Posted on Leave a comment

Sesame & Peanut Brittle Squares: Best Sweets with Four 'O Clock Chai

P817

Posted on Leave a comment

What America Sells To The World: NPR's Planet Money

It’s a myth that the U.S. doesn’t make anything anymore. It’s a myth that we don’t export anything to the rest of the world.

Yes, we import more than we export. Our trade deficit last year was $558 billion

But we export a lot. Last year, U.S. exports were worth $2.1 trillion. Which raises a simple question: $2.1 trillion worth of what?

Mostly goods. Also, services:

U.S. exports in goods and services 2011

Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis

Here’s a closer look at our goods exports in 2011. The two biggest categories — industrial supplies and capital goods — account for about $500 billion a piece.

Breakdown of U.S. Exports in goods by major category

Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis

Here’s a breakdown of our services exports:

 

Breakdown of U.S. services exports by major category

Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis

Royalties and licensing includes money people pay to use American software, and to distribute movies and TV shows. It also includes wonkier stuff, like payments to use patents on industrial processes.

One interesting note about travel: When foreign tourists come to the U.S. and buy stuff, it counts as exports. This makes sense if you think about how the money flows. It’s money coming in from other countries, and being used to buy services produced in the U.S.

So who’s buying all these goods and services? Here’s the top five:

Top five countries receiving U.S. exports

Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis

That Canada and Mexico hold the top spots is a reminder that, even in this globalized world, proximity still matters. (Also: NAFTA.)

And here’s the top goods we’re selling to each of the top five. It’s striking how varied this list is — from soybeans (China) to auto parts (Canada) to gold (U.K.).

Breakdown of goods exported to top five countries receiving exports

Source: U.S. Census Bureau

Correction: Due to an editing error, an earlier version of this post had an incorrect figure for the U.S. trade deficit.

Trade

 

Posted on Leave a comment

Pi Day in America: An "Irrational" Attraction

2012-03-13-BorweinPic1.jpg  
Borwein lecturing at University of Technology Sydney on March 14, 2011

Why, might you ask, should anyone want to celebrate a mathematical constant which allows you to calculate the area inside a circle?

As unlikely as it may seem, the number pi, or 3.14159… has been crucial to the development of modern life. As far back as the ancient civilizations of Babylon and Egypt, people needed approximations of pi to deal with the flooding of the Tigris, Euphrates and Nile rivers, for astronomy, and for surveying and building ziggurats and pyramids. The ancient Greeks were the first to study pi for its own mathematical sake.

2012-03-13-BorweinPic2.jpgToday, 4,000 years after people first discovered how useful pi could be, we are about to celebrate International Pi Day. The first time a day was dedicated to pi was on March 14, 1989 at the Exploratorium, a museum of science, art and human perception in San Francisco. The idea was the brainchild of Larry Shaw, a physicist at the center. (See picture of Larry Shaw, “Prince of Pi,” at right.)

Since then, this museum and many others, as well as universities, schools and individuals have celebrated Pi Day by performing pi-related activities; some serious and some less so, such as creating pi puns; baking, throwing and eating pies; and singing pi songs. You can check out this year’s bash at the Exploratorium here.

The date is derived from the first three digits of pi — 3.14 — using American dating order, just as September 11 is 9/11. And 2015 is going to be a big year for pi since we will celebrate 3.14 15 (correct to 4 places)

2012-03-13-BorweinPic3.jpg

At first, Pi Day was a gimmick and a good joke, but now it is a big deal. Many North American and UK schools use it to spark interest in maths and science projects (for example, learning how the Greeks or Arabs did arithmetic; studying famous scientists like Gauss, Newton or Archimedes who worked on pi; or perhaps calculating the volumes of real pies before eating them).

 

What is Pi?

Pi is represented by the Greek letter π, and it is the most important numerical constant in mathematics. You can compute the area of a circle of radius r, using πr2. The perimeter of this circle has length 2πr.

Without pi there is no theory of motion and no understanding of geometry. For instance, the volume of a sphere of radius r is 4/3πr3 and that of a cylinder of height h is πr2h.

Pi occurs in important fields of applied mathematics such as Fourier analysis and image reconstruction. It is used throughout engineering, science and medicine and is studied for its own sake in number theory.

