outliers
Un compentario interesante, de David Brooks en una Op-ed en el NYT: "Control of attention is the ultimate individual power. People who can do that are not prisoners of the stimuli around them." Malcolm responde aquí.
Labels: libros
Labels: libros
OZYMANDIAS
I met a traveller from an antique land
Who said: Two vast and trunkless legs of stone
Stand in the desert. Near them on the sand,
Half sunk, a shatter'd visage lies, whose frown
And wrinkled lip and sneer of cold command
Tell that its sculptor well those passions read
Which yet survive, stamp'd on these lifeless things,
The hand that mock'd them and the heart that fed.
And on the pedestal these words appear:
"My name is Ozymandias, king of kings:
Look on my works, ye Mighty, and despair!"
Nothing beside remains: round the decay
Of that colossal wreck, boundless and bare,
The lone and level sands stretch far away.
Labels: libros
Labels: libros
Labels: libros
![]() Thinkmule medium:Mixed Media style:Textured
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| ![]() Tom Nic Cocotos medium:Collage/Cut Paper style:Collage
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Betty, ya estoy catalogadísimo (gato ocurrente), pero de todas maneras quiero encasillarme bien zig-zag-eante por tu post:Labels: agus, barcelona, blogs, deportes, economía, familia, libros, life, travel, vacaciones
De todas maneras me gustaron muchísimo dos libros: una colección de cuentos de "terror" llamado Kiss Kiss y una autobiografía llamada Going Solo, donde relata sus experiencias en la RAF (Royal Air Force).The Peter Principle is a colloquial principle of hierarchiology, stated as "In a hierarchy every employee tends to rise to his level of incompetence." Formulated by Dr. Laurence J. Peter in his 1968 book of the same name, the Peter principle pertains to the level of competence of the human resources in a hierarchical organization. The principle explains the upward, downward, and lateral movement of personnel within a hierarchically organized system of ranks.
On a personal level, the practical application of the Peter Principle is that it allows assessment of the potential of any given employee for a promotion to a higher rank on the basis of job performance in his or her current position. It states that members of a hierarchical organization are eventually promoted to their highest level of competence, after which further promotion raises them to a level at which they may become incompetent. Such a level is called the employee's "level of incompetence", at which the employee has a dismal or no chance at all of being promoted any farther, thus achieving the ceiling of his or her career growth within a given organization.
Labels: libros
Augusto Pinochet
The passing of a tyrant
Dec 13th 2006
From The Economist print editionNo ifs or buts. Whatever the general did for the economy, he was a bad man
HIS was not the bloodiest of the military dictatorships that afflicted South America in the 1970s. That accolade belonged to the Argentine junta. Nor was it the longest-lasting: Alfredo Stroessner misgoverned Paraguay for 35 years and Brazil's collegial military regime lasted for 21. But General Augusto Pinochet, who ruled Chile from 1973 to 1990 and who died last weekend, was the most brutally successful of the dictators. He presided over a viciously effective police state and came to personify a whole era of bloody despotism during the latter stages of the cold war (see article).
The left abhorred him not only because of his brutality but because he overthrew the elected Marxist government of Salvador Allende. The coup in 1973, which had the backing of the United States, ended a democratic tradition in Chile that stretched back to the 1930s. For his defenders both at home and abroad—who not long ago were numerous—he was the saviour of his country. They argue that he rescued Chile from communism and went on to turn it into the fastest-growing economy in Latin America by applying free-market policies that would be imitated in eastern Europe and Asia. General Pinochet hoped that a record of economic success, not just intimidation, would enable him to win a referendum in 1988 and remain in power. Chileans voted instead to restore democracy, by 56% to 43%. The general stayed on as army commander, casting an overbearing shadow. He was finally brought to book, if not quite to trial, thanks to a Spanish judge, Britain's House of Lords and the courts in Chile.
The Pinochet story raises two uncomfortable questions for liberals. If the coup did indeed rescue Chile from an elected government that was Marxist-dominated—and thus anti-democratic—was it justified? The answer is no. The Allende government generated economic chaos and extreme political tension and would probably have imploded. But the intention of the junta was to crush democracy, not just communism.
