Donald B. Campbell
Even though the TV show has been cancelled, you can check out my archived page on CBC's "ZeD" website: http://zed.cbc.ca/go?user_id=20849&c=contentPage (You'll have to copy and paste the URL.)
Saturday, October 29, 2005
Friday, October 28, 2005
Star Trek's George Takei : Yes I'm Gay
by 365Gay.com Newscenter Staff
Posted: October 28, 2005 12:01 am ET
(Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania) Actor George Takei, best known for his role as Mr. Hikaru Sulu in "Star Trek," has come out publicly. He made the announcement in the current issue of LA gay magazine Frontiers.
Takei told The Associated Press on Thursday that his new onstage role as psychologist Martin Dysart in "Equus," helped inspire him to publicly discuss his sexuality. Takei described the character as a "very contained but turbulently frustrated man." The play opened Wednesday at the David Henry Hwang Theater in Los Angeles, the same day that Frontiers magazine featured a story on Takei's coming out.
The current social and political climate also motivated Takei's disclosure, he said.
"The world has changed from when I was a young teen feeling ashamed for being gay," he said. "The issue of gay marriage is now a political issue. That would have been unthinkable when I was young."
The 68-year-old actor said he considers himself as "having been out for quite some time." Takei and his partner, Brad Altman, have been together for 18 years.
Takei, a Japanese-American who lived in a U.S. internment camp from age 4 to 8, said he grew up feeling shameful about his ethnicity and sexuality. He likened prejudice against gays to racial segregation.
"It's against basic decency and what American values stand for," he said.
Takei began his acting career in 1959, appearing in "Ice House" with Richard Burton. He joined the "Star Trek" cast in 1966 as Mr. Sulu, a character he played for three seasons on television and in six subsequent films. Takei has appeared in scores of movies and television shows. He received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 1986.
A community activist, Takei ran for the Los Angeles City Council in 1973. He serves on the advisory committee of the California Civil Liberties Public Education Program and is chairman of East West Players, the theater company producing "Equus." The play closes Dec. 4.
© www.365Gay.com 2005
Thursday, October 27, 2005
Iran imposes harsh new censorship rules
Thurs. , Oct. 27, 2005 16:25:44 EDT
CBC Arts
Hardline Islamic leaders in Tehran have banned most foreign films in an effort to wipe out "corrupt Western culture."
The Supreme Council of the Cultural Revolution, presided over by Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, said Iranians had to be protected from the "propaganda of the ideas of secular people, feminists, liberals, nihilists and those that degrade Eastern culture."
The ban is a cultural reversal of the opening to the outside world Iranians had experienced under former reformist president Mohammad Khatami.
The ban is likely to be almost impossible to enforce. Iran's booming black markets distribute scores of pirated Western movies, though few of these movies will ever be shown on local screens.
Iranians also have a taste for Bollywood, and access to foreign satellite feeds that carry both Western and Indian movies and television shows.
Many of Iran's 70 million people are young and say they'll find ways to get around the censorship. Four years ago, Iranian students protested over press censorship.
"A policy of censorship never works. Hardliners don't understand that they can't tell the people what to watch and what not to watch," said cinema fan Hasan Jamali, according to Associated Press.
RELATED STORY: Thousands demand end of censorship in Iran
In 2003, plays by William Shakespeare returned to an Iranian stage for the first time in 25 years, in a modified form to suit conservative Iranian tastes. Embraces between males and females were omitted from performances.
Even under Khatami's more liberal regime, state censors cleaned up western programs shown on TV, cutting out sections that exposed too much skin or showed men and women touching. Most TV programs selected were crime or action shows.
Ahmadinejad had campaigned for president on a promise to promote Islamic culture and confront what he called the western cultural invasion.
Among the practices Islamic clerics don't want to see on their screens are drug-taking, drinking of alcohol, violence and "oppression."
Critics of the new policy say the terms are so vague that the group of hardline clerics who act as censors will be able to ban almost anything.
Even Iran's acclaimed filmmakers, beginning to make their mark on the world with films such as Stray Dogs and Taste of Cherry, are feeling the chill.
The past three films made by the country's most prominent director, Abbas Kiarostami, have been banned from Iranian cinemas.
Award-winning director Mohsen Makhmalbaf was forbidden to make a new film entitled Amnesia earlier this year. He says he is considering taking production into neighbouring Afghanistan.
"It seems that the new censorship strategy intends to push the Iranian artists to migrate from the country," Makhmalbaf said in a statement.
Poem: "Nursery, 11:00 p.m."
by Robyn Sarah
from Questions About the Stars,
Brick Books. Reprinted with permission.
Nursery, 11:00 p.m.
Asleep, the two of you,
daughter and son, in separate cribs,
what does it matter to you
that I stand watching you now,
I, the mother who did not smile all day,
who yelled, Go away, get out, leave me alone
when the soup-pot tipped over on the stove,
the mother who burned the muffins
and hustled bedtime, tight-lipped.
You are far away,
beyond reach of whispered
amends. Yet your calm
breathing seems to forgive,unwinding
into the air to mesh
like lace, knitting together
the holes in the dark.
