beamjockey: Drawing of Bill of the Heterodyne Boys by Phil Foglio. (Default)
K and I are headed for Minicon 50 (yeah, fifty Minicons!) this weekend, 2 through 5 April. I love Minneapolis fandom and I love Minicon-- but this is the first time I've been able to attend in a few years. Here are the program items I'm doing. Can't wait!
Inappropriate (Mis)uses of Astrophysical Matter
FRI 8:30 PM Krushenko's

Forget about using the universe for good! That's not the human way of doing things! Murder by black hole was used as a plot device by Larry Niven in his Hugo award-winning "The Borderland of Sol." Dominic Green postulated using a Penrose accelerator as a waste management "solution" in his Hugo-nominated story, "The Clockwork Atom Bomb." A discussion of the Pandora's Box aspect of particle physics and astrophysics within SF.
Chris Beskar
Bill Higgins
Larry Niven
Michael Kingsley

Almost There
SAT 4:00 PM Veranda 3/4

So, we don't have flying cars. What "technology of the future" is actually right around the corner? A discussion of technologies that we almost have licked including nuclear fusion, anti-gravity, cloaking devices, and teleportation.
Bill Higgins
Bill Thomasson
Chris Beskar
Ctein
Neil Rest
Tyler Tork

Battlefields of Tomorrow
SAT 7:00 PM Veranda 5/6

Powered and unpowered - a discussion of various battle armors in Sci-Fi and the corresponding reality of what is being fielded, under development, and what is to come. Also, find out about the real world development and deployment of lasers, particle beam weapons, rail guns and other directed energy weapons.
Bill Higgins
Chris Beskar
John Stanfield

[Looks like I'll need to get a quick dinner between about 5 and 6:30, or wait and have a late dinner after 8.]

Dawn of the Asteroid Belt: Exploring Vesta and Ceres
SUN 1:00 PM Edina

Asteroids are relics of the ancient Solar System. NASA's Dawn spacecraft orbited Vesta for a year. Now its ion thrusters have propelled it across the Asteroid Belt to Ceres, the largest asteroid, where Dawn has again entered orbit. Join Bill Higgins to explore Dawn's findings at Vesta and its plans for doing science at Ceres.
Bill Higgins


I don't think I've met Chris Beskar, but it looks like I'm going to be seeing a lot of him in the next few days...
beamjockey: Drawing of Bill of the Heterodyne Boys by Phil Foglio. (Default)
Remember that time when meteors clobbered Chicagoland? Remember that other time?

The Chicago Council on Science & Technology does a variety of things to encourage public engagement with science in our city. Including holding scientific talks in a tavern.


I'm appearing in C2ST's Speakeasy series next Tuesday, 3 March, at 7 PM. The venue is exciting: the new Geek Bar Beta in Chicago. It's near the triple corner of North Avenue, Damen, and Milwaukee. The topic:
Vandals of the Void: Damaging Meteors from Chelyabinsk to Chicago

Two years ago, a window-shattering shock wave injured 1400 Russians, and startled the world, as a small asteroid hit Chelyabinsk. Violent meteors are rare, but they can be devastating—and meteors have assaulted Chicagoland at least twice. Join William S. Higgins for a look at the science behind the Chelyabinsk blast. And hear the story of Chicago's own local impacts: one smaller than Chelyabinsk, one MUCH bigger.

Tuesday, March 3rd, 2015 7:00pm
Geek Bar Chicago
1941 West North Avenue
Chicago IL 60622
Twitter: @geekbarchicago


Geek Bar Chicago is handy to the El.

Damage to the Park Forest firehouse, 2003.

Deep strata shaken up by cosmic impact, a very long time ago.



I'm very pleased that C2ST invited me, and I am eager to meet the sort of people who would come out to see a talk like this. Because they've got to be cool.
beamjockey: Drawing of Bill of the Heterodyne Boys by Phil Foglio. (Default)
A couple of weeks ago, Professor Farah Mendlesohn, Head of Department in the Department of English, Communication, Film and Media at Angela Ruskin University, spoke at the Royal Society in London. You may know her as the author and editor of many scholarly books on science fiction and fantasy, or as an organizer working on science fiction conventions in the UK and sometimes North America, or from her Livejournal writings.

