Ripples #42
Compiled and written by Lenny Giteck
Vanilla Ice Rips Out âRottenâ
Pool, Replaces It with New One
You may recall a Ripples item from August 2010, when we reported on a wild escapade by the rapper Vanilla Ice: He revved up a vintage Cadillac, deliberately sped off a berm, soared through the air and crashed into a pond. He nearly drowned in the exploit â causing Ripples to wonder at the time why he would perform such an idiotic stunt.
A close reading of the Wikipedia entry on the rapper may provide a clue: He is identified as âan American rapper, extreme athlete [italics added] and home improvement television personality.â Clearly, Mr. Ice has a taste for adrenaline.
It is, however, the third identifier (âhome improvement television personalityâ) that is of interest here. Ice â whose real name is Robert Matthew Van Winkle â now has his own reality TV show called âThe Vanilla Ice Project,â which airs on DIY Network. It turns out that in addition to being a rapmeister, Van Winkle has an impressive background as a handyman, contractor, and rehabber and builder of houses â experience that is applied to the showâs various home renovation projects.
In one recent episode, he tore out a backyard pool that definitely had seen better days and replaced it with a new, much larger installation. Ice proposed at the beginning of the episode, âWeâll put in a lazy river thatâll go around an island with a Tiki hut. Weâll have stone waterfalls, a shallow beach area with bubblers, and weâll surround the pool area with gorgeous travertine tiles and palm trees to create a tropical oasis.â It will be, he promised, âthe most amazing swimming pool youâve ever seen.â
Quite a claim ⦠you be the judge.
Video: To see a brief You Tube clip of Vanilla Iceâs lazy-river pool project, click here. (Note: Some Web sites may open behind this screen.) The full episode is occasionally repeated on the DIY Network.
Mute Young Man Able to Speak
Again Thanks to Dolphin Therapy
Nearly five years ago, Morad Azva, then a well-liked 16-year-old Israeli high school student, was physically assaulted by a number of his schoolmates â a vicious attack that left him with both physical injuries and serious mental problems. The youngster displayed symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder, which in his case included becoming mute and shutting himself off from the world.
Unfortunately, the treatments carried out by one of Israelâs most renowned psychiatrists, Dr. Ilan Kutz, showed no signs of improving Moradâs condition. According to a recent article on the case on the Web site jpost.com, the psychiatrist was quoted as saying at the time: âI havenât seen that degree of severe [mutism]. It usually lasts a few hours at most; never anything this long.â
With zero progress being made, Kutz saw no purpose in continuing with traditional therapy and recommended that Morad be institutionalized in a mental health facility. The boyâs father rejected that and asked Dr. Kutz to come up with another course of action. Thatâs when the psychiatrist suggested dolphin therapy, which involves supervised swimming with the highly intelligent marine mammals. Such therapy was available in Eilat, Israelâs southernmost city, on the Red Sea.
The article on jpost.com summed up the results:
During his time at the Dolphin Reef, Morad regained his ability to communicate, first with dolphins and later on with people. A few months into therapy, he spoke his first words. âI felt like I was reborn,â he recalls, âThe dolphins were my new family.â Morad flourished in his new surroundings. He became an active member of the reef and continued his experience with dolphins as a staff member.
Dr. Kutz ⦠stresses that despite the great progress, âit is important to keep in mind that not all of Moradâs problems have been dealt with.â According to him, âit took unbelievable patience, dedication, intimacy and love from all parties to restore a sense of security for Morad.â
Learn more: For further details on the Morad Azva case and dolphin therapy in general, click here.
Pennsylvania Swim Coaches Use iPads
To Help Improve Studentsâ Technique
High school swim coaches in Pennsylvania have found a new purpose for the Apple iPad: using it as a video teaching tool to show students the problems theyâre having with their swimming techniques.
Coach LuAnn Hetherington told the Web site highschoolsports.pennlive.com: âIâve had [my iPad] for about four or five weeks, and I learn more about it every day. The major thing I use it for is in practice. When I see ⦠somebody swimming wrong, I immediately grab the iPad and film them. Then I pull them out of the water individually and let them watch it.â
Recording videos of swimmers in the water for training purposes is nothing new, but the iPad makes it much more convenient. Mike Gobrecht, another coach, recalls âlugging one of those big, cumbersome video cameras on deck, then wheeling in a television set, extension cords and a VCR in order to get footage of his swimmers in practice.â
And using the iPads is much safer than the old way, adds Gorbrecht. âWeâd be running cords all over the pool, but making sure we werenât too close ⦠so we wouldnât electrocute ourselves,â he notes.
Young Inventors Develop Device to
Generate Electricity from Pool Water
The InvenTeam at Harker School, in San Jose, Calif., has created an Aquatic Thermoelectric Generator to exploit the temperature differential between a swimming poolâs warmer surface water and cooler water below to generate electricity.
Members of the team are sophomores, juniors and seniors at Hacker, a private college-preparatory school. To date, there have been nearly 100 InvenTeams in high schools around the country. Each team receives a grant of up to $10,000 from the Lemeson-MIT Program; the money is used to solve â with the help of science, technology, engineering and mathematics â an individual problem that the students choose.
Harker math teacher Anthony Silk, adviser to the schoolâs InvenTeam, explains on the Web site mnn.com, “As [the studentsâ] device floats on water, reflector panels focus sunlight onto a black surface that converts the solar energy to heat. This heat is then passed through thermoelectric panels and passively dissipated into the surrounding water.”
What advice does Silk have for other budding young inventors? “You have to give your heart and soul into the project,” he says. “This includes sacrificing playing video games and hanging out with friends to work on your project. You have to be thinking about the subject 24-7.”
The Harker team plans to further refine its device and have it ready for EurekaFest, which will be held June 20-23 at MIT and Bostonâs Museum of Science. âEurekaFest,â notes the eventâs Web site, âis a multi-day celebration designed to empower a legacy of inventors through activities that inspire youth, honor role models, and encourage creativity and problem solving.â
Until next time, happy watershaping to you!