Friday, 31 October 2014

Happy Halloween! Louis Armstrong Performs Skeleton in the Closet (1936)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ae5WtA_Oqfs

Should you happen to be in the vicinity of Corona, Queens this Halloween afternoon, the Louis Armstrong House Museum will be welcoming trick-or-treaters ’til 6pm. (Fun-sized Snickers be damned! Go anyway, just to see “To Jack Bradley, the ‘Greatest’ Photo Taker,” a collection of candid, private moments captured by the friend Satchmo described as his “white son.”)


If pre-existing engagements prevent you from haunting Corona today, virtual chills await you, above, with “The Skeleton In The Closet,” Armstrong’s show-stopping number from 1936’s Pennies From Heaven. (That masked man on the drums is frequent collaborator Lionel Hampton.)


The vintage Halloween content is a real treat. Gimme ghosts, goblins, and an “old deserted mansion on an old forgotten road” over psycho gore or depressed prefab sexiness any day, not just October 31.


Pennies From Heaven was Armstrong’s first major screen appearance. At the insistence of star Bing Crosby, his turn as a mathematically-challenged bandleader snagged him a main title credit, a first for an African-American actor appearing opposite whites.


The role itself is not a pillar of race advancement, but Ricky Riccardi, the Armstrong House’s Archivist notes that Armstrong remained fond of the work, reenacting an entire scene from memory when he and Crosby appeared as guests on the David Frost Show in 1971.


Riccardi subjects “The Skeleton in the Closet” to a close musical and performance analysis on his Wonderful World of Louis Armstrong blog, a major source of year round goodies for Armstrong fans.


Rattle your bones!


Related Content:


Louis Armstrong Plays Historic Cold War Concerts in East Berlin & Budapest (1965)


Watch the Earliest Known Footage of Louis Armstrong Performing Live in Concert (Copenhagen, 1933)


Louis Armstrong Plays Trumpet at the Egyptian Pyramids; Dizzy Gillespie Charms a Snake in Pakistan


Ayun Halliday is an author, homeschooler, and Chief Primatologist of the East Village Inky zine. Follow her @AyunHalliday



Happy Halloween! Louis Armstrong Performs Skeleton in the Closet (1936) is a post from: Open Culture. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Google Plus, or get our Daily Email. And don’t miss our big collections of Free Online Courses, Free Online Movies, Free eBooks, Free Audio Books, Free Foreign Language Lessons, and MOOCs.


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Happy Halloween! Louis Armstrong Performs Skeleton in the Closet (1936)

The Books the Boss is Reading



#457290084 / gettyimages.com


Bruce Springsteen will make his debut as a children’s author next Tuesday, with the release of Outlaw Pete. In advance of that literary event, The New York Times interviewed Springsteen about the books on his reading list and his literary tastes. They ask:


What books are currently on your night stand?


I just finished “Moby-Dick,” which scared me off for a long time due to the hype of its difficulty. I found it to be a beautiful boy’s adventure story and not that difficult to read. Warning: You will learn more about whales than you have ever wished to know. On the other hand, I never wanted it to end. Also, “Love in the Time of Cholera,” by Gabriel García Márquez. It simply touched on so many aspects of human love.


Who is your favorite novelist of all time, and your favorite novelist writing today?


I like the Russians, the Chekhov short stories, Tolstoy and Dostoyevsky. I never read any of them until the past four years, and found them to be thoroughly psychologically modern. Personal favorites: “The Brothers Karamazov” and, of course, “Anna Karenina.”


Current favorites: Philip Roth, Cormac McCarthy and Richard Ford. It’s hard to beat “American Pastoral,” “I Married a Communist” and “Sabbath’s Theater.” Cormac McCarthy’s “Blood Meridian” remains a watermark in my reading. It’s the combination of Faulkner and Sergio Leone’s spaghetti westerns that gives the book its spark for me. I love the way Richard Ford writes about New Jersey. “The Sportswriter,” “Independence Day” and “The Lay of the Land” are all set on my stomping grounds and, besides being poignant and hilarious, nail the Jersey Shore perfectly.