The august Royal Society has a series of Friday afternoon lectures on the history of science. They're among my favorite podcasts. (A few Itunes versions here. Huge collection of MP3 downloads here.) I started out by picking the ones closest to my own interests, but eventually I listened to nearly every available talk, because you never know what obscure topic might turn out to be fascinating.

So I was pleased to learn that the 4 May talk was to be given by someone I knew:

The Royal Society and Science Fiction

The lone (mad) scientist is a common trope in science fiction, but hidden away is a fascination with secret and semi-secret societies who work for the future of all mankind. This talk will look at the representation of the Royal Society in science fiction and fantasy as fact, fantasy and metaphor.


A video has just been posted, incorporating the soundtrack of Farah's talk along with images of her slides. Watch it here. (Such talks usually turn up audio-only on Itunes, but this one hasn't appeared there yet.)

Special bonus: Eleven minutes in, image of a SMOFcon T-shirt featuring a member of the Royal Society.
beamjockey: Drawing of Bill of the Heterodyne Boys by Phil Foglio. (Default)
The new version of Cosmos, Todd Johnson explained tonight, differs from Carl Sagan's series.

"But," he added, "they are set in the same universe."
beamjockey: Drawing of Bill of the Heterodyne Boys by Phil Foglio. (Default)
Michael Grebb at CableFax reports on efforts to promote the post-Saganic reboot of TV's Cosmos. The documentary series will be blasted out in "a global launch across hundreds of networks."
In an unprecedented move, Fox Networks on March 9 will premiere Cosmos across 10 U.S. nets simultaneously, including Fox, FX, FXX, FXM, Fox Sports 1, Fox Sports 2, Nat Geo, Nat Geo Wild, Nat Geo Mundo and Fox Life, with Fox International Channels and Nat Geo Channels International premiering the reboot on all 90 Nat Geo channels in 180 countries, as well as 120 Fox-branded channels in 125 countries.
Expect hype, and plenty of it, in the weeks to come.
beamjockey: Drawing of Bill of the Heterodyne Boys by Phil Foglio. (Default)
I'll be at Capricon 34 this weekend in Wheeling, Illinois, doing a few panels and a talk.

Time Travel without Technology
- Friday, 02-07-2014 - 7:00 pm to 8:15 pm - Willow

While most time travel seems to involve a technological breakthrough, sometimes, as with Matheson’s Bid Time Return or Vonnegut’s Slaughterhouse-Five, characters manage to move through time either through force of will or natural phenomenon. How is this time travel different from the more traditional type?
Walt Boyes (M), Roland J. Green, Bill Higgins, Ken Hite, Matt Mitrovich

By the Light of the Chinese Moon
- Saturday, 02-08-2014 - 10:00 am to 11:15 am - Botanic Garden B

On December 14, China became the third country, and the first in 37 years, to soft land on the Moon. Is this the start of a new space race or has the US conceded the Moon to China? Will other countries join them?
Dermot Dobson (M), Bill Higgins, Jeffrey Liss, Jim Plaxco, Henry Spencer

Weird Patents
- Saturday, 02-08-2014 - 11:30 am to 12:45 pm - Botanic Garden A
A look at some of the weird ideas for which people have filed, and received patents.
Dermot Dobson, Bill Higgins, Ruth Pe Palileo (M)

Vandals of the Void: Damaging Meteorites from Chelyabinsk to Chicago
- Saturday, 02-08-2014 - 4:00 pm to 5:15 pm - Botanic Garden A

A window-shattering shock wave injured 1100 Russians and startled the world one year ago. Meteoric violence is rare, but it can be devastating-and meteorites have assaulted Chicagoland at least twice. Bill Higgins reviews the Chelyabinsk blast, reveals our local impacts.
beamjockey: Drawing of Bill of the Heterodyne Boys by Phil Foglio. (Default)
The Boskone folks have kindly invited me to Boston for their famous convention on the weekend of Valentine's Day. And now they have put their program schedule online. A list of items sorted by panelist is also available, if there are particular people you are eager to see.

Unfortunately, K won't be able to attend. Nevertheless I am really looking forward to this con; I'm also planning to hang around Massachusetts for the following week. Here's my schedule.

WSH BRB Front 0363

Paleofutures

Friday 18:00 - 18:50

The new term "paleofuture" describes a future that never was - a prediction made in the past which hasn't panned out and never will. Which foreseen futures have subsequent events rendered impossible? Which are plausible still? What histories, worlds, discoveries, and technologies could (or could not) yet come true? And for extra credit, what are our own predictions of things to come?

