Researchers at Purdue University have developed an aluminum alloy that creates Hydrogen when mixed with water. This could be a breakthrough in the quest to turn Hydrogen into an economical and viable fuel since, prior to this discovery, isolating Hydrogen required a significant amount of energy.
Irene Sendler posed as a nurse and smuggled 2,500 children out of the Warsaw ghetto, saving their lives during the Nazi occupation in World War II. Now at age 97, Sendler is starting to reap the rewards of her actions as Poland recognized her heroism during a ceremony in March. Read her amazing story at Yahoo News. Link -via Scribal Terror
In 1991, Star Trek creator Gene Roddenerry endorsed the triple-star system 40 Eridani as the sun of the planet Vulcan, home of Mr. Spock. Now, NASA is planning a mission called SIM PlanetQuest that will scan 40 Eridani for signs of planets that could sustain life. The primary star, 40 Eridani A, shows the possibility that a planet of mass similar to Earth’s could have formed there. The system is 16 light years from Earth. SIM Planet Quest is scheduled to launch in 2015. Link
Smoky the cat owes his life to the London Fire Department and Reynolds from Random Acts of Reality. The cat was rescued from a house on fire in London and given oxygen and an ambulance ride to the local vetrinary hospital. Link -via Cynical-C
Our link seems to be blocked, but you can access the story through Cynical-C. (Thanks, tinfoil!)
The Cannes Film Festival is going on now through May 27th. You can follow the action with the IFC Cannes Cam. The webcam will be on 24 hours a day. Link -via Ursi’s Blog
Donato Di Carlo made an animated cartoon of Bill Watterson’s Calvin and Hobbes as his final project at CFP Milano film school. Push play or go to YouTube. -via Fuzzytopia
The Long Now Foundation is a private organization, which aim is to counter today’s "faster and cheaper" way of thinking and promote "slower and better" methods.
The Foundation’s projects include a 10,000-year clock called the Clock of Long Now [wiki], and the Rosetta Project (archiving all documented human languages) the Long Bets (a site about predictions).
Here’s a comedian you’ve never seen: Tommy Cooper, a comedian/magician with his own unique brand of zingers and magic tricks that he just doesn’t seem to get quite right …
Popularized By: Napoleon, naturally Hat Story: Napoleon was known for his tall. Folded-brim felt hats. Some hypothesize, in fact, that Napoleon is remembered as short because his gigantic hats dwarfed the rest of him. Pluses: The last guy who wore it conquered most of Europe. Minuses: From a distance, it looks like a giant possum is asleep atop your head.
THE BERET
Popularized By: Saddam Hussein (president, Iraq) and Max Fischer (president, Rushmore Beekeepers Club). Hat Story: Originally worn in ancient Greece and Rome, the beret reached the Basque country by way of traders. The Romans color-coded their berets (white, for instance, could only be worn by aristocrats). Minuses: Also looks French
THE FEZ
Popularized By: King Hassan II (King of Morocco in the 1960s) and Shriners Hat Story: This visorless, flat-topped, betassled felt cap became part of the official Turkish dress code under Sultan Mahmud II in the 1800s and remained so until being outlawed in 1925, two years after Turkey became a secular republic. Pluses: Friends and family will be able to spot you in a crowd: “Just look for the tassel!” Minuses: Won’t keep the sun out of your eyes; people will start calling you Fezzy McTassleman.
THE BOWLER, AKA THE DERBY
Popularized By: Charlie Chaplin (who played a dictator in The Great Dictator) and Benito Mussolini (who played a dictator in World War II) Hat Story: Originally designed as a kind of stylish hard hat, the narrow-brimmed bowler first appeared in 1850 and for the next several decades was the hat for those who though top hats pretentious—or expensive. Pluses: Much sexier than today’s hard hats (if also less hard) Minuses: It didn’t work that well for Duckie in Pretty in Pink.
EGYPIAN DIADEM
Popularized By: King Tutankhamen (of Egypt) and Steve Martin (of Saturday Night Live) Hat Story: Tut’s royal crown, made of gold, glass and semiprecious stones, featured a vulture and cobra (representing goddesses of lower and upper Egypt) to protect the leader. Martin’s was made of plastic. Pluses: It’s good to be king! Minuses: Airport metal detectors
THE TOP HAT
Popularized By: Abraham Lincoln (16th president of the United States) Hat story: A Cantonese hatter designed the first silk top hat in China for a French dandy back in 1775—but top hats didn’t catch fire until the 1820s. Honest Abe actually wore a variation on the top hat called the stovepipe hat, the hat being straight rather than wider at the top. Pluses: Uber-retro, and black is very slimming. Minuses: Kids always asking you to pull a rabbit out of it.
From mental_floss’ book Scatterbrained, published in Neatorama with permission.
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