Farewell Connie!
Today the Mudd and physical plant staff said a fond farewell to Connie Bruner, the Mudd's 1st and 2nd floor custodian for the last several years. We wish her well on the next part of her adventure. Happy travels Connie!
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Today the Mudd and physical plant staff said a fond farewell to Connie Bruner, the Mudd's 1st and 2nd floor custodian for the last several years. We wish her well on the next part of her adventure. Happy travels Connie!
After a long, dry spell, here's the latest batch of new-to-us CDs. We have dipped into our treasure trove of gifts and extracted a pile of what we like to call the good ol' M1505's. For you browsers, M1505 is excerpts from operas. To get the whole deal, go to M1500. This batch even has a few selections from musicals.
Today would have been Don Martin's 77th birthday. And he was not a lounge singer, half of a comedy duo, or a manufacturer of British luxury cars. No, children, Don Martin was a brilliant cartoonist, best known for his work in Mad magazine back when it was funny. His comic strips, according to Wikipedia, "featured outrageous events and sometimes outright violations of the laws of space-time." Who else would picture a man who, after inserting a dollar bill into a change machine, was changed into a woman?
One cannot think of Don Martin without remembering his great use of onomatopoeia. In his honor, and in the hopes that our gentle readers will make appropriate use of it, we give you The Don Martin Dictionary, an alphabetical archive of all his sound effects.
You know how things work. In order to prove anything to some people, you have to have data. And that means numbers. One of our favorite sources of data is the Statistical Abstract of the United States. We just received the 2008 edition, which, in reality, gives you stats for 2005 or 2006 and sometimes several years earlier.
There's an electronic version on the U.S. Census Bureau's web site that goes all the way back beyond 1878. Compare and contrast the number of post offices (1878: 39,258 - 2006: 36,826) or coal production (1878: 49,130,584 tons - 2005: 1,133,000,000 tons.) Astonish your friends with your storehouse of scintillating factoids.
On May 14, 1881 Harper's Weekly featured a cartoon about the high cost of gas. If this family had waited just over a year and moved to Appleton, they could have had the benefit of lighting their home with hydroelectric power.
Read all about the world's first hydroelectric power station.

Hey kids! May 1st is RSS Awareness Day!
What's RSS, you ask? Check out this Lawrence University page about it and subscribe to Lawrence University RSS feeds. You'll especially want to subscribe to the feed for this blog, of course...
This page contains all entries posted to News from the Mudd in May 2008. They are listed from oldest to newest.
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