The second uncomfortable question is whether Chile's subsequent economic success was possible only because of dictatorship. Like most Latin American dictators, General Pinochet was instinctively an economic nationalist. But he saw the “Chicago Boys”, a group of free-market economists, as a means to consolidate his personal dictatorship. The radical shrinking of Allende's bloated state was a way to avoid sharing patronage, and thus power, with the armed forces.
With Chileans cowed, the Chicago Boys could work as if in a laboratory, with no regard for social costs. They made mistakes: a fixed exchange rate and unregulated bank privatisations triggered a massive recession and financial collapse in 1982-83. More pragmatic policies and a renewal of growth followed. But it took the return of democracy in 1990, with its ability to bestow legitimacy, to create an investment-led boom and a large fall in poverty. Elsewhere in Latin America, free-market reforms were enacted by democracies.
When economic and political liberty are divorced
Most dictators are economic bunglers. A few get the economy right, as Spain's Franco did after 1958. But in the long run (as China is likely to discover) economic liberty seldom thrives in the absence of political liberty. And General Pinochet's claim to have stood selflessly for the former was tarnished when it emerged that he had amassed a fortune incommensurate with his salary. Even if history bothers to remember that he privatised the pension system, that should not wipe away the memory of the torture, the “disappeared” and the bodies dumped at sea. His defenders—who include Britain's Lady Thatcher—really should know better.
Labels: libros
Lola. Sex sells?Lola Copacabana nos transporta a un mundo en el que conviven maternidad y sexo desenfrenado, estudios universitarios y borracheras, los hermanos Marx y Simone de Beauvoir. Escritos entre sus veintidós y veinticinco años, estos apuntes - que surgieron de un famoso blog en Internet - narran los avatares de una crianza, el final de un gran amor y cierta indecisión vocacional con irreverencia, sarcasmo y "buena leche".
No puedo dejar de poner fotos de nenes divinos, es como que sino esta página es fea
Agustín sigue obsesionado con un robot mientras mis hermanitos se debaten cuál libro leer
Mi viejo es fana de los Meccanos, acá demuestra cómo funciona una sierra para madera en miniatura
Me encantaría tener 4 años para entretenerme con una gotera cayendo en un balde
No curto mucho la onda 80s, pero esto vale la pena, es gracioso.Labels: libros
*1. Reside en una metrópolis cosmopolita importante.
2. Permaneció mínimamente un mes en al menos dos de las siguientes ciudades: Londres - Paris - New York.
***3. Es soltero.
*****4. Ostenta estas tres características al mismo tiempo: es alto, tiene el pelo oscuro y es buen mozo (buen mozo es 'handsome', no 'hot').
***5. Su rostro luce siempre perfectamente afeitado.
6. Su prosperidad es su principal fuente de ingreso.
7. No se avergüenza en decir que su padre le expende dinero si usted así lo requiere.
**8. Cursó sus estudios en un colegio de renombre y atiende (o planea) atender a un college de mayor renombre aún (Oxford o Princeton suman puntos extra).
*9. Abusa del chofer y de los taxis.
10. Posee exiguos conocimientos sobre autos de lujo y deportivos de colección, que podrían dejar boquiabierto a cualquiera.
11. No asocia al Martini (y por ende al infausto James Bond) con la figura mítica de un dandy, sino que prefiere el champagne, el cognac o un buen scotch, de los que conoce las más sofisticadas y caras etiquetas.
*12. Puede mantener una conversación coherente en francés.
13. Sabe de buena tinta lo suficiente de música clásica como para seguirle la charla a alguien que le hable sobre el tema.
14. La mayor parte del arte que cuelga de las paredes de su hogar refieren a motivos ecuestres, circunstancias de caza o a hombres ilustres. Se permite también algún cuadro de arte clásico, pero todo lo demás está vetado (lo que no significa que invista magnánimos conocimientos sobre todas las corrientes artísticas, desde pinturas rupestres hasta arte moderno).
*15. Gusta de las antigüedades por el mero hecho de que representan objetos snob de colección (aquellos que tienen un propósito utilitario, como los libros, no cuentan).
*16. Prefiere los deportes donde se cultiva la individualidad y practica al menos uno de estos tres: esgrima – tenis - golf.
****17. Puede dominar al menos una de estas cosas: andar a caballo - tocar el piano - pintar y/o esculpir.
18. Posee al menos un traje hecho a medida.
19. Jamás usó ni usaría un ítem vintage para algún equipo de gala.
20. Atesora en su guardarropas una corbata y unos zapatos blancos (no cuenta si alguna de esas prendas son parte de un uniforme que dispone para trabajar).
