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As I had difficulty finding a location with an unobstructed view I missed the arrival of the winner at the finish line by about ten minutes. In case you don't know here are the results:
Geoffrey Ndungu won the Dublin City Marathon for the second year running in a time of 2 hours 11 minutes and 9 seconds. The time was outside last year's course record time of 2:08.33.
Paul Pollock from Belfast was the first Irish man home in ninth place in 2:16.30, ahead of Sean Hehir who finished in 2:17.50.
Magdalene Mukunzi was the first woman home in a time of 2:30.46 which was outside the course record of 2:26.13. Maria McCambridge was the first Irish woman through the finishing line in 2:35.28.
Luke Jones from Wales won the wheelchair section.
A total of 14,300 people registered for this year's race which was without a major sponsor for the first time in 20 years.
File name: 10_03_001150a
Binder label: Medical
Title: Dr. Fitzgerald's improved Invigorator - just discovered a positive cure for dyspepsia, all stomach and nervous diseases, liver and heart difficulties and impure blood. (front)
Created/Published: Boston : Bufford
Date issued: 1870-1900 (approximate)
Physical description: 1 print : lithograph ; 8 x 12 cm.
Subject: People; Horses; Patent medicines
Notes: Title from item.
Collection: 19th Century American Trade Cards
Location: Boston Public Library, Print Department
Rights: No known restrictions.
The Lizard Lighthouse is a lighthouse at Lizard Point, Cornwall, England, built to guide vessels passing through the English Channel. It was often the welcoming beacon to persons returning to England, where on a clear night, the reflected light could be seen 100 mi (160 km) away.
A light was first exhibited here in 1619, built thanks to the efforts of Sir Christopher Dimaline but it was extinguished and the tower demolished in 1630 because of difficulties in raising funds for its operation and maintenance.
The current lighthouse, consisting of two towers with cottages between them, was built in 1751 by the landowner Thomas Fonnereau; each tower was topped by a coal-fired brazier. Trinity House took responsibility for the installation in 1771. In 1812 the coal burners on each tower were replaced with Argand lamps and reflectors. In each tower a fixed arrangement of nineteen lamps and reflectors was installed. In 1873 the original lamps and reflectors were still in use. That year, because of the number of wrecks still occurring around the Point, the decision was taken to upgrade the lights and provide a fog signal.
Therefore, in 1874, the site was significantly changed by the building of an engine room to provide electric power, not only for the lights but also for a fog siren. The engine room was equipped with three 10 hp caloric engines by A & F Brown of New York, driving six Siemens dynamo-electric machines, which in turn powered an arc lamp in each tower; (caloric engines were used because there was no nearby source of fresh water for steam power). At the same time a pair of medium-sized (third-order) fixed catadioptric optics were installed, one on each tower, designed by John Hopkinson of Chance Brothers. The siren was in use from January 1878; it sounded (one blast every five minutes) through a 15-foot (4.6 m) horizontal horn which was installed on the roof of the engine house and could be moved depending on the prevailing wind direction. The new electric lights were first lit on 29 March that same year. In 1885 the Siemens dynamos were replaced by a pair of more powerful de Méritens magneto-electric generators.
In 1903 there were further changes when a large four-panel rotating optic, manufactured by Chance Brothers, was installed in the eastern tower and both the lantern and light on the western tower were removed (it was announced that this 'new revolving light of very great power' would be 'visible at a distance of between 40 and 50 miles'). In 1908 a new pair of sirens were installed (sounding out to sea through twin 'trumpets' on the roof of the engine house) and a trio of Hornsby oil engines replaced the caloric engines . Soon afterwards an underwater bell was set up two miles south of the Lizard, operated by an electric striker controlled from the lighthouse via a submarine cable.
A carbon arc lamp continued to provide the light source until it was superseded in 1926 by an electric filament lamp, which enabled a reduction in the number of personnel at the lighthouse from five to three. The new lighting system, designed and installed by the General Electric Company, functioned automatically: a lamp changer was provided which would switch to a reserve electric or emergency acetylene lamp in the event of a bulb or power failure; and an automatic winding device was fitted to the clockwork mechanism that rotated the lenses. Transformers were introduced in the engine room to allow the 40-year-old magnetos to remain in use, along with the Hornsby engines.
