Official BBO Hijacked Thread Thread No, it's not about that
#2441
Posted 2013-February-12, 18:18
Ok, maybe not morons. But according to the Daily Mail teenager Lauren Marbe has a higher IQ than Stephen Hawking, Bill Gates and Albert Einstein. (Einstein never actually took an IQ test but experts predict that he would have scored a 160.)
http://www.inquisitr...ures-and-mensa/
#2442
Posted 2013-February-12, 21:19
At
http://en.wikipedia....ilyn_vos_Savant
we find
Quote
Which leads to my favorite IQ story: Ms. Savant had discussed a problem in probability that I mentioned to a freshman class, and I mentioned who she was and that she wrote for Parade magazine. I no sooner finished the sentence after which a young woman piped up "She has the highest IQ in the world and she writes for Parade magazine?". Indeed.
Then there was the girl I asked out in high school. She accepted and early on in the date she explained that she had a part time job at the courthouse that gave her access. probably not approved access, to records and that she had looked me up. Her IQ was one point higher than mine, she informed me. This was a weird start to a date and it got weirder.
#2443
Posted 2013-February-12, 21:38
#2444
Posted 2013-February-12, 22:19
mike777, on 2013-February-12, 21:38, said:
And why they had his IQ in there.
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#2445
Posted 2013-February-12, 23:15
"Learn from the mistakes of others. You won't live long enough to make them all yourself."
"One advantage of bad bidding is that you get practice at playing atrocious contracts."
-Alfred Sheinwold
#2446
Posted 2013-February-12, 23:35
"Learn from the mistakes of others. You won't live long enough to make them all yourself."
"One advantage of bad bidding is that you get practice at playing atrocious contracts."
-Alfred Sheinwold
#2447
Posted 2013-February-13, 06:12
mike777, on 2013-February-12, 21:38, said:
blackshoe, on 2013-February-12, 22:19, said:
Yes, now that you mention it. Good question. And why was a part time employee of high school age able to access it?
All of which reminds me of another story. This is the hijack thread after all, so I'll tell it.
A few years ago a local gealogy society gave a series of free or low cost (I forget which) talks on how to find your family tree online, so Becky and I decided to go. Early on they asked for someone to volunteer a name to track. I suggested Anton Perekovic. This was my father's name when he came over on the boat in 1910. No luck, not surprising since he was ten years old and pretty much disappeared into the masses after he arrived. Ok, I said, try Thomas R. Berg. This was his name after he went through Ellis Island. No luck. Some with in the audience suggestged we try searching witness protection. However when we switched to myu mother his software came thorough. We found an online picture of my mother on a boat in a swimming suit, ca.1930.
Government records have a lot. And apparently had a lot even back when I was young. I was adopted at birth, and with this genealogy course as motivation I decided to see what I could find. People who are squeamish would be well-advised to let sleeping dogs lie but it can be a kick. Really I am far more interested in tracking down some early history of my (adopted) father's life. I think it qualifies as a true adventure but it was also difficult and he very much avoided talking about it. It's been tough finding much. Ellis Island says that he and his older brother who came with him were headed for Wisconsin. No trace there that I have found.
#2448
Posted 2013-February-13, 07:31
1. We always thought that part of the family came from Krakow, they actually came from Lvov, but if you got sent back from further down the line it was eminently preferable to be sent back to Krakow than Lvov so you claimed to come from there.
2. A father put his 3 sons on boats, one to South Africa, one to New York, one to London. The one headed to "New York" got off the ship having been told he was in New York and realised some time later he was in Newcastle-upon-Tyne.
#2449
Posted 2013-February-13, 08:05
Cyberyeti, on 2013-February-13, 07:31, said:
1. We always thought that part of the family came from Krakow, they actually came from Lvov, but if you got sent back from further down the line it was eminently preferable to be sent back to Krakow than Lvov so you claimed to come from there.
2. A father put his 3 sons on boats, one to South Africa, one to New York, one to London. The one headed to "New York" got off the ship having been told he was in New York and realised some time later he was in Newcastle-upon-Tyne.
The adventures of those times, carried out by just folks, seem stunning to me. I can well understand my father's reluctance to relive the details, but I wish that he could have done so.
#2450
Posted 2013-February-13, 11:07
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#2451
Posted 2013-February-13, 13:39
#2452
Posted 2013-February-13, 15:59
They all had to make a hard decision: return to Poland or one-way-tickets from Southampton to Halifax or Melbourne. My grandpa spent one year in Canada and decided there to return to his family in Silesia despite of fact that the communists had there all the power.
#2453
Posted 2013-February-13, 17:19
Aberlour10, on 2013-February-13, 15:59, said:
They all had to make a hard decision: return to Poland or one-way-tickets from Southampton to Halifax or Melbourne. My grandpa spent one year in Canada and decided there to return to his family in Silesia despite of fact that the communists had there all the power.
Great and credible story but for leaving Canada.
I grew up with a friend of Lebanese descent who's family arrived here via Uganda and South America. He told me that it was a family tradition that when the shooting starts, they f***ck off. He proved it by teaching at the University in Riyadh during the first Gulf War and returning to Canada in a hurry.
Makes me feel good not to have to face those choices and kudos to them that gave me such a comfortable life.
What is baby oil made of?
#2455
Posted 2013-March-10, 09:08
#2456
Posted 2013-March-12, 04:03
The wing patterns of two unpalatable butterfly species, Heliconius erato, top row, and Heliconius melpomene, show striking similarities. DNA studies suggest that some species generated similar patterns independently; others share color-controlling genes.
#2457
Posted 2013-March-12, 09:13
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#2458
Posted 2013-March-12, 09:42
blackshoe, on 2013-March-12, 09:13, said:
No he means unpalatable - tasting bad to predators (or indeed possibly poisonous). If you read the article, the hypothesis is that the species mimic each other because predators then only need to eat one not one of each to know they taste bad (hence natural selection is in their favour). They have got the same pattern by shared DNA, whether this is common ancestor or interbreeding at an earlier stage is unknown.
#2459
Posted 2013-March-15, 10:21
http://individual.ut...omody/quiz.html
George Carlin
#2460
Posted 2013-March-15, 13:48
gwnn, on 2013-March-15, 10:21, said:
http://individual.ut...omody/quiz.html
bed