimensionality is an approximate one that only emerges in some semiclassical context."

So does this means that the end is in sight-that some day soon we will be able to work out the Standard Model from first principles? When I put this question to some leading physicists in this field they were still cautious. Townsend likened our present state of knowledge to the old quantum era of the Bohr atom, just before the full elucidation of quantum mechanics. "We have some fruitful pictures and some rules," he says. "But it's also clear that we don't have a complete theory."

Witten, too, believes we are on the right track. But he says we will need a few more "revolutions" like the present one to finally solve the theory. "I think there are still a couple more superstring revolutions in our future, at least," says Witten. "If we can manage one more superstring revolution a decade , I think that we will do all right." From Harvard, Vafa adds: "I hope this is the light at the end of the tunnel'. But who knows how long the tunnel is?"
Personally,I am optimistic. For the first time, we can see the outline of the lion , and it is magnificent. One day, we will hear it roar.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Author

Michio Kaku is professor of theoretical physics at the City University of New York and author of Hyperspace: A Scientific Odyssey through the 10th Dimension, Oxford University Press.

Into the Eleventh Dimension

===============================================================================
Edward Witten
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Publications

Curriculum Vitae
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Selected Articles:
Reflections on the Fate of Spacetime

Duality, Spacetime and Quantum Mechanics

Magic, Mystery, and Matrix

The Holes are Defined by the String

The Mass Question

Hunting the Higgs

* Universe on a String

Black Holes and Quark Confinement

* When Symmetry Breaks Down
* (most accessible)


Contact Information:

Edward Witten
Institute for Advanced Study
School of Natural Sciences
Einstein Drive
Princeton, NJ 08540

School of Natural Science


Posted by philcutrara1 at 5:58 AM EST
Updated: Thursday, 3 February 2005 6:52 AM EST
Saturday, 15 January 2005
READING AND WRITING
In the fictional movie called "Finding Forrester," the author tells his student to first write from the heart, and then when you edit your draft, write using your head.

The movie showed that they both have a very good collection of the best writers.

This is a good example for anyone wanting to be a "good" writer.

Read the Classics, the Masterpieces of Literature, the writers who won a Pulitzer or even the Amazon.com Great American Novel list and then try your skills at writing the Great American Novel!

PRC

You can Write the Great American Novel

by James Capobianco

In this article, I would like to share with you, my thoughts on *writing*. The ability to express yourself in words. To pass on to others the knowledge and experiences you have acquired just by living. I look forward to doing just that every month in my newsletter. Maybe I can get you to look inside yourself and find these experiences and to share *your* knowledge with others.
Here's how.

Look at what the Internet is giving us. Communicating at incredible speed for next to nothing. Purchasing products and services from the comfort of our home. Allowing us to research the world for information on any subject imaginable (both good and bad I'm afraid). It also allows ANYONE to fulfill the DREAM within all of us:


to write "THE GREAT AMERICAN NOVEL!"


Or at least to give anyone the capability to create, publish and market an infoproduct for the world to read, appreciate and, hopefully buy, and make you rich.

Where will the subject matter come from? YOU..yes you! Your experiences, your knowledge, your very soul! With your own knowledge, some thought and research, I'm sure, no, I know there is a book in all of you.

No matter what kind of back ground, up-bringing, job history or life you've lived, unless you've been in a closet since birth (and even that might make a good story) you have all experienced something. Something you could share with others of similar interests.

There is something in particular we each enjoy doing and are good at. It may be your favorite hobbies such as fishing, cooking, woodworking, sewing, stamp collecting or watching television. Hmm? A good e-book might be "How I Learned to Use the Remote with Both Hands" by C. Potato. We all know something that someone else would like to know and, if properly presented, willing to pay for.

How about subjects from the real world such as job related experiences, problems you solved, a single Mom coping with life's challenges, caregiving for a loved one (with people living longer more and more people will face this challenge). Anything you've experienced that may help someone else, is subject matter.

As you can see the possibilities are endless. You can do it! But you have to be willing to devote yourself to the task. Like everything else in life, you have to make it happen.