The engines and magneto generators continued in daily use until 1950, when the lighthouse was connected to mains electricity. In that year four Gardner diesel engines were installed, three to run compressors for the fog signal, the other linked to a pair of generators for use in the event of a mains power failure. In March 1954 the lighthouse keeper and assistants were able to put out a fire that was started in the exhaust pits of the engines providing the electric power. The clockwork drive, used to rotate the optic, was replaced with an electric motor in 1972.
In 1998, Lizard Lighthouse was automated and demanned. The fog horn was decommissioned in 1998 and replaced with an automatic electronic fog signal; at the time it was the last compressed-air fog signal still in use in the United Kingdom. As of 2022 the rotating optic continues in use for the light.
Opened in 2009 with a grant from the Heritage Lottery Fund, the Lizard Lighthouse Heritage Centre is located in the lighthouse engine room, which still features some of the original engines. Interactive exhibits and displays focus on the history of the lighthouse, the life of a lighthouse keeper, and the role of lighthouses in sea safety. Currently, the buildings around the site are being used as holiday cottages.
One of the lighthouse's old magneto-electric generators is now in the collection of Thinktank, Birmingham Science Museum. The other is still in situ in the engine house; it carries a plate marked:
L'ÉLECTRICITÉ
MÉDAILLE D'OR
Exposition d'Électricité Paris 1881
No. 3 L
A de MÉRITENS, 44 rue Boursault
PARIS
Bté. s.g.d.g. en France & à l'Étranger
After the compressed-air foghorn was decommissioned its machinery was left in place and it was still occasionally sounded to mark special occasions. Prior to the opening of the Heritage Centre two of the four Gardner engines were removed (one with its attached compressor, the other with its attached generator); they were subsequently acquired by the Internal Fire Museum of Power in Wales. The other two compressor sets remain in place in the engine room.
The Lizard (Cornish: An Lysardh) is a peninsula in southern Cornwall, England, United Kingdom. The most southerly point of the British mainland is near Lizard Point at SW 701115; Lizard village, also known as The Lizard, is the most southerly on the British mainland, and is in the civil parish of Landewednack, the most southerly parish. The valleys of the River Helford and Loe Pool form the northern boundary, with the rest of the peninsula surrounded by sea. The area measures about 14 by 14 miles (23 km × 23 km). The Lizard is one of England's natural regions and has been designated as a National Character Area 157 by Natural England. The peninsula is known for its geology and for its rare plants and lies within the Cornwall Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB).
The Lizard's coast is particularly hazardous to shipping and the seaways round the peninsula were historically known as the "Graveyard of Ships" (see below). The Lizard Lighthouse was built at Lizard Point in 1752 and the RNLI operates The Lizard lifeboat station.
Etymology
The name "Lizard" is most probably a corruption of the Cornish name "Lys Ardh", meaning "high court"; it is purely coincidental that much of the peninsula is composed of serpentinite-bearing rock. The peninsula's original name may have been the Celtic Bridanoc, from Britannakon ("the "British one"), preserved in the name of the former village of Predannack, now site of Predannack Airfield.
History
There is evidence of early habitation with several burial mounds and stones. Part of the peninsula is known as the Meneage (land of the monks).
Helston, the nearest town to the Lizard peninsula, is said to have once headed the estuary of the River Cober, before it was cut off from the sea by Loe Bar in the 13th century. It is speculated that Helston was once a port, but no records exist. Geomorphologists believe the bar was most likely formed by rising sea levels, after the last ice age, blocking the river and creating a barrier beach. The beach is formed mostly of flint and the nearest source is found offshore under the drowned terraces of the former river that flowed between England and France, and now under the English Channel. The medieval port of Helston was at Gweek, possibly from around 1260 onwards, on the Helford river which exported tin and copper. Helston was believed to be in existence in the sixth century, around the River Cober (Dowr Kohar). The name comes from the Cornish "hen lis" or "old court" and "ton" added later to denote a Saxon manor; the Domesday Book refers to it as Henliston (which survives as the name of a road in the town). It was granted its charter by King John in 1201. It was here that tin ingots were weighed to determine the duty due to the Duke of Cornwall when a number of stannary towns were authorised by royal decree.