The rest of the interview touches on his favorite New Jersey writer (had to ask that); the writers who most inspired his songwriting (spoiler alert, Flannery O’Connor is one of them); his favorite book about music; the unexpected books on his shelves (hello Bertrand Russell’s “The History of Western Philosophy“); and much more. Read the interview in its entirety here.


Note, you can find most of the classic books he mentions in our collection, 600 Free eBooks for iPad, Kindle & Other Devices.


Related Content:


Bruce Springsteen Plays East Berlin in 1988: I’m Not Here For Any Government. I’ve Come to Play Rock


Bruce Springsteen and Pink Floyd Get Their First Scholarly Journals and Academic Conferences


Heat Mapping the Rise of Bruce Springsteen: How the Boss Went Viral in a Pre-Internet Era



The Books the Boss is Reading is a post from: Open Culture. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Google Plus, or get our Daily Email. And don’t miss our big collections of Free Online Courses, Free Online Movies, Free eBooks, Free Audio Books, Free Foreign Language Lessons, and MOOCs.


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The Books the Boss is Reading

11 Skills You Need To Master To Land A $100,000 Engineering Job At Google

sergey brin google glass


Google is the most desirable employer on Earth. 


Engineers are the rock stars there — and they’re paid accordingly. 


Interns start at $ 70,000 to $ 90,000 salaries, while software engineers pull in $ 118,000 and senior software engineers make an average of $ 152,985. 


But one does not simply walk into the Googleplex.


The company receives upwards of 2.5 million job applications a year, but only hires about 4,000 people. 


Thankfully for would-be Googlers, the Google in Education team has released a list of skills that they want to see in potential engineers. 


“Having a solid foundation in Computer Science is important in being a successful Software Engineer,” the company says. “This guide is a suggested path for University students to develop their technical skills academically and non-academically through self-paced, hands-on learning.”


Here are the skills Google wants its tech talent to master, complete with online resources to get you started: 


1. Mastering the foundation. You have to be able to get through an introduction to CS course, like the ones from Udacity or Coursera.  


2. Learn to code in at least one object-oriented programming language. Like C++, Java, or Python. Consult MIT or Udacity. 


3. Learn other programming languages. Add Java Script, CSS, Ruby, and HTML to your skillset. W3school and CodeAcademy are there to help. 


4. Test your code. Because Google wants you to be able to “catch bugs, create tests, and break your software.” Udacity, once again. 


5. Have some background in abstract math. Like logical reasoning and discrete math, which lots of computer science draws on. MIT can help you with mathematics for computer science. 


6. Understand algorithms and data structures. Google wants you to learn about fundamental data types like stacks, queues, and bags, as well as grasp sorting algorithms like quicksort, mergesort, and heapsort. MIT provides the recommended online resources, and the book “The Algorithm Design Manual” is super helpful, too. 


7. Get to know operating systems. Because they’ll be where you do much of your work. The University of California, Berkeley, provides a primer. 


8. Become familiar with artificial intelligence. Google loves robots. Stanford has the knowledge. 


9. Learn how to build compilers. Stanford says that when you do that, “you will learn how a program written in a high-level language designed for humans is systematically translated into a program written in low-level assembly more suited to machines.” Head to Coursera for the learning. 


10. Learn cryptography. Because cybersecurity is crucial. Coursera and Udacity provide courses. 


11. Learn parallel programming. Because being able to carry out tons of computations at the same time is super powerful. The University of Illinois can help you out. 


But Google doesn’t just look at skills in its select candidates — the search giant seeks specific personality qualities, too. 