After all, what is a book? Be it fact or fiction. It is a collection of words that has the ability to; explain how to do something, show us how to build something, entertain us, take us, by mental picture and photographic image, somewhere we've never been. Books have been around for centuries. Even with the Internet, books thrive and I'm sure always will. There is something about curling up with a good book.

However, the draw back to traditional paper books is the cost of production and distribution. Enter the Internet! Now ANYONE, with the help of their HOME computer, can write a BOOK (or electronic book, aka E-book). Almost half the homes today have computers and the number grows daily. Not only is the source for authors abundant; but so is the market for your e-book. The cost of promoting your work, though somewhat less, is still a real factor. But that too is easier on the Internet.

So what's holding you back from becoming the next, Hemingway, Steinbeck, T.S. Elliott, or T. Williams? OK! OK! I sometimes get a little carried away. But the point is:

if you live, you experience...
if you experience you gain knowledge (positive and negative)...
if you have knowledge, you have something to share...
So share your knowledge with the world (or at least those who would be interested) as you would share your knowledge with your family and friends, except do it via the Internet.

That's what I'm doing.

About the Author

James Capobianco has been self-employed for over 25 years, both on and offline. At his web site, Cap-Tech.com, and in his newsletter, The Cap-Tech Times, he shares his experience and expertise when it comes to owning your own business. Come pay a visit at Cap Tech Times

Posted by philcutrara1 at 12:22 PM EST
Updated: Saturday, 15 January 2005 1:08 PM EST
Thursday, 6 January 2005
Ellis Island Timeline


Date Description of Ellis Island Through History

1630 The Colonial governors of New Amsterdam purchased a small, 3.5-acre mud bank in Upper New York Bay, near the New Jersey shore. The Indians called it Kioshk, or Gull Island, after the birds that were its only inhabitants. The Dutch settlers called it "Oyster Island", after the many surrounding oyster beds. The Island barely rose above the surface at high tide.

1700s During the Colonial period, the Island was known as Dyre's; later it was called Bucking. In the 1760's, after some pirates were hanged from one of the island's scrubby trees, it became known as Gibbet Island.

1776 By the time of the American Revolution, the Island was owned by Samuel Ellis, a New York merchant and owner of a small tavern on the island catering to fishermen.

1808 Samuel Ellis's heirs sold the island to New York State. The name Ellis Island stuck. Later in the year, the Federal Government bought Ellis Island for $10,000.

1812 Shortly before the War of 1812, a battery of 20 guns, a magazine and a barracks were constructed on the island.

1834 By the terms of an interstate agreement, Ellis Island and neighboring Bedloe's Island (renamed Liberty island in 1956, site of the Statue of Liberty) were declared part of New York State, even though both islands are on the New Jersey side of the main ship channel. Ellis continued to serve as an arsenal until 1890. Nearby residents of Jersey City, Manhattan and Brooklyn worried for years about explosion of the powder magazines.

1890 The States turned over control of immigration to the Federal Government. The U.S. Congress appropriated $75,000 to build the first Federal immigration station on Ellis Island. Artesian wells were dug, and landfill (from incoming ships' ballast and New York City subway tunnels) doubled the size of Ellis to over six acres. While the new immigration station was under construction, the Barge Office on the Battery on the tip of Manhattan was used for immigration reception. During 1891, there were 405,664 immigrants, or about 80% of the national total, that were processed at the Barge Office.

01 Jan 1892 The First Ellis Island Immigration Station was officially opened. The first immigrant to pass through Ellis was a "rosy-cheeked Irish girl," Annie Moore, age 15, from County Cork. She came with her two younger brothers to join their parents in New York City. That first day, three large ships were waiting to land, and 700 immigrants passed through Ellis Island. In the first year, nearly 450,000 immigrants passed through the Island.

15 Jun 1897 A fire of undisclosed origin, possibly faulty wiring, completely destroyed the Georgia pine structures on Ellis Island. No one died, but most of the immigration records dating from 1855 were destroyed. In five years, some 1.5 million immigrants had been processed. While a new, fireproof immigration station was being constructed on Ellis, processing was transferred back to the Barge Office.

17 Dec 1900 The present Main Building, an impressive, French Renaissance structure in red brick with limestone trim was open. It cost some $1.5 million and was designed to process 5,000 immigrants per day. This was scarcely big enough for the surge in immigration in the pre-World War I years. The island was continuously enlarged with landfill, remodeling, additions and new construction.

