Category Archives: Balkans

Brotherhood and Unity

Stronger together. Should have thought of that back in 1991. But, perhaps it’s not too late

Some very old beer…

Via Snarkmarket, I found this (probably incomplete) Wikipedia list of the oldest companies in the world that are still operating today under the same name. The oldest one, a construction company in Japan called Kongō Gumi, just went belly-up after serving their customers since the year 578AD.
And according to a commenter there, the oldest University in continuous operation is University of Al Karaouine in Fes, Morocco.
The oldest company on the list from the Balkans is Apatinska Pivara which has been brewing beer continuously since 1756. They produce one of the most popular local beers, the Jelen Pivo (although, both in the region and for emigrants like me, the champion is Montenegro’s Niksicko Pivo, both the pilsner and the stout).
WWII and the subsequent nationalization of all sorts of businesses makes it unlikely that many old companies continued under the same name afterwards, but I cannot believe that only one beer brewery made the list. Anyone here from the Balkans can think of (and verify) some other companies with a long tradition?

Ha!

3291_Marija_Serifovic.jpgAfter all those years that I actually cared about this, now that I don’t any more Serbia finally won the Eurovision contest!

The Work-Place, or, Catching a Catfish Online

I will be offline for a couple of days so I will not be able to post at my usual frantic pace. Instead, I decided to write something that will take you a couple of days to read through: a very long, meandering post, full of personal anecdotes. But there is a common theme throughout and I hope you see where I’m going with it and what conclusions I want you to draw from it.
Pigeons, crows, rats and cockroaches
I was born and grew up in a big, dirty city and I am not going back (my ex-Yugoslav readers have probably already recognized the reference to the good old song Back to the Big, Dirty City by my namesake Bora Djordjevic of the uber-popular Fish Soup band). I spent the first 25 years of my life in Belgrade, population 2 million. No, I did not feel uncomfortable there. I knew every nook and cranny of the city. I walked around town most of the time, even if that meant two hours at a brisk pace in the middle of the night from the northernmost part of Zemun all the way home south of center.
And I still think that it is a great city – a wild mosaic of architecture from Roman and Ottoman times, through the Austro-Hungarian time, the pre-WWII Serbian and early Yugoslav kingdom era and the Tito communist period, to the Milosevic decade and Wes Clark’s enriched uranium. Steeped in history, yet not trying to live in it. Some cities try to keep looking the same the way they did a century or two ago when they were at the hight of their influence. Stratford-upon-Avon keeps trying to look as if Shakespeare is still living there. Not Belgrade. Far too confident in its 11 centuries of history to care about anything but youth and future. It can be dizzying walking around – there may be an old mosque from the times of Turkish occupation embedded into the remains of the Roman fortress, looking down the street of houses built in Austro-Hungarian style in one direction, in soc-realist style in another direction and overlooked by a huge green-glass modern hotel. There is great art and the ugliest kitch standing side-by-side, European hyper-intellectuals walking side-by-side with peasants, bookstores sinking under the weight of philosophy books and Gypsies collecting scrap metal – and all equally poor.
But it hurts one’s throat to arrive in Belgrade (at least it did in 1995, the last time I went to visit, when my father was still alive). Clean air is not the first priority when the retirees are waiting for months to get their pensions. That is why I escaped whenever I could – summers in our small weekend house at the base of the Mt.Avala just about 20 minutes south of Belgrade when I was a little kid, a couple of weeks at the Adriatic coast every summer when I was little before that became too expensive, teenage years spent on the Danube river in Eastern Serbia in the village my father grew up in, and many years, day after day, at the Belgrade racecourse and the surrounding woods.
~.~.~.~.~.~
Back in 1989 or so, the rats at the racecourse got really numerous and big. Ten-pounders, some of them, I bet. They were not afraid to walk around in the middle of the day. They chased, caught, killed and ate our barn cats. Our terriers were afraid to approach the feed-rooms. We forbade the kids from going to get horse feed. Even we adults banged on the doors before going in. But gradually, we moved all the grain into bins and barrells, plugged all holes, reinforced the walls, and kept the floors as clean as possible. There was just not enough food around any more to sustain such a huge population. As it always goes, after a boom, there is a bust. The rat population collapsed and dissappeared as suddenly as it initially appeared.
~.~.~.~.~.~
I grew up in a small appartment on the 7th floor. My school (K-12) was a walking distance from home. I took a bus to school anyway, being an owl and a late riser, but I had plenty of time to walk home after classes and stop by various food establishments, or parks, or the Natural History Museum, or the library, or stealing cherries and appricots from trees along the route…

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This is someone you WANT to hire!

