Wafaa Bilal meets RPI and gets a Virtual Jihad of another color entirely

I have this deep conviction that, given the chance, most Americans would take anything that smells like art or an artist and ship it to the giant island of plastic waste in the middle of the Pacific. With that mindset it should come as little surprise the events in Troy, New York during the last week involving RPI‘s visiting artist Wafaa Bilal. Except things reached a point of the truly wrong. That the storied engineering school with the slogan ‘Why Not Change the World’ should have a hardcore club of republican students with apparent connections beyond campus (or whatever the case is) should also come as little surprise. Still, the whole thing leaves a bitter taste in the mouth as a supreme ‘what the fuck’ moment. Although officially written out of US law in 1973, federally protected free speech still held a shimmering veneer, that, in practice, anyway, seemed secure. Secure until what the application of “community standards” really amounts to in a former industrial center of the American northeast became apparent. Welcome to the scene in Troy, New York. Early March, 2008.

Across the river, mansion hill burns with the emerging scandal of now former New York Governor Elliot Spitzer’s indiscretions. In the historic district of downtown Troy an untarnished hero of the people is roasted for doing what was clearly the right thing at the right time. Steve Pierce is a saint. A champion of the empowering possibilities of media placed in the hand of the common man. He should be held in the same regard as other such far-thinkers as Rick Prelinger and Kevin Kelly. His most recent passion, The Sanctuary for Independent Media was callously shut down by the City of Troy, New York this week in a blatant flexing of cronyism.

Here’s Steve’s official statement from last night:

Hi-

Perhaps you’ve heard the news that the City of Troy, citing code violations, has shut down The Sanctuary for Independent Media effective immediately.

This happened the day after a top Troy official, who is also a Rensselaer County legislator and a constituent liaison for Senator Joseph Bruno, organized a protest condemning Wafaa Bilal’s work and our decision to present it on Monday night.

We have been working on our building since we first occupied it and throughout have been in close communication with the city about our plans, so this sudden closure-following the censorship of Wafaa’s work by RPI last week-came as quite a shock.

You can hear the phone call from the City of Troy at www.MediaSanctuary.org, along with a clip from Wafaa Bilal’s talk, and make up your own mind about the motivation behind the City’s action.

We have contacted the Center for Constitutional Rights, the American Civil Liberties Union, and private practice attorneys for assistance on the First Amendment aspects of this situation.

This crisis has created an urgent need to raise funds for building improvements: if you can manage it, it would be greatly appreciated if you could make a secure online financial contribution at www.MediaSanctuary.org, or send a check payable to The Sanctuary for Independent Media to PO Box 35, Troy NY 12181.

Under the circumstances, the remaining three programs in our “Art, Freedom, Democracy” series are in jeopardy as is the rest of the Sanctuary season. We will let you know shortly whether our presentation of The Yes Men next Tuesday, March 18 will proceed as planned, and if so, where.

Many thanks for your support in the past; if you can offer further help in this moment of need, please let us know by emailing info@MediaSanctuary.org.

Hope to see you soon!

–Your Friends at The Sanctuary for Independent Media

Here is Wafaa Bilal’s videotaped statement on the incident:

Interview with Wafaa Bilal on We Make Money Not Art

Virtual Jihadi main page

Article on Wired

Wikipedia entry on Bilal

YouTube Channel with coverage of the event

Still on the fence? Cast your vote… would you waterboard a dog or this Iraqi?

Princeton Laptop Orchestra on Fox News


Fox again dips into the pool of slightly odd to fill space in their schedule, this time dragging Mr. Scott Smallwood (beard, glasses, sitting in the center) along with them. This clip is a tad old, but, hey, it was new to me. For those unfamiliar, Mr. Smallwood is pretty much the central unit in music at Wow Cool, being 1/2 of Evidence and a member of Brown Cuts Neighbors and nickname: Rebel. Check his stuff at the DeptEx shop.

FAIL – be careful with your ad placement

firsttennessee.jpg
Screen grab of the ad section from one of those ridiculous themed RSS aggregator ad farm sites (or Splog). The interpretations of this juxtaposition (and the potential for resulting humor) are endless. Way to go, 1st Tenn!

The Damn Best of 2007 List

I wasn’t really going to do one of these, but basically had done most of the pieces elsewhere, so I’ve compiled it all here.