1907 This was the peak year at Ellis Island with 1,004,756 immigrants received. The all-time daily high was on April 17th of this year when a total of 11,747 immigrants were processed.

1908 The Baggage and Dormitory Building was completed and capacity of the hospital was doubled. A dining room for 1,000 at a sitting was built on the top floor of the Kitchen and Laundry Building.

30 Jul 1916 Explosions believed set by German saboteurs at nearby Black Tom Wharf in New Jersey severely damaged the Ellis Island buildings. The most notable addition included in the repairs was the new ceiling over the Great Hall, a barrel vault constructed by the Guastavino brothers.

1917 When the U.S. entered the war in Europe, Ellis Island was used to detain crews from German merchant ships anchored in New York Harbor. Suspected enemy aliens throughout America were rounded up and brought to Ellis Island.

1918-19 The U.S. Army and Navy took over most of Ellis Island for use as a way station and treatment of returning sick and wounded American servicemen. During the war, there was a sharp decline in immigration as the numbers of newcomers passing through Ellis Island decreased from 178,416 in 1915, to just 28,867 in 1918.

1921 Post-war immigration quickly revived and 560,971 immigrants passed through Ellis Island in 1921. The first Immigration Quota Law passed the U.S. Congress, adding to the administration problems at Ellis Island. It provided that the number of any European nationality entering in a given year could not exceed three percent of foreign-born persons of that nationality who lived in the U.S. in 1910. Nationality was to be determined by country of birth, and no more than 20 percent of the annual quota of any nationality could be received in any given month. The total number of immigrants admissible under the system was set at nearly 358,000, but numerous classes were exempt.

1924 The Immigration Act of 1924 further restricted immigration, changing the quota basis from the census of 1910 to that of 1890, and reducing the annual quota to some 164,000. This marked the end of mass immigration to America. The Immigration Act also provided for the examination and qualification of immigrants at U.S. consulates overseas. The main function of Ellis Island changed from that of an immigrant processing station, to a center of the assembly, detention, and deportation of aliens who had entered the U.S. illegally or had violated the terms of admittance. The buildings at Ellis Island began to fall into disuse and disrepair.

1930s Funds from the Public Works Administration permitted the landfill addition of recreation grounds on the Manhattan side of the Main Building. Works Progress Administration (WPA) labor added landscaping, new playgrounds and gardens on new landfill between Units 2 and 3. As a result of these efforts, Ellis Island reached its present 27.5 acres

1938-1945 During World War II, Ellis Island facilities were used by the Coast Guard to house and train recruits. After the U.S. entered the war in December 1941, Ellis Island was again used as a detention center for suspected enemy aliens and as a hospital for returning wounded servicemen. The detainees became so numerous that the immigration functions had to be transferred to Manhattan for lack of room on Ellis.

1946 Following the decommissioning of the Coast Guard Station, Ellis Island remained in use primarily as a detention center for aliens whose status was questioned.

1950 A brief flurry of activity occurred on Ellis Island after the passage of the Internal Security Act of 1950, which excluded arriving aliens who had been members of Communist and Fascist organizations. Remodeling and repairs were performed on the buildings to accommodate detainees who numbered as many as 1,500 at one time.

1952 As a result of the Immigration and Naturalization Act of 1952 and a liberalized detention policy, the number of detainees on Ellis Island dropped to less than 30.

Nov 1954 Ellis Island, with its 33 structures, was closed and declared excess Federal property.

1954-65 Ellis Island was under jurisdiction of the General Services Administration.

11 May 1965 President Lyndon B. Johnson issued Proclamation 3656 adding Ellis Island to the Statue of Liberty National Monument, thus placing Ellis Island under the jurisdiction of the National Park Service.

1976 Ellis Island was opened to the public for visits. Sixty-minute guided tours were limited to the Main Building. Over 50,000 visited the island in 1976.

1984 Visitation had reached 70,000 per year when the current restoration began. The non-profit Statue of Liberty-Ellis Island Foundation, Inc., chaired by Lee A. Iacocca, raised all the funds from private citizens, corporations and other groups. In collaboration with the National Park Service, it also lets contracts for the work.

