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Olivia Newton-John's
Physical
Sexiest Song Ever
from Reuters -
Move
aside Madonna and watch out Barry White. The
winner of the sexiest song of all time is --
Olivia Newton-John with "Physical," according to
music publication Billboard.
Billboard
has come up with a list of the 50 most popular
songs about sex in time for Valentine's Day with
each song given points according to its
performance on the Billboard hot 100 chart from
August 1958 until January this year.
"Physical," released by
Newton-John in 1981, topped the list after
spending 10 weeks as No. 1 in the Billboard Hot
100 chart. And while it certainly speaks to sex
with lyrics such as "There's nothin' left to
talk about, unless it's horizontally," the song
became known as well-known as a track for
aerobics classes in line with the singer's
exercise-themed video.
Second in the list came
Rod Stewart's 1976 song "Tonight's the Night,"
followed by Boyz II Men's 1994 ballad "I'll Make
Love To You."
Eleven Tons of Blood Plasma
Stolen in Poland
from Associated Press --
Warsaw
police recovered 11 tons of human blood plasma
that had been stolen from a U.S. company and was
on its way to Austria, officials said Thursday.
The truck with a freezer unit carrying the
plasma, worth more than euro1 million ($1.4
million), was stolen while the driver made a
rest stop in Germany, Polish police spokesman
Artur Chorazy said. It was taken across the
border into Poland, where it was seized on
Wednesday.
Police footage showed frozen salmon-colored
plasma packed in boxes originating from
Harrisonburg, Virginia, where
BioLife Plasma Services, a collection
facility owned by
Baxter International Inc., has operations.
BioLife
spokeswoman Laura Jacobs said the plasma had
come from other facilities as well, but did not
elaborate.
Jacobs said the company was working with local
authorities to determine how the theft occurred.
"Importantly, the plasma has been recovered and
is currently in Baxter's Vienna facility," she
said.
Polish police have made no arrests so far, and
believe thieves stole it in hopes of selling it
elsewhere in Eastern Europe, Chorazy said.
Freezing Water with Heat
from Science --
Imagine
water freezing solid even as it's heating up.
Such are the bizarre tricks scientists now find
water is capable of.
Popular belief contends that water freezes at 32
degrees Fahrenheit (0 degrees Celsius).
Surprisingly, if water lies in a smooth bottle
and is free of any dust, it can stay liquid down
to minus 40 degrees F (minus 40 degrees C) in
what's called "supercooled" form. The dust and
rough surfaces that water is normally found in
contact with in nature can serve as the kernels
around which
ice crystals form.
Now researcher Igor Lubomirsky at
the Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot,
Israel, and his colleagues have discovered
another way to control the
freezing point of water — via what are
called quasi-amorphous pyroelectric thin films.
These surfaces change their electrical charge
depending on their temperature.
When pyroelectic surfaces are positively
charged, water becomes easier to freeze, and
when they have a negative charge, it becomes
harder to freeze.
The researchers saw that supercooled
water could freeze as it's being heated, as
long as the temperature changes the surface
charge as well. For instance, when supercooled
water is on a negatively charged lithium
tantalate surface, it will freeze solid
immediately when the surface is heated to 17.6
degrees F (minus 8 degrees C) and its charge
switches to positive.
Curiously, positively charged surfaces inspire
supercooled water to freeze from the bottom
up, while negatively charged surfaces cause it
to freeze from the top down. This likely has to
do with how water molecules orient themselves —
the negatively charged oxygen atoms in water
molecules naturally point toward positively
charged surfaces, while the reverse is true with
hydrogen atoms.
"The difference between the positive and
negative charge was unexpected," Lubomirsky
said.
The ability to better control the freezing
temperature of supercooled water could be
critical for a variety of applications,
including the survival of cold-blooded animals,
the cryo-preservation of cells and tissues, the
protection of crops from freezing, and the
ability to understand and trigger cloud
formation.
The scientists detailed their findings in the
Feb. 5, 2010 issue of the journal
Science.
When Creative
Writing Gets Too Creative
from UTNE Reader
--
The lines between fiction and nonfiction are blurring and giving
rise to a new form “that we might call ‘true
fiction,’” writes Alissa Quart in Columbia Journalism Review.
Quart sees examples of this phenomenon all around, including Dave
Eggers’ brilliant book
What Is the What, which tells but also
takes a few liberties with the tale of a Sudanese “Lost Boy”; the
forthcoming graphic novel A.D. by Josh Neufeld, which depicts
post-Katrina New Orleans; and even The Hurt Locker, the war
film that is presented as fiction but is based on an original
nonfiction magazine article.
Quart is quick to acknowledge that the
fiction-nonfiction hybrid isn’t all that new, but she contends that
writers well known for mixing the two, like Truman Capote and Norman
Mailer, “imagined their work to be a certain kind of journalism.”