Elizabeth Bear (M), Bill Higgins, James Patrick Kelly, Beth Meacham

The Science of Hal Clement's Iceworld

Friday 20:00 - 20:50

In Hal Clement's 1951 novel Iceworld, characters who breathe hot gaseous sulfur confront the mysteries of Earth, to them an unbelievably frigid planet. Among other things, the legendary master of hard SF foresaw robotic interplanetary exploration in a unique way. Join Bill Higgins in exploring the chemistry, physics, and astronomy behind the classic story.

Bill Higgins

[A brand new talk, especially for Boskone, on Hal Clement's home turf.]

Boskone Meet the Guests & Art Show Reception

Friday 21:00 - 22:00

Connoisseurs and philistines alike: welcome! Come meet our special guests while enjoying a feast for the eyes that is the Boskone Art Show. Join us in the Galleria to enjoy refreshments -- and refreshing conversation.

Bill Higgins, Jane Yolen, Seanan McGuire, David Palumbo, Bill Roper, Ginjer Buchanan


[I've heard Boskone's art show is very good. This'll be a great opportunity to get a look at it in my otherwise busy weekend.]


WSH HH&O 1090x960

Kaffeeklatsche with Bill Higgins

Saturday 11:00 - 11:50

[Simply conversation with other fans. Sign up and let's chat!]


Welcome to Fermilab: Particles Beneath the Prairie

Saturday 13:00 - 13:50

Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory is a fascinating place, full of mile-long machines, giant assemblies of intriguing apparatus, underground beams of mysterious particles, and a herd of buffalo. Take a tour and hear a few stories from Bill Higgins's 35 years in the accelerator business.

Bill Higgins




Interview with Science Speaker Bill Higgins

Saturday 14:00 - 14:50

Join us for a lively discussion as former Special Guest Guy Consolmagno interviews Boskone's current Hal Clement Science Speaker, Bill Higgins. Bill is a radiation safety physicist at Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory near Chicago. As a longtime member of fandom, he writes and speaks about the crossroads where science, history, and science fiction meet. Other topics that may come up include spaceflight, astronomy, physics, and maybe even some weird aviation.

Guy Consolmagno (M), Bill Higgins


The Year in Physics and Astronomy

Saturday 17:00 - 17:50

An annual roundup of the latest research and discoveries in physics and astronomy. Our experts will talk about what's new and interesting, cutting-edge and speculative: the Higgs, solar and extrasolar planets, dark energy, and much more besides.

Mark L. Olson (M), Bill Higgins, Guy Consolmagno, Jeff Hecht


[This will require some homework!]

The Dark Universe

Sunday 11:00 - 11:50

What are dark matter and dark energy? What is this dark universe that coexists alongside the cosmos we can see and feel? How apropos is George Lucas' description of The Force? (Obi-Wan Kenobi speaks of "[A]n energy field created by all living things. It surrounds us, penetrates us, and binds the galaxy together.") Is there something in this idea that might reveal mysteries that keep eluding us -- and do we really want to find out?

Mark L. Olson (M), Bill Higgins, Elizabeth Bear, Guy Consolmagno


[This will also require homework. Where did I put that Dark Energy file I compiled when I... oh, right. I haven't blogged about that adventure yet.]

Chelyabinsk Fireball Dashcam View


Vandals of the Void: The Chelyabinsk Meteor Strike of 2013

Sunday 13:00 - 13:50

One year ago, a window-shattering shock wave injured 1400 Russians and startled the world. A 20-meter asteroid had exploded in the sky above Chelyabinsk. Join Bill Higgins and Guy Consolmagno for a look at what scientists have learned about this striking event.

Bill Higgins, Guy Consolmagno


[I couldn't resist the opportunity to juice up my Chelyabinsk talk by drafting my favorite meteorite expert.]
beamjockey: Drawing of Bill of the Heterodyne Boys by Phil Foglio. (Default)
William Higgins appears to have been a man of peculiar habits, possessing very great abilities, and singularly comprehensive views upon science, but totally deficient in energy, and in the ambition of working out to the end any happy idea in science which might strike him, and in that peculiar tact of putting his opinions forward in such a manner as to call immediate attention to them, without which the most important discoveries may remain for many years neglected and barren. He was incapable of making his age comprehend him. His style of lecturing was very quaint, and a number of laughable anecdotes are still remembered of circumstances the result of this quaintness, but which our space, and our respect for his memory, forbid us dwelling upon.

