
Feedback is our weekly column of bizarre stories, implausible advertising claims, confusing instructions and more
Mammoth tidings
GOOD news for South Carolina. Earlier, its House of Representatives opposed creationist references that the state Senate slipped in while enacting 8-year-old Olivia McConnell’s proposal to name the Columbian mammoth as the state fossil (26 April). Then an inter-house “conference committee” , despite the majority of its members initially voting in favour of the “created on the Sixth Day” language. On 16 May, the bill . That was wise politics: Olivia had she was determined to have the unadulterated bill passed, even if it “might not be until I’m 23 or 40… If it doesn’t pass this year, I’m going to be back next year.”
Mail from tells of “a ‘Crowd Prediction’ experiment to see if the date of future catastrophes can be predicted” – but wouldn’t it be nicer to start with lottery numbers?
Advertisement
Tomorrow will now occur…
EDITING this week’s column, we found ourselves writing to a colleague: “next week, Thursday will take place on Wednesday 21 May.” This is a consequence of the UK public holiday that some readers may have enjoyed not long before reading this, requiring that everything be done early.
In turn, as we draft this on Friday 16 May, the word “today” would mean “Saturday 31 May” – the date on the cover. Meanwhile, we are discussing with a colleague an idea for another publication, in which “today” is “Friday 23 May”. So why was it not a journalist but a patent examiner who realised the relative nature of time?
Patently absurd
THERE will now be a short pause while Feedback savours the phrase “Swiss patent-attorney humour”. èƵ published a letter from Alan Wells about the patent work of Albert Einstein, including the phrase: “back then, the Swiss Patent Office only examined patent applications relating to timing means” (12 April, p 32). Alan now confesses that this sentence was “ein Schnappsidee” – a term that he says is “not easily translatable” but which we recognise all too easily, knowing that Schnapps is alcoholic and Idee is “idea”.
He looks forward to his letter being cited to support the notion that, as Graham Greene put it in The Third Man, 500 years of Swiss democracy and peace produced “the cuckoo clock”. In patent-attorney terms, that would be a “mechano-avian timing means”. For the record, Alan directs us to the Swiss Patent Office in Bern listing patents examined by Einstein, which include a gravel sorter and an “electrical typewriter with shuttle-type carrier” ().
Diplomatic language
DISCUSSING with colleagues the prospects for the , we recalled the immortal intent of a diplomat in Geneva “not to move the discussion unnecessarily forward” (8 February). Other favourite diplomatic language includes “I shall have to refer to my capital,” meaning: “I don’t care what you lot say for the rest of the week, I’m not consenting to anything until we next meet.”
In the record of a meeting, the words “one country said…” are a delicate way, in our experience, of recording occasions when the US, specifically, means: “dream on, people, that is so not happening.”
Feedback expects readers have similar favourites. Will you reveal them, strictly between us?
Mysterious imaging
THE Australian firm behind claims to detect metals and minerals. We observed that in 2011 it was promoting “Geo-Resonance Rejuvenation – An Innovation in Holistic Healing”, but skipped the technicalities (17 May).
Now we have found more similar claims. In Ukraine, opens with the wonderfully gnomic “When we have picked up all grain about new, very weak, but very ‘powerful’ signals, we saw a new truth about deep underground vision…” In Spain we find , with subsidiaries in, among other countries, Ukraine.
But how is it supposed to work? The company provides to which all . This specifies that “a black-and-white negative is used as an aerospace photograph [and packaged with a] test wafer and X-ray film, the formed package is treated with gamma rays.”
The X-ray film is then “chemically processed and placed in an alternating electric field of high pressure”. This method somehow reminds us of “aura-imaging” practices like . How it enables the detection of underwater or buried metals or oil, Feedback has no idea.
Town with no name
FINALLY, an update on the mapping service of a famous web search engine (FWSE). We reported that if you locate London and zoom out to see all of England, the nearest place shown was Leigh-on-Sea in Essex (10 May). This is still true. But when Viv Brown, Andrew MacGregor and we last looked, Brussels had reappeared and a place called “TOWN CENTRE” . Only zooming back in until we can spot the trains in the station revealed that this was .
Feedback has fond memories of wangling a press visit to the secret nuclear bunker under an office block on Alencon Link, by the station. Could this be connected with its anonymity?