Thursday, December 31, 2009

howbout it





Thursday, December 24, 2009

10 Gonzo Machines From Rogue Inventor Buckminster Fuller

10 Gonzo Machines From Rogue Inventor Buckminster Fuller
The late, great architect and inventor brought us the geodesic dome, but Buckminster Fuller’s often twisted, often brilliant vision extended far beyond air-conditioned sporting arenas. From super-efficient cars carrying lots of passengers to entire cities encapsulated by single roofs, he made Frank Lloyd Wright look positively normal, and his prescient engineering foreshadowed—and continues to inform—the movement toward green design and prefabricated housing. Here’s a handful of our favorite concepts from the Fuller retrospective at the Whitney Museum in New York.

"If Canada's presence in the world were to be judged by a single criterion, [it should be] Canada's humanism, its pursuit of social justice..."

Pierre Trudeau, to Canadian Jewish Congress, 1974, in David Morrison's Aid and Ebb Tide, a history of CIDA

Monday, December 14, 2009

The insulting slang “kiss my ass” dates back at least to 1705
The science of kissing is called philematology.
Lips are 100 times more sensitive than the tips of the fingers. Not even genitals have as much sensitivity as lips
Approximately two-thirds of people tip their head to the right when they kiss
Some scholars speculate this preference starts in the womb.


KISS (v.)
O.E. cyssan "to kiss," from P.Gmc. *kussijanan (cf. O.S. kussian, O.N. kyssa, O.Fris. kessa, Ger. küssen), from *kuss-, probably ultimately imitative of the sound. The O.E. noun was coss, which became M.E. cuss, but this yielded to kiss, from the verb. For vowel evolution, see bury. There appears to be no common I.E. root word for "kiss," though suggestions of a common ku- sound may be found in the Gmc. root and Gk. kynein "to kiss," Hittite kuwash-anzi "they kiss," Skt. cumbati "he kisses."
"Kissing, as an expression of affection or love, is unknown among many races, and in the history of mankind seems to be a late substitute for the more primitive rubbing of noses, sniffing, and licking." [Buck, p.1113]
Some languages make a distinction between the kiss of affection and that of erotic love (cf. L. saviari "erotic kiss," vs. osculum, lit. "little mouth"). Fr. embrasser "kiss," but lit. "embrace," came about in 17c. when the older word baiser (from L. basiare) acquired an obscene connotation. Kiss of death (1948) is in ref. to Judas' kiss in Gethsemane (Matt. xxvi.48-50). Slang kisser "mouth" is from 1860. Insulting invitation kiss my ass is at least from 1705, but probably much older (cf. "The Miller's Tale").