the pilot's drawl
Why do pilots all have that laid back drawl?
That accent is an evolution of Chuck Yeager's West Virginia drawl. (You'll occasionally hear a version from airline pilots.)
he was the first pilot to break the sound barrier but few heard of him before the book and movie The Right Stuff
multicuturalism is alive and well
before the deluge
the story of the church before the rebels distorted Vatican II to destroy the church..
the girl who liked bugs
The protagonist befriends insects, names her attendants after them, and engages in poetic exchanges involving furry caterpillars, leading to laughter on the part of others. Portrayed as even more eccentric is her disregard for her physical appearance: she leaves her hair untrimmed; has unplucked eyebrows; neglects to blacken her teeth; and allows herself to be seen by men. 'Oh, how regrettable! Why does she have such a weird mind'.
more here.
the little princess didn't like plucking her eyebrows and didn't like pencil her eyebrows. And she disliked dyeing her teeth black, as was the custom for Japanese ladies at that time. The princess loved things as they were. She thought that it was good to be natural. So, she disliked makeup and things like that.
She said to her mother, "There is a purpose in pursuing the origins of something in order to gain result. Caterpillars grow up into butterflies. The silk is made by silkworms. If silkworms come out of cocoons and become imagoes, the silk yarn is not able to take it." The princess showed some silkworms and cocoons that had grown into imagoes to her mother. She was both an intelligent and a very wise young lady.>777\
KellyBrenner's website notes that this tale was one of the influences behind the anime Nausicca of the Valley of the Winds, where a girl saves her people by understanding the insects that threaten their village.
The material art world
This podcast by the Met is really really interesting.
about the material in the world around us: But not from a scientific point of view but the point of view of art and culture.
cross posted from my main blog
these latest episodes are about metals:
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