It makes of this dark
one whole covering
to shawl around me.
How warm it is, I think,
how much softer
than my deserving.
(from Garrison Keillor's "Writer's Almananc" on National Public Radio--NPR--in the U.S.)
Wednesday, October 26, 2005
Today's Word: TOBOGGAN (Noun)
Pronunciation: [tê-'bah-gên]
Definition 1: A long, flat-bottomed sled without runners made of slats curled up in front.
Usage 1: Today's word may also be used as a verb signifying the use of a toboggan, as to toboggan down a snowy hill. However, if you are in the Southeastern US where snow is a rarity, be careful using today's word. In the US South it more usually refers to the knitted, stretchable hat that you might pull over your head to toboggan. You are a tobogganer if you toboggan.
Suggested usage: Be sure you know who you are talking to if you say anything like, "Hey, put a toboggan on your head and let's toboggan." Northerners will think you are going to carry your sled on top of your head but Southerners will think you should pull on a knitted cap.
Tobogganing is a headlong plunge downhill, so we could also say, "With the economy tobogganing heaven knows where, it is better to keep your money in a sock under your mattress."
Etymology: Borrowed by French Canadians from an Algonquian language. It was originally spelled tabaganne (Le Clercq 'Nouvelle Relation de la Gaspesie,' 1691, p. 70). The word was probably borrowed from Micmac (Lower Canada, Nova Scotia) "tobâkun," a word related to Abnaki (Quebec and Maine) "udãbãgan," Montaignais "utapan," Cree "otâbânâsk," and Ojibwe "odaban-ak."
(Today we thank Phyllis Rich for spotting an interesting story in today's seasonal word.)
—Dr. Language, www.yourDictionary.com
Monday, October 24, 2005
TROPICAL STORMS & HURRICANES
CBC News Online Updated October 19, 2005
WHAT ARE TROPICAL STORMS?
Severe storms spawned in the tropics are known by different names in different parts of the world: hurricanes in the Atlantic and east Pacific; typhoons in the northwest Pacific and cyclones in the southwest Pacific and Indian Ocean. These storms originate over tropical waters, close to the equator. If the atmosphere is calm and the water is warmer than about 27 C, evaporation forces large amounts of moisture into the air, creating a low-pressure system. When this water vapour condenses, it releases heat that powers the circular winds that characterize these storms. Rainfall in the developing storm releases more heat, triggering a convection process that pulls more moisture-laden air up through the centre of the system. The storm grows via this feedback mechanism. The strongest winds are found immediately outside the centre, or "eye," of the hurricane at ground level.
Every one of these systems begins as a tropical depression, a system of thunderstorms with an overall circular motion and maximum sustained winds less than 62 km/h. When a storm becomes severe enough and the winds pick up to more than 62 km/h, it is designated a tropical storm. When the winds reach 119 km/h, the system is called a hurricane, typhoon or cyclone. An average of 10 tropical storms develop over the Atlantic Ocean each year, of which about six become severe enough to be called hurricanes.
Besides strong winds and heavy rain, these hurricanes also create a "storm surge," a massive wave beneath the centre of the storm. In the eye of the hurricane, air is sucked upward faster than it can rush in at the bottom. This lowers the atmospheric pressure under the eye of the storm; as a result, the eye tries to pull at the ocean itself, creating a bulge of water as much as six metres high that moves together with the storm.
WHEN IS HURRICANE SEASON?
Hurricane season officially runs from June 1 to November 30, but the most intense storms mainly occur between mid–August and mid–October.
HOW ARE HURRICANES CLASSIFIED?
Tropical storms that get strong enough to be classified as hurricanes are categorized by the intensity of their wind speeds using the Saffir-Simpson scale.
Only three Category 5 hurricanes have made landfall in the U.S. in the past century – one that struck the Florida Keys in 1935, Hurricane Camille in 1969, and Hurricane Andrew in 1992.
HOW ARE TROPICAL STORMS NAMED?
A tropical storm is given a name if its winds reach a speed of 62 kilometres per hour. An international committee has drawn up a list of 126 names - half male and half female - which are repeated after a six-year cycle. There are 21 names on the list for a given year, with each name corresponding to a letter of the alphabet. The letters Q, U, X, Y and Z are skipped. If the list of names is exhausted for a given year, which may occur in 2005 with the formation of tropical storm Wilma in October, subsequent storms are named after the letters of the Greek alphabet: Alpha, Beta, Gamma and so on. However, if a hurricane causes extensive damage, its name is retired from use. So far, more than 50 names have been retired, from Hazel in 1954 to Juan in 2003. The word "hurricane" itself comes from the Carib Indian word "hurican," which referred to the tribe's god of evil. This may in turn derive from the name of a Mayan god who created the world with his breath, blowing on the oceans to create dry land.
MEMORABLE HURRICANES
Andrew
In August and September 1992, Hurricane Andrew wrought havoc across the Caribbean and Florida. Andrew was an unusual storm - after brewing for several days at low latitudes, it weakened and nearly vanished about 600 km east of Puerto Rico. But the storm regained its strength and moved northward with devastating results. Andrew left 17,000 people homeless in Florida alone and destroyed or badly damaged 85,000 homes. The storm caused a record $26.5 billion US in property damage. In 2002 Andrew, initially classified a Force 4, was upgraded to have actually been a Force 5 storm.
