Saturday May 14, 2016

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Kissing

One scene from my childhood:
Spending the night at my Aunt Eva’s,
I have come downstairs at midnight
for a glass of milk.
She and her husband, Ferdinand,
sit at the kitchen table, their backs to me.
His left trouser leg
is rolled up to his thigh.
The stump of the leg he lost under a tractor
is propped on a stool,
gleaming in the lamplight.
My aunt and uncle bend above it,
laughing uncontrollably and kissing.

“Kissing” by Jo McDougall from In the Home of the Famous Dead. © The University of Arkansas Press, 2015. Reprinted with permission.  (buy now)

Skylab was launched on this date in 1973. It was America’s first space station. It served as a solar observatory, a microgravity lab, a medical lab, an Earth-observation station, and a proving ground for new technology that enabled humans to survive in space: microgravity toilets, showers, and sleeping bags — among other necessities — were developed or perfected on Skylab.

Skylab was launched without a pilot or crew; its first crew rendezvoused with the space station on May 25. They spent 28 days in space, which broke the previous record for duration of a space flight. Their record didn’t stand long, however; its second crew was in space for 59 days. Skylab’s third crew spent 84 days in orbit, and their record remained unbroken until a crew spent six months about the Russian space station Mir in the mid-1990s.

Everything the Skylab astronauts did as part of their daily routine was considered “data.”

Their day started at six in the morning, when the three crewmembers would check for the day’s orders from Mission Control. Then they would use the bathroom, weigh themselves, and eat breakfast. They took turns at the daily science chores — including serving as the medical “guinea pig” to study the effects of space travel on the human body. The workday lasted until eight in the evening, and then they enjoyed a couple of hours of free time before their 10 p.m. bedtime. They often spent that leisure time just looking out the window, although once in a while they would devise their own informal experiments. Astronaut Jerry Carr, a member of the third crew, said, “It was such an interesting thing to turn loose a blob of water to see what you can do with it.” They recorded their little experiments and saved them to show American schoolchildren a little bit about what life in space was like.

The Skylab crews also had to contend with equipment malfunctions and unexpected repairs, and some of these required a spacewalk. Jack Lousma, a member of the second crew, described it at Skylab’s 40th anniversary celebration: “From outside you can see the entire Earth in a three-dimensional perspective. You’re riding along on this ‘magic carpet.’ There’s no vibration, no sound, and a sunrise and sunset every hour and a half. You just want to stay out there.”

Skylab was occupied for just less than eight months. Its final crew returned to Earth in early February 1974, and left Skylab in its orbit. Jerry Carr said: “There was a certain small amount of sadness when we left, realizing we were going to be the last crew to inhabit the spacecraft. It had hung together beautifully for us, and we kind of hated to leave it. But, of course, we were also looking forward to going home.” After so long in space, it took the astronauts a little while to adjust to life with gravity: they would often just drop things rather than setting them down, because they expected them to simply float away.

NASA expected Skylab to remain in orbit for the next 10 years or so. But a high level of solar activity heated the Earth’s atmosphere and caused more drag on the space station than scientists had expected. They predicted that it would break apart and fall to Earth sometime in 1979. Skylab’s demise was a huge media event: people sold Skylab re-entry merchandise and took bets on when and where the first piece would hit the Earth. Two San Francisco newspapers offered competing prizes for the first piece of Skylab delivered to their offices. As it happened, most of Skylab’s remains landed on a sparsely populated region in western Australia, or in the Indian Ocean. Seventeen-year-old Stan Thornton, of the Australian town of Esperance, collected the San Francisco Examiner’s prize for the first retrieved Skylab piece.

Skylab paved the way for the International Space Station, which was developed with the aid of Carr and his fellow crewmember Bill Pogue.

It’s the birthday of the man who said, “Move fast and break things. Unless you are breaking stuff, you are not moving fast enough.” That’s Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg. A precocious student, Zuckerberg began writing software in middle school after his father taught him BASIC programming. He wrote dozens of programs in high school including Synapse, a music player that got the attention of AOL and Microsoft, both of whom tried to recruit him. Instead he enrolled in Harvard in 2002 where he founded Facebook when he was 19 years old.