Tatjana Jovanovic is a fellow escapee from Serbia and a fellow biologist. She got her MS in Biology at the University of Belgrade and has collected enough data before emigrating to be able to immediately get a PhD if someone would sponsor her here. She is currently in Arizona, but she is moving to North Carolina later this year. She will send you her impressive CV on demand – her publications range from immunology to pest control, but most of it is focused on small rodents, their avian predators and the dynamics of predator-prey relationships. She has combined lab and field work, from biochemistry through mathematical modelling to field experiements, in most of her papers and has made discoveries of small mammals not previously known to reside in that part of the world.
Tatjana particularly likes owls (a subject of several of her papers), she has performed the Serbian portion of the research for the Global Owl Project and is active on The Owl Pages.
She is also an artist and has acted as a mentor for several high-school and undergraduate theses in biology (yes, we do simple research and write theses on topics related to our majors in high school in Serbia). Science education is one of her strengths and passions. Environmental protection is another.
If you are in North Carolina and have a place for a hard-working, honest, smart, highly-educated and well-rounded person in your lab, school, organization or company, contact Tanja at: tanjasova AT gmail DOT com

My Serbian readers will die laughing when they read this….

A guy ‘jebo jeza’, ahem, literally fucked a hedgehog in Serbia and ended up in the ER. Do kids there these days don’t even know their slang? ‘Jebo jeza’ means something along the lines of ‘being in big trouble’ or ‘having everything go wrong for you’. This guy accomplished that for himself, I guess….unless this is, as is likely, an urban legend.

Kryptonite discovered in Serbia!

Oh, that explains it why Superman did not intervene in the recent Balkan wars!

For my Orthodox Readers

Easter.JPG
Yes, the Orthodox and Catholic Easter fall on the same day this year.

Bosnian Pyramid Update

I really did not have time to follow up on the whole case, but Alun has so check out his latest…. And you can always be up to date by following the postings on the APWR Central blog. I wish the whole thing was just an April’s Fool joke, but unfortunately, it is just one’s fool’s joke that threatens to destroy some real archeological treasures in the region.

Belgrade Zoo needs to move!