Members of the newer breed, she notes, “seem to be backing away from
categorizing things as ‘true,’ even as they are also rethinking what
nonfiction is and can be.”
The
new anthology The Lost Origins of the Essay, Quart writes,
even makes the case “that some works long considered fiction are
actually closer to this hybrid form,” and she quotes from a piece by
the anthology’s editor, John D’Agata: “Do we read nonfiction in
order to receive information, or do we read it to experience art?”
Coincidentally, it was a recent story
by D’Agata in The Believer that left me confused about
what was information and what was art. In
What Happens There, D’Agata traces the final moments of Levi
Presley, a 16-year-old who killed himself by jumping from the top of
the 1,149-foot-high Stratosphere Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas.
The writer does several things at once:
In the guise of a reporter, he attempts to penetrate the wall of
silence surrounding suicide in Las Vegas, which has the highest
suicide rate in the nation year after year. Wearing a memoirist’s
hat, he interweaves his own experiences in the city, where he
briefly lived to care for his mother. And as a facile prose stylist,
he attempts to vividly convey the sights, sounds, and smells that
Presley might have encountered as he walked toward his deadly jump
through the sprawling casino complex.
I was immediately drawn in by D’Agata’s
deft, artful writing, and yet as the tale unfolded I was stopped
cold at several junctures, mostly because as a journalist I had
certain expectations about what I perceived as, first and foremost,
a piece of journalism. To wit:
• The story begins with the
glaringly vague time reference “one summer,” yet anyone with
Google at his fingertips can learn that Presley committed
suicide in 2002. Why not place the story’s main event in time
for the reader? When is one of the six key story
components in classic news journalism—components that are,
ironically, the organizing principle of D’Agata’s new book
About a Mountain, which includes the suicide tale.
• After meeting with Presley’s
parents to discuss their son’s death, he writes, “At some point,
it came clear while I was visiting the Presleys that in fact I
had not spoken to their son the night he died.” I first read
this as a jarringly understated admission, delivered almost as
an aside, that he had misrepresented himself to the parents in
order to meet with them. Ethical red flags were flying all over
the place before I figured out elsewhere—via his book’s jacket
notes—that D’Agata himself had believed he might have spoken
with Presley on that fateful night. Maybe fans of the new “true
fiction” will read right past this, but for me this was a major
stumbling block.
• D’Agata pays a private
investigator $400 for “vital information” about Presley that
he’s unable to ferret out himself, and rather than praising the
investigator’s ability to dig up these details, he feels
compelled to coyly note that she “had a smoker’s voice, a
barking dog and screaming kids and Jeopardy on in the
background” when he called her. Yeah, and she probably was
overweight and wearing ridiculous slippers and sucking on a Bud
Lite. D’Agata clearly has a keen eye for detail, but extending
it to someone who’s basically helping him report the story, with
a wink-wink-nudge-nudge dose of classist disapproval, gave me a
shudder of discomfort.
• D’Agata is able to get only one
local official to go on the record about the suicide, county
coroner Ron Flud. The coroner seems like a pretty straight-up
guy—“a finder of facts,” he calls himself—who invites D’Agata
into his office and expounds insightfully on the taboo of
talking about suicide. But apparently this still isn’t enough
for D’Agata. He calls Flud out for not answering a question
about whether a suicide jumper is likely to lose consciousness
in a fall, then proceeds to relay, in a self-serving writerly
flourish, several things that Flud did not say.
• Someone who knew Presley hangs up
on D’Agata when he asks personal questions about the deceased.
But we don’t know who because the writer doesn’t tell us. The
conversation is transmitted as a terse, paraphrased exchange
with no context or explanation. Literary, yes, but mystifying.
• Finally, D’Agata appears to have
never visited the suicide victim’s
memorial website, which has been online since 2005. Here he
could have gleaned several intimate details about Levi
Presley—details not mentioned in the article—from reminiscences
written by friends and family, and he could have learned the
names of several sources to pursue for his allegedly
hard-to-find interviews. He also would have learned from the
entry by “Mom” that Presley’s mother called him her “precious
Boomer”—from “baby Boomer”—not “Booper,” as D’Agata writes.
In the end, the story seems to be a
case in which a creative writer took on a semi-journalistic task, in
the process taking liberties that some audiences may enjoy (James
Wolcott of Vanity Fair certainly did, calling the story a “show
stopper”) and that others may find confusing, distracting, or
journalistically dubious.
If we are indeed entering a new world
of hybrid literary journalism—one in which, Quart writes, “we are
seeing nonfiction freed from its rigid constraints”—I for one hope
we remember that some subjects, like a teenager’s suicide, seem to
demand a deep and abiding respect for facts and clarity. At first
impression D’Agata appears to be honoring the memory of Levi Presley
by speaking the unspeakable—yet by the story’s end, at least to this
reader, he appears to have been done just the opposite.
Source: Columbia
Journalism Review, The
Believer (subscription required),
Vanity
Fair
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