Ellis Island Information




Posted by philcutrara1 at 10:49 AM EST
Updated: Thursday, 6 January 2005 11:29 AM EST
Wednesday, 29 December 2004
Holistic Health

FRONTLINE traces the mainstreaming of alternative medicine to the halls of Congress and one U.S. senator's allergies. Viewers meet Sen. Tom Harkin (D-Iowa), who recalls complaining to a friend about his terrible allergies. The friend said he knew someone who could cure the senator's allergies using bee pollen.

"I went on this very tough regimen of taking a lot of bee pollen, sometimes as much as sixty pills a day," Harkin tells FRONTLINE. "And literally on about the tenth day, all of a sudden my allergies just left. Well, that's when I began to think, 'We've got to have somebody looking at these different approaches.'"

Harkin, the chairman of the Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education Committee, convinced Congress to allocate $2 million to the National Institutes of Health (NIH) for the study of alternative medicine. Ten years later, the National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine (NCCAM) has a budget of over $100 million and is funding hundreds of research projects around the nation.

In 1994, Congress passed the Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act (DSHEA), a controversial bill that limited the Food and Drug Administration's power to regulate dietary supplements at a time when the FDA was gearing up to increase its regulation of what has since become an $18 billion a year industry. Supporters claim that the bill protects the freedom of American consumers to take care of their own health by assuring access to a range of natural products.

National Center for Alternative and Complementary Medicine
Affiliated with the National Institute for Health, NCCAM is the federal government's lead agency for scientific research on complementary and alternative medicine. This comprehensive website describes different kinds of treatments, defines terms and reports research findings, and offers a variety of FAQs, fact sheets, etc.

The White House Commission on Complementary and Alternative Medicine Policy (WHCCAMP)
The WHCCAMP was created by Executive Order on March 7, 2000. Comprised of doctors, public health officials, and experts in alternative medicine, the purpose of the commission was to explore pressing issues in CAM, notably research, public access, information dissemination, and the licensing of practioners. Upon publishing a final report of its findings and policy recommendations in March 2002, WHCCAMP was terminated by Executive Order. Visitors to the WHCCAMP website can read the commission's final report, learn about the commission's members, and read expert testimony.

Alternative Medicine Home Page
Created by a medical librarian at the University of Pittsburgh, this site contains an extensive selection of links to resources about complementary and alternative medicine, including government sources, searchable databases, and directories of practioners.

Other references and links:
? Alternative Medicine Association
This site offers a number of useful information resource guides on different alternative treatments and a database of studies and articles on many herbal supplements.

? The Office Of Cancer and Complementary Alternative Medicine
The Office of Cancer and Complementary Alternative Medicine was established at the National Cancer Institute in 1998 to coordinate the agency's CAM-related research. OCCAM's website includes information about clinical trials and a comprehensive cancer database.

Research Studies on CAM

? Current Research
This is a list of NCCAM's ongoing clinical trials of over more than 80 types of alternative and complementary medicine, from acupuncture to yoga. Entries are indexed both by treatment or by disease or condition treated, with contact information and the status of each project.

? Understanding Clinical Trials
A primer from NCCAM on understanding how clinical trials of complementary and alternative medicines are conducted, plus information on how to participate in a trial.

? The International Bibliographic Information on Dietary Supplements (IBIDS) Database
Run jointly by the NIH and the USDA, the IBIDS Database allows visitors to access citations and abstracts from thousands of herbal supplement studies published in peer-reviewed scientific journals. The database also contains links to consumer-oriented literature as well.

? CAM on PubMed
"CAM on PubMed" was created by the National Institutes of Health as a special subset of the National Library of Medicine's (NLM) database of published studies relating specifically to complementary and alternative therapies. Visitors can perform keyword searches to access citations and abstracts of scientific studies on CAM methods, as well as links to many full-text articles.

? MEDLINEplus: Alternative Medicine
Also jointly administered by the NIH and the NLM, MEDLINEplus provides information about CAM-related published studies, clinical trials, and news releases. It also has links to additional resources on alternative therapies indexed by modality, and a search engine that allows visitors to research alternative medicine topics arranged alphabetically from A - Z.

