South Korean Archery Training

Friday, August 3rd, 2012

South Korea dominates archery — despite its recent Olympic team performance — and relies on some unusual training methods:

Earlier this month, South Korea’s six Olympic archers held their final training session at a military base in Wonju, 71 miles east of Seoul. It was configured to look like the site where they will be competing this weekend.

Around 700 soldiers shouted, chanted and even booed during each shot as the archers competed under the tournament rules they will face in London.

“We thought soldiers would be more boisterous and distracting for the archers,” said Ban Mi-hye, a spokeswoman for Korea Archery Association.

[...]

In the buildup to London, the Korean archers have visited cemeteries late at night, undergone fitness training with Special Forces soldiers and conducted “wind-fighting” archery practice on Jeju Island, a windblown tourist island that gets some of the country’s most extreme weather.

The archers also spent a night on patrol at the Demilitarized Zone, the heavily fortified border between South and North Korea. “The exercise itself wasn’t very hard, but it made me mentally more mature by watching other soldiers working hard in harsh conditions,” said Im Dong-hyun, who set the men’s Olympic record score at the 2004 Athens Games and will be competing for the third time in London.

Then there was a six-hour walk along Seoul’s Han River during a winter night when the temperature was minus-4 degrees Fahrenheit. Twenty-one archers endured that drill, held months before the Korean team was narrowed to the six athletes who traveled to London.

Those training sessions are aimed at enhancing concentration, preparing for distractions and building a fighting spirit.

To remind the archers that they mustn’t settle for less than perfection, the country’s archery team since the 1990s has been using a cutout that features only the two most inner sections of an archery target—nine and 10 points—during training.

The team’s record suggests the extreme training works. South Korea’s female archers have won the last six Olympic team gold medals. The men’s team has won the last three.

The Police Tapes

Friday, August 3rd, 2012

Alan and Susan Raymond shot The Police Tapes in 1976 with one of the first video cameras:

Alan: We used these early video recorders that started coming to America from Japan. The earliest was the PortaPak. I believe Nam June Paik brought over the original deck from Japan that we used for the film. It was held together with gaffer tape. When we started testing it, we realized it didn’t even work in the daytime. We got this really weird image where the green foliage of the trees turned white. So, we had to figure out something we could do at night. Something like a film noir, nighttime show.

Susan: Alan decided that we would make a police film because it was a genre staple of television, and the only representation of police on television was Barney Miller, which was a really stupid sitcom.

After hitting the Blue Wall of Silence, they got their break:

Alan: No one wanted to be in the film. So, we just stood around for two weeks. Even my high school friend didn’t want to go on camera.

Susan: There was an officer who was trying out a one-man car. It was something nobody in the precinct would do because it was way too dangerous. We knew there would be room for us, so the sergeant asked if he’d take us out and he did. We went out for a whole evening with this officer and nothing happened until the very last minute. He saw a guy stealing a car. He arrested the guy and threw him in the back of the car with us. The guy started getting violent and we got kicked in the head.

Alan: The officer had to knock him out with his flashlight. That was our baptism of fire.

Susan: When the officers found out, we had to fill out a report and naturally we said that the heroic officer saved our lives.

The movie influenced Hill Street Blues, which copied the morning roll call scene’s style, using handheld cameras.

Color May Be More Than Skin Deep

Thursday, August 2nd, 2012

Pigmentation varies greatly across and within species — and color may be more than skin deep:

In 2008, Anne-Lyse Ducrest, Laurent Keller and Alexandre Roulin, three ecologists at Switzerland’s University of Lucerne published a review article in Trends in Ecology and Evolution [Pleiotropy in the melanocortin system, coloration and behavioral syndromes [4] September 2008] on the relations between pigmentation, sexuality, and aggression in 45 vertebrate species. They found that darker-colored individuals had higher levels of aggression and sexuality than lighter colored individuals across three species of mammals (African lion, soay sheep, [5] and white-tailed deer), four species of fish (mosquito fish, guppy, green swordtail, and Arctic char), four species of reptiles (asp viper, adder, fence lizard, and spiny lizard), one amphibian species (spadefoot toad), and 36 species of birds.

