Kansas Wheat Farm Stories
My father and his twin brother recently visited a small piece of Kansas farmland (approximately here) that has been in the Barron family for decades. In the past the land had been rented out to local tenant farmers who grew wheat. The family now wants to sell the land (hence the reason for their visit), as few people are interested in trying to be a landlord from several thousand miles away.
While in Kansas the brothers visited the last remaining Barron (a 75-year-old second cousin of theirs) still living in the area; they learned a lot about the history of the land and our family. I won't bore you with the details (of which there are many), but I do want to share a funny story about the twin's birth that even they didn't know about before this trip!
When the "twins" were born in 1948 (William and John), the second was a surprise to the doctor and to our parents. As a consequence, the name for the younger of the two twins had not yet been decided. In a telegram sent to our uncle Lloyd on the day announcing the birth of the twins, this is apparent as our father cited the names of the twins as a "William Clark" and a "John Doe". John Doe is a term used for someone whose true name is unknown. When our parents finally picked the name for the younger of the two twins, they apparently decided to keep the first name "John".
You can see a larger image of my father, aka "John Doe", at our (soon to be sold) wheat farm here.
Imaginary Numbers Explained
I just read a fascinating article about the square root of -1 (or commonly known as i) over at one of the more geeky blogs I read: Good Math, Bad Math. History + Math + Complex Concepts That Make Me Feel Smart = Happy Mike:
It got its name as the imaginary number as a result of a diatribe by Rene Descartes, who believed it was a phony artifact of sloppy algebra. He did not accept that it had any meaning at all: thus it was an "imaginary" number.
...
Once the reality of i as a number was accepted, mathematics was changed irrevocably. Instead of the numbers described by algebraic equations being points on a line, suddenly they become points on a plane.
I'm not sure if I understand i any better, but I certainly enjoyed reading about it.
Hair from the Past
Yes ladies, the hair is real. I guess this explains my lacking powers of seduction during the eighth grade. But damn, looking back, don't I look sexy with that big blonde tidal wave of hair?
The Class of '97 is just beginning to prepare for our ten year reunion. As a result, Claudio has been kind enough to send out some scans of past yearbooks and school newspapers. It's a bit funny looking at all those old photos, and quite humorous.
Highway to the Defunct-Zone
The F-14 Tomcat is finally being retired. The plane has been around since 1970, but it was made famous by 1986's Top Gun (sidenote: this was the movie where Shannon really solidified her crush on Tom Cruise, before he went bat-shit crazy).
Pop Music From 100 Years Ago
Ever wonder what you grandparents listened to when they hung out with their friends? Click on over to 20 songs from 1901-1920 for a list of the top songs from that era (freely available to download).
The recordings sound muffled due to their age and the fact that the original performances were sung directly into an "acoustical horn" whose vibrations transcribed the sound, carving circular grooves into a revolving wax cylinder.
(via foldedspace.org)