? ClinicalTrials.gov
ClinicalTrials.gov is a service provided by the National Institutes of Health. Visitors can search the database by disease or by funding organization to learn up-to-date information about human clinical research being conducted in the United States.

? Search the Studies at NIH
This website allows visitors to search studies being conducted at the National Institutes of Health Clinical Center by condition, symptom, or keyword.

Dietary and Herbal Supplements

? The Food and Nutrition Information Center
Part of the US Department of Agriculture, the FNIC is a great resource to learn about dietary and herbal supplements. The FNIC website includes a database of scientific published studies, as well as government reports and warnings.

? The Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition
The Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition is part of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, and has extensive information about dietary supplements, including FAQs, FDA warnings, safety information, and industry regulations.

? Dietary Supplements: A Consumer Guide (PDF)
The National Consumers League (NCL), a well-established non-profit organization dedicated to promoting the interest of consumers and workers on issues relating to child labor, privacy, and food safety, has produced a highly readable two-page brochure on dietary supplements. It provides easy-to-understand information about how to read dietary supplement labels, a glossary of terms, and a checklist of questions to ask before buying any herbal product.

? What's the Story? Drug-Supplement Interaction
A feature on drug-supplement interactions, including a detailed table of which drugs and herbal supplements "don't mix," from the American Council on Science and Health, Inc. (ACSH), a non-profit dedicated to educating consumers on issues related to nutrition and health issues.

? The Office of Dietary Supplements at the National Institutes of Health
The Office of Dietary Supplements (ODS) at the NIH funds research on dietary supplements and disseminates the research findings. ODS provides fact sheets on a variety of dietary and herbal supplements, safety information, consumer resources, and links to dietary supplement research centers.

? The U.S. General Accounting Office (GAO) Special Report: "Health Products for Seniors: Anti-aging Products Pose Potential for Physical and Economic Harm"

(PDF) The GAO's special report was presented at a hearing of the Senate Select Committee on Aging on September 10, 2001. The report focuses on products marketed to seniors because, as the authors state, "seniors are thought to be at particular risk of physical harm because they often take multiple prescription pharmaceuticals, increasing their risk of possibly dangerous drug-supplement interactions."

Appendix II of the report (pp. 28-33) provides a table of known adverse effects, contraindications, and interactions for each of the following herbal supplements and specialty products: evening primrose oil, garlic, ginkgo biloba, ginseng, kava kava, saw palmetto, St. John's Wort, valerian, chondroitin sulfate, coenzyme Q10, DHEA, glucosamine, melatonin, omega-3 fatty acids, soy proteins, and shark cartilage.

Acupuncture

? Accupuncture Information and Resources from NCCAM
Includes FAQs, practitioner referral sources, and an explanation of existing theories about whether, and how, acupuncture works.

? National Institutes of Health Consensus Statement on Acupuncture
A review of the research on acupuncture's effectiveness.

? American Academy of Medical Acupuncture (AAMA)
The AAMA is a professional association of acupuncturists. Its website is loaded with information, including certification requirements, a listing of hospitals that provide medical acupuncture as well as a state-by-state listing of private practioners, and news and events.

? British Acupuncture Council (BAC)
The BAC is an association of acupuncture practioners in Britain. On the BAC site you can read about the history of acupuncture and the medical conditions it is most likely to help. It also has a Q & A section for the most commonly asked questions about acupuncture.

? British Medical Acupuncture Society (BMAS)
The BMAS is an association of medical practioners who work or are interested in acupuncture. On the BMAS site you can find information for patients, as well as a link to the medical journal, Acupuncture in Medicine, which you can search for abstracts.

Homeopathy

? National Center for Homeopathy (NCH)
The NCH is a non-profit dedicated to educating the public about homeopathy. The NCH site provides detailed information on homeopathy, a link to a database of studies, and a directory to find a homeopath. You can also get connected to a local study group in your area.

? North American Society of Homeopaths (NASH)
NASH is a professional association of registered homeopaths. The NASH website provides a directory of registered homeopaths, as well as links to the organization's journal and newsletter.

Interview: Andrew Weil, M.D.

Posted by philcutrara1 at 9:59 AM EST
Updated: Wednesday, 29 December 2004 10:32 AM EST

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