SEE ALSO: 11 Qualities Google Looks For In Job Candidates


Join the conversation about this story »


Education



11 Skills You Need To Master To Land A $100,000 Engineering Job At Google

Walter Benjamin’s Radio Plays for Kids (1929-1932)

benjamin radio plays


Many novelists and poets—from Oscar Wilde to Neil Gaiman—have excelled at reaching adults as well as kids, but it’s incredibly rare to find an academic who can do so. Two of the few exceptions that come to mind are the ever popular C.S. Lewis and J.R.R. Tolkien, both well-respected Oxford scholars and more-than-able children’s authors. We can add to that short list a rather unexpected name—that of Walter Benjamin: apocalyptic Marxist theorist and literary critic, student of mystical Judaism and Kabbalah, mentor and friend to Hannah Arendt, Theodor Adorno, Bertolt Brecht, and Herman Hesse, and children’s radio host. During the years 1927 and 1933, while working on his monumental, and unfinished, Arcades Project and teaching at the University of Heidelberg, Benjamin also maintained a lively presence as a broadcaster, where “he found himself,” Critical Theory tells us, “writing on a variety of topics for… all ages, including children and adolescents.”


Columbia Student Assaulted In Campus Dorm

columbia university


A female Columbia University graduate student was assaulted in her on-campus dormitory Wednesday night, according to local news reports.


The student was returning to her dorm from a jog, and was followed in by a man she did not know, CBS 2 reports. The man then “groped and fondled her” and “tried to take off the woman’s bra,” police confirmed to CBS.


According to the police, the woman’s screams scared off her attacker.


Police named 27-year-old Allen Taylor as a suspect in the assault.


According to Gothamist, “Taylor, who is homeless, was charged with attempted rape in the first degree, second degree burglary and sexual abuse.”


SEE ALSO: This Striking Statistic Says A Lot About Sexual Assault On College Campuses


Join the conversation about this story »


Education



Columbia Student Assaulted In Campus Dorm

Vintage Photos of Veterans of the Napoleonic Wars, Taken Circa 1858

Monsieur Moret of the 2nd Regiment 1814/15


Historians have debated for centuries how Napoleon Bonaparte managed to turn the same men who once overthrew a king in the name of liberté, égalité  and fraternité into a formidable fighting force devoted to an emperor. But that’s precisely what he did. As he swept through Italy, Spain and Egypt, his army grew rapidly and not just with French troops. Polish, German, Dutch and Italian soldiers took up arms under Napoleon’s banner. In 1805, in a French village facing the English Channel, Napoleon christened his massive multinational army the Grande Armée.


Monsieur Ducel Mameluke de la Garde 1813-1815.


Originally, the diminutive despot from Corsica planned to use the force to invade Britain but that ultimately never happened. Instead, he directed his force to take out some of his continental rivals. The Grande Armée destroyed the Holy Roman Empire at Austerlitz. After it forced the Austrians into submission following the Battle of Wagram in 1809, the Grande Armée set out for Napoleon’s disastrous campaign in Russia. As it marched towards Moscow in 1812, its ranks swelled to over a half million troops. As it retreated, it was reduced to less than 120,000.


Monsieur Vitry Departmental Guard


Napoleon and the Grande Armée were finally defeated in 1815 during the Battle of Waterloo. And though Napoleon was ignominiously exiled to Elba, he, and his army, continued to be revered by the French. On the anniversary of his death, May 5th, veterans of the Napoleonic wars would pay homage to the Emperor by marching in full uniform through Paris’ Place Vendôme.


Quartermaster Fabry 1st Hussars


In 1858, someone took portraits of the veterans using that newfangled technology called photography. The men were well into old age when the pictures were taken, and some were clearly struggling to stay still for the length of the camera’s exposure. But they all look impressive in their uniforms complete with epaulettes, medals, sashes and plumes. You can see some of the images above. Click on each to enlarge them.


The photographs, highlighted this week on Mashable, come from a website hosted by Brown University. There you can see more images from the collection.


via Mashable


Related Content:


14,000 Free Images from the French Revolution Now Available Online


The First Color Photos From World War I: The German Front


Napoleon: The Greatest Movie Stanley Kubrick Never Made


Jonathan Crow is a Los Angeles-based writer and filmmaker whose work has appeared in Yahoo!, The Hollywood Reporter, and other publications. You can follow him at @jonccrow. And check out his blog Veeptopus, featuring lots of pictures of vice presidents with octopuses on their heads.  The Veeptopus store is here.