*21. Sabe lo que es un Hamburg y un Bowler.
22. Un extraño se ha burlado de su attire al menos una vez en su vida.
*23. Ansía que los demás consideren su apariencia como 'elegante' y no como 'trendy', 'fashionable' o 'única'.
*24. Prefiere el azul y el gris al negro.
25. Cuando discute sobre moda con otras personas siempre le piden su consejo, y jamás osan en darle uno.
26. Puede describir con exactitud el look del Duke of Windsor.
****27. En medio de una reunión social tiene debilidad por tomarse a la ligera las cosas importantes y por hablar seriamente sobre los temas más banales.
*****28. Puede, con la misma naturalidad, despotricar contra el comunismo y la vulgaridad de las masas de la misma forma que debate sobre Oscar Wilde.
*29. Los demás suelen reconocer que sus comentarios son mordaces y agudos.
30. Sabe quién fue George Brummell.
31. No es que realmente le importe lo que otros piensan de usted, pero siempre prefiere ser recordado como una persona común (pero no básica).
*32. Se considera a sí mismo al menos tres de estas disposiciones de vida: un filósofo - un hombre bien vestido - un artista – un esteta - un rebelde en contra del conformismo.
Abuses of police powerBuenos Aires provincial police, the notorious Bonaerense, are once again under scrutiny, for their treatment of Gabriel Roser, a political activist. Critics claim that Mr Roser was singled out for mistreatment by the police because of his politics. Even though he had no criminal record, he featured in a book of police mugshots, from which he was identified by prosecution witnesses in an armed robbery case.
In early December he was released from prison, where he had spent almost 20 months despite bearing little resemblance to the initial description of the criminal and numerous inconsistencies in the witnesses' testimony. The case against him ultimately fell apart, and the prosecutors withdrew their case before the trial had ended.
For background see: The battle for safer streets, September 30th 2004
Labels: buenos aires, libros
Abuses of police powerBuenos Aires provincial police, the notorious Bonaerense, are once again under scrutiny, for their treatment of Gabriel Roser, a political activist. Critics claim that Mr Roser was singled out for mistreatment by the police because of his politics. Even though he had no criminal record, he featured in a book of police mugshots, from which he was identified by prosecution witnesses in an armed robbery case.
In early December he was released from prison, where he had spent almost 20 months despite bearing little resemblance to the initial description of the criminal and numerous inconsistencies in the witnesses' testimony. The case against him ultimately fell apart, and the prosecutors withdrew their case before the trial had ended.
For background see: The battle for safer streets, September 30th 2004
Labels: buenos aires, libros
1. "Duro con ellos", Nikita Nipone: Bueno, agarrense... excepto por Nikita Nipone en 2005 no hubo ningún grupo argentino capaz de hacer del rock algo calamitoso. Pity Alvarez y el Pelado Cordera tendrían que tomar ayahuasca un año seguido para crear personajes tan morbosos como los dementes que protagonizan estas ocho canciones. Y si los aceptable últimos trabajos de Intoxicados y Bersuit coquetean con la locura, Duro con ellos es un motín en el pabellón de los psicópatas peligrosos.
El disco suena como si los integrantes de este quinteto de Zona Norte jamás hubieran escuchado música antes de grabar. Si bien son demasiado bizarros para la radio, a medida que progresan se van quedando sin techo. Lo interesante es que para concretar sus ambiciones, lo primero que hicieron fue fumarse el libro de reglas. Avanzan intuitivamente, sin darle lugar a las convenciones y su aguda glorificación del ridículo los puso al tope de esta lista. Uno supone que las próximas generaciones van a ver en ellos un claro ejemplo de esquizofrenia creativa. Si fueran un remedio, serían de esos que hay que tomar con cuidado porque provocan alucinaciones. Si no me creen intenten poner el disco a todo volumen en la habitación y después díganme si acaso no terminan echando espuma por la boca... y hasta capaz que se animan a comer vidrio (eso si, con mayonesa).