Pi goes global

Public interest in pi came to a head in 2009 when the U.S. House of Representatives formally declared March 14 National Pi Day, in House Resolution number 224. The Bill grandly begins:

“Whereas the Greek letter (pi) is the symbol for the ratio of the circumference of a circle to its diameter… ”

After many more “whereases,” it resolves…

“That the House of Representatives (1) supports the designation of a Pi Day and its celebration around the world.”

The bill urges schools and educators to help learn about pi and generally engage students in the study of mathematics.

The growing interest in pi has seen it become firmly established in popular culture. Pi has been featured in such TV shows as The Simpsons and Star Trek, as the title of a Kate Bush song, in the movies The Matrix, and Pi; and in the 2001 novel Life of Pi by Yann Martel. Oscar-winning director Ang Lee has just completed a 3D movie version.

Things you can try

Pi has even inspired the invention of a new literary form called ‘piems.’ The challenge is to write a poem where the length of each word is the same as the number in the pi sequence.

For example, the first eight decimal places of pi can be recalled with the phrase: “How I need a drink, alcoholic of course” (to represent 3.1415926). Some piems are thousands of words in length. And there is money in piems. A student won 250 euro for a 2011 piem in Spanish.

If you’re better with numbers than words, some folks prefer to memorise pi for themselves. The current Guinness World Record for remembering pi is well in excess of 60,000 digits. If you want to give it a try, memorisers typically add 10 or 15 digits a day to their total.

What next?

Meanwhile, the world’s computational mathematicians continue to outdo each other, calculating pi to ever more decimal and hexadecimal (base 16) places. The current world record is ten trillion (10,000,000,000,000) decimal digits. It was set in October last year by Japanese systems engineer Shigeru Kondo, using an $18,000 homemade computer running software developed by American grad student Alex Yee.

Irrational attraction

But just as climbers still climb Mount Everest, this is certainly not the end. Within the next ten years a quadrillion digits will probably have been computed.

What makes things really interesting is that pi is an irrational number, so its digits never terminate or repeat. While it never runs dry, we cannot even prove that the decimal expansion of pi has infinitely many sevens, let alone that it is normal, although I would bet it is (in other words that it has equally many ones, twos, threes, etc). My co-workers (including Alex Yee) and I have just completed a research paper analyzing roughly 16 trillion bits (binary digits) and have concluded it is almost certainly normal.

2012-03-13-BorweinPic4.jpg
When we draw a picture, pi seems very random. The figure to the left shows a ‘random walk’ on the first two billion binary digits of pi.

We convert ’01’ to ‘left,’ ’10’ to ‘right,’ ’11’ to up and ’00’ to down (or something like that) and we have a turtle graphic.

2012-03-13-BorweinPic5.jpgThe picture to the right does the same thing for a pseudo-random string of bits. In each case we change colors as we walk and march through the spectrum — from red through indigo and violet and back to red.

If you go to the web you can explore a ten billion step gigapan movie-walk on pi.
While it is very likely we will learn nothing really new mathematically about pi from computations to come, we just may discover something truly startling. That was part of the punch line in astronomer Carl Sagan’s novel Contact, when he suggested that alien life forms encoded messages to the human race in the numerical value of pi.

Stay tuned!

Pi

 

Posted on Leave a comment

What's In A Word? A 'Dictionary' Of Americanisms via NPR

One of the joys of reading books set in another time or another place is the foreignness of the language, even if that language is English. Locutions unknown in your backyard wing through the pages like unfamiliar birds. If they look different than the words you know, it’s because they’ve evolved to fit another linguistic ecosystem: that’s how people there talk, with the words necessary to describe their lives.

Take Laura Ingalls Wilder’s classic children’s novel Little House in the Big Woods. First published in 1932 and set in rural Wisconsin around 1870, it begins a series about Laura and her family that has gripped generations of children. Much of its appeal lies in Wilder’s depictions of a domestic life her modern readers will never know: how the family handles bears, which parts of a slaughtered hog make good toys, how women arrange their hair for a dance at maple sugaring time. That dance is capped by a memorable moment:

“Suddenly Grandma stopped laughing. She turned and ran as fast as she could into the kitchen. The fiddle had stopped playing … everybody was still for a minute, when Grandma looked like that.