Who says? )
beamjockey: Drawing of Bill of the Heterodyne Boys by Phil Foglio. (Default)
My friend Fred Pohl passed away last weekend. There are appreciations of him sprouting up all over the Net. Some that have come to my attention include Jo Walton's, Joe Haldeman's, and one on his own blog site by Leah Zeldes.

Fred Pohl


Fred connected us to the age of pulps, when science fiction was still forming itself, and to the first decade of SF fandom. He had innumerable tales to tell, about those days, and about all the years in between.

I'd like to share a few links, in particular audio and video where you can hear Fred tell stories and converse with his colleagues.

Frederik Pohl reminisces at Windycon in 2012 (MP3), courtesy of Leigh Hanlon's Chicagoscope .

Fred and Jack Williamson discuss “The Art, Science and Combat of Collaboration”, a 1977 panel at Confusion, from The Time Traveler Show and the Science Fiction Oral History Association.

SFFaudio page rounding up audio of Fred's fiction.

Also from SFFaudio, a 1972 interview with Isaac Asimov and Fred Pohl together:
Part 1 (MP3). Part 2 (MP3).

Video of Fred's 2004 talk at the Library of Congress (Realplayer format).

Mentions of Fred in my own blog. "Eponymously Yours, W. Skeffington Higgins."

(Prose) interview with R. K. Troughton at Amazing Stories.

Edited to add: Another audio track by Fred Pohl exists, but as far as I know it's not available online. In 2002, celebrating Windycon XXIX, ISFiC Press created A Walk on the Windy Side, a compact disc containing comedy, songs, and stories.

On this CD, Fred reads his 1949 story for Planet Stories, "Let the Ants Try." It's a 28-minute track. Each person attending Windycon was given a copy, but no further copies were sold, so the album is rather scarce.*

On the theory that two nonagenarians are better than one, the StarShipSofa podcast interviewed Jack Vance and Fred Pohl together in 2010.

In the 1960s, Fred was also a regular guest on Long John Nebel's late-night radio talk show. Some tapes of this show are floating around the Net, but I can't lay hands just now on any episodes that may feature Fred.



* I'm on it too, performing Jeff Duntemann's filksong "Our Space Opera Goes Rolling Along." Maybe I should put it online somehow. The tune is public domain, and I could probably get Jeff's blessing.
beamjockey: Drawing of Bill of the Heterodyne Boys by Phil Foglio. (Default)
Hal Clement was one of the great science fiction writers, and an enthusiastic participant in programming at SF conventions. His talent in explaining and speculating about science, which fans experienced in reading his fiction and hearing him at cons, reminded us that he must have been very good at his vocation as a high school science teacher.

The New England Science Fiction Association writes:
After his death, NESFA decided to honor him by establishing the Hal Clement Science Speaker as a memorial. Each year we bring someone who shares his wide interest in science combined with a love of science fiction to speak at Boskone.
I am pleased to say that I have been invited to be Hal Clement Science Speaker at Boskone 51, 14 through 16 February 2014, in Boston.

I am grateful for this honor, especially because I've always wanted to attend Boskone. Boston is a great city that I always love to visit. So I'm really looking forward to Valentine's Day.
beamjockey: Drawing of Bill of the Heterodyne Boys by Phil Foglio. (Default)
Musecon 3 is nearly upon us and the program is now available. I'll be at the Westin Chicago Northwest, in Itasca, Illinois, participating in a couple of items:

Todd and Bill Provide Endless Amusement

Sat, August 3, 4:30pm – 5:45pm
Carlyle Room
Todd Johnson, Bill Higgins
Endless Amusement is a book, published in 1820, containing 400 scientific demonstrations, experiments, tricks, and projects for young readers. Join Todd Johnson and Bill Higgins for Regency-era fun, as they try out a couple of the saner suggestions. Merely discussed will be the ones our hotel would not allow (plenty of recipes for fireworks) and the ones that are rather dangerous ("DISSOLVE 100 grains of mercury by heat, in an ounce and a half of nitric acid...")


