WORLD
TRADE CENTER REBUILDING For one thing, they were all wacky. They just didn't look like real buildings. They looked like something a first-year architecture student would come up with, when he's got the math and the physics and the graphics software down pretty well, but before he has actually had to deal with actual people who actually wanted places they could actually live or work in. For another, they were all high, which means that you would never persuade anyone to move into them. This isn't cowardice, it's just common sense. I don't think I'm a coward, and I would face shot and shell in a noble cause. Hope I would, anyway. But just to get a paycheck? Just to trade someone's financial futures, or process someone's health-insurance claim, or program someone's computers? For stuff like that I'm going to spend my working life sitting in the middle of a bullseye waving cheerily at all the world's lunatics? No way. And for another thing, this is New York City, and it isn't 1973 any more. Nothing is going to get done on that scale without years decades, very likely of litigation. This is a city that can't even figure out how to provide public lavatories for pedestrians. By the time every interest group, every labor union, every posturing politico, every busybody environmental lobby, every weeping, moaning "victim" association, has had its say, it'll be mid-century. So what would I do with the World Trade Center site? Divide it into 50x150 lots and auction them off, no two to the same developer. Let them build some nice modest ten-story apartments, stores, or offices. Put a decent plaque on one of the walls to commemorate the dead, and have a city employee go round and polish it bright once a week. Name the streets after people who perished while doing heroic deeds of rescue. And tell the fancy architects to go play their games in some city that has no serious business to attend to. SONG
LYRICS
These lines are so thoroughly, comprehensively bad, you hardly know where to start with a critique of them. Isn't it precisely the existence of seas that causes loneliness in sailors, for example? Ah, well, de mortuis nil nisi bonum. And I am probably the last person in the world that knows who Eddie Cochran was, anyway. No! Google delivers reams of Cochran sites. Even a googlewhack on "eddie cochran" + "schopenhauer" yields five. Ye gods. CONSCIENCE
OF THE YOUNG Asked to explain herself, Ms. Smith extruded the following: "For some time now, the inequalities that are embedded into the American system have bothered me." Then: "It will be a great day when our schools get all the money they need and the military has to hold a bake sale to buy a bomber." I know, a lot of people are angry about Toni. Me, I can't help but smile in fond recollection. What I am recollecting is myself as a sixth-former (= high-school senior) back in England. In those distant days, it was the custom at all English movie theaters for the national anthem to be played at the end of every show. You were supposed to stand there reverently while it was played, then make your way out of the theater. A lot of people did just that. Another group finessed the issue by hastening out in a rather unseemly way just before the end of the movie. The youthful Derb and his pals, though, bold fearless rebels all, used to remain ostentatiously seated while the anthem was played. The inequalities that were embedded in the British system bothered us, you see. We looked forward to that great day when our schools would get all the money they needed and the military would have to hold a bake sale to buy a bomber. (We really did: That old chestnut has been around almost as long as I have.) Yes, yes, I know Toni Smith is kind of deplorable. Let's remember, however, that she is also a silly, smug, vain, ignorant kid, who has a lot of growing up to do. As we all were once. CRIME
STORY OF THE MONTH Here is the punch line. "The burglar's gun was not recovered at the scene, and police speculated that the man who got away ran off with it." I am reminded of those stories you hear about a homeowner who shoots a burglar dead, calls 911, and then, while he's waiting for the police to arrive, gets a call from the station house.
UNDERPERFORMIN'
NORMAN Now, I am not an expert on the WWII relocation camps for Americans of Japanese ancestry, so I am going to phrase the following as questions, and hope that someone more knowledgable will answer them for me. I would welcome that. So in a spirit of earnestly seeking enlightenment, I ask the following.