“Then she came to the door between the kitchen and the big room, and said:

“‘The syrup is waxing. Come and help yourselves.'”

At this, everyone races outside, fills plates with snow and comes back for Grandma to pour hot maple syrup onto the snow, where it turns into soft candy. Gloriously, the children are allowed to “eat all they wanted, for maple syrup never hurt anybody.”

But what is this “waxing” — a word powerful enough to bring an entire dance party to a halt? One-hundred-forty years later, in a world where a night’s entertainment rarely depends on the cooking stages of maple syrup, it’s a term few of us recognize.

Fortunately, there is a guidebook: the lexicographical analogue of Audubon’s Birds of America. I’m referring to the Dictionary of American Regional English, a 50-year project to collect English as it has been spoken in various parts of this country. The fifth volume, covering Sl through Z, was just published this month. If you’re the kind of person who is delighted to stumble across one strange new word in a book, you may find reading this enormous volume to be an almost excessive pleasure.

The "snow parties" of the last century popularized "waxing," the pouring of maple syrup on snow to produce a chewy candy.

Enlarge iStockphoto.com

The “snow parties” of the last century popularized “waxing,” the pouring of maple syrup on snow to produce a chewy candy.

The "snow parties" of the last century popularized "waxing," the pouring of maple syrup on snow to produce a chewy candy.
iStockphoto.com

The “snow parties” of the last century popularized “waxing,” the pouring of maple syrup on snow to produce a chewy candy.

Flip open Volume V, and there it is: wax, or maple sugar wax, or wax on snow, used largely in the northeast, but apparently extending as far west into maple sugaring country as Wisconsin. The dictionary includes a 1954 quotation suggesting that festivities similar to the Ingalls family’s continued into the 20th century: “Now and then ‘snow parties’ do take place these days, with singing and dancing in the kitchen by the stove and the chief point of the party, eating ‘wax on snow.'”

Like the Oxford English Dictionary, this series builds a history of each word through chronologically ordered quotations, many taken directly from field interviews with local “informants.” For this reason, the Dictionary is a book you can actually sit down and read — not just for colorful words and quotations, but also for a tour of actions, objects, creatures and categories central to far-off or vanished pockets of American life.

Some entries point to regionally distinctive obsessions. It makes sense that seafaring inhabitants of the New England island of Nantucket would need a word, slatchy, for a sky that mingles stormy weather with patches of blue, or that in the South, where sweetened iced tea flows like water, the peculiar alternative must be distinguished as unsweet tea.

But more of the terms seem simply to reflect our past. It’s striking to note all the words for the diverse things people used to invent and make — games (three-kitten-mitten), food (soft pie), and so on — which have now been replaced by nationally marketed, off-the-rack products (Angry Birds, Oreos). Equally notable are the local words for birds, fish, animals and plants whose names, in these days of urbanization and supermarket chains, we have largely forgotten.

According to the Dictionary of American Regional English, "vinegarroon" is another name for the whip scorpion, which produces a vinegary smell.

ChartChai MeeSangNin

According to the Dictionary of American Regional English, “vinegarroon” is another name for the whip scorpion, which produces a vinegary smell.

Some words serve as little windows onto a whole moral world: the sooner child, or one born less than nine months after the wedding, or the rather sweet phrase take notice to describe a widow or widower beginning once again to consider a possible romance. Sometimes you need to read the quotes to understand a term’s power, as in this tantalizing snippet of a Los Angeles trial in the entry for snake hips: “The defense attorney asked: ‘In the part of the hula you did do, did you do the snake hips?’ ‘No,’ Hall said … ‘Was Mrs. Dorsey dancing the snake hips?’ ‘Yes, the snake hips, the hula, or whatever you call it.'” (It’s all fun and snake hips until someone loses the end of his nose, evidently.) And sometimes the greatest shiver comes from the sources themselves. In a description of a dish called slang-jang, apparently a kind of terrible convenience-food gazpacho with raw oysters thrown in, the first recipe comes courtesy of the Texas-based Kute Kooking Klub — yes, the good cooks (kooks?) responsible for the 1894 KKK Cook Book.