Ukulele Summit
Sun, August 4, 9:00 am – 10:15 am
Lakeshore Room
Lisa Golladay, Michael Blake, Bill Higgins, Bryan Peterson
Four strings and the truth. Bring a uke, borrow a uke, teach a song or learn some new ones. Absolute beginners welcome; also blazing hipsters, guitarists who seek the light, and those of us for whom vaudeville never died (you know who you are).


(Yes, Lisa, I know who I am.)
beamjockey: Drawing of Bill of the Heterodyne Boys by Phil Foglio. (Default)
I'll be at Capricon 33 in Wheeling, Illinois this weekend, having attended thirty-two Capricons previously.

Science Reporting Sucks Rocks
Friday, 02-08-2013
11:30 am to 1:00 pm
Botanic Garden A

Correlation is not causation! Every day, the news butchers articles about health, climate change, and technological advancements. Science literacy continues to suffer in the US. Why does this happen? How can we prevent it?

Dr. Lisa Freitag
Bill Higgins (Moderator)
W. A. (Bill) Thomasson
Dr. Michael Unger

Nerdvana: Big Bang Theory's Impact on the Perception of Fandom
Friday, 02-08-2013
1:00 pm to 2:30 pm
Birch A

Love it or leave it, everyone seems to be watching the Big Bang Theory. The shows fan community reaches beyond whom we would expect to be interested. Are they laughing at us or with us?

Jerry Gilio (Moderator)
Liz Gilio
Bill Higgins
Mary Anne Mohanraj

Curiosity on Mars Slideshow
Friday, 02-08-2013
4:00 pm to 5:30 pm
River AB
Curiosity is on Mars and there's more out there than Marvin the Martian. Come feed your curiosity with the latest from Curiosity.

Bill Higgins

Higgins and Silver Talk
[This really could have used a better title...]
Friday, 02-08-2013
7:00 pm to 8:30 pm
Bill Higgins and Steven Silver discovered a joint affection for Brewer's Dictionary of Phrase and Fable, a collection explaining the background of common sayings. In this wide-ranging discussion, the two use randomly selected entries to guide their conversation.

Bill Higgins
Steven H Silver

AI Vision: Early AI vs. Current Technology
Saturday, 02-09-2013
1:00 pm to 2:30 pm
Botanic Garden A
Humankind has been dreaming of thinking machines for centuries. History, philosophy, mechanics, computing, and human imagination feed this dream. What has been and what will be?

Peter de Jong
James Dobbs (Moderator)
Bill Higgins

Riverworlds: The Latest on Mars and Titan
Saturday, 02-09-2013
4:00 pm to 5:30 pm
Botanic Garden A

Dried river beds on Mars? A mini Nile on Titan? Interesting. We want to learn more.

Bill Higgins
Jeffrey Liss
Jim Plaxco (Moderator)
beamjockey: Drawing of Bill of the Heterodyne Boys by Phil Foglio. (Default)
NPR's Morning Edition this morning featured a story about growing meat without growing animals. Not only did they refer to Alexis Carrel, but they interviewed Frederik Pohl about The Space Merchants/Gravy Planet.
Though the idea of growing animal parts in a lab rather than on a farm has been around for a century, it has never seemed like a good time to talk about man-made meat. But the concept has had some famous proponents, including Winston Churchill in his 1932 essay "Fifty Years Hence": "We shall escape the absurdity of growing a whole chicken in order to eat the breast or wing, by growing these parts separately under a suitable medium."

Churchill was likely inspired by the work of Alexis Carrel, who at the time of Churchill's comment had been keeping alive a cultured piece of chicken heart tissue for 20 years. The Nobel Prize-winning scientist kept his experiment small, but it fed many an imagination, including that of author Frederik Pohl.

Pohl wrote the 1952 sci-fi novel The Space Merchants, in which tissue-cultured meat gets a starring if inglorious role — it's the starter ingredient for an ever-growing lumpen food source known affectionately as Chicken Little.

But Pohl, now almost 90, suspected the novel he wrote with Cyril M. Kornbluth wouldn't stay science fiction for long.

"Actually, when Cyril and I wrote the book, I thought we would see much of it actually happening," he says.

Extra bonus points for quoting Winston Churchill!