I am only asking. FOR
OPENERS AFTERMATH
OF A TRAGEDY I can't see anything inhumane about sending the Santillans back to Mexico. To the contrary, at a time like this, I am sure they want to be among familiar faces, speaking their own language, not among strangers whom they can't understand. It would, of course, be callous, churlish, and what's that expression? oh yes mean spirited of me to suggest that the Santillans' next project is to get rich from their daughter's death, so of course I am not going to suggest it.** I do think, though, that they should be gently, firmly, and sympathetically escorted back to their own country, where they can grieve privately in familiar surroundings, away from the cruel glare of publicity. PC
INDEXING The principal person in my book is the 19th-century German mathematician Bernhard Riemann. He married a lady named Elise Koch, who thereby became Frau Riemann, and who would never have thought of herself in any other way who would, in fact, have considered it a gross offense against propriety if someone had addressed her as "Fraulein Koch" after her wedding day. In my book, I mention her maiden name once, and thereafter refer to her as "Elise Riemann." I was therefore surprised to find that when the index came back to us, there was no index entry for "Riemann, Elise." Every single reference to this person was indexed under "Koch." I thought my precious manuscript had fallen into the hands of some grim crop-haired man-hating feminazi. However, making careful inquiries, I learned that the indexer is "a conservative Catholic lady." So it's not a personal-quirk thing, it's standard indexing procedure. Why does this sort of thing make me so furious? TIME
TRAVEL I have a half-brother, Roy Noel Derbyshire, who is much older than me. He was born in January 1930, in Christchurch, New Zealand. The circumstances of his birth have always been very mysterious. Those were the Wanderjahre of my father's youth. Dad had washed up in New Zealand somehow, got involved with a woman, and produced a child. Four months after Roy Noel's birth, pressing family business took Dad back to England. He arrived with the infant, who was then raised by Dad's mother and sister. Much later, during WWII, Dad met and married my mother, and in the fullness of time (flourish of trumpets), I was born. Of Roy Noel's mother, we knew next to nothing. Dad was close-mouthed about it, letting slip only an occasional remark. Roy Noel himself declared no interest in the matter: "If they didn't want to know me, I don't want to know them." He grew up to be a fine man and a solid citizen. He joined the British army, rose to the rank of Sergeant, and served 22 years in uniform the maximum for enlisted men. After that, he worked as a traffic warden in a small English town, through to retirement age. Then, with time on his hands, he got to thinking about his mysterious mother. He knew, from a copy of his birth certificate the Army had required, that she was a married woman, maiden name Goddard. On a trip home in December 1998 I showed him how to look up White Pages on the Internet, and we found several Goddards in Christchurch. Somehow this worked on his mind, until a few months ago he started writing letters at random to New Zealand Goddards. One of them who turned out to be a first cousin replied, and my brother is now learning about his New Zealand relatives. He has discovered, for example, that he has a sister alive out there. Imagine learning, at age 73, that you have a sister! (Technically a half-sister, but hey.) In fact my brother has struck gold, for the Goddards turn out to be one of those families that are keenly interested in their own genealogies. There is actually a Goddard Association, with chapters all round the world. The Goddards are even more fascinated to have discovered my brother than he has been to discover them they had no idea he existed! There is surely a trip to New Zealand in Roy Noel's future. Meanwhile they have got me going through Dad's stuff, which I acquired after he died, computerizing and sending off faded old photographs from his New Zealand days, to see if the Goddards can recognize anyone. It's a very odd feeling, looking at these pictures from 70-odd years ago groups of young men horsing around, girls playing tennis in long skirts, a picnic group on a lawn. They all seem suffused with summer sunlight, though I suppose that is just an artifact of their aging, and of the primitive cameras used. Everyone is laughing, happy, youthful. Now they are dead, or very decrepit. (Roy Noel has learned that his mother, whom he never knew, died just two years ago at age 90.) The past is definitely another country, and they don't issue too many visas. PUZZLE
CORNER A lighthouse has a circular floor plan, 20 feet in diameter. On the outside wall of the lighthouse is fixed a hook. A leash is tied to the hook, with a dog at the other end. The leash is 10 pi feet (that is to say, a tad more than 31.4159265358 9793238462 6433832795 0288419716 9399375105 8209749445 9230781640 6286208998 6280348253 4211706798 feet) long. Assuming the dog cannot enter the lighthouse, and the surface he can travel is flat and unobstructed, what area can he cover? |
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http://www.nationalreview.com/derbyshire/derbyshire022803.asp
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