Needless to say, we won't be doing this...we don't have twins.(via BoingBoing, via Consumerist and Gawker, via Copyranter, via Vintage Adds, via Flickr user Wishbook, via page 135 of the May 8, 1954 Saturday Evening Post, via DuPont)
Needless to say, we won't be doing this...we don't have twins.
The view from the street
The view from inside. It looks like that window is closed, doesn't it.
Here is a picture from 1915 of the open air crib in action.
This box would have worked better at my old town house in Wilmington, there was a good three story drop out the back.
1947. Boxes For Babies. Baby John Gray Jr. happily playing in his Skinner box, developed by Indiana Univ. psychologist Burrhus Frederic Skinner,. type of new-style crib which eliminates germs, drafts & constricting clothing because of temperature controls & slid-down glass
"What the Earl saw was a graceful, childish figure in a black velvet suit, with a lace collar, and with lovelocks waving about the handsome, manly little face, whose eyes met his with a look of innocent good-fellowship." (Little Lord Fauntleroy)For comparison Gainsborough's Blue Boy.
Or Goya's "Blue Boy", actually a rarely seen painting of Infante Don Luis Maria.
Great works of art all of them.




Figure 3. Reconstructed Trees of Apes and Humans with the Siamang as the Outgroup Derived with Tickling-Induced Vocalizations(A) The single maximum-parsimony phylogram as a result of exhaustive search (treelength = 113, RI = 0.750). Shorter branches indicate fewer character state changes.
(B) Bootstrap cladogram as a consensus tree of 10,000 replicates. Bootstrap values for ingroup clades are shown just above their preceding branches.
How did they come up with the idea and what implications does this have for laughter as communication and its evolution?
A cumulative distribution plot of the popular name index (PNI) for the two populations, the state population and the juvenile delinquents shows that the juvenile delinquent names are less popular than the general state population.
The plot shows a considerable difference in the medians (50th percentile). About half the names in the state population have a PNI greater than 20, while about half the names of juvenile delinquents have a PNI greater than 11. The average PNI for the state population is 26.31 but falls to 22.0 for the juvenile delinquents. The study says that this difference is significant. Therefore, compared to the state population of names, a larger proportion of juvenile delinquents have unpopular names.
And attacking me from a different angle, he knows mommy has caught him trying to put my whole head in his mouth.