| ya me acordé a que salió el tema de la modelito esa | ||||
| se llama Karina Jelinek | ||||
| Guinzburg le preguntó si era algo de la que ganó el Nobel | ||||
| Elfriede Jelinek | ||||
| JAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAJAJAJJAJAA | ||||
| JAJAJA todavia me estoy riendo de eso... | ||||
| entonces ella le dice: | ||||
| "La conozco pero no soy nada" | ||||
| "No soy de generación de leer libros" | ||||
| JAAAAAAAAAAAAAJAJAJAJJAJAJAJA | ||||
| notar el "de" extra, bonus track | ||||
| "Leo revistas... el diariooooooo" | ||||
| (diario re agregado) | ||||
| Después en otro programa | ||||
| de UNA generación QUE lee libros | ||||
| claro, así sería | ||||
| JAJAJA OVBIO! para no quedar TAN bruta... jajaja le preguntan, y ella aclara: | ||||
| "Lo que dije es que no soy de leer de nocheeee" | ||||
| Antes de irme a dormir | ||||
| "Ah, ok, y que hacés para irte a dormir?" | ||||
| Piensa... | ||||
| Piensa... | ||||
| Piensa... | ||||
| "Me tomo un vaso de leche caliente" | ||||
| KATRINA DE CHANESSSSS |
Labels: libros
What Mayer thinks will be essential for continued innovation is for Google to keep its sense of fearlessness. "I like to launch [products] early and often. That has become my mantra," she says. She mentions Apple Computer and Madonna. "Nobody remembers the Sex Book or the Newton. Consumers remember your average over time. That philosophy frees you from fear."
hice espacio en la que tenía (amarilla)
y saqué mis libros de las cajas que estaba usando de muebles.
Ya sé, ya sé, un pajero total, pero estuve distraido.
Labels: libros
EDUCACION : FORMACION EN INSTITUCIONES PRESTIGIOSAS, BILINGUES, CON BACHILLERATOS INTERNACIONALES
Cómo es el pequeño mundo de la educación de elite
Estudian en colegios que garantizan una inserción universitariay laboral, frecuentemente en el exterior. Mantienen tradiciones y crean un fuerte sentido de pertenencia. Pagan cuotas de entre $ 900 y $ 4.000.
Tradición. Valores. Formación académica de excelencia. Homogeneidad social... ¿Qué busca la elite al elegir un colegio para sus hijos? Instituciones con reconocido prestigio, formación bilingüe y orientación internacional. Pero no es todo.
"La escolarización de las elites es un tema poco explorado. Las Ciencias Sociales, por razones legítimas (ideológicas y teóricas) privilegiaron los estudios de los sectores populares y medios", dice Sandra Ziegler, autora de "La escolarización de las elites: un acercamiento a la socialización de los jóvenes de sectores favorecidos en la Argentina actual". Su investigación integra "La Trama de la desigualdad educativa", una compilación de Guillermina Tiramonti, directora de la FLACSO Argentina. ¿El sentido del trabajo? Entender los procesos de construcción de las desigualdades educativas en el país.
Claro en la descripción, un sitio de Internet para extranjeros que planean vivir aquí, dice: "Los argentinos tienden a enviar a sus hijos a colegios privados. Sólo en Buenos Aires hay 90 colegios bilingües". El Ministerio de la Producción también da una idea con su listado de colegios privados de Capital y Gran Buenos Aires: 16 tienen cuotas mensuales superiores 900 pesos (ver "Cuánto...").
"Estas familias buscan escuelas prestigiosas que den formación académica que les permita a sus hijos desempeños óptimos en su inserción universitaria y laboral. Además, garantizan la inserción de los chicos en un universo semejante al de la familia; ofrecen una experiencia escolar rica en aprendizaje y brindan una red de pertenencia y vínculos sociales para el futuro", dice Ziegler.
Las instituciones pueden tener proyectos pedagógicos distintos: "Unas se orientan a la formación para un mundo competitivo y globalizado, otras se aferran a la preparación tradicional y religiosa o se orientan a la formación academicista. Parecen 'nichos' excluyentes a pesar de recibir todas a sectores privilegiados".
Silvina Gvirtz, directora de la Escuela de Educación de la Universidad de San Andrés, aclara: "Hay varios tipos de elite. Hay un sector poderoso económicamente al que no le interesa lo intelectual, pero hay otros que buscan la excelencia académica. Por otro lado, están los intelectuales que buscan la mejor educación, pero que no siempre tienen el dinero para pagarla. Así, todos se forman de manera diferente".
