Archive for August, 2003

Dean Archie Epps Dead at 66

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Sadly, Harvard yesterday announced the death following
surgery of longtime Dean Archie Epps. I met Dean Epps for
the first time in 1971, when he was the young (mid-30’s), hip (well,
he was Black, which in those days was sorta the same thing) newly appointed
Dean of Students, which meant he handled undergraduate disciplinary problems,
and I was an 18-year-old freshman, which meant I got to know him pretty
well over the following four years.

But that first encounter was over the Andy Ben B. affair,
after which Archie was forever know among our small and

admittedly obscure clique as "the whitest
man on campus."

Andy Ben B. was my freshman roommate, and the smartest guy I had ever
known.  His IQ was off the scale; it had been measured at 186 but
that was an underestimation. He also came from an obscenely rich leather-tanning
family in New Jersey and showed up in September with a brand new Porsche,
which he didn’t mind lending to his roomie. What did I know, I figured
this was a typical Harvard setup.

We spent the next few months exploring Cambridge and the insides of
each others minds, fueled by the youthful exuberance and endemic
recreational substances of the era. I was looking forward to Andy’s intellectual
camaraderie and support for at least the duration of our collegiate careers,
but alas, it was not to be.

Andy Ben B. came back from Thanksgiving break with some mescaline which
was too good to be true.  In fact, it was so good that when Andy
took it, he never came down.  Over the course of the next
week, to paraphrase Allen Ginsberg, I watched one of the finest minds
of my generation burst in a super-nova and then slowly disintegrate into
a babbling pool of incoherence.  It was an awesome and terrible
experience.

The first three days were pure enlightenment. Andy was preternaturally
brilliant, astounding the rest of us smartasses with amazing insights
into topics as far afield as psychophysiology, economics and particle
physics. He started discussions that continued in the Chem department
and the
School of Theology. Of course, he was completely off his nut, not sleeping
or eating or attending any classes.  We, his circle of friends,
were babysitting him round the clock, in tandem teams, marveling at his
genius, deathly afraid for his sanity and physical well-being.

On the fourth day Andy announced that he was retiring from Harvard,
from the modern world actually, and would spend six years traveling
and
studying the six great cultures of the human race. During the seventh
year, he would rest, and reflect, and write a book.  In the meantime
he had produced a 30 page statement pointing to the solutions
of the problems of our times whose brilliance we could only surmise as
he would let no one read it, and which he proposed to hand deliver to
the New York Times, Wall Street Journal and other major media outlets.

Counting in our group several members halfway through freshman psych,
including myself, we immediately saw signs of megalomania and a nasty
messianic
complex. But we had no idea what to do about it. We had reached the chapter
on diagnosis, but wouldn’t get to treatment until spring.

In retrospect what we should have done is to feed Andy a massive
dose of tranks, knock him out for a few days and get his mind and body
out of that accelerating upward death-spiral that lack of sleep and underlying
psychosis can produce.

But what did we know, back then? Besides, we were too scared to
feed him any more drugs and were beginning to have awful, dark premonitions
as to how all this would turn out.

Andy’s ravings had turned darker.  All
sorts of family shit was starting to come out, a lot of it centered around
his mother, who apparently, at least in this rendition of things, was
quite a piece of work.

Meanwhile, we were becoming exhausted and increasingly freaked out by
the still brilliant but now dark and twisted meanderings of Andy’s unraveling
mind.  It was increasingly obvious that old Andy would
need some sort of institutional setting to deal with this, and soon.

So it was with a desperate mixture of relief and foreboding that I took
the call one early December morning from Dean Archie Epps (been wondering
if I would ever get back to him?) asking if Andy Ben B. could stop by
for a chat.  At 10, say? As I hung up the phone I knew that, for
better or worse, the gig was up.

I had a 9 o’clock class, I remember, one that I had missed several times
during the preceding week watching over Andy, so I obtained his repeated
and solemn assurances that he understood when and where he was to report.  He
seemed reasonably coherent and content, and I dared to hope the worst
was over.

