Wednesday, June 17, 2020


Spreading its leafy limbs before the former Mansfield Town Hall is a tree of a non-native species that once covered many of the hills and valleys of Connecticut—a black mulberry.  And almost directly across Storrs Road on Route 195 bordering the Altnaveigh Inn stands a second, a white mulberry.  Two hundred years ago tens of thousands of cultivated mulberry trees dotted the Connecticut landscape.  Few have survived the ravages of time, the harsh Connecticut climate, blight, and the foibles of mankind.  Those that remain are relics of a strange chapter in Connecticut’s history, one that featured a fabled fabric, get-rich-quick dreams spun by promoters, hucksters, and swindlers, and, finally, panic and ruin.  It is the story of a burgeoning but short-lived cottage industry that was unique in the young, 19th-century American nation.  The story begins with the mulberry tree and the silkworm, which is a type of caterpillar.  The silkworm prefers a diet of mulberry leaves.  It produces a cocoon which, when unraveled, can be spun into silk thread.  The process of silk production is called sericulture, and Connecticut, especially Windham and Tolland Counties, was the epicenter of US raw-silk production.  The Chinese discovered the secrets of mulberry leaves, silkworms, and silk production 4,000 years ago and threatened death to anyone who revealed those secrets.  These new threads, which had a greater tensile strength than metal cable, could be spun into a luxurious fabric that was so desired that it opened up trade across half the globe on the famous Silk Road.  Eventually the secrets of sericulture spread throughout Asia and Europe.  Silkworms were first imported to Virginia as early as 1613, but efforts to build businesses around them in American colonies such as Georgia, South Carolina, and Pennsylvania were only marginally successful.  In 1734 the Connecticut Colonial Assembly passed legislation offering financial incentives for silk growers.  Two individuals ended up succeeding in bringing silk production to Connecticut, where others had failed.  One was Nathaniel Aspinwall, a horticulturalist.  In the 1750s Aspinwall planted mulberry trees at a nursery he owned in Long Island and later in Mansfield and New Haven, Connecticut.  Aspinwall also raised and distributed to customers the silkworm eggs needed to produce the caterpillars and cocoons.  Historians do not make clear what caused the collapse in mulberry prices.  The fall came after the general financial panic of 1837, which had actually caused mulberry prices to soar as investors took their cash and used it to buy more trees, which seemed a safer haven.  Much of the blame has fallen on boosters who downplayed the labor involved in silk production while over-inflating the potential profits.  Another factor was that the multicaulis was poorly equipped to weather the harsh winters of the northeastern United States.  Through 1839 prices fell at alarming rates.  Trees that at the beginning of the year could fetch $1 to $1.25 by the end of the year could be had for 2 to 4 cents.  One auction of 30,000 multicaulis trees that would have sold for $20,000 just a few years before now had no takers.  Many nurserymen began burning the trees or using them for compost.  Bob Wyss  Read much more and see graphics at https://connecticuthistory.org/connecticuts-mulberry-craze/

The central nervous system (CNS) consists of the brain and spinal cord.  The brain is an important organ that controls thought, memory, emotion, touch, motor skills, vision, breathing, temperature, hunger, and every process that regulates our body.  The brain can be divided into the cerebrum, brainstem, and cerebellum: 
Cerebrum.  The cerebrum (front of brain) is composed of the right and left hemispheres, which are joined by the corpus callosum.  Functions of the cerebrum include:  initiation of movement, coordination of movement, temperature, touch, vision, hearing, judgment, reasoning, problem solving, emotions, and learning.
Brainstem.  The brainstem (middle of brain) includes the midbrain, the pons, and the medulla.  Functions of this area include:  movement of the eyes and mouth, relaying sensory messages (such as hot, pain, and loud), respirations, consciousness, cardiac function, involuntary muscle movements, sneezing, coughing, vomiting, and swallowing.
Cerebellum.  The cerebellum (back of brain) is located at the back of the head.  Its function is to coordinate voluntary muscle movements and to maintain posture, balance, and equilibrium.  Find other parts of the brain described at https://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/health/conditions-and-diseases/anatomy-of-the-brain