Vintage Photos of Veterans of the Napoleonic Wars, Taken Circa 1858 is a post from: Open Culture. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Google Plus, or get our Daily Email. And don’t miss our big collections of Free Online Courses, Free Online Movies, Free eBooks, Free Audio Books, Free Foreign Language Lessons, and MOOCs.


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Vintage Photos of Veterans of the Napoleonic Wars, Taken Circa 1858

Charles & Ray Eames’ Short Film on the Mexican Day of the Dead (1957)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YJZf-2fLpGM

As much fun as Americans have on Halloween, we could learn a thing or two from the Mexicans. Their Día de los Muertos, the celebration of which spans October 31 to November 2, gets more elaborate, more serious, and somehow more jovial at the same time. The robust Mexican culture of Los Angeles, where I live, assures us a range of Día de los Muertos festivities each and every year, most impressively the well-known cross-cultural blow-out at the Hollywood Forever Cemetery. But I passed my most memorable Día de los Muertos on the campus of the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México where, the year I went, they’d put together an entire field of shrines to the dead, normal enough for the holiday, but that time around they’d decided to theme them all after Jorge Luis Borges stories. (An Argentine, yes, but this has become a Latin American holiday.) Every so often, the power went out — Mexico City, remember — plunging the thousands of us there amid the hundreds of representations of  “The Aleph,” “Funes the Memorious,” and, appropriately, “The Garden of Forking Paths,” into periodic darkness.


As much as I would recommend such an experience, maybe you wouldn’t want to make it your introduction to the Mexican Day of the Dead. Maybe you’d prefer this short film from famed designers (and, perhaps not coincidentally, Angelenos) Charles and Ray Eames, a film that paints a portrait of Día de los Muertos through its icons and artifacts just as their acclaimed Powers of Ten painted a portrait of Earth at every scale. “In Mexico,” explains its narrator, “an intimate acceptance of death extends far back into pre-Hispanic times. In the Aztec culture which preceded the coming of the Spaniards, death shows itself again and again — a familiar image. These ancient things of this land were joined over the centuries with the Spanish celebration of All Souls. Together they form a universal festival of many facets and many dimensions — the Day of the Dead.” Through its cempasúchitl flowers, its sugar skulls, and, yes, its angel-guiding rockets, The Day of the Dead examines just what this endlessly fascinating holiday has, over the centuries, come to mean.


The Day of the Dead  (1957) will be added to our big collection, 700 Free Movies Online: Great Classics, Indies, Noir, Westerns, etc..


Related Content:


Down to the Bone: A Claymation for The Day of the Dead


Designers Charles & Ray Eames Create a Promotional Film for the Groundbreaking Polaroid SX-70 Instant Camera (1972)


Charles & Ray Eames’ Iconic Film Powers of Ten (1977) and the Lesser-Known Prototype from 1968


Charles and Ray Eames’ Powers of Ten: The Classic Film Re-Imagined By 40 Artists


Colin Marshall hosts and produces Notebook on Cities and Culture and writes essays on cities, language, Asia, and men’s style. He’s at work on a book about Los Angeles, A Los Angeles Primer. Follow him on Twitter at @colinmarshall or on Facebook.



Charles & Ray Eames’ Short Film on the Mexican Day of the Dead (1957) is a post from: Open Culture. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Google Plus, or get our Daily Email. And don’t miss our big collections of Free Online Courses, Free Online Movies, Free eBooks, Free Audio Books, Free Foreign Language Lessons, and MOOCs.


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Charles & Ray Eames’ Short Film on the Mexican Day of the Dead (1957)

Thursday, 30 October 2014

13 Things You Never Knew About Halloween

halloweenHalloween is the spookiest night of the year, when spirits wander the earth freely and children wander the neighborhood seeking candy and causing havoc.


But how much do you really know about Halloween?