Ducrest and her co-authors’ explanation: increased levels of melanocortin hormones, which determine coloring, are linked with increased testosterone and other steroids that stimulate aggression and sexuality, among other things.

To test this, Ducrest & Co. experimentally varied melanocortin dosage levels. They found concomitant increases (or decreases) in aggression and sexuality.

They also carried out cross-fostering studies, placing darker and lighter offspring with adoptive parents of the opposite pigmentation. Cross-fostering did not alter the offspring’s coloring or behavior. Male lions with darker manes remained more aggressive and sexually active than those with lighter manes. Darker feathered barn owls continued to have a stronger immune response to stress (another linked phenomenon) than lighter feathered barn owls [6].

It was the biological, not the adopting, parent that determined both the offspring’s coloration and its behavior.

This link between coloring and behavior has been confirmed in many other species — even tortoises [7]. In Russia, a 40-year-study [8] bred for tameness in silver foxes and found that lightness coincidentally emerged. After 40 years, the selected foxes [9] were as tame and eager to please as domestic dogs [10] — and the dark coat colors originally evolved as camouflage in the wild had been replaced by piebald. (Piebald coats are often seen among domestic animals — in dogs, cats, sheep, donkeys, horses, pigs, goats, mice, and cattle).

Similarly, selecting for tameness over 30 generations of Norway rats [11] caused the proportion of piebald rats to increase rapidly until over 70% had white bellies and about 50% had white feet and ankles — “socks.”

Dogs, too [12], show a relationship between coat color and behavior — and dog lovers have figured it out. Shelters have a harder time getting black dogs adopted. [13]

Sir John Keegan

Thursday, August 2nd, 2012

Military historian Sir John Keegan, born May 15 1934, died August 2 2012:

The family’s return to down-at-heel post-war London, where he was sent to the Jesuit-run Wimbledon College, was not a happy experience. In 1947 tuberculosis began to affect one hip. He was placed in an open-air ward of a hospital in Surrey, where the young patients had to wear pullovers and mittens in the worst winter of the century during the day, and were provided with the protection of flapping canvas screens lowered around them at night. He was allowed home after eight months.

The hip grew worse again, and he found himself taken back to hospital, encased in a plaster corset. This time he was not among children, but cheerful cockney veterans in a men’s ward of St Thomas’s, near Westminster Bridge. The Anglican chaplain taught him Greek; a polio victim coached him in French; and, thanks to a well-stocked library, Johnnie, as he was known there, was able to read much history and almost the entire works of Thomas Hardy.

On emerging from hospital two years later, his hip immobilised with a bone graft, Keegan won a place to read History at Oxford. But on going up to Balliol he developed TB again, and was away for another year while being treated with new drugs. He then returned, walking with a stick, to find himself among a highly talented intake, which included the future Lord Chief Justice Lord Bingham, Northern Ireland Secretaries Patrick Mayhew and Peter Brooke, historian Keith Thomas, the Benedictine monk Daniel Rees, and the Prince of Wales’s Australian schoolmaster Michael Collins Persse.

Keegan was tutored in the Middle Ages by Richard Southern and in the 17th century by the Marxist Christopher Hill. Although there was no chance of a military career, he observed the confidence of those who had done National Service and decided to take “Military History and the Theory of War” as a special subject.

After a long tour of the battlefields of the American Civil War with his future brother-in-law Maurice Keen, the medieval historian, he returned home to find work writing political reports for the American embassy in London for two years, then obtained a post as a lecturer at the Royal Military Academy, Sandhurst. It was Keegan’s first proper job.

We Are Not All Created Equal

Thursday, August 2nd, 2012

Combat-experienced Marine Captain Katie Petronio shockingly concludes that we are not all created equal, and placing women in the infantry will not improve the Marine Corps’ ability to fight:

As a young lieutenant, I fit the mold of a female who would have had a shot at completing IOC, and I am sure there was a time in my life where I would have volunteered to be an infantryman. I was a star ice hockey player at Bowdoin College, a small elite college in Maine, with a major in government and law. At 5 feet 3 inches I was squatting 200 pounds and benching 145 pounds when I graduated in 2007. I completed Officer Candidates School (OCS) ranked 4 of 52 candidates, graduated 48 of 261 from TBS, and finished second at MOS school. I also repeatedly scored far above average in all female-based physical fitness tests (for example, earning a 292 out of 300 on the Marine physical fitness test). Five years later, I am physically not the woman I once was and my views have greatly changed on the possibility of women having successful long careers while serving in the infantry. I can say from firsthand experience in Iraq and Afghanistan, and not just emotion, that we haven’t even begun to analyze and comprehend the gender-specific medical issues and overall physical toll continuous combat operations will have on females.