(By the way, today is the 81st anniversary of the transatlantic flight of Carrel's pal Charles Lindbergh.)
beamjockey: Drawing of Bill of the Heterodyne Boys by Phil Foglio. (Default)
Couldn't get back to sleep. I decided to get up and do something else.

I've just been watching an interesting talk on TV by David M. Friedman, author of The Immortalists: Charles Lindbergh, Dr. Alexis Carrel, and Their Daring Quest to Live Forever (not to be confused with Prof. David D. Friedman, author of Harald, with whom I occasionally correspond).

Lindbergh & Carrel on the cover of Time, June 13, 1938


The Immortalists is the story of the friendship between Charles A. Lindbergh, first man to fly the Atlantic alone, and Dr. Alexis Carrel, eccentric medical pioneer. Friedman's talk made it sound very much worth reading.

Carrel developed a technique for suturing blood vessels, an important step on the road to transplanting organs. For this he received the 1912 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.

Carrel worked on tissue culture, becoming the first to observe cancer cells growing outside the body.

Working with Lindbergh in the 1930s, Carrel developed a perfusion pump that could circulate blood through a disembodied organ.

Carrel believed that cells could keep dividing indefinitely (this is no longer believed correct). Beginning in 1912, he kept cells from the heart of an embryonic chicken alive and growing for over 20 years in his lab.

I want to jot down something about a topic Friedman may have missed: Carrel's influence on writers of science fiction. This has been bouncing around my head for years, and maybe it's time I told someone.

SF is storytelling about the ideas the Age of Science gives us. So SF authors are always looking for information about science and technology and society, plucking ideas and hoarding them away.

Among other things, scientific notions that get a lot of attention in the popular media tend to show up in SF stories. So fiction can be a funhouse mirror reflecting, in distortion, fashions in the pop science of its era.

Think of the way General Semantics shows up in the SF stories of so many different writers in the 1940s and 1950s, or O'Neill's space colonies in the 1970s and 1980s, or the notion that RNA has something to do with memory, or intelligent dolphins.

It's important that Carrel loved publicity, and was always happy to take phone calls from reporters. His doings were frequently reported in the Sunday supplements. When in 1935 he wrote a book for laymen, Man the Unknown, it became a best-seller. (I gather he was worried about inferior races overwhelming superior races, and therefore big on eugenics, among other things.)

How did Carrel's ideas work their way into science fiction?

To answer this well, I should read Carrel's book, Friedman's book, and some other histories, and comb a mountain of SF looking for clues.

Instead, I will answer quickly, with some examples off the top of my head. Maybe this will help somebody else discuss this in more depth. Maybe somebody already has, but I am ignorant of the work. If you have other examples, or opinions on my remarks, please leave a comment.

1. In L. Sprague de Camp's "The Gnarly Man," about a prehistoric survivor living in New York, there is a celebrated and theatrical surgeon who insists that his assistants wear purple robes in the operating room. Carrel and his assistants wore unusual black robes (everybody else was required to wear hoods, but Carrel got to wear the Special White Surgeon's Hat).

2. Frederik Pohl and Cyril Kornbluth included the "Lindbergh-Carrel pump" keeping geezers alive in Search the Sky. I think it shows up in another of Fred's stories as well.

3. In The Space Merchants or Gravy Planet, again by Pohl and Kornbluth, a major food source is "Chicken Little," a giant blob of immortal chicken-heart tissue connected to a nutrient supply. Workers slice meat off the outside of Chicken Little, and it keeps growing more.

4.I believe there is Carrel-influenced stuff in Bernard Wolfe's Limbo, but you know, I've forgotten what it is. (The inventive novel is also saturated with pop-science ideas from the works of Korzybski, Wiener, and others.)

5. Arch Oboler, the master of radio horror, wrote a memorable 1938 episode of Lights Out, "Chicken Heart," in which a tissue-culture experiment escapes from the laboratory and grows to monstrous size, engulfing an entire city. (Realaudio here courtesy of David Szondy, starring the great Hans Conried.) This may sound stupid as I describe it, but it's actually scary. I told you he was a master.

6. Holding up a second mirror to distort Oboler's already distorted image of Carrel's work, comedian Bill Cosby recounted hearing the forbidden Lights Out as a terrified kid, The plot points of Oboler's story are present, but in Cosby's telling it becomes one of the most hilarious comedy routines I've ever heard. It's recorded on the 1966 album "Wonderfulness," in a track also entitled "Chicken Heart."

