Jump to content

Official BBO Hijacked Thread Thread


Winstonm

Recommended Posts

The postings above remind me of my grandpa's odyssey during the IIWW. Was it possible to be in 3 different armies during these years? Yes, it was....my grandpa lived in Upper Silesia after the 1939 campagne and helped over two years the soldiers of the polish underground army, He has been never unmasked by the germans, but 1944 he was recruited forcibly to the Wehrmacht like a x thousends of silesian men in those days. No escape for them, Wehrmacht or KZ, that was the choice. His regiment was moved to France and after the chaos of the D-Day he renegated by occasion to the british forces. After the verifing he joined to the polish units of the british army late in 1944 and stayed there until those units have been demobilized 1947 in South England.

They all had to make a hard decision: return to Poland or one-way-tickets from Southampton to Halifax or Melbourne. My grandpa spent one year in Canada and decided there to return to his family in Silesia despite of fact that the communists had there all the power.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The postings above remind me of my grandpa's odyssey during the IIWW. Was it possible to be in 3 different armies during these years? Yes, it was....my grandpa lived in Upper Silesia after the 1939 campagne and helped over two years the soldiers of the polish underground army, He has been never unmasked by the germans, but 1944 he was recruited forcibly to the Wehrmacht like a x thousends of silesian men in those days. No escape for them, Wehrmacht or KZ, that was the choice. His regiment was moved to France and after the chaos of the D-Day he renegated by occasion to the british forces. After the verifing he joined to the polish units of the british army late in 1944 and stayed there until those units have been demobilized 1947 in South England.

They all had to make a hard decision: return to Poland or one-way-tickets from Southampton to Halifax or Melbourne. My grandpa spent one year in Canada and decided there to return to his family in Silesia despite of fact that the communists had there all the power.

 

Great and credible story but for leaving Canada.

 

I grew up with a friend of Lebanese descent who's family arrived here via Uganda and South America. He told me that it was a family tradition that when the shooting starts, they f***ck off. He proved it by teaching at the University in Riyadh during the first Gulf War and returning to Canada in a hurry.

 

Makes me feel good not to have to face those choices and kudos to them that gave me such a comfortable life.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 4 weeks later...

Solving the Puzzles of Mimicry in Nature

 

http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/2013/03/12/science/12CREA/12CREA-articleLarge.jpg

The wing patterns of two unpalatable butterfly species, Heliconius erato, top row, and Heliconius melpomene, show striking similarities. DNA studies suggest that some species generated similar patterns independently; others share color-controlling genes.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

"unpalatable"? I don't think you mean that - I suspect you mean "incompatible".

No he means unpalatable - tasting bad to predators (or indeed possibly poisonous). If you read the article, the hypothesis is that the species mimic each other because predators then only need to eat one not one of each to know they taste bad (hence natural selection is in their favour). They have got the same pattern by shared DNA, whether this is common ancestor or interbreeding at an earlier stage is unknown.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Random guest post on the topic of color sensitivity by Jon Bowen:

 

On Dec. 16, 1997, at exactly 6:50 p.m., 685 people in Japan, most of them children, simultaneously suffered epileptic seizures. When doctors around the country began looking into the cause of the outbreak, a surprising culprit emerged: Every one of the seizure victims, at the fateful hour, was watching the TV cartoon “Pocket Monsters.”

 

Since 1997 we’ve known that “Pocket Monsters” caused the seizures. Now we know why. Japanese researchers have found evidence that the seizures were provoked by rapid changes of blue and red in the cartoon’s color, and with this discovery, they believe they may have pinpointed a new type of epilepsy related to color sensitivity. Their report is published in the June issue of the journal Annals of Neurology.

 

Flickering lights — strobe lights, for example — can trigger epileptic seizures. Patients who experience such seizures are said to suffer from “photosensitive epilepsy.” Rapid shifting between light and dark causes nerve cells in the brain to fire electrical impulses more rapidly than usual. In people with photosensitive epilepsy, the resulting havoc in the brain can lead to muscular convulsions or blackouts.

 

Something similar happened to the “Pocket Monsters” watchers. Dr. Shozo Tobimatsu, along with colleagues in the neurology department at Kyushu University in Japan, studied four boys who had suffered seizures during the cartoon. Like most of the other victims, they had never suffered from epilepsy prior to the “Pocket Monsters” episode, although two of the boys had a family history of epilepsy.

