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30/10/2024

How stupid! Biden comparing Trump supporters to garbage. Remember "Basket of Deplorables?" Name calling will not get one vote.

28/10/2024

The fact that Trump is even running, let alone might win, is a measure of how very sick we are.

28/10/2024
In Lynching and Leisure, Terry Anne Scott examines how white Texans transformed lynching from a largely clandestine stra...
25/10/2024

In Lynching and Leisure, Terry Anne Scott examines how white Texans transformed lynching from a largely clandestine strategy of extralegal punishment into a form of racialized recreation in which crowd involvement was integral to the mode and methods of the violence. Scott powerfully documents how lynchings came to function not only as tools for debasing the status of Black people but also as highly anticipated occasions for entertainment, making memories with friends and neighbors, and reifying whiteness. In focusing on the sense of pleasure and normality that prevailed among the white spectatorship, this comprehensive study of Texas lynchings sheds new light on the practice understood as one of the chief strategies of racial domination in the nineteenth- and twentieth-century South.

18/10/2024

The guy who led the mob on Jan 6 is now close to being reelected to the office he attempted to destroy by insurrection. What kind of madness do we face? Here is what certain women did on Jan 6 seeing the unthinkable actually happening. What they did would have frustrated the attempt to hijack the presidency. It was a close call. If those boxes had been carried to the bonfire in front of the Capitol, certification at least would have temporarily blocked.: With insurrection at the door, one woman realized the danger and her thoughts turned to the mahogany and leather boxes in the Senate chamber. The three boxes contained the votes, the very documents that had drawn a mob into the nation's Capitol during a violent assault on democracy Wednesday afternoon. The woman, a Senate aide who we are not naming for safety reasons, was the one who directed staffers to gather the 18-inch by 10-inch boxes and transport the votes to a secure location while President Donald Trump supporters incited a riot within the building, sending senators, representatives, aides, interns and reporters to seek shelter while offices were ransacked.

Earlier in the day, the president had encouraged his supporters to march on the Capitol in protest and stop the certification of the election taking place. The certified electoral votes symbolized an election many of them felt they were robbed of. That's why the aide's quick thinking has been hailed as heroic by many though few knew who was the person behind the move to protect the certified electoral votes.

"One of the staff members was very quick thinking and was able to grab and secure the electoral college ballots and take them with her to this location, so we have them with us and we will be able to proceed as long as Mitch McConnell calls us back into session," Sen. Tammy Duckworth told CBS Evening News Wednesday afternoon.

In the aftermath of the riot the same day, images of staffers carrying the boxes to the joint session of Congress went viral on social media, with many praising the women. But the photos did not depict the moment the boxes were carried away to safety earlier that day.

thanks LOR

"But why do I in a conference of pleasure enter these great matters, in sort that pretending to know much, I should forg...
18/10/2024

"But why do I in a conference of pleasure enter these great matters, in sort that pretending to know much, I should forget what is seasonable? Pardon me, it was because all things may be endowed and adorned with speeches, but knowledge itself is more beautiful than any apparel of words that can be put upon it. And let me not seem arrogant without respect to these great reputed authors. Let me so give every man his due, as I give time his due, which is to discover truth. Many of these men had greater wits, far above mine own, and so are many in the Universities of Europe at this day. But alas, they learn nothing there but to believe: first, to believe that others know that which they know not; and after, themselves know that which they know not. But indeed facility to believe, impatience to doubt, temerity to answer, glory to know, doubt to contradict, end to gain, sloth to search, seeking things in words, resting in part of nature; these and the like, have been the things which have forbidden the happy match between the mind of man and the nature of things; and in place thereof have married it to vain notions and blind experiments: and what the posterity and issue of so honourable a match may be, it is not hard to consider. Printing, a gross invention; artillery, a thing that lay not far out of the way; the needle, a thing partly known before: what a change have these three made in the world in these times; the one in state of learning, the other in state of the war, the third in the state of treasure, commodities, and navigation! And those, I say, were but stumbled upon and lighted upon by chance. Therefore, no doubt, the sovereignty of man lieth hid in knowledge; wherein many things are reserved, which kings with their treasure cannot buy, nor with their force command; their spials [spies] and intelligencers [informants] can give no news of them, their seamen and discoverers cannot sail where they grow: now we govern nature in opinions, but we are thrall unto her in necessity; but if we would be led by her in invention, we should command her in action." A Conference of Pleasure by Francis Bacon

At the opening tonight of Hew Locke’s intervention at the British Museum, “What have we here?”, running to 9 February 20...
17/10/2024

At the opening tonight of Hew Locke’s intervention at the British Museum, “What have we here?”, running to 9 February 2025.
The most extraordinary object for me was the Arawak Bird Man from pre-Columbian Jamaica (image 1), which Hew compares to the Benin Bronzes in terms of its importance to Caribbean civilisation. [Taken from a Richard Drayton post including the description.]

Brother Bill and me.
17/10/2024

Brother Bill and me.

17/10/2024

June, ca. 240 B.C. Eratosthenes Measures the Earth!

