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rgmi A Privacy Chair That Draws All the Attention to You
« le: Janvier 01, 2025, 08:24:25 am »
Phng Avengers/Totoro mashup soaks an adorable Hulk in the rain
 Want to have your brain blown fo stanley usstanley website a few minutes today  Dip your head in some physics, and realize that there   no such thing as pink. Scientifically speaking, that is: it   just something our brain makes up. MinutePhysics puts it in predictably concise terms: all colors correspond to wavelengths of light. But there   no wavelength in there for pink! Instead, it   a combination of neural trickery鈥攐ur brains strip green out of the spectrum to fill in for pink. Brains! [MinutePhysics]                                                         stanley quencher Physics Zgnc Number of Facebook friends linked to size of certain brain areas
 When Dr. Athelstan Spilhaus met President Kennedy in 1962, JFK told him,  The only science I ever learned was from your comic strip in the Boston Globe.      The comic strip that Kennedy was referring to was called  Our New Age  and ran in about 110 Sunday newspapers all around the world from 1958 until 1975. Much like Arthur Radebaughs mid-century futurism comic  Closer Than We Think,  which ran from 1958 until 1963,  Our New Age  was a shining example of techno-utopian idealism. Not all of the strips were futuristic, but they all had that particular brand of optimism that so characterized postwar American thinkin stanley cup usa g about science and technology. Each week the strip had a different theme, illustrating a scientific principle or advancement in an easily digestible way stanley mug . Some of the strips tackled straightforward scientific topics like meteors and volcanoes, while others explained the latest scientific developments in synthetic fibers, space travel and lasers. The strip seemed to say that the building blocks of the future were laid out before us, we just had to build it. Athelstan Spilhaus wrote  Our New Age  from its inception until 1973, but it went through three different illustrators: fi stanley cup rst Earl Cros, then E.C. Felton, then Gene Fawcette. I have a strip from 1975  when Fawcette is still credited as the illustrator  but after Spilhaus stopped doing the strip in 1973 the identity of the writer was unclear. As Spilhaus tells it, he was inspired to start the comic strip in October