Writers have always been fascinated by the lexicons of various regions: It is these words that make writing feel authentically of a place. In Let Us Now Praise Famous Men, James Agee diligently notes that Alabama cotton farmers plow fields with a twister—an implement also known as a turn shovel or turning plow, the Dictionary confirms. Frank Stanford’s long 1977 bayou poem The Battlefield Where the Moon Says I Love You mentions a “crew of vines and snakes and vinegarroons,” and that last word roots the line firmly and beautifully in the South. (Vinegarroon, according to the Dictionary, is another name for the frightening whip scorpion, which emits a vinegary stench when provoked).

Such marvelous words are sprinkled through our national literature; without your own team of roaming lexicographers, there is probably no easier way to browse America’s past ways of living and talking than to read its books. But Dictionary of American Regional English gathers all these terms into one place, together with samples of the voices and stories and songs that gave rise to them. It’s the rare American book whose roots extend not just to one region but to all of them.

Dictionary
Maple

 

Posted on Leave a comment

On This Day: March 14

Updated March 13, 2012, 2:28 pm

NYT Front Page

On March 14, 1900, Congress ratified the Gold Standard Act.
Go to article »

On March 14, 1879, Albert Einstein, the Nobel Prize-winning physicist and one of the great thinkers of the ages, was born. Following his death on April 18, 1955, his obituary appeared in The Times.

Go to obituary » | Other birthdays »

 

On This Date

By The Associated Press

1743 The first recorded town meeting in America was held, at Faneuil Hall in Boston.
1794 Eli Whitney received a patent for the cotton gin.
1883 Political philosopher Karl Marx died at age 64.
1900 Congress ratified the Gold Standard Act.
1939 The Republic of Czechoslovakia was dissolved, opening the way for Nazi occupation.
1951 United Nations forces recaptured Seoul during the Korean War.
1964 A jury in Dallas found Jack Ruby guilty of murdering Lee Harvey Oswald, the accused assassin of President John F. Kennedy.
1967 President John F. Kennedy’s body was moved from a temporary grave to a permanent memorial site at Arlington National Cemetery.
2004 Opposition Socialists scored a dramatic upset win in Spain’s general election, unseating conservatives stung by charges they’d provoked the Madrid terror bombings by supporting the U.S.-led war in Iraq.
2004 Russian President Vladimir Putin captured more than 70 percent of the vote to win a second term in an election that European observers said fell short of democratic standards.
2005 A judge in San Francisco ruled that California’s ban on gay marriage was unconstitutional.
2005 About 1 million people rallied in Beirut, Lebanon, demanding Syrian withdrawal and the arrest of ex-Prime Minister Rafik Hariri’s killers.
2008 Protests led by Buddhist monks in Tibet turned violent, leading to an extensive crackdown by China’s military.

Current Birthdays

By The Associated Press

Quincy Jones, Record producer

Record producer Quincy Jones turns 79 years old today.

AP Photo/Chris Pizzello

Billy Crystal, Actor, comedian

Actor-comedian Billy Crystal turns 64 years old today.

AP Photo/Jason DeCrow

1928 Frank Borman, Astronaut, turns 84
1933 Michael Caine, Actor, turns 79
1939 Raymond J. Barry, Actor, turns 73
1941 Wolfgang Petersen, Director, turns 71
1948 Tom Coburn, U.S. senator, R-Okla., turns 64
1958 Prince Albert, Member of Monaco’s royal family, turns 54
1959 Tamara Tunie, Actress (“Law & Order: SVU”), turns 53
1965 Kevin Williamson, Producer (“Dawson’s Creek”), turns 47
1979 Chris Klein, Actor (“American Pie” movies), turns 33
1983 Taylor Hanson, Rock singer, musician (Hanson), turns 29

 