Long time ago, I mentioned here something about the Belgrade Zoo. The power of Google brought a Belgrader, Sonja, to my blog, who alerted me to the dire conditions in which the Zoo is right now and the existence of her website (made by her and her students) called Zoo SOS whose goal is to force the City government of Belgrade to move the Zoo from its present location to a better place outside town (not having to deal with the Animal Rights terrorists there, they must have placed a link to PETA by mistake – they do not know the distinction between Animal Rights and Animal Welfare. Update: The PETA link has been removed.).
Belgrade Zoo is located on Kalemegdan, the most ancient (from Roman through Turkish times) part of Belgrade. The zoo is small, and most of it is on stone and concrete. You can see some pictures of it here (just keep clicking on “Next” until you see them all).
Belgraders love their zoo. It is one of the favourite spots to spend a weekend. But it is also depressing to see animals crowded in small cages. It is especially painful for those of us who have seen modern zoos, like the one here in Asheboro, where animals are free to roam over many acres of land specifically designed to mimic their natural habitats.
The Belgrade Zoo is better called a ‘menagerie’ than a Zoo. It is an old-style city zoo, where the main goal is entertainment, while conservation and education play small or no role. It is not affiliated with any international zoo associations, so the nasty conditions in which animals live are cannot be addressed in any way by the rest of the world.
From its very inception, 80 years ago, there was a talk about moving it outside of the stony fortress and onto a bigger, nicer piece of land. Of course, that would make it less accessible to the citizens and tourists, thus probably reducing the revenue. So there has always been a tension between the people who did and people who did not want to see the Zoo moved.
After decades of neglect, Belgrade Zoo got a new Director in the mid-eighties: Vuk Bojovic. The relationship between the citizens of Belgrade and Vuk is quite schizophrenic – some love him, some hate him, but most have a strange love-hate relationship with him.
He is, in person, actually quite a pleasant fellow. But working for him is horror.
He loves animals and has a nice ‘touch’ with them. On the other hand he does not know anything about animals and is not prepared to listen to the experts.
He loves the attention he gets, but that also brings attention to the Zoo, so nobody is really sure how much of his posing is self-love and how much is a Zoo-promoting stunt.
He built a legend around himself as the only person who could pack medication into the tooth of the elephant Boy (who died a couple of years later, just to be replaced by an unwanted, man-killing female ditched by a Dutch zoo). Unlike his predecessors, elephants Tasa and Mita who were sweethearts (I remember feeding them peanuts by hand when I was a kid), Boy had a nasty temper, so the regular elephant feeders gladly let Vuk take the job and the spotlight – just one less dangerous elephant duty to do every day.
Vuk also brought in the first, one and only chimpanzee that the Zoo ever had – Sammy. Sammy was a smart guy so he made it a routine to escape from his cage and go galivanting around Belgrade. On one hand, that demonstrated that the Zoo is incapable of housing a chimp. On the other hand, he became a media darling – showing up on TV every time he escaped. Again, Vuk built a legend around himself as the only person who could approach, catch and recapture Sammy. So, TV crews often had great fun filming 40-something bearded Vuk climbing a tall poplar trying to lure Sammy down.
All those stunts brought interest of Belgraders back to the zoo after many decades. People started coming in. Money started flowing in. And the money was used to make the Zoo pretty – for people. Nothing was done to make the life of animals much better.
Now, that marketing strategy – painting the buildings, opening a new restaurant, offering pony rides for kids, etc. – may have been OK if it lasted the first year or so until enough money is collected to actually start using it for the benefits of animals. But, after 20 years, it does not sound so smart any more.
Then, the 90s came and the wars and sanctions ruined the economy of the country – not to mention the psyche of the people living there, painted as pariahs by the world, painted as villains in the movies, and not given any help to actually get rid of Milosevic (not to mention to retain Kosovo, and get rid of the Al Qaida HQ located there – aiding the KLA terrorists)…
There was no money to feed people, so who had the money to feed the animals? And as the war spread throughout the country, many small zoos had to be evacuated and all the animals brought to the Belgrade Zoo. Already lacking space and resources, the Zoo had to accept dozens of wolves, bears, wild boars, deer, etc. They all had to end up in tiny little cages because there was just no space for them. Yet, although hungry themselves, Belgraders donated meat to the Zoo to feed the animals.
In the 1999, when Belgrade was bombed, electricity would run out and all the meat would get spoiled in the freezers – good only for vultures and hyenas. Water was fouled. There was not enough water to keep the pools for hippos, polar bears, sea lions and penguins full. Eggs of rare birds rotted in the incubators. Daily bombing turned even the calmest animals into psychos – one tiger started chewing his own front toes!
During all that time, Vuk started doing some shady business, including smuggling of exotic animals (he almost smuggled in another elephant!). And now – he is the most vocal opponent of the move to the periphery of the city.
The initial idea was to relocate the Zoo to the Veliko Ratno Ostrvo, a large sandy island in the middle of the Danube at the spot where river Sava flows into it – that is: smack in the middle of Belgrade, but away from any regular streets (they would have built a bridge for the Zoo – right now the only way to get there is by boat).
Right now, the new proposed location is in Surcin, between Sava and the airport. It is not as big as Asheboro Zoo – not even close – but it is much bigger land than what the Zoo has now and it is not all stone and concrete! It would definitely be an improvement and, being built from scratch, it would be built in the most modern way possible, keeping the welfare of animals first and foremost as the goal of the entire operation.
As the Zoo is not part of any international association, and Serbia is now not a signator of any international agreements on regulation of animal keep and trade, and as the Zoo Director himself is the most vocal opponent of the move, the only people who can do something about it are the members of Belgrade city government and the mayor. And those people need LOTS of pressure to move on any matter, not just the Zoo. Most of that pressure has to come from locals, but we can help, by signing this petition, by writing about it and spreading the word. So, do it.

In Memoriam, Cava 1920-2007

Osvaldo_Cavandoli aka Cava, the author of the amazing and hillarious cartoon La Linea, one of my childhood favourites, has died about two weeks ago. Here is the very first episode:

There are several more available on YouTube (I just watched about a dozen and laughed out loud).
Unlike most of the episodes seen on TV this one below is definitely NSFW (i.e., if your work does not find this safe, you should find a saner employer):

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Serbian War Criminal Advising US DoD on Iraq?!

