11 Hand-Drawn Infographics About African-American Life by W.E.B. Du Bois

W.E.B. Du Bois was many things in his lifetime: a civil rights activist—he was a co-founder of the NAACP—a sociologist, a historian, a poet, and an author. And, in a lesser-known role, he was a designer.

Du Bois, who was born on February 23, 1868, attended the 1900 Paris Exposition to present the Exhibit of the American Negroes, a look at the lives of African Americans.

Du Bois himself prepared charts, graphs, and maps to visualize the status and progress of black Americans, particularly in Georgia, where he lived at the time. His colorful, imaginative visualizations, recently discussed on the Public Domain Review, covered topics like income distribution, property values, city population statistics, and marriage rates among African Americans. Here are a few of the exhibition’s highlights:


[h/t Public Domain Review]
All images by W.E.B. Du Bois // Public Domain


February 23, 2017 – 8:00am

5 Questions: “-ears” to You

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Thursday, February 23, 2017 – 01:45

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The Strange Case of Everet vs. Williams: When Two Highwaymen Took Each Other To Court

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In 1725, one of the most peculiar cases in British legal history was brought before the Court of Exchequer. John Everet (or Everitt) and Joseph Williams, who had gone into business together, made an oral agreement to divide all the costs and profits of their enterprise equally. But after one particularly lucrative transaction went awry, Everet became suspicious that Williams was taking more than his fair share—so he took his partner to court.

Ordinarily that wouldn’t make for such an unusual case, and indeed, the official court documents seem to suggest that nothing in the pair’s dealings was out of the ordinary: In entering into their partnership, the records show that the pair had quite rightly agreed to share the cost of all the equipment their enterprise would require, “such as horses, bridles, saddles, assistants and servants,” they were merely involved “in dealing and in buying and selling several sorts of commodities.”

But as above board as all that sounds, Everet and Williams were both highwaymen—and their “business” amounted to nothing more than robbing unsuspecting gentlemen in and around north London and the surrounding countryside.

How the case even ended up in court at all is unclear, although one account claims that it was, in fact, Williams who made the first move: After a quarrel over the value of a gold watch they had acquired in a recent robbery, Williams sued Everet for £200. When Everet failed to show up to court (perhaps understandably, given the true nature of their business, although Everet would claim he was in prison), the action against him went undefended, and Williams won not only the case but Everet’s share of the spoils as well. In response, Everet—presumably aggrieved that Williams had won the case—then raised his own case against Williams. He took the unusual step of hiring a pair of solicitors, William Wreathock and William White, to represent him. Wreathock and White, in turn, hired legal counsel, a barrister by the name of Jonathan Collins, who drew up an official complaint and took the highwaymen’s case to the Court of Exchequer.

The bill Collins compiled—which requested that Williams account for the value of the goods in question, and repay any money owed to the plaintiff—is a masterclass in legalese. At no point are the criminal aspects of Everet and Williams’s business alluded to, and instead Collins merely wrote that:

“… pursuant to the said agreement, [Everet] and the said Joseph Williams went on and proceeded jointly in the said dealing with great success on Hounslow Heath, where they dealt with a gentleman for a gold watch … [Williams informed Everet that] Finchley was a good and convenient place to deal in, and so they dealt there with several gentlemen or divers watches, rings, swords, canes, hats, cloaks, horses, bridles and other things to the value of £200 and upwards.”

According to Collins’s statement, after this “deal” had been concluded, Williams took charge of all the goods the pair had acquired, but Everet became suspicious when Williams “began to shuffle with him,” and refused to give him any kind of account or inventory of the items involved.

In explaining why the dispute was being brought to court—and seemingly unaware of the irony of what he was doing—Collins declared:

“My client, John Everet, is relievable only in a Court of Equity before Your Honours, where just discoveries are made, frauds detected, and just accounts settled.”

In fact, it is presumed that in bringing the case to court, Collins’s plan was to force Williams’s hand and compel him to agree to an out-of-court settlement before the case ever came before a judge. He hadn’t banked, however, on Williams holding his nerve: Collins’s bill was presented in October of 1725, and a month later, the case was officially heard in court. The court was far from impressed.

Faced with resolving a dispute between two criminals and doling out the stolen profits of an illegal enterprise, the court dismissed the case as “scandalous and impertinent”—but the judges weren’t done yet. An order was issued for the arrest of Wreathock and White, Everet’s solicitors, on a charge of contempt of court for even bringing the case to the court’s attention at all. And for his part in the fiasco, barrister Jonathan Collins was ordered to pay all the costs himself—earning him a unique place in British legal history as the only barrister ordered to pay the costs of a failed case.

With the authorities now fully aware of Everet and Williams’s activities (not to mention the precise locations they liked to ply their trade), both men were eventually apprehended and tried: Williams was hanged at Maidstone in Kent in 1727, while Everet was hanged at Tyburn in London in 1730. In one final bizarre twist, William Wreathock was found guilty of robbery five years later and sentenced to transportation in 1735.

As the curious case of Everet vs. Williams—or “The Highwayman’s Case,” as it has become known—drifted into obscurity, for many years the unlikely tale of two highwaymen taking each other to court to resolve their dispute was believed to be a myth, until a law journal found a supposed reprinting of the case, and was able to verify key information. Since then, the case has gained an understandable reputation as one of the strangest in legal history, and is frequently cited as an example of the legal principle ex dolo malo non oritur action—“no right of action can have its origin in fraud.” Or, in other words: You can’t expect the law to help when what you’re doing is illegal in the first place.


