Wednesday, September 2, 2009

Fire, Stars and Dreams

(Albert Einstein, Edwin Hubble, and Walter Adams (l-r) in 1931 at the Mount Wilson Observatory 100" telescope, in the San Gabriel Mountains of southern California. It was here in 1929 that Hubble discovered the cosmic expansion of the universe. photo: California Institute of Technology)

Tim Rutten has a thoughtful piece in today's Los Angeles Times about the Mount Wilson Observatory - it's part local history, often overlooked or diminished, part science lesson, part a larger meditation about what these fires mean.

An excerpt:

"On the other hand, if this "angry" Station fire has done nothing else, it has reminded us that we remain rather small and often helpless before the most basic of terrestrial elements -- fire, water, wind. Those huge pyrocumulus clouds looming over downtown L.A. on Monday were like monuments to a kind of heedlessness and vanity that flourishes with particular force in this city -- where a fantasy of control long ago took hold. How do you accept implacable nature of the sort that's been on display for the last week in a city where so many believe they can reinvent their lives, their looks and even their psyches?

The last time fire burned all the way through what's now the Angeles National Forest was in 1897, eight years before astronomer George Hale began work on the first phase of the Mt. Wilson Observatory. Dave Boucher, the L.A. County Fire Department's historian, and other local scholars of fire ecology believe that the Station blaze already has surpassed that conflagration in size.

Almost all of the largest fires in California history -- including the largest, the 273,246-acre Cedar fire in San Diego County six years ago -- have occurred in this century, products of urban sprawl, the thoughtless propagation of non-native plants, unwise fire suppression policies and, probably, global warming.

The dreams that propelled Hubble toward the world-altering discoveries he made atop Mt. Wilson may very well have had their origins in our ancestors' reveries beside their flickering fires. It's sobering to witness how easily it can become once again an element of dread."

To read the rest, click here.



"On a visit to the Mount Wilson Observatory near Pasadena in 1931, Albert Einstein demonstrated his calculation of the density of the Milky Way. By using Mount Wilson's 100-inch telescope Edwin Hubble had recently shown that the universe is expanding." -from Science@Berkeley Lab:

VETS Center opens at Saddleback College

Bohrstein sent us this pic of Mt. Wilson last night

Recently, in the OC Reg:

New student center focuses on war vets (Niyaz Pirani)

MISSION VIEJO - Saddleback College students who are former members of the armed forces or on active duty and their families will now have a dedicated space to receive counseling, share experiences and receive academic and career help.

The VETS Center opened alongside the beginning of the fall semester last week and is meant to ease veterans into student life. The center will also provide referrals for on-campus and off-campus veterans' services.

"Our veterans have sacrificed so much for our country and it is only fitting to provide them with every resource they need to succeed as a Saddleback College student and beyond," said Tod A. Burnett, president of the college, in a release.

The center is located in the Student Services Center, room 207, and is open from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Thursday and 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Friday. For more information, call 949-582-4252.

The troubling sentiment

I’ve been trying to locate the sappy patriotic video shown by Chancellor Raghu Mathur two weeks ago at his fall opening extravaganza. It presents a series of more-or-less patriotic images—including bald eagles and Americans experiencing hard times—and is accompanied by Lee Greenwood’s execrable “God Bless the USA,” a clumsy, bombastic anthem that seems to be “de Bomb” in Redneckville and environs.

I haven’t located the exact video.

I tried to remember the troublesome sentiment with which the video ends, and it appears that it is the following:

Only two defining forces have ever offered to die for you—Jesus Christ and the American Soldier. One died for your soul, the other for your freedom.

That’s right. Jesus Christ. This inarticulate blather ("defining forces" that make "offers"?) is making the rounds among the usual suspects.

Roy's obituary in LA Times and Register: "we were lucky to have you while we did"

  This ran in the Sunday December 24, 2023 edition of the Los Angeles Times and the Orange County Register : July 14, 1955 - November 20, 2...