Five Comics or Comics-Related Publications You Enjoyed Reading This Year (originally on The Comics Reporter)
* Scott Pilgrim, Vol 4: Scott Pilgrim Gets It Together – Bryan Lee O’Malley
* Daybreak Vol. 2Brian Ralph
* The Escapists by Brian K Vaughan & company
* UnInked edited by Chris Ware (Scroll way the heck down the page)
* The Comics Journal 285 – the Darwyn Cooke Interview

Best LPs of 2007
RadioheadIn Rainbows
UnkleWar Stories
Cold War KidsRobbers & Cowards
The Go! TeamProof of Youth
Hot Fuzz OST (UK Version)

Top five tracks that came out in 2007 after I’d already done my Festive Fifty List (Artist links are home pages, song links are videos)
Friendly FiresParis
Malcolm Middleton – We’re All Gonna Die
The Octopus Project – Ghost Moves
Ebony BonesWe Know All About You
Black KidsI’m Not Gonna Teach Your Boyfriend How to Dance With You

Web Comics I Actually read every day (originally on BKV.tv… updated)
Scary Go Round by John Allison – updated 5 days a week – full 5 year archive online!
American Elf by James Kochalka – usually updated daily
Daybreak by Brian Ralph – more or less bi-weekly (search the archives)
Cul de Sac by Richard Thompson (I think this is an actual comic strip)
And I just started reading We The Robots… pretty good so far.

OK… that’s it. There was also favorite TV, food, moments, etc. this last year, but those are a bit more easy to come by, especially as top 5 categories go, and I am here primarily to promote music and comics… so there you go.

Cosmos is on TV again

We are all made out of star stuff. For those of us who remember a time when Pluto was a planet, Australia was a continent and Vegetable Soup was a tv show… there is one magic, authoritative voice that has always sent a shiver of awe through our collective spine as it delivered a sense of cosmic awe and wonder. Yes, it is true… I stumbled upon this randomly tonight, but, really… no… I’m sitting here with that same sense of awe and wonder I had 25 odd years ago. Yes. The original Cosmos by Carl Sagan is being shown on the Discovery Science Channel. It really is just so good (and, to the best of my knowledge, with super string theory, and cold dark matter still not being all that in the cosmic theorem realm… still, um maybe 90 odd percent accurate on this cosmic scale stuff). Carl Sagan was just so, so good at this. He is much missed. Relive the wonder now (or for the first time) Cosmos page on Discovery Science.

TV Worth Watching

I’m still trying to figure out what Queens of the Stone Age have to do with Slow Food and why they were on Anthony Bourdain‘s No Reservations tonight… but I am much more excited about Tuesday night’s debut on the Sundance Channel of the film Strange Culture. I’ve been following the strange and tragic case of Steve Kurtz pretty much since day one and have tried to be an outspoken supporter of his case in my limited ability. If you get the channel, I urge you to tune in tomorrow night at 9:30pm. Here’s the description from the Sundance site:

What does it take to fall under suspicion as a terrorist in contemporary America? Experimental filmmaker and artist Lynn Hershman Leeson (CONCEIVING ADA) tells the disturbing Kafkaesque story of Steve Kurtz, a conceptual artist/college professor who was suspected of bioterrorism after FBI agents found harmless microbes in his house. Breaking from documentary convention, Hershman Leeson uses comic strips and actors (Tilda Swinton, Thomas Jay Ryan and Peter Coyote) to tell the tale. “A scary testament to the power of fear” — Seattle Times.

The details are a bit more bizarre and disturbing. Read the background at the Critical Art Ensemble Defense Fund site. The American public is only just starting to wake up to the abuses perpetrated since 9/11. The recent revelation of the destruction of torture videotape documentation by the C.I.A. (New York Times story – registration required) and the condemnation of this by Senator Edward Kennedy has set this issue in fresh relief, but the case of Professor Kurtz… so much closer to home… should have the resonance many people need to start giving a shit about the abuses being perpetrated on U.S. citizens in the name of our security.

Karlheinz Stockhausen – Final Kontakte

I was very sad to hear this evening of the passing of the German composer Karlheinz Stockhausen. I’ve found he is someone who more people have heard of then have listened to his works. Often, at best, they know of the connection from Holger Czukay and Irmin Schmidt of Can. A few years ago I became very serious about music and sound theory and read just about everything that Stockhausen had written that was available in english.

Krebstar: Barry Morse
So… by way of tribute… Under the influence of Stockhausen I created, through a destructive process (no intermediate copies saved, no notes taken) a suite of structuralist/serialist/what have you, pieces, grouped together on a CD named after the beloved character actor Barry Morse (The Fugitive, Space: 1999). Various formulas were applied. A favorite, at the time, was one simply titled FM that set two wacky bits of modulated FM synthesis against each other. The piece was designed so that one or the other passage would be much louder than the other, depending on the playback system’s range response. On some, the bit that is a bit quieter on most stereos, is quite shuddering.

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I lost track with Stockhausen somewhere after his helicopter work a few years ago. I like to think he’s somewhere up there with them… spinning.