I was a motivated, resilient second lieutenant when I deployed to Iraq for 10 months, traveling across the Marine area of operations (AO) and participating in numerous combat operations. Yet, due to the excessive amount of time I spent in full combat load, I was diagnosed with a severe case of restless leg syndrome. My spine had compressed on nerves in my lower back causing neuropathy which compounded the symptoms of restless leg syndrome. While this injury has certainly not been enjoyable, Iraq was a pleasant experience compared to the experiences I endured during my deployment to Afghanistan. At the beginning of my tour in Helmand Province, I was physically capable of conducting combat operations for weeks at a time, remaining in my gear for days if necessary and averaging 16-hour days of engineering operations in the heart of Sangin, one of the most kinetic and challenging AOs in the country. There were numerous occasions where I was sent to a grid coordinate and told to build a PB from the ground up, serving not only as the mission commander but also the base commander until the occupants (infantry units) arrived 5 days later. In most of these situations, I had a sergeant as my assistant commander, and the remainder of my platoon consisted of young, motivated NCOs. I was the senior Marine making the final decisions on construction concerns, along with 24-hour base defense and leading 30 Marines at any given time. The physical strain of enduring combat operations and the stress of being responsible for the lives and well-being of such a young group in an extremely kinetic environment were compounded by lack of sleep, which ultimately took a physical toll on my body that I couldn’t have foreseen.

By the fifth month into the deployment, I had muscle atrophy in my thighs that was causing me to constantly trip and my legs to buckle with the slightest grade change. My agility during firefights and mobility on and off vehicles and perimeter walls was seriously hindering my response time and overall capability. It was evident that stress and muscular deterioration was affecting everyone regardless of gender; however, the rate of my deterioration was noticeably faster than that of male Marines and further compounded by gender-specific medical conditions. At the end of the 7-month deployment, and the construction of 18 PBs later, I had lost 17 pounds and was diagnosed with polycystic ovarian syndrome (which personally resulted in infertility, but is not a genetic trend in my family), which was brought on by the chemical and physical changes endured during deployment. Regardless of my deteriorating physical stature, I was extremely successful during both of my combat tours, serving beside my infantry brethren and gaining the respect of every unit I supported. Regardless, I can say with 100 percent assurance that despite my accomplishments, there is no way I could endure the physical demands of the infantrymen whom I worked beside as their combat load and constant deployment cycle would leave me facing medical separation long before the option of retirement. I understand that everyone is affected differently; however, I am confident that should the Marine Corps attempt to fully integrate women into the infantry, we as an institution are going to experience a colossal increase in crippling and career-ending medical conditions for females.

There is a drastic shortage of historical data on female attrition or medical ailments of women who have executed sustained combat operations. This said, we need only to review the statistics from our entry-level schools to realize that there is a significant difference in the physical longevity between male and female Marines. At OCS the attrition rate for female candidates in 2011 was historically low at 40 percent, while the male candidates attrite at a much lower rate of 16 percent. Of candidates who were dropped from training because they were injured or not physically qualified, females were breaking at a much higher rate than males, 14 percent versus 4 percent. The same trends were seen at TBS in 2011; the attrition rate for females was 13 percent versus 5 percent for males, and 5 percent of females were found not physically qualified compared with 1 percent of males. Further, both of these training venues have physical fitness standards that are easier for females; at IOC there is one standard regardless of gender. The attrition rate for males attending IOC in 2011 was 17 percent. Should female Marines ultimately attend IOC, we can expect significantly higher attrition rates and long-term injuries for women.

