AKA: How to pick up chicks with one hand.
AKA: How to pick up chicks with one hand.
I suspected all along that one day I would be vindicated.

Geek Alert! How long is the longest continuous running science experiment? Eighty-five years, so far. It all began in 1927 when Thomas Parnell, a physics professor at the University of Queensland in Australia, set out to show his students that tar pitch, a derivative of coal so brittle that it can be smashed to pieces with a hammer, is in fact a highly viscous fluid. It flows at room temperature, albeit extremely slowly. Parnell melted the pitch, poured it into a glass funnel, let it cool (for three years), hung the funnel over a beaker, and waited.
Eight years later …a dollop of the pitch fell from the funnel’s stem. Nine years after that, another long black glob broke into the beaker.

Hilarious gramps drops the F-bomb every sentence, but is cheerful as hell.
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