Este último grupo suele elegir colegios como el Nacional de Buenos Aires (ver "El colegio...").
¿La elite busca homogeneidad? "Sí. Tener un grupo de pertenencia que comparte los valores no sólo refuerza la identidad en una etapa fundamental, también ayuda a transitar un mundo cambiante e incierto", dicen en el Cardenal Newman de Boulogne.
Una ex alumna del Northlands —de la camada de Máxima Zorreguieta, princesa de Holanda—, bromea: "Había homogeneidad, y también diferencias: chetas, paquetas y guitudas". Ese año, el 90% siguió estudios universitarios, y muchas fueron al exterior.
"Los alumnos de Northlands esperan que su exigente formación académica los prepare para ingresar y prosperar en las mejores universidades del país y el exterior. Es uno de los pocos colegios del mundo donde es obligatorio cursar y rendir los exámenes del Diploma de la Organización del Bachillerato Internacional (IBO)", dicen. La IBO es una organización académica (está en Ginebra) que da currículo y metodología pedagógica de avanzada a 1.600 colegios de 128 países. Mide el nivel académico y sirve como examen de ingreso para universidades de todo el mundo.
La mayoría de estos colegios tiene bachillerato internacional. También se destacan por sus actividades extracurriculares (pintura, música, teatro) y las acciones sociales del tipo solidarias. Mantienen profesores prestigiosos, autores de libros, muy actualizados, gracias a cursos, viajes al exterior y salarios altos.
En general siguen ciertos ritos de las comunidades a las que pertenecen: respetan las fiestas de sus patronos, las fechas patrias y hasta sus vacaciones. Celebran jornadas abiertas (Open Day) para mostrar los trabajos de los alumnos. Los deportes tienen una importancia capital: los clásicos son jockey y rugby, pero también atletismo, salto en alto, equitación, esgrima. Algunos hasta corren regatas. El próximo sábado se hace la "VIII Argentine Interschool Challenge Regatta".
En suma, son colegios que "venden tradición, trayectoria, y a la vez renovación académica y edilicia, que incluye lo último en tecnología. Una combinación cara, pero muy apetecible.
Labels: buenos aires, familia, libros, reflexión
i made a book. a collection of love and hate mail sent to raymi over the years, several two-minute drawings and a bonus interview and it costs twenty dollars. why don't you go and buy it!
Duncan está jugando realmente mal al final de los partidos contra Detroit, a tal punto que algunos están empezando a dudar de él.Is anyone else torn on this Tim Duncan thing? Did any of the other top-20 players in NBA history ever display anything close to the Tim Duncan "I'm not even sure if this next free throw is hitting the rim" face? Remember, this isn't the first time he's looked shaky in a big playoff series. Two years ago, after he played a terrible Game 2 against the Nets, I wrote this sequence about him:
"Duncan might be the Most Valuable Player in the league, certainly the first guy you would build a franchise around … but after watching him for six seasons, should we still worry about his crunch-time nerves like this? Will he ever peak the way Hakeem did in '94 and '95? Will he ever destroy the league for an entire spring, lay his stamp on everyone and everything, and head into the summer thinking to himself, 'You know what? There isn't a guy in the league who can stop me.' I'm just not getting that vibe from him. Duncan is great, but he's not that great. At least not yet."
Believe me, I'm not falling prey to the reactionary journalism that seems to be sweeping the nation right now, where you can make one point on one day and completely contradict yourself the next, with no repercussions. Whatever happens tomorrow night, it won't change the fact that Duncan is the best power forward of all time, as well as one of the top 20 players ever. But there are levels of greatness. For instance, you would have had to pretty much murder Bill Russell to win a Game 7 against him. Same with MJ and Bird. Other superstars were a little shakier at times – like Magic, who played the 1984 Finals with both hands around his neck. But that experience made him stronger, and by 1987, he was a cold-blooded killer at the end of games.
And I guess what I'm trying to say is this: I don't see that same quality from Tim Duncan. Does he have it in him? Can he protect his house? In my book, that's the most compelling story of Game 7. Nothing else is close.
(As always, the poor Pistons get overlooked. Again. Sorry, guys.)
Labels: buenos aires, libros


BUENOS AIRES BRIEFINGThe city's nightclubs are reopening, after a two-month closure. The city council had shut them down after 192 people died in a fire at the República Cromañón nightclub on December 31st. But at the end of February, after rigorous security checks, inspectors allowed two clubs to open and reckoned that around 40 would soon follow by the end of March.