The royal manor of Winnianton, which was held by King William I at the time of the Domesday Book (1086), was also the head manor of the hundred of Kerrier and the largest estate in Cornwall. It was assessed as having fifteen hides before 1066. At the time of Domesday there was land for sixty ploughs, but in the lord's land there were two ploughs and in the lands held by villeins twenty-four ploughs. There were twenty-four villeins, forty-one freedmen, thirty-three smallholders and fourteen slaves. There was 6 acres (24,000 m2), eight square leagues of pasture and half a square league of woodland. The livestock was fourteen unbroken mares, three cattle and one hundred and twenty-eight sheep (in total 145 beasts); its value was £12 annually. 11 of the hides were held by the Count of Mortain and there is more arable and pasture and 13 more persons are recorded: Rinsey, Trelowarren, Mawgan-in-Meneage and seventeen other lands are also recorded under Winnianton.
Mullion has the 15th century church of St Mellanus, and the Old Inn from the 16th century. The harbour was completed in 1895 and financed by Lord Robartes of Lanhydrock as a recompense to the fishermen for several disastrous pilchard seasons.
The small church of St Peter in Coverack, built in 1885 for £500, has a serpentinite pulpit.
The Great Western Railway operated a road motor service to The Lizard from Helston railway station. Commencing on 17 August 1903, it was the first successful British railway-run bus service and was initially provided as a cheaper alternative to a proposed light railway.
The Solar eclipse of 11 August 1999 departed the UK mainland from the Lizard.
The transatlantic record run of the unaccompanied one hand sailor Thomas Coville within less than 5 days in his sailboat Sodebo Ultim from New York, USA, to Europe landed here on 15 July 2017.
Nautical
The Lizard has been the site of many maritime disasters. It forms a natural obstacle to entry and exit of Falmouth and its naturally deep estuary. At Lizard Point stands the Lizard Lighthouse. In fact, the light was erected by Sir John Killigrew by his own expense: It was built at the cost of "20 nobles a year" for 30 years, but it caused an uproar over the following years, as King James I considered charging vessels to pass. This caused so many problems that the lighthouse was demolished, but was successfully rebuilt in 1751 by order of Thomas Fonnereau and remains almost unchanged today. Further east lie The Manacles, near Porthoustock: 1+1⁄2 square miles (4 km2) of jagged rocks just beneath the waves.
In 1721 the Royal Anne Galley, an oared frigate, was wrecked at Lizard Point. Of a crew of 185 only three survived; lost was Lord Belhaven who was en route to take up the Governorship of Barbados.
A 44-gun frigate, HMS Anson, was wrecked at Loe Bar in 1807. Although it wrecked close to shore, many lost their lives in the storm. This inspired Henry Trengrouse to invent the rocket-fired line, later to become the Breeches buoy.
The transport ship Dispatch ran aground on the Manacles in 1809 on its return from the Peninsular War, losing 104 men from the 7th Hussars. The following day, with local villagers still attempting a rescue, the Cruizer-class brig-sloop HMS Primrose hit the northern end of these rocks. The only survivor of its 126 officers, men and boys was a drummer boy.
5 Sept 1856 the Cherubim and Ocean Home collided off Lizard Point
The SS Mohegan, a 6,889 GRT passenger liner, also hit the Manacles in 1898 with the loss of 106 lives.
The American passenger liner Paris was stranded on the Manacles in 1899, with no loss of life.
The biggest rescue in the RNLI's history was 17 March 1907 when the 12,000-tonne liner SS Suevic hit the Maenheere Reef near Lizard Point in Cornwall. In a strong gale and dense fog RNLI lifeboat volunteers rescued 456 passengers, including 70 babies. Crews from the Lizard, Cadgwith, Coverack and Porthleven rowed out repeatedly for 16 hours to rescue all of the people on board. Six silver RNLI medals were later awarded, two to Suevic crew members.