Mitch
In November 1998, Hurricane Mitch tore through Central America, killing as many as 10,000 people and leaving two million homeless in Nicaragua and Honduras. The storm's 300 km/h winds and heavy rains caused more than $3 billion US in damage – more than half the combined gross domestic product of those two countries. Mitch also unleashed deadly landslides, and caused the worst flooding in the region in 200 years. In the storm's wake, with roads and infrastructure wiped out, thousands of people developed illnesses such as dengue fever, cholera and malaria.
Hugo
Hurricane Hugo swept across the Caribbean and the southeast U.S. in September 1989, leaving a 3,700-kilometre-long trail of destruction from Guadeloupe to the Carolinas. The storm killed at least 28 people in the Caribbean, left up to 80,000 homeless and caused $2 billion US in damage. In the U.S., it killed another 11 people and caused more than $750 million in damage. The storm sent giant waves crashing onto the U.S. Eastern Seaboard, with a wall of water some five metres in height washing over Charleston, S.C.
HURRICANES IN CANADA
Canadians are lucky when it comes to hurricanes. Although these storms often end up over Canadian land and waters, they have usually lost most of their strength. "Most of the storms, by the time they reach Canadian areas, have weakened to tropical storm status," says Ken Kirkwood, a meteorologist at the Canadian Hurricane Centre in Dartmouth, N.S. Hurricanes need a supply of warm, moist air, and this supply is cut off when a hurricane crosses land or moves too far north. However, a storm occasionally reaches eastern Canada while still packing hurricane-strength winds.
This happened in September 2003 when Hurricane Juan slammed into the eastern shores of Nova Scotia, bringing winds of more than 140 km/h and a record storm surge causing coastal flooding.Two people were killed, including a paramedic who died when a tree fell on his ambulance near a Halifax hospital. More than 100,000 people lost electricity, thousands of trees were uprooted and a section of a four-storey apartment building in Dartmouth collapsed.
Hurricane Hortense
In September 1996, Cape Breton Island, N.S., felt the wrath of Hurricane Hortense. The storm brought 120 km/h winds and caused $3 million in damages, mostly due to flooding, wind damage and power outages.Hurricane HazelFor Ontarians old enough to remember it, Hazel was the storm of a lifetime – and one of the few to inflict significant damage in central Canada. Hurricane Hazel formed in early October 1954 and crossed the Caribbean and the eastern U.S. before entering southern Ontario. The storm left as many as 1,000 dead in Haiti, six more in the Bahamas, another 95 in the U.S. and 81 in the Toronto region.
FORECASTING TROPICAL STORMS
The ability of scientists to predict the path and destructive power of a tropical storm has improved greatly since Hurricane Hazel. The greatest boost has come from weather satellites that show a storm's precise location and allow tracking at 15-minute intervals. Meteorologists are usually able to give several days warning before a storm strikes land. (By comparison, the devastating hurricane of 1900 took the city of Galveston, Tex., completely by surprise and killed 8,000 people). Another difference is the ability of scientists to collect data from within the storm itself. One tool they use is the "dropwindsone," an instrument dropped from an airplane and used to measure wind speed, air pressure and humidity within the storm. The data from satellites, dropwindsone, and other sources are fed into powerful computers that use mathematical models to simulate a storm's development. Forecasters then study the computer's output to plot a hurricane's expected path. (In practice, several different models are used simultaneously and their results averaged together. As the storm progresses, the output from the most successful models is given greater "weight.")
And progress is being made: The average tracking error has been halved since the 1970s when a typical three-day forecast would be off by 650 to 720 km; that error is now between 325 and 400 km. "We've made significant improvements," says Dan Petersen, a meteorologist with the U.S. National Weather Service in Silver Spring, Md. "The average track errors have improved." But that's only half the battle, he says. Because of the dramatic rise in population along coastal areas (and in South Florida in particular), the region needs earlier warnings than in the past. "Our population has increased so much along our coastline that it takes people longer to leave if they have to evacuate. And so they need longer lead times in order to make a decision, or to leave the area."
TROPICAL STORMS AND GLOBAL CLIMATE TRENDS
While tropical storms seem to follow certain natural cycles, scientists are concerned about the effects of global warming and long-term climate change. On Sept. 15, 1999, the United Nations issued a report predicting that global warning will cause more frequent and more severe tropical storms, floods and tornadoes in the coming century. "We do know that hurricane intensity is directly correlated to how warm the ocean waters are," says Petersen. "And if global warming continues to occur, and this results in warmer water temperatures, then we'll see an undeniable signal of stronger hurricanes."
But scientists have a difficult time disentangling the effects of man's activity from the various natural cycles also known to be present. For example, when there's an El Nino – with warm surface waters building up in the eastern Pacific Ocean – high-altitude wind patterns are affected, and the number of Atlantic storms is low. Hurricane formation is also linked to wind patterns in the stratosphere, ocean temperatures in different regions, and rainfall in West Africa.