The capital's tourism and entertainment industries have suffered under the crackdown. Musicians have had to escape the city to find clubs to perform in, and the city's formerly thriving alternative-theatre circuit has also been stymied by suddenly diligent safety inspectors. Even the Hotel Faena, one of the city's most fashionable and exclusive hotels (which opened in October), had to turn guests away for a week during tiffs with zealous inspectors. Assailed for not doing enough to avert December's disaster, the city has worked to demonstrate its toughness. The city council has beefed up controls on public venues, and the General Justice Inspectorate has decreed a ban on offshore companies operating in the capital. This is to mitigate one of the contributing factors in the República Cromañón case, in which the club's ownership was obscured by arrangements with a series of Uruguay-based companies.
Security officials at Barajas airport in Madrid intercepted 60 kilos of cocaine that had been shipped from Buenos Aires' main airport, Ezeiza, revealing serious breaches in security there. Though the packages were discovered in September, their existence was not made public until February. The government has blamed the air force for keeping the discovery quiet. The chief executive of Southern Winds, the airline responsible for the shipment, denounced the case in the Argentina courts in October, and blamed rogue employees. But the judge on the case suspects the incident points to larger problems in airport security, and has arrested several Southern Winds executives.
The packages had fake labels claiming they were the property of the Argentine embassy in Madrid, and were sent as unaccompanied luggage, which is prohibited. They also were not passed through the airport's scanners. Shortly after the cocaine was found, security videos that could have identified the smugglers were erased. The government, under fire for its handling of the scandal and concerned about systemic security gaps, has acted with characteristic vigour. It has removed the senior command of the air force, previously responsible for security at airports; dissolved the force's National Aeronautical Police, replacing it with a civilian force; and cancelled a joint venture between the state and Southern Winds.
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After a lull in activity at the beginning of the year, the capital's piqueteros—unemployed protestors—returned to the streets in February. In the most serious incident, a 24-year-old piquetero was arrested after attacking a car that tried to pass through a column of marchers. Demonstrators smashed several of the car's windows, covered it in dents and inflicted cuts and bruises on the occupants, including three young girls. The organisation responsible, which has ties to Quebracho, one of the city's most radical left-wing groups, later apologised, calling it “an error”. But the family of those assaulted rejected the apology, and said they would sue the government for not guaranteeing the free passage of traffic.
The attack was another blow for the image of the piqueteros, who have drawn ire after repeated roadblocks and clashes (incited by some more extreme groups). In response, the city's prosecutors have ordered a firmer crackdown, as opposed to the national government's soft approach. In a first step, prosecutors have demanded that participants not cover their faces during protests, and banned the sticks carried by the demonstrators' security forces. The piqueteros have, for now, obeyed the command.
Norberto “Pappo” Napolitano, an Argentine rock legend, was killed in a road accident at the end of February, shortly before his 55th birthday. He was hit by a car after falling from his Harley Davidson motorbike near the city of Luján, outside Buenos Aires. Before the accident he had been drinking heavily.
BB King, an American blues legend, called Pappo “Latin America's greatest guitarist.” He was a pioneer of local rock music, briefly forming part of the legendary Abuelos de la Nada, before starting his own band, Pappo's Blues, and later launching Argentina's first heavy metal band, Riff, in 1980. During his career he recorded with virtually all the big Argentine rock bands and appeared with several American stars (including Mr King). Blunt and irascible, Napolitano had once been accused of fascism; just before he died he was being prosecuted for punching another musician. But there was a gentler side: he lived at home with his mother until her death in the 1990s. Thousands of fans turned out to salute his funeral cortege and participate in the services at the city's Chacarita cemetery.
Scientists recently found the long-lost body of Facundo Quiroga, a brutal provincial leader known as the “Tigre de Los Llanos” (Tiger of Los Llanos). His burial site had been a secret for 170 years. Quiroga and his mentor, the equally tyrannical Juan Manuel de Rosas, were denounced by Domingo Sarmiento, a revered 18th-century figure, for their bloody vision of federalism in Sarmiento’s tremendously influential book “Facundo”. His coffin was found entombed in the wall of his family's crypt in the famous Recoleta cemetery. As local legend held, he had been buried standing upright and with a sword, so he could fight against Death. Historians think his burial site was kept secret to stop his many enemies from digging up and burning his remains.