There have been many working groups and formal discussions recently addressing what changes would be necessary to the current IOC period of instruction in order to accommodate both genders without producing an underdeveloped or incapable infantry officer. Not once was the word “lower” used, but let’s be honest, “modifying” a standard so that less physically or mentally capable individuals (male or female) can complete a task is called “lowering the standard”! The bottom line is that the enemy doesn’t discriminate, rounds will not slow down, and combat loads don’t get any lighter, regardless of gender or capability. Even more so, the burden of command does not diminish for a male or female; a leader must gain the respect and trust of his/her Marines in combat. Not being able to physically execute to the standards already established at IOC, which have been battle tested and proven, will produce a slower operational speed and tempo resulting in increased time of exposure to enemy forces and a higher risk of combat injury or death. For this reason alone, I would ask everyone to step back and ask themselves, does this integration solely benefit the individual or the Marine Corps as a whole, as every leader’s focus should be on the needs of the institution and the Nation, not the individual?

Which leads one to really wonder, what is the benefit of this potential change? The Marine Corps is not in a shortage of willing and capable young male second lieutenants who would gladly take on the role of infantry officers. In fact we have men fighting to be assigned to the coveted position of 0302. In 2011, 30 percent of graduating TBS lieutenants listed infantry in their top three requested MOSs. Of those 30 percent, only 47 percent were given the MOS.

Steeplechase

Wednesday, August 1st, 2012

The steeplechase is a wonderful example of how all the interesting variation in a sport gets refined away over time:

The event originated in the British Isles. Runners raced from one town’s steeple to the next. The steeples were used as markers due to their visibility over long distances. Along the way runners inevitably had to jump streams and low stone walls separating estates. The modern athletics event originates from a two-mile (3.2 km) cross country steeplechase that formed part of the Oxford University sports (in which many of the modern athletics events were founded) in 1860.

It was replaced in 1865 by an event over barriers on a flat field, which became the modern steeplechase. It has been an Olympic event since the inception of the modern Olympics, though with varying lengths.

Asia First

Wednesday, August 1st, 2012

When the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor, one might have naively assumed that the US would pursue an Asia First strategy:

In Not Without Honor: The History of American Anti-Communism, Richard Powers examines Roosevelt’s Europe First policy and those advocating an Asia First strategy. Anti-communists were the strongest advocates of an Asia First strategy, according to Powers, not because they were hot to revenge Pearl Harbor, but because they believed a Europe First strategy would benefit Stalin more than the United States. Catholic anti-communists were particularly well represented among Asia Firsters. A Milwaukee diocesan paper insisted that “our first duty is to this country and its own fronts, to Guadalcanal before Stalingrad.” Another Catholic paper complained that if supplies sent to England under Lend-Lease had been shipped to the Pacific, they might have prevented American defeats. Still other Catholics suspected that the Europe First strategy amounted to a betrayal of the anti-communist Chiang Kai-shek, forcing him to fight both the Japanese and the Red Chinese without sufficient American aid or reinforcements.

Because of their visceral anti-communism and their concern for the Catholic populations of Eastern Europe, American Catholics were the most outspoken critics of the American-Soviet alliance. The bishops and the Catholic press would not fall in line with the Roosevelt administration’s policy of praising Stalin for the duration, although the Catholic hierarchy did bend to pressure from the president to silence Father Coughlin, “the radio priest.”

The American Catholic leadership insisted on calling attention to Soviet duplicity and crimes in eastern Europe and asserted repeatedly that the triumph of the Red Army would doom the peoples of eastern Europe to a dark age of misery, despair and death.

The Soviet propaganda machine counter-attacked by manufacturing and spreading disinformation to the effect that the Catholic Church was in league with the Nazis and Fascists to exterminate the Jews. Isvestia published numerous articles alleging the Catholics and Fascists/Nazis had been in league since 1929 (the year of the Vatican’s concordat with Mussolini).

Sen. Albert Chandler was the leader of the Asia First bloc in the senate that believed the longer the American invasion of Europe was delayed, the better. The longer the invasion was put off, they reasoned, the more losses Russia would suffer. They also feared that if the United States helped the Soviets defeat Germany before the war in the Pacific was over, the S.U. would be able to have its way in Europe while the U.S. was focusing on Japan. Sen. Burton Wheeler asserted the U.S. should finish off Japan first, then “we would be in a much better position to deal with Russia when we come to the peace table, and to protect Poland.”

