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Rescuers plan biggest search yet,
using helicopters, a C-130 aircraft, infrared equipment, and scores of volunteers to search for 3 climbers trapped on Mt. Hood. But at what cost in dollars and lives? A 1998 rescue of two climbers on Mt. McKinley cost $221,818. And
Mt. Hood is no stranger to climbing accidents: in 2002, an Air Force helicopter
crashed [youtube] while trying to rescue nine climbers swept into a crevasse. Is it time to revisit the debate over who should pay for dangerous, high-profile mountain rescues?
[More inside]
posted to MetaFilter by googly
at 9:06 AM on December 16, 2006
(204 comments)
Are computers counterproductive to a child's development?
Wittenberg University education professor and former computer teacher
Lowell Monke thinks so, and has written a provocative essay arguing that, among other things, computers render children "less animated and less capable of appreciating what it means to be alive, what it means to belong in the world as a biological, social being," and "teach children a manipulative way of engaging the world.” His polemic is partially supported by
evidence (.pdf academic paper; BBC gloss
here) indicating that, above a certain threshold, computer use is correlated with lower test scores. The latest salvo in the continuing debate over education and
the culture of simulation.
posted to MetaFilter by googly
at 11:25 AM on October 5, 2005
(47 comments)
The Rise and Fall of the Black Voter
is a remarkable sequence of maps graphically describing the realignment of voting patterns in the U.S. during the past century (read
this for a bit more context). It is an excellent companion to the
purple maps of the most recent election, and a nice antidote to
simplistic comparisons of pre-Civil War and recent electoral college maps. Republicans can bask in the glow of their successful "
Southern Strategy," while Democrats can take heart that change, while often slow, is still
possible.
posted to MetaFilter by googly
at 11:57 AM on December 15, 2004
(7 comments)