Tiger Claw Elite Champions Performance

At long last I’ve managed to go through some more of my shots from the intense photo-overload in Florida last month. Some of my favorites are these from the Disney Martial Arts Festival night-time show performance by the Tiger Claw Elite Champions. Now I’m off to Raleigh-Durham in the morning for more martial arts action and to hopefully catch a Bryan Lee O’Malley’s book signing.

See the full set.

You can also watch the whole thing on YouTube.

More info at TigerClawElite.com.

What is an OEM? – Tom Manning’s Spamtoons

I gleefully tracked the poetry of spam this past summer (or spoetry) in a couple of posts (Thing 1 | Thing 2). Now, Yale School of Art MFA candidate Tom Manning has gone one better and turned them into cartoons. See the results on the excellent (if far too infrequently updated) Design Observer.

Memories of the Space Age

Kennedy Space Center entrance

I’ve been in Florida since Tuesday. I’m leaving on Monday. Too much to process right now. Cocoa Beach… the Kennedy Space Center… survived the SGIA in Orlando today. The Disney Martial Arts Festival is the next two days. Stay tuned for a flood of word and image from this strange trip.

Dead Air Space

Ah, well.. trumped by Radiohead… The recent series of untitled sketches on their Dead Air Space blog may be even more stupid then our Stupid Pages. But, I guarantee we are capable of getting dumber.

Many wizards had them, but not many ever bothered to use them.

Even the brute called Chickenwire treated Teatime with caution, if not respect, and the monster called Banjo just followed him around like a puppy. Worse, he was found to be smart and weird and crazy, intolerably so on all these counts and several others besides. Pink fires of histamine spurted from Lee’s glowing core and covered his raw periphery. 

–Today’s massive spam headers
William S. Burroughs would’ve been proud 

Words don’t mean a damn thing

So, yeah, the usual dose of spam today… but there was something different, something a little… I dunno… special. The occasional poetry of spam subject lines was exceptionally strong. I want a new word to describe it… “spamsy” is the best I’ve come up with so far. “Words don’t mean a damn thing” is a pretty exciting subject to see in the inbox. This particular batch has been a bit more obscure that usual, too… with nearly every other letter separated by a plus or minus sign, making the actual content of the message almost impossible to decipher. Anyway, here are some highlights:

The goal is to make the image as bright as possible, without oversaturating it (washing it out, often to bright pink or white)

Boomzilla sucks on the ice in the bottom of his big drink    

I was looking at myself by a second vision 

Enable the Open menu item and gray out the Save As menu item  

The track table passed in the call determines the sector number, which is passed to the disk controller for the operation

I will remove my call to FreeLibrary too 

Photo courtesy of the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review 

His chest was snowy white and his eyes were moist and brown and wise

You’re just a figment of my imagination

In other news… does anyone else think that “Keep the Car Running” on the new Arcade Fire disk sounds way too much like Eddie and the Cruisers?

 –Marc 

ps. Has anyone else found that the post editor in WordPress 2.2.2 is buggy as shit? 

No… wait… even weirder headlines

2 stoned to death on resort island
Talking urinal cakes preach against DUI
Oregon snorkeler mistaken for rodent, shot in face

And you read the stories… and the headlines don’t even seem nearly as weird as the reality…

Today’s Headlines

School bars hearing-impaired teen’s dog
SI.com: Brainy school ends 207-game losing streak
Scientist: NASA found life on Mars – and killed it
Man returns book overdue since 1960

Management Chairs

“It’s all about you and your high-quality, stylish needs.”

It’s very simple…

Oh yeah. Drop out of society. Create your own fucking system man. You know the one reason that doesn’t work? Well, you can blame the fucking Dutch East India Company, man. Because one day, you can be happily walking along in YOUR society and turn around to find out that you’ve been FUCKED by the larger system. So, it is your fucking right, duty, and priveledge to get out there, and, yes, participate in this mess, to make sure that you, and us, and all our friends out there don’t get fucked. To not let all that we have created get destroyed, or worse, taken over and compromised.
-Marc A

btw. Check out Mouth to Mouth

It’s hard to believe…

But, Michael Ironside and John Saxon have never appeared together in a film…

glioblastoma multiforme

News Letter of the American Nuclear Society- Oak Ridge/Knoxville Section
February, 1998 Vol. 98-1

BORON NEUTRON CAPTURE THERAPY

Dr George Kabalka and George Dillworth spoke to the Local Section about Boron Neutron Capture Therapy (BNCT). BNCT is a radiotherapy technique utilized to treat victims of glioblastoma multiforme, a virulent and lethal form of brain cancer.