Zuckerberg is one of the world’s youngest billionaires. He married Priscilla Chan, whom he met while at Harvard, and has recently become a father. He has set public example on social issues by taking two months’ paternity leave and posting photos of his daughter receiving vaccinations. He has pledged to leave 99 percent of his Facebook shares to charity. He said: “Facebook was not originally created to be a company. It was built to accomplish a social mission — to make the world more open and connected.”

It’s the birthday of nature writer Hal Borland (books by this author), born in Sterling, Nebraska (1900). He wrote that he grew up “in those years when the Old West was passing and the New West was emerging. It was a time when we still heard echoes and already saw shadows, on moonlit nights when the coyotes yapped on the hilltops, and on hot summer afternoons when mirages shimmered, dust devils spun across the flats, and towering cumulus clouds sailed like galleons across the vast blueness of the sky. Echoes of remembrance of what men once did there, and visions of what they would do together.”

Hal’s grandfather was a blacksmith, and his father a newspaperman. Hal followed in his father’s footsteps and moved all over the country working for local papers — he started out at his father’s paper in Flagler, Colorado, a town of 750 people, and he ended up at the New York Times in 1937. One day, he submitted a piece about the English oak tree to the editorial page, and it was accepted. After that, his nature editorials were a staple in the Times. He published one every week, and by the time he died in 1978 he had written 1,750 nature editorials — the last of them published the day before his death. Borland kept a New Yorker cartoon on his office wall showing a man brandishing a newspaper and shouting: “Here’s another of those crackpot editorials about the voices of frogs shattering the autumn stillness!”

Borland published quite a few books, too, including When the Legends Die (1963) and Sundial of the Seasons (1964).

On this day, the first group reading of Welsh poet Dylan Thomas’s radio play Under Milk Wood (1953) was staged at the Poetry Center at the 92nd Street Y in New York City (books by this author).

Thomas began writing radio plays in the 1940s to supplement his income. Under Milk Wood grew from a story he’d written for the BBC (1945) called “Quite Early one Morning” and was inspired by an early morning walk Thomas had taken in New Quay, Cardiganshire, in West Wales. On his walk, he began imagining the voices of the townspeople. He determined to write what he called “a play for voices,” for the radio. Under Milk Wood is set in a small Welsh fishing town called Llareggub, which is “bugger all” spelled backward. The play spans one day and one night in a town filled with prostitutes, ghosts, drunkards, and bigamists like Polly Garter, Captain Cat, Organ Morgan, Mrs. Willy Nilly, and No Good Boyo. The title of the play refers to the forest that looms on a hill above town where villagers go for illicit sexual encounters. Dylan worked on the play for eight years.

When he arrived in New York for the reading, he was still tinkering with the beginning and he didn’t have an end. He was also drinking and smoking heavily. Finally, his literary agent locked him in a room until he finished the play, then painstakingly copied the new pages for the actors, jumped into a cab, and shoved the pages in the actors hands minutes before the curtain rose. Dylan himself performed two characters, that of “First Voice” and Reverend Eli Jenkins.

At the last minute, someone decided to record the play, and single microphone was placed on stage. This is the only known recording of Under Milk Wood with Thomas as part of the cast. Several months later, Thomas fell into a coma from excessive drinking and died. Under Milk Wood was his last significant piece of writing.

The play was adapted for a film version starring Richard Burton, Elizabeth Taylor, and Peter O’Toole (1972). It’s been produced as a ballet by the Independent Ballet of Wales (2008) and was the primary influence for the Kinks album We Are the Village Green Preservation Society (1968).

In Under Milk Wood, Dylan Thomas wrote: “There’s the clip clop of horses on the sunhoneyed cobbles of the humming streets, hammering of horse-shoes, a gobble quack and cackle, tomtit twitter from the bird-ounced boughs, braying on the Donkey Dawn.”

Be well, do good work, and keep in touch.®