The Battle at the Lizard, a naval battle, took place off The Lizard on 21 October 1707.
Smuggling was a regular, and often necessary, way of life in these parts, despite the efforts of coastguards or "Preventive men". In 1801, the king's pardon was offered to any smuggler giving information on the Mullion musket men involved in a gunfight with the crew of HM Gun Vessel Hecate.
Avionic
In the First World War a Naval Air Station was established at Bonython, flying mainly blimps used for spotting U-boats. One was sunk and several probably damaged by bombs dropped by the blimps. The airfield site is now occupied by the wind farm.
RAF Predannack Down (see Predannack Airfield) was a Second World War airbase, from which Coastal Command squadrons flew anti-submarine sorties into the Bay of Biscay as well as convoy support in the western English Channel. The runways still exist and the site is used by a local Air Cadet Volunteergliding Squadron 626VGS and as an emergency/relief base for RNAS Culdrose (HMS Seahawk).
RNAS Culdrose is Europe's largest helicopter base, and currently hosts the Training and Operational Conversion Unit operating the EH101 "Merlin" helicopter. It is also the home base for Merlin Squadrons embarked upon Royal Navy warships, the Westland Sea King airborne early warning (AEW) variant helicopter, a Search And Rescue (Sea King, again) helicopter flight, and some BAe Hawk T.1 trainer jets used for training purposes by the Royal Navy. The base also operates some other types of fixed wing aircraft for calibration and other training purposes. As befits the base's name, a non-flying example of a Hawker Sea Hawk forms the main gate guardian static display. RNAS Culdrose is a major contributor to the economy of The Lizard area.
Political
The Lizard peninsula is in the St Ives parliamentary constituency (which comprises the whole of the former district of Penwith and the southern part of the former district of Kerrier). However, the parishes northeast of the Helford River are in Camborne and Redruth parliamentary constituency
To the north, The Lizard peninsula is bordered by the civil parishes of Breage, Porthleven, Sithney, Helston, Wendron, Gweek and – across the Helford River – by Constantine, Kerrier and Mawnan.
The parishes on the peninsula proper are (west to east):
Northern parishes:
Gunwalloe
Cury
Mawgan-in-Meneage
St Martin-in-Meneage
Manaccan
St Anthony-in-Meneage
Southern parishes:
Mullion
Grade-Ruan
St Keverne
Landewednack
The Lizard's political history includes the 1497 Cornish rebellion which began in St Keverne. The village blacksmith Michael Joseph (Michael An Gof in Cornish, meaning blacksmith) led the uprising, protesting against the punitive taxes levied by Henry VII to pay for the war against the Scots. The uprising was routed on its march to London and the two leaders, Michael Joseph and Thomas Flamank, were subsequently hanged, drawn and quartered.
Technological
Titanium was discovered here by the Reverend William Gregor in 1791.
In 1869, John Pender formed the Falmouth Gibraltar and Malta Telegraph company, intending to connect India to England with an undersea cable. Although intended to land at Falmouth, the final landing point was Porthcurno near Land's End.
In 1900 Guglielmo Marconi stayed the Housel Bay Hotel in his quest to locate a coastal radio station to receive signals from ships equipped with his apparatus. He leased a plot "in the wheat field adjoining the hotel" where the Lizard Wireless Telegraph Station still stands today. Recently restored by the National Trust, it looks as it did in January 1901, when Marconi received the distance record signals of 186 miles (299 km) from his transmitter station at Niton, Isle of Wight. The Lizard Wireless Station is the oldest Marconi station to survive in its original state, and is located to the west of the Lloyds Signal Station in what appears to be a wooden hut. On 12 December 1901 Poldhu Point was the site of the first trans Atlantic, wireless signal radio communication when Marconi sent a signal to St John's, Newfoundland. The technology is one of the key advances to the development of radio, television, satellites and the internet.
