Happy 2023
My First Escape Room
While I was in Utah a few weeks ago, I went to my first escape room with my sister Heather and her family. I had no idea what to expect really. We went to Alcatraz Escape Rooms and picked a Harry Potter themed room.
They put us and another group of 4 or 5 (total strangers to us--my first thought was that I would have to work and talk with people I didn't know) into a dark room the size of a small dining room. I'm looking around completely clueless about how to start while they went over the rules. Then we were off.
Everyone starts scrambling and I have no idea what to scramble for. I noticed that there were colored pennants on the wall. Most people were working on figuring out what the two foot columns were for when I called out that there were pennants on the wall. Someone who knew what they were doing decided to match the colors with the columns to get a combination. Okay then, I see how this works now.
There was a chest set with a clue to find the white queen's winning play with several examples of the game board. This is where I become both brilliant and a complete moron at the same time. Brilliant, because I know enought about chess that I immediately knew the correct sequence and loaded them on the board. A moron because as soon as I placed the final piece a trap door opened in the wall behind me and a wand popped out. I give the wand to my sister's daughter, but I did not get the connection that it came from the chess piece. I don't know how much more time I wasted trying to figure out that chess game that I had already solved.
It so it went. I had moments of brilliance and moments of being utterly clueless. It was really fun though, with lots of laughter and even working with strangers who were okay. It seems like we were smarter than we gave ourselves credit for because we kept second-guessing ourselves. We ended up escaping with five minutes to spare so Huzzah to us!
I highly recommend these as good family fun!
White Smoke: Review

My rating: 5 of 5 stars
I love this book more than I thought I would. It's the kind of story where you want to skip ahead to see how it ends, but don't dare because you don't want to miss one darn word.
Mari, the main character, has personality and attitude, but can she trust what she is seeing? She's coming off a situation where her family can't take her word for anything, leaving us readers wondering if she is a reliable narrator. What is going on? Is the house/neighborhood haunted? Is there a conspiracy? Every citizen is suscipious and creepy. This is NOT a town you want to move to.
I cannot wait to introduce this story to my freshmen students. They are going to be as caught up as I was.
View all my reviews
Top Gun: Maverick
Pascal's Triangle
So yes, this is me talking about math. Shocker, since I soooo love math. Did you hear the sarcasm? To finish my degree, I had to take one more math class. That was almost a deal breaker for me until I found out I could take a history of math course that would suffice. So this is a history paper on mathematics. Go me!
The
concept of Pascal’s Triangle has been around for centuries, although it wasn’t
given that name until the 17th century. The Persians and the Chinese
both appear to have discovered the application independent of the other in the
eleventh century. In Persia, Omar Khayyam was extracting number roots with the
triangle. Khayyam was a teacher of geometry and algebra, and studied astronomy
and the Jalali calendar. He was also an “advisor to Malik Shah I” (Famous
Mathematicians 1) until Shah was murdered. In 1070, Khayyam’s finished writing
his treatise called Treatise on
Demonstration of Problems of Algebra. Within it “he laid the foundation of
the Pascal’s triangle with his work on triangular array of binomial
coefficients” (Famous Mathematicians, 1). This treatise was not only highly
influential in Persia, but made its way across Europe as well.
Later, an itinerant teacher, Zhu
Shijie traveled across China in the later part of the 13th century. He
was considered one of the greatest mathematicians of China. He is best “known
for having unified the southern and northern Chinese mathematical traditions”
(Horiuchi, 1). In 1303 he published Siyuan
yujian or “Precious Mirror of Four Elements” which showed a diagram of the
triangle, which was labeled the “Old Method”, proving that the concept was much
older.
Zhu Shijie's
illustration of Jia Xian's triangle. Image courtesy of Encyclopeadia
Britannica, Beard
In Italy, another mathematician Niccolò Fontana, came onto the mathematics
scene. In 1535, Bologna University held one of their public mathematics
competitions where Fontana revealed a solution that had been considered
impossible. He later “devised a method
to obtain binomial coefficients called Tartaglia’s Triangle” (16th
Century, 1). Due to an injury, Fontana stammered and was called Tartaglia,
which means “the stammerer”. Even though
he produced many formulas, he “died penniless and unknown” (16th
Century, 1). Which brings us to Blaise Pascal.
Much later in 1654, French
philosopher and mathematician Blaise Pascal wrote a treatise on the triangle
named Traité
du triangle arithmétique (Treatise on Arithmetical Triangle). It was
published in 1655.
Blaise
Pascal was both religious and a scientist. “He laid the foundation for the
modern theory of probabilities, formulated what came to be known as Pascal’s
principle of pressure, and propagated a religious doctrine that taught the
experience of God through the heart rather than through reason” (Jerphagnon,
1). Syringes, hydraulic pressure, the barometer, and the first type of
calculator, among many other contributions of science, can all be linked back
to Pascal, including the triangle named after him. Although Pascal didn’t
discover the triangle first, he “made the conceptual leap to use the triangle
to help solve problems in probability theory” (17th Century, 1).
References
Beard,
Andrea. Yang Hui: Chinese Mathematician. Encyclopaedia
Britannica. https://www.britannica.com/biography/Yang-Hui
Famous Mathematicians.
https://famous-mathematicians.com/omar-khayyam/
Horiuchi,
Annick. “Zhu Shijie: Chinese Mathematician.” Encyclopaedia Britannica. https://www.britannica.com/biography/Zhu-Shijie
Hosch,
William H. Encyclopedia Britannica https://www.britannica.com/science/Pascals-triangle.
“Jia
Xian” Mac Tudor. http://www-history.mcs.st-and.ac.uk/Biographies/Jia_Xian.html
Jerphagnon,
Lucien, et al. “Blaise Pascal: French Philosopher and Scientist.” Encyclopaedia
Britannica. https://www.britannica.com/biography/Blaise-Pascal
Kazimir,
Jessica. “Pascal’s Triangle.” Montclair
University. http://pages.csam.montclair.edu/~kazimir/history.html
“16th
Century Mathematics – Tartaglia, Cardano, and Ferrari” The Story of Mathematics. https://www.storyofmathematics.com/16th_tartaglia.html
“17th
Century Mathematics – Pascal.” The Story
of Mathematics. https://www.storyofmathematics.com/17th_pascal.html