Historic Birthdays

Albert Einstein 3/14/1879 – 4/18/1955 German-American Nobel Prize-winning physicistGo to obituary »
86 Georg Philipp Telemann 3/14/1681 – 6/25/1767
German composer of the late Baroque period
45 Johann Strauss, the Elder 3/14/1804 – 9/24/1849
Austrian composer of Viennese waltzes
57 Victor Emmanuel II 3/14/1820 – 1/9/1878
Italian king of Sardinia-Piedmont andfirst king of united Italy
75 Giovanni Schiaparelli 3/14/1835 – 7/4/1910
Italian astronomer and senator
61 Paul Ehrlich 3/14/1854 – 8/20/1915
German Nobel Prize-winning medical scientist
37 Casey Jones 3/14/1863- 4/30/1900
American railroad engineer
82 Algernon Blackwood 3/14/1869 – 12/10/1951
British mystery writer
75 Sylvia Beach 3/14/1887 – 10/5/1962
American owner of Shakespeare and Company bookshop in Paris
70 Adolph Gottlieb 3/14/1903 – 3/4/1974
American Abstract Expressionist painter
78 Raymond Aron 3/14/1905 – 10/17/1983
French sociologist, historian and political commentator
48 Diane Arbus 3/14/1923 – 7/26/1971
American photographer

 

 

Posted on Leave a comment

March 14

MORNING

“Be strong in the grace that is in Christ Jesus.”
2 Timothy 2:1

Christ has grace without measure in himself, but he hath not retained it for himself. As the reservoir empties itself into the pipes, so hath Christ emptied out his grace for his people. “Of his fulness have all we received, and grace for grace.” He seems only to have in order to dispense to us. He stands like the fountain, always flowing, but only running in order to supply the empty pitchers and the thirsty lips which draw nigh unto it. Like a tree, he bears sweet fruit, not to hang on boughs, but to be gathered by those who need. Grace, whether its work be to pardon, to cleanse, to preserve, to strengthen, to enlighten, to quicken, or to restore, is ever to be had from him freely and without price; nor is there one form of the work of grace which he has not bestowed upon his people. As the blood of the body, though flowing from the heart, belongs equally to every member, so the influences of grace are the inheritance of every saint united to the Lamb; and herein there is a sweet communion between Christ and his Church, inasmuch as they both receive the same grace. Christ is the head upon which the oil is first poured; but the same oil runs to the very skirts of the garments, so that the meanest saint has an unction of the same costly moisture as that which fell upon the head. This is true communion when the sap of grace flows from the stem to the branch, and when it is perceived that the stem itself is sustained by the very nourishment which feeds the branch. As we day by day receive grace from Jesus, and more constantly recognize it as coming from him, we shall behold him in communion with us, and enjoy the felicity of communion with him. Let us make daily use of our riches, and ever repair to him as to our own Lord in covenant, taking from him the supply of all we need with as much boldness as men take money from their own purse.

EVENING

“He did it with all his heart and prospered.”
2 Chronicles 31:21

This is no unusual occurrence; it is the general rule of the moral universe that those men prosper who do their work with all their hearts, while those are almost certain to fail who go to their labour leaving half their hearts behind them. God does not give harvests to idle men except harvests of thistles, nor is he pleased to send wealth to those who will not dig in the field to find its hid treasure. It is universally confessed that if a man would prosper, he must be diligent in business. It is the same in religion as it is in other things. If you would prosper in your work for Jesus, let it be heart work, and let it be done with all your heart. Put as much force, energy, heartiness, and earnestness into religion as ever you do into business, for it deserves far more. The Holy Spirit helps our infirmities, but he does not encourage our idleness; he loves active believers. Who are the most useful men in the Christian church? The men who do what they undertake for God with all their hearts. Who are the most successful Sabbath-school teachers? The most talented? No; the most zealous; the men whose hearts are on fire, those are the men who see their Lord riding forth prosperously in the majesty of his salvation. Whole-heartedness shows itself in perseverance; there may be failure at first, but the earnest worker will say, “It is the Lord’s work, and it must be done; my Lord has bidden me do it, and in his strength I will accomplish it.” Christian, art thou thus “with all thine heart” serving thy Master? Remember the earnestness of Jesus! Think what heart-work was his! He could say, “The zeal of thine house hath eaten me up.” When he sweat great drops of blood, it was no light burden he had to carry upon those blessed shoulders; and when he poured out his heart, it was no weak effort he was making for the salvation of his people. Was Jesus in earnest, and are we lukewarm?

 

Posted on 1 Comment

Jupiter and Venus: Getting Cozy in the Western Skies

P811

Posted on Leave a comment

337/365/01

P806