
An odd argument
MUCH ado about nothing: in the first weeks of January, authorities in the Indian city of Delhi ran a traffic-calming experiment whereby cars with licence plates ending in an even number could only drive on even-numbered days, and vice versa. The rules are being enforced by thousands of volunteer officers following “Gandhigiri” methods – issuing polite reprimands and gifts of flowers, rather than fines.
Things got off to a bumpy start when, on 1 January, volunteer traffic wardens approached a man driving a car with a plate ending in a zero. The man argued that zero was neither an odd nor an even number, and he should be permitted to continue his journey. According to the , the driver said he was a student of mathematics and commerce, and insisted that “zero did not fit into either category”.
Advertisement
Eventually the guards admitted defeat, offered him a rose – which he refused – and moved on. For now, on the streets of Delhi, the evenness of zero remains open to debate.
“The single pre-packaged brass door bolt bought by John Lewin declares “approximate contents: 1” “If the package was empty, would I have room for complaint?” he wonders”
Something smells rotten
OUR friends at Retraction Watch, who keep a beady eye on scientific misconduct, that a study into cattle manure turned out to be, er, bullshit.
During an investigation by Washington State University into the 2011 study “Evaluation of Co-Digestion at a Commercial Dairy Anaerobic Digester”, first author Craig Frear admitted falsifying data that exaggerated the efficiency of bioreactors used at dairy farms, claiming the original measurements were lost when his laboratory notebook was “blown into a manure pit at WSU’s Knott Dairy Farm”.
That may have been believable, were it not for Frear’s close commercial ties to the company that manufactures said bioreactors, a conflict of interest not declared in the paper.
As one hardy Retraction Watch reader quipped: “Any decent researcher would have dived into the pit to save his work.”
Monkey business
YOU may not know the name Naruto, but you’ll almost certainly have seen his work. The macaque monkey caused a storm when he snapped a now-famous using photographer David Slater’s camera.
The twist came when the US Copyright Office ruled that Slater could not claim ownership of the image because he hadn’t taken it. Spying an opportunity, animal rights group PETA filed a lawsuit to have Naruto declared as author of the work and to administrate any profits from it on his behalf, that the monkey “cannot independently bring this action due to inaccessibility and incapacity”.
However, San Francisco judge William Orrick dismissed the claim earlier this month, on the basis that animals were . So now we know – although a room of monkeys chained to typewriters may eventually produce the collected works of Shakespeare, the furry little bards will never see a penny in royalties.
A spin of the wheel
ANY chance to wheel out another example of nominative determinism: our colleague spotted a paper in the journal Psychological Science: “Bicycle helmet wearing can increase risk taking and sensation seeking in adults”, by one .
Element of rock
HEAVY metal fans are to name one of four new superheavy elements added to the periodic table after Motörhead frontman Lemmy, who died in December.
However, , laid down by the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry, make it doubtful that scientists will be forging lemmium in their laboratories any time soon.
Ken Durose, a physicist at the University of Liverpool, UK, and ardent Motörhead fan, reporters: “the problem is that elements have to be named after either their properties, a myth, a mineral, a place or a scientist.”
This would seem to exclude music legends. Yet canny fans may have found a loophole – by christening an astronomical object Lemmy, the name can then be used without contravening IUPAC rules.
Will the hard-living rock star be immortalised on the periodic table? Watch this space.
Protective pants
PREVIOUSLY, Feedback revealed that tinfoil hats were being given a makeover by start-up Shield (9 January). We subsequently discover “E-smog panties” from , silver lamé undergarments that promise “99% effective shielding against electromagnetic fields for everyday protection”.
The range also includes trousers, a bra and a long sleeved top all made from the same metalled material, granting you not only the style sensibilities of a comic book superhero, but the power to repel electromagnetic fields, sunlight and most likely, other people.
Flat-packed town

A CHANGE in perspective: Anthony Richardson reports news that Telford town centre’s shopping malls are getting an exciting revamp. A glossy brochure informs him that the buildings will be “dramatically transformed and given a 3D look”.
Anthony says: “That’ll be handy for all those citizens of Telford who have had to manage with a 2D building up to now.”