Apparently, it is so.
Veljko Kadijevic, a former Yugoslav General who was indicted for War Crimes (mainly for the brutal destruction of the Croatian city of Vukovar early in the conflict) was never brought to justice (or even pursued by Croatia to be arrested – wonder why?) is apparently advising the US Department of Defense in Iraq.
As a West Point alumnus, Kadijevic had many connections with the US military throughout his career. But his poor military performance in the early nineties, if not his criminal status, should have been enough to keep him out of any kind of “advising” about anything.
But you know how the current US Administration operates in everything – hire the “friends” who owe you something and are incapable of doing the job well. Then blame the “government” and “liberal media”. Brownie.

Let’s play “Serbs” and “Croats”

Belgrade blog, Neretva River and Japan Probe solved the mystery of a couple of pictures (and discovered many more from the same source) depicting Japanese people wearing Serbian and Croatian uniforms – images that greatly disturbed many Serbian and Croatian bloggers for whom the war is still fresh in memory. Read their excellent posts and comments.
Even more puzzling was the fact that the uniforms were from several different periods and wars. There were Serbian and Croatian uniforms from the most recent conflicts, but also WWII-era uniforms of partisans, Chetniks and Ustasha.
a1%20-%20japanski%20Srbi.JPG
Apparently, the Japanese had a fun weekend doing battle re-enactments. This one was a Battle For Mostar which, in real life, was not fun at all (and was, mostly, between Bosnian Croats and Bosnian Muslims, not Serbs). I knew the Americans like to do Civil War battle re-enactments, but I had no idea the Japanese did the same. And why would they re-enact OTHER PEOPLE’s battles!? (OK, growing up we played ‘cowboys’ and ‘Indians’, as well as WWII-themed games with “Germans” and “partisans”)
a2%20-%20japanski%20Hrvati.JPG
Perhaps, this soon after the war, when the issues are far from settled, war criminals are still at large and the cangaroo court in The Hague (ICTY – International Tribunal for Yugoslavia) is still re-enacting Matlock episodes, the only place where one can safely “play” Balkan wars is a place as geographically and culturally distant as Japan (which was also one of the countries that was the most neutral during the conflict and had by far the best media reporting on it during the 1990s).

On This Day in History

Zoran Djindjic, the first person I ever voted for, was assassinated on this day four years ago. He had the guts to deport Milosevic to The Hague and he got paid for it with a bullet.

How to put a vampire to rest

Too busy these days to blog much or even read blogs much, so I missed the news on Balkan blogs and only today, several days later, I got the news from PZ. A guy, just to be sure no resurrection ever happens, drove a three-foot stake through the heart of the dead and burried body of Slobodan Milosevic.
Keep in mind that Milosevic was born and was buried in Pozarevac, in Eastern Serbia, the part of the world which invented the myth of vampires (the old Vlad is in the neighborhood, just over the Danube). The word “vampire” is, as far as I know, the only English word of Serbian origin.