As well as we can piece it together, before heading over to University
Hall for his visit with Dean Epps, Andy squirreled out a deeply hidden
stash of cocaine that some other insane undergraduate had laboriously
and ingeniously wormed into the woodwork of the ancient fireplace mantle,
and about which I knew nothing, I maintain to this day.  Andy proceeded
to snort the entire stash and march right in to see Archie like a drunk
deb with an over-powdered schnozz.

What went on in Dean Epps office that morning no one really knows except
Andy and Archie, and now Archie is gone. About halfway through the meeting
Dean Epps opened his office door, fearing for his life no doubt.  Second
hand reports from secretaries and other students who happened to be in
the office include accounts of Andy dancing on the dean’s desk, patiently
explaining the chemical composition of dozens of psychotropicals, snatching
Archie’s pipe from his mouth and using it to do an uncanny, spot on imitation
of the dean himself, with every mannerism and inflection perfect, singing
perfectly rhymed and syncopated quatrains on the virtues of German automobiles,
Chilean women and organic psychedelics.

Two of our gang showed up near the end of the climatic performance and
it is they who reported, to our everlasting appreciation, that when he
walked out of his office Dean Archie Epps was the whitest man on campus.

Andy was taken directly to the Stillman infirmary where he was finally
tranquillized, but the damage had been done.  He was institutionalized
for an extended period, eventually recovered but never returned to Harvard.

In an additional bummer, Andy’s complete mental nakedness and lack of
any prudent monitoring unleashed a torrent of stories and insights on
illegal
intoxicants
on campus which must have seemed, to an outside observer, exaggerated
and impossible.  Only
his obvious insanity and complete worthlessness as a witness saved us
all
from serial
indictments.

Andy’s aforementioned Mom did try her best to get me kicked out of the
college.  Probably
only the fact that I was able to prove the final fatal dose of mescaline
that pushed Andy over the edge had been obtained by him in New Jersey
over Thanksgiving saved
my ass.  That and the fact that Dean Archie Epps was still a rookie
and somehow fell for my true but tawdry line of pathetic bullshit about
how we were all stunned, devastated and worried first and foremost for
Andy himself.

So here’s to Dean of Students Archie Epps, who was an exceptional presence
on campus for over 30 years, and who defied categorization or classification
except in that it may be said, with honor and pride on both parts, that
he was a Harvard man.

related
story from
The Boston Globe

US Crime Rate Lowest in Recorded History

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WASHINGTON (AP) — Violent and property crimes dipped
in 2002 to their lowest levels since records started being compiled 30
years ago, and have dropped more than 50 percent in the last decade,
the Justice Department reported Sunday.

The rate of violent crimes — rapes, robberies and assaults — was about
23 victims for every 1,000 U.S. residents 12 or older last year. That
compares with 25 victims per 1,000 in 2001 and 50 in 1993.

from CNN….

IRS in Riyadh for Terrorist Audits

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Its a tough time to be a Saudi. Under increasing pressure
to deal with the popular, virulent anti-Americanism which is proving
to be such a fecund petri dish of terrorism for Saudi youth with too
much time on their hands, the government is spending millions on a sophisticated
US public relation campaign and looking for more ways to cooperate with
the US government.

The Saudi royal family, which owes its position atop the world’s
biggest proven pot of petroleum to a post-WWI land-grant from the victorios
European powers, has maintained that positon through a Faustian pact
with

radical fundamentalists who channel popular
anger at being kept in ignorance and underdevelopment away from the government
and directly at Jews and Americans.

Now Adam Zagorin, Time magazine’s national
economics correspondent, reports that while their governments are publicly
feuding,
FBI and IRS agents are in Riyadh working with their Saudi counterparts
to form a joint task force to trace terrorist financing.