February 23, 2017 – 6:30am

Seven Wonders of the Ancient World

The Seven Wonders of the World, also known as the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World, is a collection of extraordinary constructions referred to numerous times in ancient Hellenic media. The first such lists occurred in the first and second centuries BC, with many thanks to the 4th century BC conquests by the Greeks. These conquests allowed access to the civilizations of the Egyptians, Persians, and Babylonians, of which Hellenic tourists frequently mentioned in their own writings, be it poems, or even guidebooks. The current list, however, originated, and finalized, during the Renaissance. Imagine yourself relaxing in a sun-lit garden

The post Seven Wonders of the Ancient World appeared first on Factual Facts.

Morning Cup of Links: Getting to Know Johnny Carson

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Rollyn Puterbaugh, Dayton, Ohio – eBay itemphoto frontphoto back, Public Domain, Wikimedia Commons

14 Facts You May Not Know About Johnny Carson. The longtime host of The Tonight Show had an amazing life.  
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Blame: Was the death of Jill Wells an accident or murder? A gripping true crime story.
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Flight Attendants Share the 25 Things They Wish Passengers Would Stop Doing. People don’t think about how they make someone else’s job more difficult.
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A 10-year-old girl contacted her local police department through Facebook when she needed help with her math homework. Lt. B.J. Gruber did his best to help her out.
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23 Hacks That’ll Make University That Little Bit Easier For You. We don’t endorse the ones about taking things that don’t belong to you.
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15 Perfect Spots to Watch the Total Solar Eclipse as It Crosses the U.S. Next Summer. Make your reservations now.
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11 Prickly Facts about Porcupines. With pictures of more porcupines than you’ll ever see in real life.


February 23, 2017 – 5:00am

Watch Smithsonian Conservationists Restore and Study Asian Art Treasures

filed under: art, museums, video

Connoisseurs of fine Asian art travel to Washington, D.C. to visit the Smithsonian Institution’s Freer Gallery of Art and Arthur M. Sackler Gallery. Together, the conjoined galleries house countless artworks and objects imported from the Far East, ranging from richly drawn Islamic manuscripts to paintings from India’s Mughal Empire. When items from the collections aren’t being shown to the public, conservationists prepare them for display and study old artifacts for new historic clues. Watch those pros in action in the video above, which features Paul Jett, former head of conservation and scientific research at the Freer and Sackler.

[h/t The Kid Should See This]

Banner image: Quadell via Wikimedia Commons//CC BY-SA 3.0


February 23, 2017 – 3:00am

New Study Finds No Link Between Childhood Cat Ownership and Psychosis

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Cats can be manipulative. There’s no doubt about that. But are they controlling our minds with their poop? Probably not. Contrary to prior reports, a new study published in the journal Psychological Medicine found that living with a cat in early life did not increase subjects’ risk of psychotic episodes in adolescence.

The premise behind the original idea is less improbable than it sounds. Cats are the host of choice for Toxoplasma gondii, a parasite that has been shown to cause dramatic behavior changes in rodents. (Mice infected with T. gondii lose their fear of cats and become downright friendly, which leads to them getting eaten, which buys the parasite a ticket into its favorite feline hangout.) A few controversial studies have linked cat ownership with schizophrenia and psychotic episodes, but many researchers remain skeptical.

Psychiatrist Francesca Solmi and her co-authors are among those skeptics. They decided to put the theory to the test, focusing specifically on the effects of cat ownership on two vulnerable populations: kids ages 4 to 10 and developing fetuses.

They tapped into a large-scale survey called the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children (ALSPAC), which has monitored the health of thousands of British kids since the 1990s. For the current study, the researchers compared the mental health of teenagers who had grown up with cats with that of kids in cat-free homes.

At first, it seemed like the psychosis theory might have been at least a little bit correct: The results did suggest a small link between cat ownership and psychotic symptoms at age 13. But once the team adjusted their analysis to consider other variables like family income and crowded home situations, the link disappeared.

“The message for cat owners is clear: there is no evidence that cats pose a risk to children’s mental health,” Solmi said in a statement. “Previous studies reporting links between cat ownership and psychosis simply failed to adequately control for other possible explanations.”

But even if T. gondii has no hand in mental health issues, that doesn’t mean it’s harmless. “There is good evidence that T. gondii exposure during pregnancy can lead to serious birth defects and other health problems in children,” senior author James Kirkbride said. “As such, we recommend that pregnant women should continue to follow advice not to handle soiled cat litter.”


February 22, 2017 – 7:30pm

New Image Translation Tool Turns Any Drawing Into a Terrifying Cat Monstrosity

filed under: art, cats, design, tech
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There are a lot of reasons why you wouldn’t want your drawings to come to life. If you need another, check out Christopher Hesse’s edges2cats. The project, which was created with Google’s open-source machine-learning project called Tensorflow, is an image-to-image translation that produces “real” looking cats from your doodles—yet the results aren’t so much cute and cuddly as they are haphazard monstrosities featuring random tufts of fur and distorted eyes.

The algorithm was trained with over 2000 photographs of cats, which gives it the ability to see lines and guess whether they’re supposed to be eyes, tails, or limbs. From there, it appears to grab the clone Photoshop tool and go to nightmare town.

“Some of the pictures look especially creepy, I think because it’s easier to notice when an animal looks wrong, especially around the eyes,” Hesse writes on the site. “The auto-detected edges are not very good and in many cases didn’t detect the cat’s eyes, making it a bit worse for training the image translation model.”

If inanimate objects are more your speed, Hesse also has programs that reproduce buildings, bags, and shoes, which produce less terrifying results. But since the edges2cats program yields the most visceral reactions, the mental_floss team made a few examples of how AI can go horribly (and still wonderfully?) wrong:

[h/t The Verge]


February 22, 2017 – 3:30pm