Two centuries later, Quiroga continues to generate controversy. Politicians from La Rioja, his native province, demanded that his remains be sent there, alleging that the tomb where he was buried had been neglected. Burial rows are a regular topic in Buenos Aires. There were recently proposals to make a mausoleum in Buenos Aires province for General Juan Domingo Perón and his wife Evita, and to bring to Argentina the remains of Ernesto “Che” Guevara.
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Until April 10th 2005
With the support of the French embassy, the Borges Cultural Centre hosts an expansive retrospective of the work of Henri Cartier-Bresson, a Parisian photographer who championed a photojournalistic style. This show features 155 of his pictures. Born in 1908, Cartier-Bresson was trained to be a painter; by 1932 he became inseparable from his Leica camera, which he wielded with a painterly eye. After documenting the liberation of Paris in 1945 (he spent three years as a Nazi prisoner-of-war), he travelled the world, mostly India and China, where he captured iconic images of Gandhi and of Mao's rise to power. Though he rejected photography for drawing in the last 25 years of his life, he has left an unrivalled body of work.
See obituary: Kingdoms of the world in a moment, August 5th 2004
Centro Cultural Borges, corner of Viamonte and San Martín, Centre. Tel: +54 (0)11 5555-5359. Open: Mon-Sat, 10am-9pm. For more information, visit the museum's website.
Labels: buenos aires, business, libros, madrid, mujeres
Labels: libros



By KEVIN J. DELANEY and JEFFREY A. TRACHTENBERG
Staff Reporters of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
December 14, 2004; Page D1
Google Inc. is expected to announce plans today to let consumers use its search engine to access millions of books from the libraries of some top U.S. and foreign universities.
In a dramatic expansion to an existing Google service that makes books searchable online, the Mountain View, Calif., company will scan the entire library of the University of Michigan, which includes seven million volumes. It also will make available online large parts of the libraries at Stanford University and the University of Oxford, as well as books from Harvard University and the New York Public Library.
The initiative has the potential to change the way people view their libraries, as they are able to find information from books without ever setting foot in the library itself. It also intensifies Google's competition with Internet retailer Amazon.com Inc., which itself offers a service for searching within books.
Under the new program, consumers will be able to type key words into Google's main Web search site just as they currently do. Links to portions of text from the library books will then show up in the results. The books-related results will be set apart at the top of the search-result page. When users click on a book-related result, they will see images of the relevant scanned pages with their search terms highlighted.
Depending on agreements with a book's publisher or author, the user will then be able to browse a portion of the book or the entirety. Starting today, some of the books already digitized at the University Michigan will go online. Piggybacking on a separate database, Google's service allows consumers to type in their ZIP Code and see if books that show up in their search results are owned by libraries near them.
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The group, which includes the evolutionary biologist, Richard Dawkins, astronomer Sir Patrick Moore, neuroscientist Susan Greenfield and the inventor James Dyson, urges us all to take samples of our own DNA, measure the speed of light with chocolate, and solve the mathematical mystery of the number 137.
The list, compiled by New Scientist magazine, suggests booking to see Galileo's middle finger (preserved in Florence) or ordering liquid nitrogen to make the "world's smoothest ice-cream" at home.
More complicated options include joining the 300 Club at the South Pole (they take a sauna to 200 degrees Fahrenheit, then run naked to the pole in minus 100 F) or learning Choctaw, a language with two past tenses - one for giving information which is definitely true, the other for passing on material taken without checking from someone else.
The appeal to scientists of such native American precision runs through the whole collection, but the compilation's editors, Valerie Jamieson and Liz Else, also want participants to have fun.
"You've only got one life, so make the most of it," they say. "Swim in a bioluminescent lake, boil an egg with a mobile phone, or have a new species named after you." With a little practice - carefully explained - you may also be able to achieve multiple orgasm, or, for £35,000, clone your pet cat.
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seat.co.ukThe scientists also offer five things to get organised for your remains after death. These include leaving your body for use in car crash research, which has saved an estimated 8,500 casualties since 1987, or having the carbon in your ashes turned into a diamond.