We rounded up 13 of the best facts about Halloween, from its history to bizarre laws targeting mischief makers. You might be surprised at what you find.


1. There’s a $ 1,000 fine for using or selling Silly String in Hollywood on Halloween.


The prank product has been banned in Hollywood since 2004 after thousands of bored people would buy it on the streets of Hollywood from illegal vendors and “vandalize” the streets. The city ordinance calls for a maximum $ 1,000 fine and/or six months in jail for “use, possession, sale or distribution of Silly String in Hollywood from 12:01 AM on October 31 to 12:00 PM on November 1.”


2. Dressing up on Halloween comes from the Celts.


Celts believed Samhain was a time when the wall between our world and the paranormal world was porous and spirits could get through. Because of this belief, it was common for the Celts to wear costumes and masks during the festival to ward off or befuddle any evil spirits.


3. The moniker “Halloween” comes from the Catholics.


Hallowmas is a three-day Catholic holiday where saints are honored and people pray for the recently deceased. At the start of the 11th century, it was decreed by the pope that it would last from Oct. 31 (All Hallow’s Eve) until Nov. 2, most likely because that was when Samhain was celebrated and the church was trying to convert the pagans.


“All Hallow’s Eve” then evolved into “All Hallow’s Even,” and by the 18th century it was commonly referred to as “Hallowe’en.”


4. We should carve turnips, not pumpkins.


The origin of Jack-O-Lanterns comes from a Celtic folk tale of a stingy farmer named Jack who would constantly play tricks on the devil. The devil responded by forcing him to wander purgatory with only a burning lump of coal from hell. Jack took the coal and made a lantern from a turnip, using it to guide his lost soul.


Carved Turnips


The myth was brought over by Irish families fleeing the potato famine in the 1800s, and since turnips were hard to come by in the US, America’s pumpkins were used as a substitute to guide lost souls and keep evil spirits like “Jack of the Lantern” away.


5. Halloween symbols aren’t random.


Black cats, spiders, and bats are all Halloween symbols because of their spooky history and ties to Wiccans. All three were thought to be the familiars of witches in the middle ages, and are often associated with bad luck.


Bats are even further connected to Halloween by the ancient Samhain ritual of building a bonfire, which drove away insects and attracted bats.


6. Fears of poisoned Halloween candy are unfounded.


One of parents’ biggest fears is that their child’s Halloween candy is poisoned or contains razor blades.


In reality, this fear is almost entirely unfounded. There are only two known cases of poisoning, and both involved relatives, according to LiveScience. In 1970, a boy died of a heroin overdose. The investigators found it on his candy, but in a twist they later discovered the boy had accidentally consumed some of his uncle’s heroin stash, and the family had sprinkled some on the candy to cover up the incident.


Even more horrifically, in 1974 Timothy O’Bryan died after eating a Pixy Stix his father had laced with cyanide to collect on the insurance money, according to Smithsonian Magazine.


And now, parents in Colorado are worried about their children eating candy infused with marijuana. We’ll have to wait to see how widespread this problem turns out to be.


7. Halloween and the candy industry supposedly influenced Daylight Savings Time.


Candy makers supposedly lobbied to extend daylight savings time into the beginning of November to get an extra hour of daylight so children could collect even more candy (thus forcing people to purchase more sweets to meet the demand).


halloween candy


They wanted it so badly that during the 1985 hearings on daylight saving time, they put candy pumpkins on the seat of committee members, according to NPR. (The candy industry disputes this account, according to The New York Times.)


8. Candy Corn was originally known as “chicken feed.”


Invented by George Renninger, a candy maker at the Wunderle Candy Company of Philadelphia in the 1880s, Candy Corn was originally called “butter cream candies” and “chicken feed” since back then, corn was commonly used as food for livestock (they even had a rooster on the candy boxes).


It had no association with Halloween or fall, and was sold seasonally from March to November. After World War II, advertisers began marketing it as a special Halloween treat due to its colors and ties to the fall harvest.


