May172013

oaklandtribunearchives:

Oakland, CA April 26, 1939 - Lee Ya-Ching arrives at the Oakland Airport aboard her red and yellow “Spirit of New China” plane on her campaign to raise funds for China’s 30 million war refugees. She was greeted by China’s vice-consul to San Francisco Patrick Sun. 

Lee studied and earned her license at the Boeing School of Aeronautics in Oakland, California in 1935.

(Oakland Tribune Photos)

If you are interested in learning more about Lee, Air & Space magazine, a publication of The Smithsonian, has a very knowledgable article about her on their website http://www.airspacemag.com/history-of-flight/Chinas_First_Lady_of_Flight.html

(via coolchicksfromhistory)

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(via kiwibird)

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pewinternet:

Slideshow: Tech trends, library stats, and how teens do research

Research Analyst Kathryn Zickuhr gave a presentation at the Westchester Library Association’s annual conference that touched on a lot of our recent findings on library use, as well as a broad overview of technology adoption among adults and teens and a quick look at how teens do research in the digital age. Take a look at her comprehensive slideshow.

(via pewresearch)

May162013
vanityfair:

With the sexified Disney princess scandal in the news, take a look back at           VF.com’s Sexiest Animated Character Bracket.

vanityfair:

With the sexified Disney princess scandal in the news, take a look back at           VF.com’s Sexiest Animated Character Bracket.

5PM

wired:

watercutter:

motherjones:

nickbaumann:

Awesome icons of the Female Saints of Television, by Spencer Salberg. Prints are available here.

“Our Lady of Having it All”

Love. Love. Love.

Everything about this is spectacular. Prayer cards, anyone?

6AM
“My mother said I must always be intolerant of ignorance but understanding of illiteracy. That some people, unable to go to school, were more educated and more intelligent than college professors.” Maya Angelou (via loveyourchaos)

(Source: xxxi-i-mcmxcii, via loveyourchaos)

3AM

andy065:

afootballreport:

Indecisive? Pick the middle

“The goalkeeper picks a side and dives 93.7 percent of the time and just stands in the middle only 6.3 percent of the time. There was a clear bias toward action.”

The Journal of Economic Psychology recently looked at the link between decision making and penalty kicks, and found, somewhat surprisingly, that goalkeepers might be better off doing nothing at all. 

Analyzing close to 300 penalty kick situations, the study considered goalkeeper’s decisions in regards to which direction to move towards, the area to which the ball was actually kicked, and most importantly, whether the penalty was actually blocked.

The conclusion? Goalkeepers dive right or left 93.7% of the time, and choose to remain in the center in only 6.3% of penalty kick situations.

The problem comes from the fact that the direction of penalty kicks were distributed much more evenly, with almost 30% of penalty kicks sent towards the center of the goal.

But if goalkeepers could “almost double their save percentage by doing nothing,” why do they almost always choose to dive?

The researchers point towards something called action bias. Essentially, there’s an accepted norm that goalkeepers dive when attempting to block penalty kicks. If they fail to block a penalty kick when diving, they are considered to have made an effort; if they stay in the center when a penalty tucks into a corner, they’re lazy, indecisive, and made no attempt to block the ball. Goalkeepers favor action because of social expectations.

Read More

however, save percentages go up if a goalie follows a simple quote from a Shakira song: The hips don’t lie. 9 times out of 10, if you watch the kick takers hips as they approach the ball, you can tell where they’re shooting to. Hips open up, going strong foot side, hips close in, weak side. Knee over the ball is a low drive, and hint of leaning back means its going in the air.

(via pitchside23)