Blue Jerseys

As most of you know, here in these pages I do my best to stay out of the culture wars. Likewise, when March Madness rolls around, I do my best not to take sides in family disputes. That’s no easy task this year when UNC plays Duke in what could be Coach K’s last game. And when your cousin and your niece are both Tarheel alums, while beloved Deacon Sally was the world’s most rabid Blue Devil fan. (You can read that post, here.) And your old basketball mentor thinks ‘Nova coach Jay Wright walks on water… Well, any way you slice it, it’s gonna be a match-up of blue bloods in blue jerseys. And somebody’s gonna go home disappointed.

I will admit that I – along with my good buddy Jeff – picked Kansas to win it all this year. So the tiebreaker in our head-to-head bracket competition comes down to the final score of the championship game on Monday night. Jeff: 78-75.  Me: 84-79. (Go Jayhawks!) For an intriguing summary of the teams, the coaches, the players, and the match-ups, see Mike Lopresti’s fine ncaa.com piece, here. And just in case you were wondering about his bona fides, they are hilariously listed at the end of the article as follows:

 

Mike Lopresti is a member of the US Basketball Writers Hall of Fame, the Ball State journalism Hall of Fame, and the Indiana Sportswriters and Sportscasters Hall of Fame. He has covered college basketball for 43 years, including 39 Final Fours. He is so old he covered Bob Knight when he had dark hair, and basketball shorts were actually short.

 

Blue Jersey - Nova

Blue Jersey - Jayhawks

Blue Jersey - Duke

Blue Jersey - UNC

 

May the best team with blue jerseys win.

(Go Jayhawks!)

Cowboy Joe

There’s a little hole-in-the-wall we visited yesterday on the main drag of Elko, Nevada. It’s called Cowboy Joe and we highly recommend it for all your early morning caffeine and carb needs. Well, if you’re into that sort of thing and as long as you’re in the area. Then, there’s this review from Yelp, which we found completely accurate as well as utterly hilarious.

 

Cowboy Joe
Spot-on, in my recent latte experience.

 

From the Cowboy Joe website:

 

Cowboy Poetry
All this Joe and poetry too.

 

What more do you need, Cowboy?

An earlier (2019) post about an alternate route across NV is here.

Can’t promise you a latte, but as lonely roads go, it’s unparalleled.

Archbishop of Canterbury

Today’s WOTD is “hubris.” Defined by Merriam Webster as “exaggerated pride or self-confidence,” it derives from the Greek meaning that particular brand of cockiness that’s both a dangerous character flaw and the human trait most likely to provoke the wrath of the gods. The word always makes me think of this quote from Rowan Williams, former Archbishop of Canterbury.

 

 

The Archbishop of Canterbury
Rowan Williams, theologian and 104th Archbishop of Canterbury.

Whatever the limits of his tonsorial splendor, Williams always exhibited a sentiment quite the opposite of hubris. It’s one of the things that made him beloved by gods and humans alike. (I guess if you’re only one of 104, maybe it’s easier to stay humble? Could be, could be…)

Stay humble, friends. Be like Rowan.

See post from 2019, here.

(The best wisdom is recycled wisdom.)

And Happy Lent, y’all!

Cannibalism Versus…

Today’s WOTD is “dichotomy.” Merriam Webster tells us this means a division into two mutually exclusive, contradictory options.  Dichotomies are often overly simplistic, usually misleading, and sometimes blatantly false. (Notice, three options rather than two, thus expertly skirting the potential for a false dichotomy.)  Examples might include the ever-popular “Struggle of Good versus Evil.” (What, no Gray Area? And why are we Capitalizing Everything, fercryinoutloud?).  Plus, my personal favorite: “Please answer ‘yes’ or ‘no:’ Have you stopped beating your wife?” (Sorry, #MeToo fans: I haven’t. I mean, I have. I mean… well, you know what I mean!)  Then of course there’s the latest from Randall Munroe, perfectly illustrating the point, which pits cannibalism versus…  (yep, you guessed it) false dichotomies.

 

Cannibalism Versus...
More to tickle your cannibalism versus false dichotomy fancy at xkcd.com

 

Oops Too Late

Know what I love most about today, 3/14, AKA Pi Day? Other than that it’s a chance for math nerds to get a little bit math nerdy? It’s one holiday Hallmark hasn’t sunk its teeth into yet… oops, too late. Ah well. Happy Pi Day anyway.

 

Oops Too Late
Hallmark, co-opting your holidays since 1910.

 

For a more in-depth treatment of this hallowed irrational number day,

see the 2019 post, here.

