Archive for September, 2008

Stan’s Cafe Theatre Company: Of All The People In All The World

I stumbled on to this via an item in Tom Hoffman’s Google Reader Shared Items list. I’m finding Shared Items to be one of my best sources of interesting items found on the web.

Of All The People In All The World (UK) uses grains of rice to bring formally abstract statisitcs to startling and powerful life.

Each grain of rice = one person and you are invited to compare the one grain that is you to the millions that are not.
Over a period of days a team of performers carefully weigh out quantities of rice to represent a host of human statistics

- the populations of towns and cities
- the number of doctors, the number of soldiers
- the number of people born each day, the number who die
- all the people who have walked on the moon
- deaths in the holocaust.

The statistics are arranged in labelled piles creating an ever changing landscape of rice. The statistics and their juxtapositions can be moving, shocking, celebratory, witty and thought provoking.
[From Stan's Cafe Theatre Company: Of All The People In All The World]

Cross Country at Overlook Park

Portland Parks offers a series of Cross Country meets for elementary and middle school students at Overlook Park. My nephew is coaching my son and some others from his school…

Shared item: September 21, 2008, 10:00 am from 10:00 to 10:00

These are my links for September 21, 2008, 10:00 am from 10:00 to 10:00:

Shared item: September 15, 2008, 7:59 am from 07:59 to 07:59

These are my links for September 15, 2008, 7:59 am from 07:59 to 07:59:

Shared item: September 13, 2008, 7:46 am from 07:46 to 07:46

These are my links for September 13, 2008, 7:46 am from 07:46 to 07:46:

Shared item: September 7, 2008, 8:10 am from 08:10 to 08:10

These are my links for September 7, 2008, 8:10 am from 08:10 to 08:10:

Erin McKean: Redefining the dictionary

In this Ted talk from March, 2007, Erin McKean, editor in chief of the Oxford American Dictionary, looks at the dictionary, and discusses how technology could change how it is used and what it becomes…