Share the joy and amazement as a baby experiences rain for the first time. 
In a Spiegel Online interview, "whistleblower Peter Wilmshurst discusses 
how pressure from Big Pharma corrupts research into new medicines and leads 
companies to cover up fraudulent data. He says he has no regrets about 
taking on an entire industry."
Listen to a porcupine vocalizing as it enjoys eating a pumpkin.
Paul Krugman counteracts the "
fantasies and fictions of the first Republican candidate debate." 
Finally, a likely explanation for 
what happened to the lost colony at Roanoke.
A Bloomberg op-ed piece opines 
why the Fed should raise interest rates now. 
"With 
Red: A Natural History of the Redhead, Jacky Colliss 
Harvey sets out to discover everything — what it takes to make a 
redhead, where in the world they come from and why they exist at all; 
whether redheads are actually different or just treated differently; how
 they got their reputation, what that reputation might be and whether 
they deserve it."
 High-school football is undergoing some dramatic changes
High-school football is undergoing some dramatic changes:
"...convention is being challenged by a more professional model at the 
highest levels as top players urgently pursue college scholarships, 
training becomes more specialized, big business opens its wallet, school
 choice expands, and schools seek to market themselves through sports, 
some for financial survival. Increasingly,
 prep football talent is being consolidated on powerful public, private,
 parochial, charter and magnet school teams. And recruiting to those 
schools is widespread in one guise or another."
An impressive 
apple peeler-slicer from Pampered Chef.
A report that 4/5 of the cocaine being sold in Britain has been 
cut with a veterinary deworming medicine (levamisole), giving users ulcerating skin lesions.
Razor scooter fail reminds us that smokers and drinkers aren't the only ones causing higher costs for medical insurance.
"A postgraduate student of counter-terrorism was 
falsely accused of being a terrorist after an official at Staffordshire University had spotted him reading a textbook entitled Terrorism Studies in the college library."

A compilation of 
incidents occurring during the Hajj.
Robert Reich:  "
Meritocracy is a lie."
Watch out!  Slow down!  
Be careful on this corner!
A North Carolina woman says 
she is happier than ever after she fulfilled her lifelong wish of becoming blind.  Drain cleaner to the eyes did the job: "My eyes were screaming and I had some drain cleaner going down my cheek 
burning my skin,” she said. “But all I could think was ‘I am going 
blind, it is going to be okay.”
A discussion thread of "
what's considered trashy if you're poor, but classy if you're rich."
Arguably the 
greatest slam dunk in the history of basketball.
A school district has 
banned elementary students from playing the game of tag:
“The Mercer Island School District and school teams have recently 
revisited expectations for student behavior to address student 
safety. This means while at play, especially during recess and 
unstructured time, students are expected to keep their hands to 
themselves. The rationale behind this is to ensure the physical and 
emotional safety of all students..."

A Congressman 
drank the Pope's leftover water.  "The congressman also gave some of the papal water to his wife Debra, and two staff members, to drink. He then invited US Senator Bob Casey, also from Pennsylvania, into his office. Senator Casey brought his wife and mother and they all placed their fingers in the glass."
Security camera footage 
gif of a bored schoolboy.  Definitely worth the 15-second watch time.
A review of the 
battle of Agincourt.  I used to include Agincourt in my lectures about death by asphyxiation.
A 
feel-good story for the day.  "I couldn't imagine spending five hours a day traveling back and forth to work, let alone on foot,” Officer Stamper said..."
The 
world's only menstruation museum.
A list of this year's 
winners of MacArthur foundation "genius grants."
A Danish travel company's humorous advertisement ("Do it for Mom") 
encourages young people to have sex and explains how grandmothers can help them.
A 
cat gif is 
better when sound is added.  Or 
like this.  If you are among those who detest cat gifs, the 
links are still useful for adding sound to other gifs.
"Few people know that 
the U.S. government is directly responsible for Popeye's dependence on the canned green vegetable. In the 1930's, America was mired in the Great Depression. The U.S. 
government was looking for a way to promote iron-rich spinach as a meat 
substitute. To help spread the word, they decided to hire one of 
America's favorite celebrities, Popeye the Sailor Man.  It was a smart plan. And it worked like a charm."
The impressive 
caterpillar of the Hickory Horned Devil (becomes a moth, 
Citheronia regalis).
A delineation of 
994 mass shootings in the United States in 1004 days.
Why the 
American family farm is the deadliest workplace.
"The City of Montreal is going ahead with its controversial plan 
to dump eight billion litres of raw sewage into the St. Lawrence River."
If you need a quick or cheap engraved ID tag for your keys or luggage, go to a pet store and use their tag machine.
California governor Jerry Brown 
has signed into law "Right To Die" legislation.
A vicar clearing out a cupboard at his church 
found a forgotten first edition King James Bible dating back to 1611.
Stoke your schadenfreude with this video of the 
owner of a Lamborghini revving his engine until it catches fire and destroys the vehicle.
"
Inside the Koch Brothers' Industrial Empire."
Impressive performance 
with one and with two hula hoops.
When the NHL goes into overtime now, the competition is 
3-on-3.
After an attack by a swan, a 
man gives the swan what for.
Tips on eating barbecue.
gif of 
uranium in a cloud chamber.
The top photo is of a replica of the 1868 locomotive "
Leviathan," constructed by David Klocke, and photographed by Fred Boucher at Steamfest 2009.  The other images embedded in this divertimento come from a gallery of drawings posted at 
BibliOdyssey, as a reminder to me that not all early American locomotives were painted black.  Identities and information about the locomotives at the link.