A radar station called RAF Dry Tree was built during World War II. The site was later chosen for the Telstar project in 1962; its rocky foundations, clear atmosphere and extreme southerly location being uniquely suitable. This became the Goonhilly satellite earth station, now owned by Goonhilly Earth Station Ltd. Some important developments in television satellite transmission were made at Goonhilly station. A wind farm exists near to the Goonhilly station site.
Geology
Known as the Lizard Complex, the peninsula's geology is the best preserved example of an exposed ophiolite in the United Kingdom.
An ophiolite is a suite of geological formations which represent a slice through a section of ocean crust (including the upper level of the mantle) thrust onto the continental crust.
The Lizard formations comprise three main units; the serpentinites, the "oceanic complex" and the metamorphic basement. The serpentinite contains significant samples of the serpentine polymorph lizardite, which were named after the Lizard complex in 1955.
Ecology
Several nature sites exist on the Lizard Peninsula; Predannack nature reserve, Mullion Island, Goonhilly Downs, and the Cornish Seal Sanctuary at Gweek. An area of the Lizard covering 16.62 square kilometres (6.42 sq mi) is designated a national nature reserve because of its coastal grasslands and heaths and inland heaths. The peninsula contains 3 main Sites of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI), both noted for their endangered insects and plants, as well as their geology. The first is East Lizard Heathlands SSSI, the second is Caerthillian to Kennack SSSI and the third is West Lizard SSSI, of which the important wetland, Hayle Kimbro Pool, forms a part of.
The area is also home to one of England's rarest breeding birds — the Cornish chough. This species of corvid is distinctive due to its red beak and legs and haunting "chee-aw" call. Choughs were extinct in Cornwall but returned naturally in 2001 and began breeding on Lizard in 2002 following a concerted effort by the National Trust, English Nature and the RSPB.
The Lizard contains some of the most specialised flora of any area in Britain, including many Red Data Book plant species. Of particular note is the Cornish heath, Erica vagans, that occurs in abundance here, but which is found nowhere else in Britain. There are more than 600 species of flowering plants on the Lizard, nearly a quarter of all UK species. The reason for this richness is partly because of the many different and unusual Lizard rocks on the Lizard Peninsula. But above all, it is a coming together of multiple factors: a very mild maritime climate, but one prone to gales and salt winds; waterlogged and boggy soils, but ones that often parch and dry out in the summer; soils of greatly contrasting fertility and pH; and lastly man's influence. Any single factor taken on its own would influence the flora; taken together, they combine, overlap and interact. Contrasting plant communities grow side-by-side in a mosaic that changes within a few metres but also changes markedly over time with the cycle of heath fires. It's not so much that conditions are ideal for growth, but that there is such a variety of different, difficult conditions. Each habitat, with its own combination of factors, attracts its own specialist plants. It is also one of the few places where the rare formicine ant, Formica exsecta, (the narrow-headed ant), can be found.
Portrayal in literature, film and music
Daphne du Maurier based many novels on this part of Cornwall, including Frenchman's Creek.
The Lizard was featured on the BBC television programme Seven Natural Wonders as one of the wonders of the South West, and on the BBC series Coast.
In James Clavell's novel Shōgun, ship's pilot Vasco Rodrigues challenges John Blackthorne to recite the latitude of the Lizard to verify that Blackthorne is the Pilot of the Dutch vessel Erasmus.
The Jennifer McQuiston 2015 novel The Spinster's Guide to Scandalous Behavior is set primarily in the fictional village Lizard Bay on the Lizard in the mid-nineteenth century.
In the television adaptation of "Horatio Hornblower", an order is given to "Weather the Lizard" in the episode Hornblower:Mutiny.
"Lizard Point" is also a track on the 1982 album Ambient 4: On Land released by Brian Eno.
The book series "Fenton House" by Ben Cheetham is set on the Lizard Peninsula.
We find that Craft & Design pupils often have difficulty remembering the sequence of operations involved when making a simple screwdriver handle. These photographs depict this process.
