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Donald Wilson

Can we please stop bringing crying babies to places they clearly don’t want to be??

I saw a clip of Emma Raducanu at the Cincinnati Open asking for a crying child to be taken out and people were acting like she was some sort of villain. It’s tennis. You’re supposed to be quiet. A toddler isn’t going to sit still for that long anyway, so she was honestly doing the kid a favor. I don’t understand why some parents insist on bringing babies to events where silence is part of the experience. I went to see Max Richter in Boston once. Just five musicians on stage in this beautiful old theatre. First song finishes, and then a baby starts crying. The acoustics were so perfect you could hear every little sound. And yes, that included the crying. It’s just… why? #EmmaRaducanu #TennisLife #PublicEtiquette #Sports #Tennis

Can we please stop bringing crying babies to places they clearly don’t want to be??
1776 Patriot

WWII Walking Wonder: The Untold Story of the Slinky In 1943, naval engineer Richard James was working in his Philadelphia workshop on tension springs meant to stabilize sensitive instruments aboard battleships during World War II. While adjusting a spring, it slipped from his hands and “walked” across the floor in a mesmerizing motion. James was astonished. He and his wife, Betty, immediately realized this accidental movement could be the basis for a playful invention. They experimented with dozens of prototypes, measuring how far springs could travel, how many flips they could make, and how quickly they could complete a descent. After testing hundreds of coils, they determined that a spring 2.5 inches in diameter made from high-grade Swedish steel produced the most consistent walking effect. Slight variations in coil thickness, tension, and length drastically changed the motion, and only about 2% of springs tested achieved the ideal “walk.” The war influenced materials and timing: steel was rationed, making their carefully sourced Swedish steel highly valuable, and small-scale production required meticulous hand-winding and testing. Post-war America’s shift to consumer goods in 1945 created the perfect market moment, allowing the Jameses to bring their invention to stores. Each original Slinky sold for $1, equivalent to roughly $17 today. Finally, they revealed the creation to the public: at Gimbels department store in Philadelphia, 400 units were displayed, and all sold within 90 minutes. By the early 1950s, Slinky was sold in over 30,000 stores nationwide, and more than 50 million units were purchased by 1960. Today, over 300 million Slinkys are sold annually worldwide, including metal, plastic, glow-in-the-dark, and themed editions like Disney and Star Wars. The toy also serves as an educational tool, demonstrating wave motion, gravity, and momentum in classrooms across the globe. #WWII #WWIIHistory #USHistory #History #America #USA #Military #Toys

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