Archive for April, 2010

April 30, 2010

Second Gulf Oil Rig Overturns (updated)

Details just coming in. Let’s really hope this isn’t even close to as bad as the first. (Update: Not even close. It was on a barge and headed to a scrap yard. Holds 20,000 gallons of fuel, not thought to be leaking.)

This one isn’t out at sea but in a narrow inland channel east west of New Orleans. (South of Morgan city.)

Telegraph, UK:

A second oil rig has overturned in the Gulf of Mexico, coastguard officials have said.

The rig overturned in inland waters near Morgan City off Louisiana on America’s southern coast.

It will hamper efforts to clear up oil from a massive spill in the Gulf of Mexico which is starting to ooze ashore in the southeastern US, threatening birds and other wildlife along fragile islands and barrier marshes and putting one of the world’s richest seafood grounds in peril.

And here’s a good story about what they’re trying to do to stop the spillage at the first site:

BP was today towing a second drilling rig into position as it fought to contain an oil slick in the Gulf of Mexico.

The British oil group said that it was moving the new rig to a position close to the Deepwater Horizon, which exploded six days ago leading to the presumed death of 11 workers.

[...]

The second rig, Development Driller III, will be used to drill a so-called “relief well” to intercept the leak. It will be used to inject cement and mud to block the flow of oil at the site, about 42 miles off the coast of Louisiana.

Let’s hope it works. Here’s a photo of the second rig:

Photo credit

Posted by Thom

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April 30, 2010

Kangaroos in the Noos

News, we meant news. Anyhoo:

• ”What is a kangaroo doing in the middle of the road in Bemidji, Minnesota in November?” Luke Havumaki said. (Uncle John said, “In November?”)

• Solving the mysteries of the elusive tree kangaroo. (With video.)

• A motorcycle rider was injured when he ran into a kanagroo. In Texas. (Texas, Asutralia.)

• Hankering for a new flavor potato chip? How about BBQ Kangaroo?

• The hunt for a phantom kangaroo…in Japan.

Kangaroo v. dingo.

Horny kangaroos!

Shark attacks kangaroo. (Whu-huh?)

• And, finally, more ocean-going kangaroos, with less shark.

Bonus: What do you call a lazy baby kangaroo? (Answer in first comment.)

Posted by Thom

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April 29, 2010

Ancient Weapons Found in Melting Arctic Ice

We now bring you another exciting edition of As the World Melts:

A treasure trove of ancient weapons has emerged from melting ice patches in the Canadian Arctic, revealing hunting strategies thousands of years old.

The weapons, which include a 2,400-year-old spear throwing tools, a 1000-year-old ground squirrel snare, and bows and arrows dating back 850 years, have been found high in the remote Mackenzie Mountains, a region where Mountain Boreal caribou abound in the summer months.

Here’s the region they’re talking about (the mountain range is west of the Mackenzie River):

Posted by Thom

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April 28, 2010

Politalks: Gordon Brown and the “Bigoted Woman”

Woo hoo. This one’s a doozy. Like we said in the last post, we love politics. Especially this kind.

Setup: British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, eight days out from an election in which Brown’s Labour Party is predicted to lose their majority for the first time since 1997, is out on the stump. He comes across one Mrs. Gillian Duffy, aged 65, on a Rochdale, England, street, who had just popped out for a loaf of bread.

He has a nice and seemingly substantive little chat with Mrs. Duffy, surrounded by reporters and cameras.

He says goodbye, and gets in his car…but his microphone is still on. And this conversation is soon played to the world:

Brown: That was a disaster. Well I just … should never have put me in that woman. Whose idea was that?

Aide: I don’t know, I didn’t see.

Brown: It was Sue [Nye] I think. It was just ridiculous.

Aide: I’m not sure if they [the media] will go with that.

Brown: They will go with that.

Aide: What did she say?

Brown: Oh everything, she was just a sort of bigoted woman. She said she used to be Labour. I mean it’s just ridiculous.

Oops!

Here’s the video:

Here’s Brown later being played a recording of a tape of the exchange on a radio show. Ouch.

And here’s news that Brown quickly made his way back to Mrs. Duffy’s home to apologize. But…it’s apparently too late:

We’re guessing that Mr. Brown will regret that one for a long, long time.

Posted by Thom

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April 28, 2010

Wednesday Wrap

If you’re just coming to see us for the first time—Welcome!—and here’s a quick look at what Uncle John’s Blog has been up to for the last week:

THURSDAY, April 22—Earth Day—we brought you the story of the making of the recycle—♲—symbol.

FRIDAY, April 23rd, we had a YouTube contender for college baseball play of the year, and we also said, “Happy Anniversary YouTube!