9. A full moon on Halloween is extremely rare.


Though a common trope in horror movies and Halloween decorations with witches flying across the full moon, it’s actually extremely uncommon for the monthly event to coincide with October 31, or any other date, for that matter.


The next full moon on Halloween won’t occur until 2020. The most recent Halloween full moon was back in 2001, and before that it was in 1955.


10. Halloween is still the Wiccan New Year.


Halloween originates from a Celtic tradition called Samhain, a festival that marked the end of the Celtic calendar year in Ireland, Scotland, and the Isle of Man. They believed it was a time that spirits or fairies could enter our world, and the Celts would put out treats and food to placate the spirits — sometimes, a place at the table was even set for the souls of the dead.


Wiccans still celebrate Samhain as a New Year celebration today.


11. Trick-or-treating has been around for a long time.


Great Pumpkin Charlie Brown


Versions of trick-or-treating have existed since medieval times. In the past, it was known as “guising” where children and poor adults went around in costumes during Hallowmas begging for food and money in exchange for songs or prayers. It was also called “souling.”


12. Trick-or-treating as we know it was re-popularized by cartoons.


Trick-or-treating was brought to America by the Irish and became popular during the early 20th century, but died out during WWII when sugar was rationed. After the rationing ended in 1947, children’s magazine “Jack and Jill,” radio program “The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet,” and the “Peanuts” comic strip all helped to re-popularize the tradition of dressing up in costumes and asking for candy from door-to-door.


By 1952, trick-or-treating was hugely popular again.


13. Halloween is the second-most commercial American holiday of the year.


The candy industry in America rakes in an average of $ 2 billion annually thanks to Halloween (that’s 90 million pounds of chocolate).


Americans spend an estimated $ 6 billion on Halloween annually, including candy, costumes, and decorations, according to History.com. (The most commercial holiday in the US is obviously Christmas.)


SEE ALSO: The 18 Most Cliché Halloween Costumes Of 2014


DON’T FORGET: Follow Business Insider’s Life on Facebook!


Join the conversation about this story »


Education



13 Things You Never Knew About Halloween

13 Things You Never Knew About Halloween

halloweenHalloween is the spookiest night of the year, when spirits wander the earth freely and children wander the neighborhood seeking candy and causing havoc.


But how much do you really know about Halloween?


We rounded up 13 of the best facts about Halloween, from its history to bizarre laws targeting mischief makers. You might be surprised at what you find.


1. There’s a $ 1,000 fine for using or selling Silly String in Hollywood on Halloween.


The prank product has been banned in Hollywood since 2004 after thousands of bored people would buy it on the streets of Hollywood from illegal vendors and “vandalize” the streets. The city ordinance calls for a maximum $ 1,000 fine and/or six months in jail for “use, possession, sale or distribution of Silly String in Hollywood from 12:01 AM on October 31 to 12:00 PM on November 1.”


2. Dressing up on Halloween comes from the Celts.


Celts believed Samhain was a time when the wall between our world and the paranormal world was porous and spirits could get through. Because of this belief, it was common for the Celts to wear costumes and masks during the festival to ward off or befuddle any evil spirits.


3. The moniker “Halloween” comes from the Catholics.


Hallowmas is a three-day Catholic holiday where saints are honored and people pray for the recently deceased. At the start of the 11th century, it was decreed by the pope that it would last from Oct. 31 (All Hallow’s Eve) until Nov. 2, most likely because that was when Samhain was celebrated and the church was trying to convert the pagans.


“All Hallow’s Eve” then evolved into “All Hallow’s Even,” and by the 18th century it was commonly referred to as “Hallowe’en.”


4. We should carve turnips, not pumpkins.


The origin of Jack-O-Lanterns comes from a Celtic folk tale of a stingy farmer named Jack who would constantly play tricks on the devil. The devil responded by forcing him to wander purgatory with only a burning lump of coal from hell. Jack took the coal and made a lantern from a turnip, using it to guide his lost soul.


Carved Turnips


The myth was brought over by Irish families fleeing the potato famine in the 1800s, and since turnips were hard to come by in the US, America’s pumpkins were used as a substitute to guide lost souls and keep evil spirits like “Jack of the Lantern” away.


5. Halloween symbols aren’t random.


Black cats, spiders, and bats are all Halloween symbols because of their spooky history and ties to Wiccans. All three were thought to be the familiars of witches in the middle ages, and are often associated with bad luck.


Bats are even further connected to Halloween by the ancient Samhain ritual of building a bonfire, which drove away insects and attracted bats.


6. Fears of poisoned Halloween candy are unfounded.


One of parents’ biggest fears is that their child’s Halloween candy is poisoned or contains razor blades.


In reality, this fear is almost entirely unfounded. There are only two known cases of poisoning, and both involved relatives, according to LiveScience. In 1970, a boy died of a heroin overdose. The investigators found it on his candy, but in a twist they later discovered the boy had accidentally consumed some of his uncle’s heroin stash, and the family had sprinkled some on the candy to cover up the incident.


Even more horrifically, in 1974 Timothy O’Bryan died after eating a Pixy Stix his father had laced with cyanide to collect on the insurance money, according to Smithsonian Magazine.


And now, parents in Colorado are worried about their children eating candy infused with marijuana. We’ll have to wait to see how widespread this problem turns out to be.


7. Halloween and the candy industry supposedly influenced Daylight Savings Time.


Candy makers supposedly lobbied to extend daylight savings time into the beginning of November to get an extra hour of daylight so children could collect even more candy (thus forcing people to purchase more sweets to meet the demand).


halloween candy


They wanted it so badly that during the 1985 hearings on daylight saving time, they put candy pumpkins on the seat of committee members, according to NPR. (The candy industry disputes this account, according to The New York Times.)


8. Candy Corn was originally known as “chicken feed.”


Invented by George Renninger, a candy maker at the Wunderle Candy Company of Philadelphia in the 1880s, Candy Corn was originally called “butter cream candies” and “chicken feed” since back then, corn was commonly used as food for livestock (they even had a rooster on the candy boxes).


It had no association with Halloween or fall, and was sold seasonally from March to November. After World War II, advertisers began marketing it as a special Halloween treat due to its colors and ties to the fall harvest.


9. A full moon on Halloween is extremely rare.


Though a common trope in horror movies and Halloween decorations with witches flying across the full moon, it’s actually extremely uncommon for the monthly event to coincide with October 31, or any other date, for that matter.


The next full moon on Halloween won’t occur until 2020. The most recent Halloween full moon was back in 2001, and before that it was in 1955.


10. Halloween is still the Wiccan New Year.


Halloween originates from a Celtic tradition called Samhain, a festival that marked the end of the Celtic calendar year in Ireland, Scotland, and the Isle of Man. They believed it was a time that spirits or fairies could enter our world, and the Celts would put out treats and food to placate the spirits — sometimes, a place at the table was even set for the souls of the dead.


Wiccans still celebrate Samhain as a New Year celebration today.


11. Trick-or-treating has been around for a long time.


Great Pumpkin Charlie Brown


Versions of trick-or-treating have existed since medieval times. In the past, it was known as “guising” where children and poor adults went around in costumes during Hallowmas begging for food and money in exchange for songs or prayers. It was also called “souling.”


12. Trick-or-treating as we know it was re-popularized by cartoons.


Trick-or-treating was brought to America by the Irish and became popular during the early 20th century, but died out during WWII when sugar was rationed. After the rationing ended in 1947, children’s magazine “Jack and Jill,” radio program “The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet,” and the “Peanuts” comic strip all helped to re-popularize the tradition of dressing up in costumes and asking for candy from door-to-door.


By 1952, trick-or-treating was hugely popular again.


13. Halloween is the second-most commercial American holiday of the year.


The candy industry in America rakes in an average of $ 2 billion annually thanks to Halloween (that’s 90 million pounds of chocolate).


Americans spend an estimated $ 6 billion on Halloween annually, including candy, costumes, and decorations, according to History.com. (The most commercial holiday in the US is obviously Christmas.)


SEE ALSO: The 18 Most Cliché Halloween Costumes Of 2014


DON’T FORGET: Follow Business Insider’s Life on Facebook!


Join the conversation about this story »


Education



13 Things You Never Knew About Halloween

Here's What Teachers Really Think Of America's Controversial Education Standards

teacher classroom


The Common Core has been a major point of contention among American educators over the past few years.


Some say applying one set of educational standards — which is what the Common Core is at its heart — to every public school across the country isn’t going to work because of the varying needs of students in different regions and at different income levels. Others like the standards but say they aren’t properly implemented and shouldn’t be tied to standardized tests.


A new Gallup poll sheds some more light on what teachers think of the Common Core system.


Teachers seem to overwhelmingly support the standards themselves while staunchly opposing using standardized tests to measure students’ performance and progress. And teachers who were polled were most opposed to tying their evaluations to their students’ test scores.


Here’s the data:


Common Core Gallup poll


Most teachers Gallup polled are experienced, too; 68% have been teaching for at least 10 years.


Common Core was created in 2009 and is meant to even the playing field by giving every state a universal set of standards to measure learning. It was built on the idea that students should be able to think critically rather than just memorize material for tests. That’s a good goal, but one that could be difficult to achieve because of Common Core’s reliance on standardized tests.


A legislative official in Massachusetts who works on education policy told Business Insider in July that rigorous standardized tests could discourage teachers from being creative and force them to teach to the test rather than encourage creative thinking among students.


Most teachers polled by Gallup agreed with this argument:


Gallup Common Core argument chart


But most teachers also agreed that the Common Core standards could ensure that all students in America get the same high-quality education and help teachers to better educate students who move from different states:


Gallup Common Core pro chart


States are divided on the issue. Some have adapted Common Core standards and then later reversed that decision, some have refused to adapt the standards entirely, and others are rolling out the system in classrooms across the state.


Common Core is incentivized with federal grant money that is given to states that implement the standards.


SEE ALSO: This May Be The Biggest Problem With America’s ‘Common Core’ Education Standards


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Here's What Teachers Really Think Of America's Controversial Education Standards

The 25 Best Universities In The World For Computer Science

mit, massachusetts institute of technology, strata center


Computer science is far and beyond the most lucrative degree in the country — if you attend the right school.


Deciding among the top universities is tougher than ever, with many schools building out their tech programs in recent years. QS World University Rankings crunched the numbers to make the choice clearer.


QS’s annual ranking highlights the best universities in the world for studying computer science and information systems, using data based on academic reputation (measured by a global survey that asked academics to identify the institutions where they believe the best work is currently taking place within their field of expertise) and citations per faculty.


“Generally, the more often a piece of research is cited by others, the more influential it is,” QS notes.


You can read its complete methodology here.


 


The top 25 universities around the world for computer science:


1. Massachusetts Institute of Technology (USA)


2. Stanford University (USA)


3. Carnegie Mellon University (USA)


4. University of Cambridge (UK)


5. Harvard University (USA)


6. University of California, Berkeley (USA)


7. University of Oxford (UK)


8. ETH Zurich – Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (Switzerland)


9. National University of Singapore (Singapore)


10. Princeton University (USA)


11. The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology (Hong Kong)


12. University of Edinburgh (UK)


13. Imperial College London (UK)


14. The University of Hong Kong (Hong Kong)


15. The University of Melbourne (Australia)


16. University of California, Los Angeles (USA)


17. The Australian National University (Australia)


18. The Chinese University of Hong Kong (Hong Kong)


19. University of Toronto (Canada)


20. The University of Tokyo (Japan)


21. Nanyang Technological University (Singapore)


22. Cornell University (USA)


22. Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (Switzerland)


24. University of Waterloo (Canada)


25. University of College London (UK)


SEE ALSO: The 50 Best Colleges In America


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The 25 Best Universities In The World For Computer Science