So. Anybody up for further Carrel-spotting?
beamjockey: Drawing of Bill of the Heterodyne Boys by Phil Foglio. (Default)
I just got word that the Physics Bus will stop at Fermilab on Sunday, 30 July. Unfortunately, I will not be in town to see it. From their site:

The Physics Bus is our science museum on wheels, and it's taken us on Bus Stops from New Mexico to California.

The brightly-colored bus is the first sign that something out of the ordinary is about to happen at a school, fair or function. It makes a colorful statement, announcing that an amazing display of smoke, sparks and force is about to begin.

The bus itself is a study in science and hands-on experimentation. From its 50-foot, molecule-tipped TV antennae mast to its vegetable-oil-powered engine, the bus is itself part of the event--and something that kids talk about for hours afterward.

Photo of the Physics Bus


Here is the bus's blog.

When I was young, I used to dream about wandering the country as an itinerant Van de Graaf operator. Maybe it could really happen.
beamjockey: Drawing of Bill of the Heterodyne Boys by Phil Foglio. (Default)
I had not heard of Famelab before, but I think a nationwide contest to find the best explainers of science is a cool idea. If they had it in my own nation, maybe I'd audition!

Podcasts here.

(For that matter, there are a number of city "science festivals" in the UK-- the finals event was part of the Cheltenham Science Festival-- but none I'm aware of in the US.)
beamjockey: Drawing of Bill of the Heterodyne Boys by Phil Foglio. (Default)
Remember when I posted about the 1923 Fleischer animated film explaining special relativity?

According to Richard Godwin, his ever-eclectic company Apogee Books is coming out with an edition of Garrett P. Serviss's The Einstein Theory of Relativity. It comes with a DVD that includes not only the animated relativity movie, but also the Fleischer film Evolution, which stirred up controversy in the 1920s and which features stop-motion dinosaurs by Willis O'Brien.

(The relativity film is really Die Grundlagen der Einsteinschen Relativitäts-Theorie, directed by Hanns-Walter Kornblum, repackaged by Max Fleischer for the U.S. market. I think he may have added some footage to the German movie.)

Fifteen bucks gets you the Serviss book and both movies. Wow.

(I don't know whether the films are the seven-reel classroom versions or the four-reel, 40-minute theatrical cuts; I suspect the latter. Will have to ask Richard.)

Yes, this is the same Garrett P. Serviss, a tireless popularizer of science, who penned an unauthorized sequel to War of the Worlds, namely Edison's Conquest of Mars. Which you can also buy from Apogee! Two-fisted adventurers Tom Edison and Lord Kelvin reverse-engineer the alien spacecraft and death-rays, build their own fleet, and take vengeance back to the Martians, while rescuing pretty girls in the process.

Edited to Add: I'll embed a Youtube clip, only 20 minutes long. Disappointingly, this version ignores the most interesting parts of Einstein's relativity.
beamjockey: Drawing of Bill of the Heterodyne Boys by Phil Foglio. (Default)
Congratulations to Mike Fortner, teacher, physicist, SF fan, and Mayor of West Chicago.

In yesterday's primary, Mike became the Republican candidate for the District 95 seat in the Illinois House of Representatives.

Politics could benefit from having more scientists involved, and Mike has been an energetic public servant.

District 95 is the southwestern corner, more or less, of Dupage County. This is a strongly Republican area.

There was nobody on the corresponding Democratic primary ballot, so I don't yet know who might be running against Mike.
beamjockey: Drawing of Bill of the Heterodyne Boys by Phil Foglio. (Default)
I've learned of a small rundown of comics about science at the site of some space scientists who produced one.

[Cover of CINDI spacecraft comic book]
beamjockey: Drawing of Bill of the Heterodyne Boys by Phil Foglio. (Default)
Clyde Tombaugh, formerly of Streator, Illinois (Jerry Corrigan's home town), would turn 100 tomorrow. As it was, he almost made it to age 91.

I never met him, but those who did always speak highly of him.

Profile

beamjockey: Drawing of Bill of the Heterodyne Boys by Phil Foglio. (Default)
beamjockey

May 2024

S M T W T F S
   1234
56789 1011
12131415161718
19202122232425
262728293031 

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Apr. 4th, 2026 10:55 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios