It may be in sight.
Child Abuse
And now for something completely different–a family that names their kids after presidents.
A Whole New Meaning To “Air Guitar”
I think we have a finalist for the Darwin Awards, here:
The 16-year-old business student, from China, was “hyped up with exhilaration” when he rebounded off the bed and out of the window, coroner Tan Boon Heng told the Straits Times newspaper.
A Whole New Meaning To “Air Guitar”
I think we have a finalist for the Darwin Awards, here:
The 16-year-old business student, from China, was “hyped up with exhilaration” when he rebounded off the bed and out of the window, coroner Tan Boon Heng told the Straits Times newspaper.
A Whole New Meaning To “Air Guitar”
I think we have a finalist for the Darwin Awards, here:
The 16-year-old business student, from China, was “hyped up with exhilaration” when he rebounded off the bed and out of the window, coroner Tan Boon Heng told the Straits Times newspaper.
No Worries
During National Engineers Week, Robert Samuelson writes that the so-called science and engineering gap is phony.
Prepare To Have Your Tears Jerked
…and save yourself the money for the movie ticket. It’s Lego Brokeback Mountain.
Devilish Weather
We’ve lost a lot of probes in the attempt to explore Mars (though the Soviets and now Russians, have had even worse luck–have they ever had a successful Mars mission?). There even used to be grim jokes in Pasadena about the “Great Cosmic Ghoul” who ate Martian-bound robots.
But interestingly, once a mission is successful, it tends to be very successful–the rovers that landed a couple years ago were only designed (and expected to last) for three months, but they’re still going strong. Michelle Thaller has an article that explains why bad weather is good for Martian explorers.
Cultural Imperialism
Ain’t it wonderful?
People looked at me funny when I took these pictures. Why on earth is that guy taking pictures of the Red Bull? He
Appeasing Tyrants
…at Harvard (or anywhere else), doesn’t work. Larry Summers is resigning:
I’ve been disappointed by Summers’ repeated apologies for raising legitimate intellectual questions in a fair and respectful way. I consoled myself with the thought that, if Summers remained in place, he might ultimately do more for reform than he might have by standing up for principle. Now even this second-best consolation is gone, making it all the more obvious that Summers ought to have stood up to the Harvard’s dictators from the start, even if it cost him his job. Now Summers must either remain silent, or hit back and implicitly acknowledge that all those apologies were bogus.