Sixteen years ago today

March 9, 1991 was the first, and the most violent day, of the five-day protest in Belgrade (then Yugoslavia, now Serbia). This was the first anti-Milosevic protest in Serbia, just a couple of months after the first multi-party elections that he stole.
About 100,000 people gathered in the center of Belgrade. Soon, the police moved in and the fight started and spread around town to several different venues, especially in front of the state TV. One teenage boy and one policeman were killed (the former was shot by a moving cordon of police, the latter was thrown over the fence onto the street below – a several meters drop).
9mart-devojka01.jpgThe demonstrators pulled the cops off the horses and beat up the horses (I know – the police veterinarian is a good friend of mine and I saw him the next day after he spent the entire night stiching up the horses’ wounds). The demonstrators took over the firetrucks that the cops placed as street barriers and drove them at the cops. The water cannons could do nothing – although it was freezing cold, people just stood there and took it, including the woman in the picture, the icon of that day.
Although it was early in the history of the Internet, much of information-sharing and coordination, as well as reporting from the scence, was accomplished via e-mail and Usenet. Some of that material was later published in a book.
In the end, with the police incapable (and in some cases unwilling) to stop so many angry Serbs, Milosevic called in the army. My house was on the southern end of town, towards the suburbs where the military barracks are located, so I was one of the first to hear the rumble. I opened the window to hear better and new immediately what it was. I got on the phone with a friend of mine who lives right in the center and told her to tell everyone on the street that the tanks are coming. I counted a total of 40 tanks passing under my window towards the city center. There, they parked, but they did not fire or do anything. I am not sure if they even had orders to do anything. Actually, they chatted with the people. This showed Milosevic that he could not rely on either the Yugoslav army (later, as Slovenes, Croats and others pulled out of the union what remained was, by default, a Serb-dominated army, a frame much loved by the Western press with its own axe to grind) or the current police, so later he built himself, out of refugees from Croatia and Bosnia, a parallel force, officially a police force, but armed with submarines and fighter jets. The old cops wore light blue uniforms and were nice – kind of cops you ask for directions. Their loyalty to Slobodan Milosevic was questionable at best. The new cops wore camouflage and were not to be looked in the eye at any cost – those were wild beasts, not people. These were Milosevic’s dogs, like Napoleon’s dobermans in ‘Animal Farm’, loyal to death.
The next day, I met several of the cops I knew. They became cops because of the quality of horses owned by the mounted police – the best shojumpers in the country, thus a guarantee for international competition. Within days, they all quit the force. Many left the country. As they all said “I don’t want to beat up my own people. That’s not what I signed up for this job for”.
Over the next four days, we made sure that there were anywhere between 20,000 (at night when it was really cold) and 100,000 people (during the day) at all times in the center of the city. We did ‘shifts’. We used humor. Had great placards (this was the first time Milosevic was compared to Saddam – a staple of later demosntations). We got some concessions: arrested people were freed; the amateur videos of police brutality was shown (many times, over and over again) on naitonal TV for all to see; the entire national TV programn turned into a local version of C-Span, continuously projecting the proceedings from the Parliament – so everyone, even people outside Belgrade who could not until then see anything but PR, could see that the Democratic opposition consists of smart, sophisticated, eloquent, educated people, while the old Socialists were dumb bullies (sounded kinda like GOP congressmen if you watch C-Span here these days).
So, what did we accomplish? Victor says it best:

Even though it seemed then that the protest didn’t have any results, it has nevertheless managed to show that the critical mass exists and that the people will, if not then, and if not in five years from then, manage to throw Milosevic down some day.
Nine years later they did.

Three months later, I was on my way to the USA. I sold my horse and saddle to get the money for the ticket. I spent the nineties here, getting information online during the day and frothing at the mouth every night watching with amazement how Jennings, Rather, Brokaw and Koppel blatantly lied every night about what is happening there. It is not just Republicans who use the media to sell their own PR. Clinton did it as well. ABC, NBC and CBS worked for him, just like RTS worked for Milosevic and just like Fox, CNN and MSNBC are now working for Bush. The first American myth that was busted when I arrived here was the myth of Free Press. Nothing has changed about it since 1991. Except, we have blogs now. We better put them to good use.

How many ex-Yugoslavias?

How many ex-Yugoslavias?Back in May 21, 2006, Montenegro seceded from Serbia. Here is what I wrote:

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History Lessons Forgotten

They are the last ones who should be playing with this fire:
Croatia probes Hitler likeness, jokes on sugar packets:

Small packets of sugar bearing the likeness of Adolf Hitler and carrying Holocaust jokes have been found in some cafes in Croatia, prompting an investigation, the office of the state prosecutor said on Monday. “The local district attorney in (the eastern town of) Pozega has opened an investigation and is currently looking at the matter,” said Martina Mihordin. The Novi List daily newspaper reported that officials at a small factory in Pozega have confirmed the sugar packs were produced on their premises.
The incident will embarrass the government which has been keen to play down the country’s past links with Nazism. Croatia’s Ustasha regime sided with the Nazis in World War Two and enforced ethnic laws under which thousands of Serbs, Jews and Gypsies, as well as anti-fascist Croats, were killed in local concentration camps in 1941-45. The Jerusalem-based anti-Nazi Simon Wiesenthal Center said in a statement it had protested the matter to Croatia’s authorities. Its director, Efraim Zuroff, expressed his “revulsion and disgust that such an item could be produced these days in a country in which the Holocaust not only took place, but was for the most part carried out by local Nazi collaborators.”
“If nothing else, this is a disgusting expression of nostalgia for the Third Reich and a period during which Jews, Serbs and Gypsies were mass-murdered (in Croatia),” it said. Zuroff urged Croatia to force the factory owners to recall the sugar packets immediately, in line with a law against racial, religious or ethnic hatred.
Under President Franjo Tudjman, who governed Croatia from its 1991 independence until 1999, some of the Ustasha symbols were tolerated and their crimes often dismissed in public, which strained relations with Israel. Subsequent Croatian leaders, who set the country on the road to European Union membership, apologized publicly for the Ustasha crimes.

