mildlyinteresting

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MrJameGumb, in Cookie experiments
@MrJameGumb@lemmy.world avatar

I’m a fan of whichever one of these makes the cookies crispy on the bottom.

LEDZeppelin, in We hit one third of boomers being dead in the last few days.

Extinction 2086?? TIL those born in 2010 are boomers

TropicalDingdong, in We hit one third of boomers being dead in the last few days.
ebits21, in We hit one third of boomers being dead in the last few days.
@ebits21@lemmy.ca avatar

That’s a lot of dead boomers in a few days …

JackGreenEarth, in I got the #1 kumquat in my bag

‘Inspected by #1’

Chef_Boyargee, in a miniature vase made on a potters' wheel, glazed and fired (cat for scale)

It was a vase

Kolanaki, in Pudding used to come in cans
@Kolanaki@yiffit.net avatar

I loved these… Does Del Monte even still make pudding?

Thcdenton, in I got the #1 kumquat in my bag

BES

logicbomb, in I got the #1 kumquat in my bag

This does look like it was printed on the kumquat. I don’t know whether it’s the case here, but this sort of thing sometimes happens when there is something printed on a bag or the plastic that food is wrapped in, and the ink can get transferred to the food.

argh_another_username, in I got the #1 kumquat in my bag

Wow! The first kumquat ever produced. You can fetch good money from collectors.

0x4E4F, in A 'Military Payment Certificate' I found in a stack of old currency
@0x4E4F@sh.itjust.works avatar

Wow, how old is this… and who’s that woman in the cert.

medicsofanarchy, (edited )
@medicsofanarchy@lemmy.world avatar

Found this, which may help

Edit: To save someone the effort, pictured is a series 591, issued 1961-1964 in Cyprus, Iceland, Japan, the Philippines, and South Korea

ChicoSuave,

Lady liberty. She was also on the backside of dimes before 1950 and some half dollar coins.

0x4E4F,
@0x4E4F@sh.itjust.works avatar

The hairdo, yes that might resemble Lady Liberty… the face though… no way.

Candelestine,

After making a slightly snide comment, I decided I had to redeem myself by actually finding the answer. It’s surprisingly difficult, but the engraver was likely Charles A Brooks. I cannot determine the name or subject of the engraving itself though, though I’m merely using google searching. The answer is probably sitting in some record books in some archive somewhere.

His engravings were nearly photorealistic, so a reverse image search from a cropped pic of just the portrait may yield something–his original source potentially.

uservoid1, (edited ) in A 'Military Payment Certificate' I found in a stack of old currency

en.wikipedia.org/…/Military_payment_certificate

Military payment certificates, or MPC, was a form of currency used to pay United States (US) military personnel in certain foreign countries in the mid and late twentieth century. They were used in one area or another from a few months after the end of World War II until a few months after the end of U.S. participation in the Vietnam War – from 1946 until 1973.

Type: Series 591

Denomination: One Dollar

Number of Notes Printed: 10,080,000

First Issued: May 26, 1961

Redeemed: January 6, 1964

Value In Very Low Grades: $5

Value In Perfect Condition: $200

FlyingSquid, (edited )
@FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

Oh wow! You just unlocked a memory of mine of a MAS*H episode where they have to exchange their military scrip from one color to another because of counterfeiting or profiteering or something.

EDIT: Looks like this is the episode- mash.fandom.com/…/Change_Day_(TV_series_episode)

KreekyBonez,

just watched that episode recently! there’s a ton of small historical details in the show.

I just watched one that utilized an older anaesthetic called curare, and discusses how it was banned for a time, which was true, until safer versions were synthesized.

FlyingSquid,
@FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

I always tell people who watch MAS*H to watch the European version without the laugh track. It’s such a different show!

FlyingSquid, in A 'Military Payment Certificate' I found in a stack of old currency
@FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

I wonder if you could exchange it for US dollars or if it was only usable in military commissaries?

Rhynoplaz, (edited )

I would bet they were the Chuck E Cheese tokens of the military. 300 more and you can get a plastic snake!

Got_Bent, (edited )

I remember seeing this on pawn stars. They said the purpose was to stop black market flows of US dollars into foreign countries. I think it was particularly prevalent in Korea and Vietnam.

What they didn’t talk about is what you would do with your stack of certificates when your tour was up and it was time to go home.

Edit: They were convertible to local currency when on leave and US dollars when returning home.

FlyingSquid, in Pudding used to come in cans
@FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

Jeez. I’m surrounded by kids. That’s the way we ate pudding in the 80s. And we liked it that way!

https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/65614a4e-1092-457c-905b-6f78d5b8cb78.png

You don’t get that reference either, do you?

Sigh.

BilboBargains, in Rare Tri-Colored Dalmation

The eyes say this Dalmatian tri-forces

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