Langar is the communal meal shared by Sikhs and all visitors to the gurdwara.  Since the founding of the Sikh community, langar has come to be an important part of Sikh religious life.  After the service, no Sikh will leave without partaking of langar.  For Sikhs, eating together in this way is expressive of the equality and oneness of all humankind. At the same time, it strengthens the Sikh sense of community. Visitors and guests are readily and warmly included in the great hospitality of the Sikh tradition.  In visiting a gurdwara one will always be offered the sweet prashad which is distributed in the sanctuary as the “grace” of the guru.  And in visiting at the time of a service, one will be offered the entire langar meal.  One of the most obvious signs of caste inequality in traditional Indian society is the taboo against eating with those outside one’s caste group, of a lower caste, or of a different religion.  Rules for the sharing of food and water are many, especially among high caste Hindus.  From the beginning, the Sikh gurus explicitly rejected this inequality by asking that all Sikhs and all visitors to the Sikh gurdwaras partake of common food in the company of one another.  In the langar hall, women and men, rich and poor, high and low sit together.  The langar meal thus assails the inner core of inequality and symbolizes a Sikh’s personal rejection of prejudice.  https://pluralism.org/langar-the-communal-meal

Gurdwara, (Punjabi: “doorway to the Guru”) in Sikhism, is a place of worship in India and overseas.  The gurdwara contains—on a cot under a canopy—a copy of the Adi Granth (“First Volume”), the sacred scripture of Sikhism.  It also serves as a meeting place for conducting business of the congregation and wedding and initiation ceremonies.  The more historically important gurdwaras serve as centres of pilgrimage during festivals.  A communal dining hall (langar), in which meals are prepared and served to the congregation, and frequently a school are attached to the gurdwara.  Every Sikh family endeavours to set aside one room of the house for the reading of the Adi Granth, and that room is also called a gurdwara.  https://www.britannica.com/topic/gurdwara

Every year on “a Wednesday in mid-June,” the Royal Society of Literature celebrates the work and legacy of Virginia Woolf.  In 2020, Dalloway Day falls on Wednesday, June 17th (the day after Bloomsday, if you want to make a week out of it), and Lit Hub is proud to be part of the festivities, which include online panel discussions, a writing workshop, a book club, an aural walking tour and a BBC broadcast.  You can see the full program here, but below are a few highlights, and if you’d like a handy list of all the books you’ll need from the authors involved with the festivities, you can find that here.  https://lithub.com/join-lit-hub-the-royal-society-of-literature-in-celebrating-dalloway-day-on-june-17th/

Marmite, a spread made with yeast extract, is now only being produced in a 250g size jar as a result of brewers’ yeast being more difficult to get hold of, a message sent on the company’s official account said on June 10, 2020.  When asked by a customer why larger 400g squeezy jars were hard to get hold of at the moment, the firm replied:  “Due to brewers yeast being in short supply (one of the main ingredients in Marmite) supplies of Marmite have been affected.  Brewers slowed and stalled production when pubs were forced to shut in an attempt to slow the Covid-19 pandemic.  The twitter thread split lovers and haters of Marmite:  “You hate to see it.  Or love to see it,” wrote one.  “Some good news at last,” wrote another.  Another tweeted that this was “Marmageddon”.  https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/jun/11/marmite-supplies-hit-by-covid-19-beer-brewing-slowdown-yeast  “British beer sales fall to 20-year low due to lockdown pub closures.”

Marmite is a food spread made from yeast extract invented by German scientist Justus von Liebig and originally made in the United Kingdom.  It is a by-product of beer brewing and is produced by Dutch-British company Unilever.  Other similar products include the Australian Vegemite (the name of which is derived from that of Marmite), the Swiss Cenovis, the Brazilian Cenovit and the German Vitam-R.  Marmite has been manufactured in New Zealand since 1919 under license, but with a different recipe, see "Marmite (New Zealand)".  That product is the only one sold as Marmite in Australasia and the Pacific, whereas elsewhere in the world the European version predominates.  Marmite is a sticky, dark brown food paste with a distinctive, powerful flavour, that is extremely salty.  This distinctive taste is represented in the marketing slogan:  "Love it or hate it."  Such is its prominence in British popular culture that the product's name is often used as a metaphor for something that is an acquired taste or tends to polarise opinions.  Marmite is a commonly used ingredient in dishes as a flavouring, as it is particularly rich in umami due to its very high levels of glutamate (1960 mg/100g).  The image on the front of the jar shows a marmite, a French term for a large, covered earthenware or metal cooking pot.  Marmite was originally supplied in earthenware pots but since the 1920s has been sold in glass jars.  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marmite

The U.K. is experiencing a shortage of Marmite, the polarizing yeast-extract spread, due to a lack of brewer's yeast, an ingredient now in short supply after pubs closed down amid the coronavirus.  Keep calm and carry on, Marmite lovers.  Listen to a short story with amusing music at

A THOUGHT FOR JUNE 17  Silence will save me from being wrong (and foolish), but it will also deprive me of the possibility of being right. - Igor Stravinsky, composer (17 Jun 1882-1971)

http://librariansmuse.blogspot.com  Issue 2286  June 17, 2020

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