A question for the physics buffs:
Once upon a time, in a land faraway, I was sitting in a technical meeting with quite a well known aeromauticl engineer, a no-kidding world-renowned expert. We were waiting for the next presenter when this expert, Gene, said to me something along the lines of "Ok smart ass. It is pretty easy to describe the physics involved in drinking through a straw, since you have the notion of a fluid head available, but how do you describe the act of sucking spaghetti?"
Quite some time after that meeting I worked out the mathematics, providing a derivation quite similar to that used to derive Archimedes principle, showing that a simple pressure differential ought to do the trick. I also noted that my description was purely mathematical, and I did not have a simple freshman-level intuitive physical description. He looked at the derivation, and agreed that he understood what I had done, but also suggested that perhaps some action of the lips was really required in addition to just a pressure differential. I did not buy his counter-argument.
So, after another period of time I sent him a video tape. The tape showed an experiment. I had a glass canning jar, with a hole in the side just the diameter of a piece of spaghetti. I had a cooked, limp strand of spaghetti that was partially inserted through the hole. Then, using my daughter to conduct the experiment while filmed it, a match was ignited and dropped into the jar, and the cap quickly put on to seal it. The match burned the oxygen in the jar, lowering the pressure, and the spaghetti strand was completely sucked into the jar -- clearly no lip action. That experiment convinced Gene of the appicability of the mathematics that I had sent him. He had only one question after seeing the tape : "How did you put the hole in that jar ?"