Of course, Adam Zagorin
also reported, in sixth grade, that putting 12 Bufferin tablets in a
can of Coke, shaking
it up, and shooting it down your throat would get you high. It doesn’t,
Adam. It just makes you very, very sick. Don’t ask how I got
this information.

from
Time

New Yorkers Hit the Roof

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The
New York Times reports that when the temps climb in the Big Apple,
so
do New Yorkers – to the roofs.

They charge through security doors
and climb up fire escapes, and nervous landlords or busybody building
superintendents are
no match. Their stories are varied and twisted.

"Sometimes you’re up on the roof, you have a little
music, you close your eyes, you could be at the beach," says Leon
Ichaso, a filmmaker. "It’s celebratory. There’s a sense that they
can’t catch you up there."

I’m wondering what you’ve been up to Leon, and who exactly "they" are….

from the New York Times

Closer to Home – Cambridge Carnival

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Meanwhile, closer to home, today is the Cambridge
Carribean Carnival
.  This
morning, our regular weekend meeting of the "Just Don’t Suck" tennis club
was interrrupted by the syncopated cadences of steel drums and the flash
and shimmer of silver and gold tinsel and firm young flesh. On a perfect
late summer day, sky a robin’s egg blue and just enough of a breeze to
take the bite out of the unfiltered sunlight, the forming up of the festival
parade was soon more interesting than our feeble attempts at athletics.  Luckily
I had my camera in my car….
 

US Official: Free Software is Unamerican

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"I don’t even know how to begin this story, so stupid and extreme
it is."  So begins Lawrence Lessig in a relevatory article
on the US reaction to a World Intellectual Property Organization
(WIPO) meeting on “Open collaborative models to develop public goods”
including open-source and free software. WIPO is affiliated with the
UN.

Enter Lois Boland, director of international relations for the U.S.
Patent and Trademark Office, who, at the prompting of Microsoft and software
industry lobbying (according to this story by Jonathan
Krim
in the Washington Post) proclaimed
“that open-source software runs counter to the mission of WIPO, which
is to
promote intellectual-property
rights.”  She was further quoted as saying, “To hold a meeting
which has as its purpose to disclaim or waive such rights seems to us
to be
contrary
to
the goals
of WIPO.”

Lessig lights into Lois here: "If Lois Boland said this, then she should
be asked to resign. " Of course, this unleashed a torrent of comments.

follow
the fun at Lessig Blog
(see blog for latest developments)

Spam Filters Compared

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It is increasingly obvious that in this day and age, if
you don’t have an effective spam filter. email is essentially useless.

Sam Holden, on Freshmeat.net, writes a comprehensive and methodologically
sound comparison of six popular filters relying on alternate techniques
such as Bayesian and heuristic filtering.

Includes Bogfilter, Span Assassin, Quick Span Fileter, Span Probe, SPASTIC
and dbacl

from
Freshmeat.

Why My Garbageman Was Always Smiling

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Two garbagemen in my hometown (Rochester, NY) have been
fired for having sex with a prostitute in their garage truck, on August
5 while they were on duty.

Vincent Grecco, was walking with his 4-year-old niece to a neighborhood
store when he said they witnessed the sexual act at the corner of Maryland
Street and Glendale Park at 2:05 p.m. .

from the
Democrat and Chronicle
.

Invasion of the Disnigoths

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Disneyland has Gay Day. Disneyland has Raver Day. Disneyland
had Yippie Day once, in 1970 – it was fun, at least till the cops showed
up in riot gear.

This Sunday, it’s the Goths’ turn.

For the fifth year in a row, Disneyland will be creeping with mobs of
black-clad death-rocker types for what organizers officially bill as
Bats Day in the Fun Park, but what most people just call Goth Day.

from the
Orange County Weekly

for more info, go to www.batsday.net.

Scuzz then ‘Doon, then Shoot for the Moon

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Finally, a sport story you can feel good about. Opening
disclosure, I live in Malden, Mass, which is only about 3 miles down
Route 1 from Saugus, whose all-star little league team plays for the
United States Championship at the Little League World Series tonight
at 7 on ESPN.