The list is "the best science has to offer in the way of new experiences," say Ms Jamieson and Ms Else, who have tried to include a number of easy options. Lives may be transformed by watching the night sky or simply going out at night and adjusting to the low levels of light - two of the 100 - or assisting at the birth of an animal. "This is one of life's most surprising and moving experiences and pretty accessible," says the booklet. "Farmers are often only too happy to have help, and if you want something more exotic, ask a zookeeper if you can be involved in the birth of a camel, zebra or giraffe."
Like all scientific experiments, the list comes with a clutch of warnings about taking care, especially when making the nitrogen ice cream (wear goggles and gloves) or touching a tiger. The mathematician Ian Stewart who suggests the latter after two "awesome" goes at it himself, adds: "Do not attempt it without professional assistance."
There is also, inevitably, some crossover with the more banal lists of things to do before you die, even if the scientists' equivalent of visiting Everest is much more interesting. The Earth's rotation causes a 20-kilometre bulge at the equator, making Chimborazo volcano in Ecuador the highest mountain above sea level. If you want to win the lottery meanwhile, enter a proof for one of seven conjectures which so frustrate mathematicians that there is a million US dollar prize for cracking any of them.
The mystery of the number 137 requires prolonged "brain gym", according to its proposer Paul Davies, theoretical physicist and author of Einstein's Unfinished Revolution. There must - probably - be a reason why the number describes the strength of electromagnetism through calculations involving the charge of the electron, Planck's constant - the fundamental constant of nature arising in quantum mechanical problems - and the speed of light. But no one has yet discovered what it is.
Before you die: 100 things you simply must do
Personal choices
Nobel prizewinner John Sulston, who led Britain's publicly funded effort to unravel the human genome
"Visit Shark Bay in Western Australia to see fossil mounds of algae which were among the earliest living things on Earth. Seeing them, I can marvel at how human thought transcends the here and now.They act as a ruler of time stretching back into the past"
James Dyson, the inventor of the bagless vacuum cleaner and the two-drum washing machine
"I'd like to see our society focusing less on how things look and more on how they work. Children should be taught to consider engineering and science as cool - not the preserve of boffins"
Patrick Moore, the unofficial national astronomer
His entry, the shortest in the book, suggests "scouring the night sky for comets, with the chance of following Halley or Donati. It would be great to see Moore's comet blazing across the sky"
Pick of the list
Extract your own DNA by spitting gargled salt water into diluted washing-up liquid and slowly dribbling ice-cold gin down the side of the glass. Spindly white clumps which form in the mixture are, basically, you
Link your home computer to the Arecibo radio telescope in Puerto Rico (via setiathome.ssl.berkeley.edu) and you could be the first person to spot messages from aliens for which the telescope constantly checks. If your computer gets the first, the Americans promise to give you the credit
Measure the speed of light by melting chocolate in microwave oven hotspots and measuring the distance between globs. Various calculations produce the answer and you can still eat the chocolate afterwards
Be a gecko. Researchers in Manchester have almost succeeded in developing Velcro-like pads to fix to the feet of volunteers who will then be able to scuttle over the town hall or the Guardian's northern headquarters like lizards, with no risk of falling
Write your name in atoms at IBM's Almaden research laboratory in San Jose, California - and, while you're saving up to go, simply see an atom by befriending a physicist at one of Britain's many university labs with the equipment to trap and cool atoms. Barium is best.
Use your excreta to enter the amazing world of the dung beetle. Much more basic but just as fascinating for some. If you are ever caught short in the open, says New Scientist, turn the accident into an opportunity by lingering nearby and watching what happens. "It won't take long for the beetles to appear, scuttle boldly up to your deposit and begin rolling balls of it away, head-butting it and pushing it with their forelegs." Reassuringly, it gets used as food and a beetle breeding nest
Inhale helium and start singing. Old hat but a must for anyone who's never done it. But don't take too much and never use a pressurised source. If you do, in New Scientist's words, "you probably won't be singing anything. Ever"
When you've gone
Help nail a murderer. You can register ahead with Tennessee's body farm. Donated corpses are left out in the open to decompose before trainee forensic scientists get to work on them. An estimated 100 murderers have been convicted as a result
Become a diamond. LifeGem of Chicago, Illinois, the book reveals, will take a few grains of your cremated remains, subject them to high pressure and temperature, and you will emerge from the process, 18 weeks later, as a sparkling one-carat diamondLabels: libros
Labels: libros