On the weekend we worked in the garden, watched some hockey, baseball, basketball, golf, stock car racing, bowling, and international lawn dart competition, cut the lawn, barbecued some pork loin, read a book, and had an all-around smashing good time.

MONDAY, April 26th, we learned all about Google Toilet View.

TUESDAY, April 27, brought us a very cool Web site specializing in how people handled household tasks in previous centuries, and, in the post just below this one, which would make it very silly to link to it, what looks like a game of Ukrainian office hockey.

That’s the first of what will be a regular Wednesday Wrap feature. We hope it helps visitors who want to quickly pick and choose just the posts that might interest them, especially as the number of posts per week continue to grow—and they will. Thanks for playing along, and from all of us at the BRI, have a great rest of the week.

(Got a tip on a great story, photograph, or video? Leave a link in the comments, send them to the contact page, or send an email to thom@bathroomreader.com. Thanks!)

Posted by Thom

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April 27, 2010

Eggs, Smoke Bombs, and Fistfights. In Parliament.

We here at the BRI love politics. Especially this kind:

Ukraine’s parliament collapsed into chaos during a debate about extending the Russian navy’s lease on a base.

Parliamentary speaker Vlodymyr Lytvyn was forced to dodge eggs and was later shielded by two aids with black umbrellas.

Opposition MPs set off smoke bombs and the debate had to be held over the whining of alarms.

There are several photos at the link, including this one:

Uncle John says: Looks like a fine game of hockey.

Posted by Thom

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April 27, 2010

Internet Wonders: Old & Interesting

This is such a great idea for a Web site:

This site is about . . .
. . . how people furnished and equipped their homes in previous centuries, and how they handled household tasks. Plans are to keep adding more articles, with the homepage updated every Wednesday—at least. Please email if you want to suggest a topic connected with the history of everyday home life, housekeeping, domestic objects, or any related bits of social history.

Simple and fascinating. There are many, many photographs of actual antique items, along with comprehensive descriptions of their histories. Just a few of the items covered:

Mangles?

Hot metal pressing irons are so common that we may forget how widespread wooden mangling boards once were. People who have heard of mangle boards may know they were traditional courtship gifts carved by young men in Scandinavia or the Netherlands. They were found further afield too, and were a standard way of smoothing linen from Russia to France, from Iceland to Bosnia. We know they were in use before 1600 and in some places were still familiar in the 20th century.

How do they work? Like the 100-year-old Norwegian tools in the photograph, the board was always one half of a pair. A roller was an essential companion to the board. While the board could be beautifully decorated on one side – sometimes with carved initials and dates – the roller had to be smooth and plain for effective “ironing”.

Go on over, take a look around, amuse yourself. You might even come across Uncle John walking the aisles of Tablecloths of the Middle Ages.

April 26, 2010

Google Toilet View

No, it’s not a new Google program—I smell lawsuits! (no pun intended)—it’s a look at what curious Web surfers like ourselves might find by putting the word “toilet” into Google images. Our Toilet-View Top Ten:

1. Wearable Toilets…in Space!

2. The Fish ‘n Flush fish tank/toilet:

3. Do you feel lighter after you go? You can verify that sensation with the Toilet Seat Scale! (We have no explanation for the happy toilet-seat bunny.)

4. The Ski-Jump “Loo with a View” Toilet:

5. A Toilet in Computer Terms:

6. The “Mrs. Hudson” Tobacco Pipe-Shaped Toilet:

7. You’ve heard of a bicycle built for two

8. The Bombs Away Toilet:

9. Toilet Paper Origami!

10. And our very, very favorite, United States Patent 4320756The Toilet Snorkel. We are not kidding. The description:

The recent rash of fires in high-rise hotels and deaths occasioned thereby has given rise to the need for a breathing device and method for supplying a hotel guest and/or fireman with fresh air until he can be rescued. The device and method of this invention provide for the insertion of a breathing tube through the water trap of a toilet to expose an open end thereof to fresh air from a vent pipe connected to a sewer line of the toilet, to enable the user to breathe fresh air through the tube.

And the image:

• If you have any amusing toilet images of your own you’d like to add, please share them with us in the comments. Who knows?—maybe we’ll do a “Uncle John’s View of Your Loo Bathroom Reader” some day and include your entry!

Posted by Thom

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April 24, 2010

Mia Farrow was on the first cover of People magazine, March 4, 1974.

Mia Farrow was on the first cover of People magazine, March 4, 1974.

Posted by BRI

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April 24, 2010

Taco is Spanish for “plug.”

Taco is Spanish for “plug.”

Posted by BRI

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