By around 500 B.C., most ancient Greeks believed that Earth was round, not flat. But they had no idea how big the planet is until about 240 B.C., when Eratosthenes devised a clever method of estimating its circumference.

It was around 500 B.C. that Pythagoras first proposed a spherical Earth, mainly on aesthetic grounds rather than on any physical evidence. Like many Greeks, he believed the sphere was the most perfect shape. Possibly the first to propose a spherical Earth based on actual physical evidence was Aristotle (384-322 B.C.), who listed several arguments for a spherical Earth: ships disappear hull first when they sail over the horizon, Earth casts a round shadow on the moon during a lunar eclipse, and different constellations are visible at different latitudes.

Around this time Greek philosophers had begun to believe the world could be explained by natural processes rather than invoking the gods, and early astronomers began making physical measurements, in part to better predict the seasons. The first person to determine the size of Earth was Eratosthenes of Cyrene, who produced a surprisingly good measurement using a simple scheme that combined geometrical calculations with physical observations.

Eratosthenes was born around 276 B.C., in the region now known as Shahhat, Libya. He studied in Athens at the Lyceum. Around 240 B.C., King Ptolemy III of Alexandria appointed him chief librarian of the library of Alexandria.

Known as one of the foremost scholars of the time, Eratosthenes produced impressive works in astronomy, mathematics, geography, philosophy, and poetry. His contemporaries gave him the nickname “Beta” because he was very good, though not quite first-rate, in all these areas of scholarship. Eratosthenes was especially proud of his solution to the problem of doubling a cube, and is now well known for developing the sieve of Eratosthenes, a method of finding prime numbers.

Eratosthenes’ most famous accomplishment is his measurement of the circumference of Earth. He recorded the details of this measurement in a manuscript that is now lost, but his technique has been described by other Greek historians and writers.

Eratosthenes was fascinated with geography and planned to make a map of the entire world. He realized he needed to know the size of Earth. Obviously, one couldn’t walk all the way around to figure it out.

Eratosthenes had heard from travelers about a well in Syene (now Aswan, Egypt) with an interesting property: at noon on the summer solstice, which occurs about June 21 every year, the sun illuminated the entire bottom of this well, without casting any shadows, indicating that the sun was directly overhead. Eratosthenes then measured the angle of a shadow cast by a stick at noon on the summer solstice in Alexandria, and found it made an angle of about 7.2 degrees, or about 1/50 of a complete circle.

He realized that if he knew the distance from Alexandria to Syene, he could easily calculate the circumference of Earth. But in those days it was extremely difficult to determine distance with any accuracy. Some distances between cities were measured by the time it took a camel caravan to travel from one city to the other. But camels have a tendency to wander and to walk at varying speeds. So Eratosthenes hired bematists, professional surveyors trained to walk with equal length steps. They found that Syene lies about 5000 stadia from Alexandria.

Eratosthenes then used this to calculate the circumference of the Earth to be about 250,000 stadia. Modern scholars disagree about the length of the stadium used by Eratosthenes. Values between 500 and about 600 feet have been suggested, putting Eratosthenes’ calculated circumference between about 24,000 miles and about 29,000 miles. The Earth is now known to measure about 24,900 miles around the equator, slightly less around the poles.

Eratosthenes had made the assumption that the sun was so far away that its rays were essentially parallel, that Alexandria is due north of Syene, and that Syene is exactly on the tropic of cancer. While not exactly correct, these assumptions are good enough to make a quite accurate measurement using Eratosthenes’ method. His basic method is sound, and is even used by schoolchildren around the world today.

Other Greek scholars repeated the feat of measuring the Earth using a procedure similar to Eratosthenes’ method. Several decades after Eratosthenes measurement, Posidonius used the star Canopus as his light source and the cities of Rhodes and Alexandria as his baseline. But because he had an incorrect value for the distance between Rhodes and Alexandria, he came up with a value for Earth’s circumference of about 18,000 miles, nearly 7,000 miles too small.

Ptolemy included this smaller value in his treatise on geography in the second century A.D. Later explorers, including Christopher Columbus, believed Ptolemy’s value and became convinced that Earth was small enough to sail around. If Columbus had instead known Eratosthenes larger, and more accurate, value, perhaps he might never have set sail.

Alan Chodos, June 1, 2006
Alan Chodos is the former editor of APS News.

Jimi Hendrix Signed His First Recording Contract 59 Years Ago Today.  It Was With The Devil For One Dollar!
15/10/2024

Jimi Hendrix Signed His First Recording Contract 59 Years Ago Today. It Was With The Devil For One Dollar!

