This year's pears looking like a good crop--like this one a few years ago.
Turning once
more to a compendium, The 2,548 Best Things Anybody Ever Said, by Robert
Byrne, I stopped on this jewel (?) from Woody Allen: “I’m astounded by people
who want to ‘know’ the universe when it’s hard enough to find your way around
Chinatown.”
I want to know about the
universe. In high school & college, I took only the General Science courses. Now, I must Google
questions about the universe that come to mind. Or that I read about in the
newspaper.
This spring, I capitalized a phrase in my journal:
WORLD/UNIVERSE: "It takes more than an hour for Spacecraft Cassini signals to
travel the approximately one-billion miles between Saturn and Earth. The gap
between the rings of Saturn and the top of Saturn’s atmosphere is between 1200
and 1500 miles across. The D ring is the innermost ring. Cassini was launched
in 1997 from Cape Canaveral and reached Saturn in 2004." (– from the Associated
Press.)
I can’t fathom such distances and the technology it
took (and takes) to achieve such a feat.
Here is a second “saying” that prompted a response:
“Is life worth living? That depends on the liver.” – Unknown author.
This
went in a different direction for me because of what I recently learned about
the human liver. “The liver is always flush with blood holding about 13 percent
of the body’s supply at any given time.” (N. Angier, New York Times) “Everything
you put in your mouth must go through the liver before it does anything useful
elsewhere in the body.” (Dr. A. Lok, U-Michigan)
“Gemish is the total soup of the liver. The liver
oscillates and regenerates itself. It’s “to-do” list is second only to the
brain, and it numbers well over 300 items “to do.” (U. Schibler, U-Geneva)
Would I be one of the “liverati”?
Finally, I’ll quote from some of the previous presidents,
or what others have said about previous presidents. “Nixon is a shifty-eyed
******* liar. . . . He’s one of the few in the history of this country to run
for high office talking out of both sides of his mouth at the same time and
lying out of both sides.” – Harry S. Truman.
“I would have made a good pope.” – Richard M. Nixon.
“Jerry Ford is a nice guy, but he played too much
football with his helmet off.” – Lyndon Baines Johnson.
“Ronald Reagan is not a typical politician because he
doesn’t know how to lie, cheat, and steal. He’s always had an agent for that.”
– Bob Hope.
“Ronald Reagan is the Fred Astaire of foot-in-mouth
disease.” – Jeff Davis
“Well, I would—if they realized that we—again if—if
we led them back to that stalemate only because that our retaliatory power, our
seconds, or strike at them after our first strike, would be so destructive that
they couldn’t afford, that would hold them off.” – Ronald Reagan when asked if
nuclear war could be limited to tactical weapons.
We think we're in uncertain times. Clarence Darrow (1857-1938) said, "When I was a boy I was told that anybody could become President; I'm beginning to believe it."
2 comments:
Love the flutterby.
I grieve that I didn't pay enough attention to science lessons and that history was abominably taught while I was at school (it was just dates, rulers, battles). I have so much to catch up on and know I will fail. I hope to die trying though.
Astronomy is beyond my little mind, but I love the stars! Good post.
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