 

The researchers measured EEG responses as the boys watched the cartoon — first in black and white, then color. Only two of the boys showed sensitivity to the black and white version, but all four boys experienced abnormal, epilepsy-like brain trouble when exposed to the color version. After further testing, Tobimatsu concluded that rapid color changes between blue and red in the cartoon were most significant in triggering the seizures.

 

In Britain in 1993, three viewers experienced seizures while watching a cartoon called “Pot Noodles.” A 1998 report on those color-induced seizures revealed a sensitivity to rapid color changes similar to that experienced by the “Pocket Monsters” watchers. Based on the findings of both reports, the Japanese team is proposing a new subcategory of photosensitive epilepsy called “chromatic sensitive epilepsy.”

 

Tobimatsu says, “Fortunately, this tragedy was only reported in Japan. The research committee of the Japanese Ministry of Health and Welfare estimated that about 10 percent of children have had visual symptoms or seizures,” resulting from photosensitive epilepsy.

 

“Pocket Monsters” was yanked from Japanese TV after the seizure epidemic, but now it’s back on the airwaves — after editors ditched the offending episode and winnowed out all strobing segments from other episodes. The show now runs in syndication in the United States, too, on stations that carry children’s programming. No further problems have been reported.

 

But it may not be the last time this kind of problem pops up. So should TV animators be held accountable for the health effects of their creations? “Sure, they need some regulations on TV animations,” Tobimatsu says. “Before this episode, only the U.K. [had] such guidelines. Since this episode, Japanese TV companies have also prohibited the use of rapid color changes in the animation.”

 

Cartoons aren’t the only potential offenders, though. In 1991, American Dianne Neale suffered seizures when listening to the voice of “Entertainment Tonight” co-host Mary Hart. Neale suffered from a rare form of epilepsy called temporal lobe seizure, and the mere sound of Hart’s electronically transmitted voice triggered abnormal discharges in her brain.

 

Sometimes, the only clue that a person is having a seizure is extreme confusion and posting stuff like this.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 2 weeks later...
Wow! revolutionary changes in the ACBL system restriction policy come soon. The Competition and Conventions Committee sent a proposal to the Board of Directors to tear down all these restrictions walls in the system policy. All systems and conventions will be allowed, starting at the ACBL Fall Nationals 2013. One of the ACBL officials has been quoted with following words:" This is a free country, you can play what do you want!!!!
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Wow! revolutionary changes in the ACBL system restriction policy come soon. The Competition and Conventions Committee sent a proposal to the Board of Directors to tear down all these restrictions walls in the system policy. All systems and conventions will be allowed, starting at the ACBL Fall Nationals 2013. One of the ACBL officials has been quoted with following words:" This is a free country, you can play what do you want!!!!

April fool???

Link to comment
Share on other sites

If a list with "The things that will never happen in North America" would really exist, this one would be surely in the top5 heh

Funny thing is there was a period of time when there was an "anything goes" policy in the ACBL. I don't remember exactly when that was, but it was probably around the time that my partner and I won our first regional pair championship in 1978 playing the original ROMEX system in full. I know that we played the Dynamic Notrump and original Mexican 2 along with all of the other aspects of the original ROMEX system. I got a comment by phone from the Tournament Chairman several weeks later, but he did not say that there was anything wrong with what we did - just that there had been some comments about our system and he was following up. Nothing more was ever said.

 

I know there are not a lot of regular posters who were active tournament players back in the late 70's and early 80's. But if you are one of us, do you have a recollection of that period of time that matches mine?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I don't know how long the Dynamic NT and the Mexican 2 have been GCC legal (and I do know that the latter has changed at least slightly in what it covers and greatly in the follow ups over the years, the follow ups having changed several times). What I do know is that they are both GCC legal now, and have been since I've been aware of the GCC (the last fifteen years, at least).

 

Of course, there's a difficulty with the Dynamic NT around here - the club owners have basically said "no, you can't play it" in spite of it being GCC legal. :angry:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I don't know how long the Dynamic NT and the Mexican 2 have been GCC legal (and I do know that the latter has changed at least slightly in what it covers and greatly in the follow ups over the years, the follow ups having changed several times). What I do know is that they are both GCC legal now, and have been since I've been aware of the GCC (the last fifteen years, at least).

 

Of course, there's a difficulty with the Dynamic NT around here - the club owners have basically said "no, you can't play it" in spite of it being GCC legal. :angry:

 

A big unbalanced 1N has been allowed in the UK for many years. I thought the problem of clubs barring systems was confined to the UK. I devised something designed to push the licensing regs as far as they would go 15 years back, and it was banned at one club without it ever being played there. (1/ both //bal, big unbalanced 1N, lots of canape etc).

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...