On Milosevic

On MilosevicTen months later (this was posted first on March 22, 2006), he has a tenure-track position there. Not a bad idea to give a good talk at various places….

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Sex On The (Dreaming) Brain

Blogging on Peer-Reviewed Research

Last week I asked if you would be interested in my take on this paper, since it is in Serbian (and one commenter said Yes, so here it is – I am easy to persuade):

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I am an Asportual male, too

Perhaps not as bad as Zeno, but close.
At least I used to watch, when I was a kid, whenever Yugoslav national teams in various sports played at big international competitions like Olympics, World Championships and European Championships. I watched Red Star soccer team demolish all of its European and World competition back in 1990. I watched Jausovec, Zivojinovic, Seles and Ivanisevic at Wimbledon and French Open.
Perhaps there is a difference between inter-club competition and international competition and in the USA nobody cares about international competition. Since I never watched anything ‘domestic’ (e.g., the Yugoslav soccer league matches), I guess I would have been a complete Asportual male if I was growing up in the States as well (I just happened to hear that NCSU beat UNC in basketball today – a fact that I can report with no emotions whatsoever although I am an NCSU alum and I live in Chapel Hill – and that there is something really big in sports happening tomorrow so I have to be worried about traffic if I need to drive somewhere).
On the other hand, since I was myself practicing and competing in karate and equestrian sports at one point or another, I watched much more of those sports at all levels, from local to international and everything in between. But there, when you are inside a sport, you actually personally know many competitors – you probably had beer with them many times, etc. It is a different ball-game altogether.

‘Pulp Fiction’ does not need to pay copyright, just be honest

'Pulp Fiction' does not need to pay copyright, just be honest(August 10, 2005)

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The Intellectual Offspring of Milankovic is doing quite well, thank you

Srbija najbolja na Astronomskoj olimpijadi (my translation):

Serbia, whose most modern telescope was built at the beginning of the 20th century and was brought to Belgrade as part of WWI war reparations, won two gold and two bronze medals at the 11th World Astronomy Olympiad in Bombay earlier this month. Olympic winners from Serbia are students of the first [ninth] grade of the Mathematical Gymnasium in Belgrade: Luka Milicevic and Natasa Dragovic. Milicevic competed in the younger category as he is 15 years old, while Dragovic is only 14. On the Serbian team were also Aleksandar Vasiljkovic, also a first grade student of Mathematical Gymnasium, and Ivana Cvijovic, the second grade student – they got bronze medals.
—————-
Luka Milicevic exlained that the competiiton cosisted of a theoretical part, solving problems that required the knowledge of Physics and mathematics, and a practical part that consisted of observations of the sky both with naked eye and through telescope, then using the observations to solve problems, e.g., calculating mass of a galaxy from its rotation rate.

International Astronomy Olympiad sees ‘starry’ contestants

The performance of students in the International Astronomy Olympiad (IAO) here was “par excellence”, reflected by the fact that the number of gold medals awarded to top performers had to be raised from 10 to 13 this year, an organising committee member said.
Five Indian students bagged gold medals, the highest by any country in the competition organised by the Euro-Asian Astronomical Society. The meet concluded here yesterday.
Normally, the IAO awards 10 gold, 20 silver and 30 bronze medals. But this time the judges demanded that the number of gold medals be increased to 13 due to the excellent performance by many students, Anand Ghaisas, member of IAO’s National Organising Committee, told reporters after the award ceremony.
That is how five Indian students won gold medals, he said. This was the fifth consecutive year that India topped the competition, which drew 120 contestants from 19 nations. South Korea won three gold medals followed by Serbia (two), Russia, Iran and Bulgaria (one each).
————–
This year’s IAO had several unique things. The students were given actual data of the Giant Meterwave Radio Telscope (GMRT) near Pune for analysis. “They got to handle real-time data in the practical round,” Ghaisas said.
In the observation rounds, the students were taken to GMRT and provided 15 optical telescopes in a field under darkness. Each student had to be there for a half-an-hour exam. “The weather was excellent and the observation test took place between 7.30 pm and 11 pm,” he said.