Goats and More

Sometimes you do stuff not because you have to, but because you can. Like today, a relatively chilly Saturday by West Sac standards, I got up early and walked the levee. There was a construction guy in a hard hat over by The Rivers who saw me  – there’s a ton of construction going on over there and I was the only one out walking at that hour – and he said to me, “Nice crisp morning for a walk.”  “Yup, sure is,” I replied. Was he being sarcastic, or friendly? Either way, I don’t mind:  It’s all good by me.

I got to see the return of the goats over by the Broderick boat ramp. The goats are in the midst of their annual visit to the neighborhood eating weeds (and, truth be told, also eating garbage) along the riverbank. What’s  more, I got to see the trees – ornamental cherries, I think – going bonkers. That always surprises me a little, such extravagance this early in the year. And then I made the pilgrimage over to Farmers Market in Midtown where I bought myself a woven African basket to carry home overpriced meats and fresh produce: Not because I had to, but because I can.

 

Goats and More - African Basket
Fair Trade African Market basket from Ghana.
Boots on the ground: Let’s walk!
Trees going bonkers early in the season.
Goats and More
Goats doing what goats do best.

 

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Not to worry: It hasn’t rained since Christmas so the water level is unusually low this year.

 

Goats and More - Vanity Plate
Love this particular vanity plate which I always see on my walks.
Reconstruction proceeds on the place behind us that caught fire.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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And now, not because I have to but because I can: Some shots from the olden days of the girls and of Darwin – each of whom I still love, inordinately.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Goats and More - Where's My Bike?
Last but not least, this one, which I find hilarious – apropos of nothing – just because I can.

 

Cocoa Puffs

It has been a while since a science story caught my eye. But here’s one that should at least catch your nose. It’s titled “How the Coronavirus Steals the Sense of Smell,” and it’s brought to us by a host of medical researchers from across the country: Columbia, NYU, and Mount Sinai in New York; Baylor in Texas; and UC Davis in California. Normally I’d just provide you with a link, which you’d ignore. But in this case I’m reprinting the bulk of the article below so you can at least pretend to have read it. Oh, and in case you care, the link to the story is here.

 

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Few of COVID-19’s peculiarities have piqued as much interest as the abrupt loss of smell that has become a well-known hallmark of the disease. COVID patients lose this sense even without a stuffy nose.  The loss can make food taste like cardboard and coffee smell noxious. Occasionally it persists after other symptoms have resolved. Scientists are beginning to unravel the biological mechanisms of this process which until now have been something of a mystery.  Neurons that detect odors lack receptors that the coronavirus uses to enter cells, and this has prompted a debate about whether they can be infected at all…

The new work settles the debate over whether the coronavirus infects nerve cells that detect odors: It does not. But the virus does attack other supporting cells lining the nasal cavity.  Infected cells shed virus and die, while immune cells flood the region to fight the virus. Subsequent inflammation wreaks havoc on smell receptors on the nerve cells’ surface that detect and transmit information about odors. The process alters the sophisticated organization of genes in those neurons, essentially short-circuiting them.

This research significantly advances the understanding of how cells critical to the sense of smell are affected by this virus despite the fact that they are not directly infected. Indeed, many complications of COVID appear to be caused by the immune system’s friendly fire as it responds to infection, flooding the bloodstream with inflammatory proteins which can damage tissue and organs.

 

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Scientists examined golden hamsters and human tissue specimens from patients who succumbed to COVID. After the hamsters were infected with the original human coronavirus, scientists tracked damage to their olfactory systems over time. (How do you know a golden hamster has lost its sense of smell? You don’t feed it for several hours, then bury Cocoa Puffs in its bedding. Hamsters that can smell will find the cereal in seconds.)

The virus did not invade neurons, only cells that play supporting roles in the olfactory system. But that was enough to alter the function of nearby neurons, leading to a loss of smell. The immune response altered the architecture of genes in the neurons, disrupting production of odor receptors. The ability of the olfactory receptors to send and receive messages is altered, but the neurons don’t die. So the system can recover after the illness resolves.

Neurons that detect smells have complex genomic organizational structures that are essential to the creation of odor receptors. The receptor genes communicate among themselves intensively: There’s a signal released from the infected cells that’s received by the neurons that normally detect odors which tells them to reorganize and stop expression of olfactory receptor genes. This may represent an evolutionary adaptation that offers a form of antiviral resistance whose main purpose may be to prevent the virus from entering the brain. “That was a relief for us,” one of the paper’s authors commented. “It’s one piece of good news.”

 

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So now you know the answer to the question: “What role is played by Cocoa Puffs in olfactory research?” Make sure to write it down because I’m pretty sure it’s gonna be on the midterm.

 

Cocoa Puffs
Would Cap’n Crunch work too?