11/10/2024

From a 1972 interview with H Kurtzman, thanks Paul
and guns and things in comic books.
Harvey Kurtzman: Sure, there were. And itching powder and bull whips and fake crocodiles and courses on how to hypnotize girls and make out, the stuff that’s been running in magazines for years. When someone comes along and says, if only you would cut this and that and the other thing out, you would change society, it drives me crazy. I think essentially society dictates the fact of this literature being there is because society wants it. The marvelous thing to me is that kids can get into everything. There is no way in the world to keep kids away from what they really want.
There was an Association of Comic Book Publishers and [Bill] Gaines claimed that he was one of the charter members. They issued a newsletter.
I think you’re talking about something that happened in response to national pressures that put Gaines out of business. There was this publisher named Goldwater who had Archie comics. All the guys who had so-called clean comics were all for cleaning up the comics because they had nothing to lose. The guys who had the so-called dirty comics were against cleaning up the comics because they had everything to lose. Now the sad thing about it all was that these guys who were doing the “clean comics” were actually doing rotten comics. You can’t do anything that has any solid entertainment value without putting guts into it. The guys with the guts were the ones who were the villains in the investigation.
Frank M. Young wrote “‘You’re Only Three-Dimensional Because of Me!’: A Celebration of Harvey Kurtzman’s Sci-Fi Stories.”
Below: From Harvery Kurtzman’s “The Dimension Translator!” in Weird Fantasy #6, March–April 1951, lettered by Bill Oda.
The story achieves the desired “EC ending” — but its ironic twist is far wryer than anything Gaines or Feldstein could achieve. The lack of irrelevant captions (descriptions of what is illustrated and a totem of editorial insecurity) allows Kurtzman to imbue the pages with a rhythm. Until the story’s final two pages, there’s one caption. No more. The use of captions towards the finale are necessary and well-worded, with an authorial voice missing from Feldstein’s work. This story suggests a what-if: a whimsical, humor-infused take on science fiction that gets its points across and is … dare I say it … fun to read! Most EC stories can’t be described thus. They are well-intentioned and sometimes effective, but the logorrheic blather of writer Feldstein’s captions and the dogged pursuit of the all-important twist ending results in a formula that proves hard to overcome.
In “Nose to Nose with Reality,” Anya Davidson traced the lineage of comics journalism and Harvey Kurtzman’s place within it.
Below: From Harvey Kurtzman’s “Rubble!,” in Two-Fisted Tales #24, (November–December 1951), lettered by Ben Oda.
Jess Ruliffson, who discovered comics journalism early in her career via the work of Joe Sacco and Sarah Glidden, defines the practice as “anything that shifts the lens away from the self (straight up graphic memoir) and points the camera to the outside world.” She came across Harvey Kurtzman through a friend: “I forget who, but a very kind friend gave me a copy of the recent Fantagraphics monograph of Co**se on the Imjin when they heard about my project to interview American veterans for a graphic novel…[Kurtzman] has an animator's sensibility for how the body moves, something I've been really curious about emulating in my own work: a sort of balance between Looney Tunes rubberiness and stone-eyed realism. I thought for a long time that "good comics" or "good drawing" was solely the result of hyper-realistic drawing--that you have to be great at perspective and anatomy to be great at comics. I so greatly admire Kurtzman for thumbing his nose at that idea--finding an energetic line that is at times less realistic but speaks so much more truth. I'm still trying to figure out how to balance realism with cartooniness in every comic I make, so it was great to revisit his work and remember how it's done!”
Michael Dooley wrote a two-part piece on “Learning from Kurtzman,” focusing on the latter’s tenure at the “School of Visual Arts, where he taught from 1973 to 1990.” The first part is an interview with Punk magazine’s John Holmstrom; the second is sound bites from Mark Newgarden, Tom Sito, Mike Carlin, Bob Fingerman and Dan Riba.
Above: A self-portrait of Kurtzman attempting to teach a class.
Michael Dooley: Harvey had no formal training as an instructor; why do you think he decided to teach?
John Holmstrom: Well, this is true of all instructors at SVA: they weren’t accredited “teachers,” they were working professionals. I think he needed the extra income. He had a family to support. And I think he liked taking a break from “Little Annie Fanny,” and hanging out with younger cartoonists.
In the NFL, they have the “coaching tree”: how many assistant coaches under coaches become successful head coaches, right? Well, I think Harvey’s “cartoonist tree” is probably longer than Will’s, although they would both be impressive. Not so much his assistants but people who he helped develop: R. Crumb, Gilbert Shelton, Terry Gilliam, and everyone at Mad! Even Gloria Steinem! With Will it was Mike Ploog, Jules Feiffer, Joe Kubert, Jack Cole, Wally Wood.
In “Seriously Funny,” humor cartoonist Drew Friedman updated his own 2012 take on having Harvey Kurtzman as an instructor.
Below: B&W portrait of Kurtzman by Friedman.
Harvey has been criticized by some of his ex-students for not being a great teacher because he was perhaps a bit too lackadaisical, but not by me. It wasn't really important that he be a great teacher -- just being in his presence for three hours a week was enough. For some reason, Harvey chose to focus mainly on creating gag cartoons, preparing his students for a career as, say, a New Yorker, National Lampoon or Pl***oy one-panel gag cartoonist (at the time he was the cartoon editor at Esquire). Rarely did he bring up the subject of his comics work, but if a student or guest ever did, particularly referring to his early MAD or EC war comics, he clearly took pride that anyone was still interested in that work.

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