Ferenc Puskas, RIP

ferenc_puskas.jpgFerenc Puskas died last week. One of the greatest of all times!

Darwin in Serbia

Darwin in SerbiaTwo years ago, there was quite a brouhaha in the media when Serbian minister for education decided to kick Darwin out of schools. The whole affair lasted only a few days – the public outrage was swift and loud and the minister was forced to resign immediately. I blogged about it profusely back then and below the fold are those old posts:

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On the Bosnian Pyramid in English

If you are interested in the saga of the Bosnian pyramid, it may be difficult for you to follow it as the members of the Anti-Pyramid Webring write mainly in some version of Serbian-Croatian-Bosnian language. But now, they have started a new, central blog for posts in English – the APWR Central. Contributors are needed.

The Saga of the Bosnian Pyramid

The Saga of the Bosnian PyramidYou may have heard about the crazy “discovery” of a pyramid in Bosnia, the scientific nonsense about it and the political heat it provoked. I have covered the story last winter and spring in a lot of detail (see my posts from December 07, 2005, January 30, 2006, April 17, 2006, April 22, 2006, April 29, 2006, May 02, 2006, May 07, 2006, May 13, 2006, May 16, 2006, June 02, 2006 and June 07, 2006), but have lost touch since then. And a lot of stuff happened in the meantime. The members of the Anti-Pyramid Webring have been pursuing the story with vigor and I’ll try to catch up with them and write a summary of the news and views within the next week or two (almosty all of their work is in one variant or another of Serbian/Croatian/Bosnian language so I’ll have to do some translating). In the meantime, to get you all up to speed, here are the re-posts of all of my earlier coverage – lots of links for your enjoyment:

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Art

It is pretty amazing what some people can do with just paper and scissors!

Never Again!

Never Again!I know, I know, Tuesdays are supposed to be for touchy-feely personal posts or navel-gazing posts about blogging, but today is an election, so I decided to go with provocative, hard-hitting stuff instead (originally posted on June 27, 2005, click on the clock-spiderweb to see the original):

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Internet use in Serbia

There is a new study out on computer and internet use in Serbia (via). Several things immediately jumped out at me: how many people connect by modem, how many connect from home (as opposed to work, school, etc.), how big is the rural/urban divide, and how many people think they have no use for the Internet and expect never to use it in their lives.
I have a feeling that these findings are quite different from other countries (not to mention the US). I’d like to know what are the equivalent numbers in other countries in which such studies have been done.
The numbers in Serbia may be also a result of the migrations over the past 15 years. Hundreds of thousands of people have left the country – mostly young, educated people who speak foreign languages (and thus have the ability and need to use the Internet fully). Thus, the population may have a slight skew at the moment towards older and less educated people. The youngest generations are still at the personal IM-ing stage and may start using the Internet more over the next few years as they grow up, MySpace first, then the rest of it.
Anyway, the numbers are not so bleak as they are rising every year (the study has been conducted annually since 1999) and the new generations will use the Internet more. Once the businesses, schools and “old” media get smarter about their Internet use and there is more broadband/wifi connection available, the use will likely skyrocket. There are certainly somne great blogs there, see here, here and here.

Astrology Academy in Serbia

Astrology Academy in SerbiaIt’s been a year since this first appeared (September 21, 2005). I wonder if the “academy” is still open or what are they studying there….

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A new meaning of ‘having a buzz’

A new meaning of 'having a buzz'This strange November 09, 2005 post should really be posted on Friday as part of the Friday Weird Sex Blogging….

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The Lost Highway Expedition

Visit the Balkans, join the Lost Highway Expedition (already in progress):

A massive movement of individuals will pass through Ljubljana, Zagreb, Novi Sad, Belgrade, Skopje, Prishtina, Tirana, Podgorica and Sarajevo. The expedition will generate projects, art works, networks, architecture and politics based on the found knowledge. Projects developed from the expedition will lead to events in Europe and the US.