Asia Firsters, outraged that Stalin honored the Russo-Japanese neutality pact, and negotiated economic treaties with Japan during the war, including a fishing treaty in mid-1943, believed Stalin might well be trans-shipping U.S. aid meant for Russia to Japan, and if not to Japan, then to Red Chinese forces.

Sen. Styles Bridges demanded that Roosevelt delay the invasion of Europe until Poland’s postwar freedom was guaranteed by treaty with the Soviets. Sen. Hamilton Fish noted in late 1944 that the country “on whose behalf World War Two was started is now about to be turned over to the Communists in utter disregard of its terrible sacrifices in fighting the Nazis and the pledges given to the Polish people by the allies.”

The Hearst newspapers kept up a drumbeat of warnings that aid to the Soviet war machine was a fundamental error. The New York Daily Mirror dubbed the Teheran conference a “Red Munich.” The San Francisco Examiner predicted in 1943 that Stalin would “install in every country in Europe a Red Regime, which means concentration camps, massacres and a continuous reign of terror.”

For these comments in his papers, Hearst was labeled “Hitler’s helper” and the “American Goebbels.” by the New Republic and the New York Times, which called for the Alien and Sedition laws be used to silence Hearst, and possibly jail him. Roosevelt himself said the war “must not be impeded by propagandists in Tokyo and Berlin.” He pressured Attorney General Francis Biddle into assigning a special prosecutor, William Maloney, into investigating alleged links between Asia First proponents and German intelligence. Maloney shortly leaked hints that he was going to indict Hamilton Fish and Congressman Clare Hoffman, two outspoken critics of Roosevelt’s pro-Soviet (as they saw it) policy of Europe First. No indictments were, in fact, ever issued against them, although a couple of dozen other Asia Firsters as well as isolotionist and pacifist opponents of the war were placed on trial for sedition in 1944.

Defendents appealed to the ACLU for help, but ACLU chief counsel Morris Ernst asserted, before any convictions were handed down, that the defendants were guilty of treason in wartime and deserved what they were getting.

The trial was as big in its day as the O.J. Simpson trial or that of the Chicago Seven in the 1960s. One of those accused, an anarchist-pacifist named Lawrence Dennis, claimed that the trial was an attempt to force the public to see all mankind as divided into two camps, fascists and anti-fascists, and to permit those in power to determine who would be included in each group.

The trial degenerated into farce as it became clear that some of the defendants, rather than being cunning tools of Nazi interests, were merely eccentrics or simply held strong opinions about international affairs. It didn’t help the government’s cause that the chief prosecuter was a man named Vyshinsky Rogge, which led to half-serious claims the trial was being directed from Moscow. On Dec. 7, 1944, during one particularly vehement yelling match between porsecutor and defendants, the judge dropped dead of a heart attack and a mistrial was declared. The government continued to hound the defendents for several more years before dropping the case in 1947.

This Asia First-Europe First argument was no simple matter of war strategy, but invoked intense passion in its day.

It’s interesting to note that to the Asia Firsters, Nazism and Japanese militarism were seen as secondary to the real danger, Soviet Communism. They had no doubt Germany and Japan would be defeated one way or the other, sooner or later, but they seemed to truly fear that the West might not be able to defeat Soviet Russia.

UCI professor threatened mass murder at late son’s high school

Wednesday, August 1st, 2012

A UC Irvine pharmaceutical science professor, grieving over the suicide of his teenage son, wrote emails about committing mass murder at University High School:

“We did take these emails very seriously,” said Farrah Emami, spokeswoman for the Orange County district attorney’s office.

It began July 24, when police arrested Rainer Reinscheid, 48, on charges of trying to light a fire in Mason Park Preserve with newspaper and lighter fluid. It was not far from the wooded spot where his 14-year-old son, Claas Stubbe, had hanged himself four months earlier.

Reinscheid, who teaches in the department of pharmaceutical science, posted bail and was released that day.

But when police examined his cellphone three days later, they found something they described as much more sinister.

In the emails, Reinscheid had allegedly planned to obtain firearms to kill students and administrators, commit sexual assault, burn down the school and then kill himself, officials said.

The professor was arrested again and is now being held, at the request of prosecutors, without bail.