Seasonal humour: Getting that special paper published

By Gordon Rugg

Every paper is special to its proud author. Some papers, though, are more special than others, and those papers can be hard to get published. Suppose, for instance, that you want to gift the world with your explanation for how the Egyptian pyramids were built using genetically engineered dinosaurs created by the Nephilim and controlled by implanted microchips. Traditional academic publishing can be very narrow-minded about such bold new ideas. This makes publication difficult. Difficult, however, is not the same as impossible.

This article presents a few modest proposals for ways of overcoming those difficulties, and achieving publication for that special paper. Continue reading

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Life at Uni: Cookery concepts 101

By Gordon Rugg

If you’re cooking for yourself for the first time, you might find this article amusing. (Maybe not very helpful, but there’s a fair chance it will be amusing…)

I know someone who used to be an army cook. The principles below are based on what he told me about his cookery training in the Army.

I suspect that his stories didn’t do justice to that fine institution, and that they contain some adjustments of the truth for greater dramatic effect, so please treat the information below with due caution.

The four food groups:

There are four food groups, namely:

  • Vegetables
  • Meat
  • Pastry
  • Chocolate

Basic cookery:

  • Boil vegetables till they go soft.
  • Fry meat it till it stops bleeding in the middle.
  • Bake pastry till it goes hard.
  • Eat chocolate before anyone else can get it.

Intermediate cookery:

  • Eggs come out of chickens, which are meat, so eggs are meat, and should be fried.
  • Mushrooms are not vegetables, pastry or chocolate, so they are meat, and should be fried.
  • Onions are honorary meat, and should be fried.

Advanced cookery:

  • If meat is hard after you fry it, then treat it as an honorary vegetable, and boil it with vegetables until they all go soft. That gives you stew.
  • If you put stew in pastry, then you get pie.

Legal disclaimer: We accept no responsibility for anyone basing their food preparation on third-hand stories from former army cooks with a track record of telling tall tales, about how things may or may not have been done half a century ago.

What’s it like at Uni? The people…

By Gordon Rugg

If you’re about to start your first year at university, and you’re feeling unsure and nervous, then you’ve got plenty of company. Most new students feel that way, though not all of them show it. This is the first in a short series of articles for people in your situation, about key information that should make your life easier.

This article is about roles at university. The American cartoon below summarises them pretty accurately.

academic muppetsImage from Twitter

So what are the roles other than “Elmo the undergrad” and how are they likely to affect you?

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Monday mood lifter: The case of the sinister buttocks

By Gordon Rugg

Poetic justice can be a wonderful thing. Mano Singham at Freethought Blogs has a delightful account of what happens when students attempt to outwit plagiarism detection software by using a thesaurus. It doesn’t end well for them…

http://freethoughtblogs.com/singham/2014/08/18/how-rogeting-leads-to-sinister-buttocks/

 

Barbara Cartland meets H.P. Lovecraft, Episode 5

By Gordon Rugg

This article is the concluding part of a serial inspired by the concept of Dame Barbara Cartland writing with H.P. Lovecraft. In it, sentences from a Dame Barbara novel and from a Lovecraft short story have been stitched together into a startling new creation by an anonymous narrator. We have seen the two authors’ styles mesh seamlessly together in the previous episodes, but how will they handle the transition from depictions of anguished fear into the gentler climes of love?

The story so far…

In arguably the greatest love story since Twilight, the Earl of Rockbrook has been tempted by the wicked Lady Louise Welwyn. Convalescing in a nearby manor house after a riding accident, he falls in love with the beautiful Purilla, and asks her to marry him, so that they can return to his estate and live happily ever after. Will her response leave him as damaged emotionally as he was damaged physically by the fall? Or will she reveal a passion that matches his? What searing emotions will be revealed by her answer, and will the story end with the two living happily ever after, or will it have a twist of eldritch horror?

cartland4

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Monday Mood Lifter – YMCA in Cantonese

By Gordon Rugg

If you’re tired and jaded, and even fish rubbing or hunting stuffed moose can’t bring a sparkle into your life, then fear not, since help is at hand.

This is the inimitable George Lam version of YMCA. It’s completely suitable for work; the only thing it lacks is a video to do justice to the unique qualities of this cover. Though, thinking about it, I’m not sure whether any video could do justice to it…

Anyway, here it is; I hope it brightens your day.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NUye5UxO-54

PS: As an added bonus, if you liked that, you could go on to try his cover of Uptown Girl (with suitable-for-work video of a live performance, on a Segway, sung and subtitled in English and Cantonese). You’re unlikely ever to see anything else quite like it.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FoUkRYDLbNQ

 

 

 

Barbara Cartland meets H.P. Lovecraft, Episode 4

By Gordon Rugg

This article is the penultimate instalment of a serial inspired by the concept of Dame Barbara Cartland writing with H.P. Lovecraft. In it, sentences from a Dame Barbara novel and from a Lovecraft short story have been stitched together into an unhealthy palimpsest recounted by an anonymous narrator. Previously, we have seen the inner torment of the hero, inimitably recounted by the two authors playing to their own unique strengths. How will they depict romance, when it enters the tale?

The story so far…

The Earl of Rockbrook is torn between the pure true love he craves and the barren, gnarled and terrrible fate which lurks before him, in the sensuous form of Lady Louise Welwyn. To distract himself from that eldritch horror he has gone riding, but has been knocked unconscious when his horse trips in a rabbit hole.

cartland4

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Barbara Cartland meets H.P. Lovecraft, Episode 3

By Gordon Rugg

For reasons that seemed good at the time, I’m writing a serial inspired by the concept of Dame Barbara Cartland collaborating in writing with H.P. Lovecraft. In the previous episodes, we have seen the two inimitable talents working in harmony, with the underlying dark mysteries in Cartland’s classic plot being masterfully elaborated by Lovecraft’s unique style. In this episode, we see this harmony continue, as the story swells to thrilling new heights…

The story so far…

The Earl of Rockbrook has succumbed to the blighted charms of Lady Louise Welwyn, and faces the prospect of having to marry her, even though he does not particularly like her as a person. Now, as he ponders the consequences, his mind turns to the gulf between the pure true love he craves and the barren, gnarled and terrrible fate which lurks before him.

cartland4

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Monday mood lifter – The Japanese have a word for this too…

By Gordon Rugg

Komuso_Buddhist_monk_beggar_Kita-kamakura

Image from Wikimedia

Yes, it’s a picture of a man with his head in a basket, playing a very large bamboo flute.

Yes, the Japanese do have a word for it. Three words, in fact, because there’s a story behind why people went round with baskets on their heads, playing flutes. It’s a story of Zen and espionage and pentatonic scales.

Continue reading