But it is not only that they hail from just down the road, or that I
am so desperately jaded by the moral bankrupcy of the local professional
sports scene, this team is authentically terrific in its own right.

Their pitching rotation is your basic two-man little league staff (rules
prohibit pichers from going more than one inning in two successive games,
so most teams have two primary aces who switch off starts). First there
is big Matt Muldoon, who at 6 feet and 185 pounds could probably walk
into half the bars in Boston and order a beer without getting carded.  He
brings the heavy heat, and bats cleanup to boot. At the other end of
the short starting rotation is Mike Scuzzarella (see photo), all 4 foot 8 inches
and 85 pounds of him, standing on tiptoes and sopping wet. Mike brings
a wicked curveball that he’s been throwing since he was 7.

But it gets even better. In tonight’s US Final, neither Scuzz nor ‘Doon
can pitch, since they were both needed to finally beat Richmond, Texas
13-14 in extra innings in their epic semi-final matchup.  That
Thursday night game was definitely the most exciting and competitive
baseball I have seen in years, in any league, at any level.

Saugus led, 10-2, after three innings, and by 10-4 entering the sixth
inning. The top of the sixth was the start of an incredible 30 minutes.
Richmond inched closer on a two-run homer by Randal Grichuk, his second
home run
of the game. Saugus then replaced starter Scuzzarella with
Muldoon, wholoaded the bases, but then got the first two outs. Then,
one out away  from the win, it all came undone, a hit, an error,
another hit, and suddenly it was tied and the game went to extra innings
(six is regulation).

In the top of the 7th Texas, still on fire, notched three more. Things
looked dim for the New England nine. "Everybody was crying when
they came into the dugout, and I felt like crying, too," Saugus
coach Rochenski said. "I just told them to stay focused out there.
We’ll cry afterward if we have to, but not now."

As Tom Hanks says in "A League of Their Own", there’s no crying in baseball.  And
indeed, in an ending worthy of cinematic treatment (are the options already
out? I’ll do it!), Saugus loaded the bases on three walks among two outs,
and then hits by Pizzano, Muldoon and.Ferreira brought it home.

So anyway, since Muldoon and Scuzzarella can’t take the mound tonight,
coach Rochenski will hand the horsehide to third starter Jason Kasabuski,
who gave up only three hits in beating tonight’s other finalist, Boynton
Beach, in round-robin play earlier in the tournament.

Catch the action tonight at 7 on ESPN

The winner will play the winner of today’s International Final between
Curacao, Netherlands Antilles and Tokyo on Monday.


Read a preview of the tournament finals from AP

Read a report on the incredible 14-13 semi from the New York Times

Robot Runs Wild, Slaps Child

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Honda Motor Co’s humanoid robot,
ASIMO (Advanced Step in Innovative Mobility), disciplines a young fan
who “dissed” him
by a comparison to the Jetson’s robot maid “Rosie”.
No, actually Asimo is dancing with a group of kids in
Manila August
23, 2003. ASIMO, who is programmed to speak Tagalog and other languages,
is in the country for a series of events being hosted by Honda.

from Reuters

How the White Wizards Stopped Sobig.F

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It looks like computer security experts were able to circumvent the first major programmed spawning of the Sobig.F virus by isolating the name servers it needed to propagate and taking them offline at the pre-programmed time (3pm ET).

On a more personal and practical level last night I saw Dave Winer whip up an instant filter for his email program by telling it to trash any messages with the words “See the attached file for details”. We had noticed that although the sender and subject lines on the Sobig-infected messages were ingeniously variable, each of the message texts was the same.

My university system administrators must have done something similar because after getting inundated with hundreds of See the attached file for details messages on Tuesday and Wednesday, there were only a few yesterday and none today, Woe to anyone who tries to use those six evil words to legitimate ends.

Anyway, here is an interesting article from the New York Times Technology about how the White Wizards who keep the net humming stopped the thing from spawing this afternoon.