BNCT was first tried as a treatment for cancer in the 1950s. It involves the injection of a non-toxic boron compound into the body. The boron is attached to sugar, which is attracted to areas of the body with high metabolism, which includes cancerous regions. The earlier tests were unsuccessful as it was difficult to focus the neutron beam, hard to localize the boron in cancer cells, and it was not possible to

image the boron compound while in the body. I These shortcomings have been overcome. Today it is possible to focus the correct energy neutron beam onto the tumor site, there are better boron agents which localize in the cancerous cells, and it is possible to image the boron agent inside the body using boron MRIs.

American reactors currently conducting experimental treatments of patients utilizing BNCT are the Brookhaven Medical Research Reactor (BMRR) at Brookhaven National Lab and the MITR reactor at MIT. At the BMRR, treatment is initiated by injecting the patient with approximately I-liter of boron phenyalaline (BPA). After I hour the patient is treated with neutrons from the reactor for about 20 minutes. The treatment is completely painless. The peak dose administered is 10.5 Gy-eq.

There are approximately 5,000 glioblastoma multiforme cancers diagnosed each year in the US. The median survival time without treatment is 3 months. With conventional treatments, such as chemotherapy and surgery, the median survival time is increased to 13-14 months. With conventional radiation treatments (not BNCT), the patient receives 30-40 radiation treatments; the median survival time is 9 months. Also, with conventional treatments the patient is sick most of the time.

The Brookhaven patients treated to date with BNCT may be segregated as follows:
9/94-2/96, 15 patients treated, median survival time 14.7 months, I side of. brain treated, 2 still alive and well;
6/96-1/97, 15 patients treated, exposure times were increased 20 %, I side of brain treated, 4 patients with large tumors died, I I still alive after 6-8 months;
5/97-present, 3 patients, irradiated both sides of brain, all still alive.
Generally the patients who had recurrence had the tumor grow back on the opposite side of the brain from the side which was treated. The quality of life for the treated patients was generally better with BNCT as compared to conventional treatments.

As has been noted in previous Acorns, the Tower Shielding Facility is being investigated for use as a BNCT Treatment Center. Cancers being investigated for treatment include glioblastoma multiforme, melanomas, colon cancer, prostrate cancer, and lung cancer.

SPECTACULAR IMAGES CAUSE RE-THINKING OF STELLAR EVOLUTION

Hubble director to speak
By Mike McNeney

Dr. Robert Williams, Director of the Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore, brings the Gubble’s stunning view of the distant universe to UVic as a part of the President’s Distinguished Lecture series, Jan. 24, 7:30 p.m. in the David Lam Auditorium (MacLaurin A144).

As the man ultimately responsible for observations made by the Hubble Space Telescope orbiting Earth, Dr. Robert Williams has a front row seat on the distant universe.

Williams brings the Hubble story and “lots of slides” to the University for a President’s Distinguished Lecture, Jan. 24 at 7:30 p.m. in the David Lam Auditorium (MacLaurin A144).

Williams’ team of 400 astronomers and support personnel at the Space Telescope Institute in Baltimore is responsible for conducting and coordinating the Hubble’s science operations. The institute calibrates, edits, distributes and maintains data from Hubble for the world scientific community.

“Two things have surprised me most about the Hubble,” wrote Williams in response to questions sent via email by The Ring. “First is the superb way in which it has revealed very faint, distant galaxies. Before launch (in 1990) there was serious doubt that the Hubble would be able to see the most distant galaxies very well.

“The second is the extent of the structure that has been revealed in every type of astronomical object observed by the Hubble. It has been remarkable in its ability to discern structure in objects where none had been seen before.”

Last month, Hubble delivered spectacular images of intricate clouds of glowing dust and gas thrown off by a dying star similar to the sun. The pictures are causing astronomers to re-think previous theories of stellar evolution.

The patterns spun into space resemble pin-wheels, jets in the shape of lawn-sprinklers and elegant goblet shapes. The outbursts send heavier elements, mostly carbon, into interstellar space as raw material for new stars, planets and, potentially, life, according to Dr. Bruce Balick of the University of Washington.

It’s impossible to predict discoveries that may be made by the Hubble, but Williams says there’s a good chance it may detect very faint stars that are only marginally more massive and larger than planets.

The Hubble’s capabilities would increase even more with the possible addition of an interferometer, Williams says.

“With the right instruments installed the Hubble could possibly detect large planets around some of the nearest stars. The actual detection of an extra-solar planet would be a milestone in our exploration of the universe, and I believe it is quite possible that Hubble might accomplish this.”

The space-based observatory&emdash;equipped with three cameras, two spectrographs and fine guidance sensors&emdash; produces high resolution images about 10 times sharper than the best ground-based telescopes.

Astronomers world-wide apply for access to the Hubble, but only one of every 10 proposals is accepted.

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