We begin with the preparation of the 25mm aluminium blank. After this the blank is held in the 3 jaw self centering chuck. A series of turning operations is then carried out. For the following we set a high spindle speed and used a slow feed speed for best results. Shown here we show facing off. Then turning down or parallel turning. Next taper turning. After that the Slocombe bit or centre bit is mounted in a Jacob's chuck and a pilot hole is drilled. A HSS twist drill or jobber bit is then mounted in the Jacob's chuck and a blind hole is drilled to a depth of 30mm. The depth gauge is used to judge this.
Taps and dies are used to cut the internal thread on the screwdriver blade and the internal thread on the handle.
Finally both components are assembled and the handle is knurled or given a textured grip pattern. This is done at a very low spindle speed and a slow automatic feed speed.
We find that Craft & Design pupils often have difficulty remembering the sequence of operations involved when making a simple screwdriver handle. These photographs depict this process.
We begin with the preparation of the 25mm aluminium blank. After this the blank is held in the 3 jaw self centering chuck. A series of turning operations is then carried out. For the following we set a high spindle speed and used a slow feed speed for best results. Shown here we show facing off. Then turning down or parallel turning. Next taper turning. After that the Slocombe bit or centre bit is mounted in a Jacob's chuck and a pilot hole is drilled. A HSS twist drill or jobber bit is then mounted in the Jacob's chuck and a blind hole is drilled to a depth of 30mm. The depth gauge is used to judge this.
Taps and dies are used to cut the internal thread on the screwdriver blade and the internal thread on the handle.
Finally both components are assembled and the handle is knurled or given a textured grip pattern. This is done at a very low spindle speed and a slow automatic feed speed.
Difficulties strengthen the mind, as labor does the body.
Seneca (5 BC - 65 AD)
#282 on December 11, 2007
Kansas Cosmosphere
"There ain't no graceful way."
Rusty Schweickart Apollo 9 astronaut, regarding difficulties of using the bathroom in space
Where's the Bathroom in Space?
There is no "bathroom" in space, but to an astronaut jammed inside the confined interior of a spacecraft for an extended period of time, having a place to "go" was an operational necessity. NASA likes to refer to this issue as "waste management."
"Waste management" became a real problem for astronauts and engineers alike when spaceflights began lasting longer than a day during the Gemini program. The problem had to be solved if astronauts were going to get to the Moon and back-a trip that would take nearly two weeks. And what would happen if nature called while an astronaut was walking on the surface of the Moon? This, indeed, was a critical issue, and a major engineering challenge.
Because of the limited size of the Gemini and Apollo spacecraft, only minimal bathroom equipment could be installed. The solutions, although functional, were far from ideal. Liquid and solid body wastes had to be taken care of in two totally different ways. Also, the requirements of an astronaut inside the spacecraft were different than those on the lunar surface. The basic waste management hardware used during an Apollo mission are displayed below.
Inside the Spacecraft
When Apollo astronauts were inside the pressurized, shirt-sleeve environment of the spacecraft, the waste management issue was a little more straight forward, but nevertheless, complicated. The key problem was the lack of gravity that an "earthly" bathroom depends upon.
Urine Transfer System
For urination while inside the spacecraft, the astronaut would attach himself to the Urine Transfer System (UTS) collection bag by means of a roll- on condom-like device. The bag would collect the urine for storage.
When the bag needed to be emptied, a hose was attached between the valve unit on the bag and a special spacecraft fitting that was open to the exterior space environment. By simply turning the valve to the correct position, the contents of the bag were exposed to the vacuum of space. The vacuum extracted the urine into space in what was known as a "urine purge," which was a truly colorful event to witness.
The Constellation "Urion"
One of the most spectacular events that was witnessed by Apollo astronauts on the way to the Moon was-surprisingly-a URINE PURGE. When stored urine was jettisoned into space, the liquid atomized into millions of tiny droplets. Immediately, these droplets froze into millions of tiny crystals. The urine crystals then caught and refracted the intense sunlight, creating an extraordinary celestial display.
On the first Apollo mission (Apollo 7), the astronauts quickly learned not to activate a urine purge prior to conducting stellar navigation. Refracting intense sunlight, the frozen urine crystals appeared as thousands of new "stars" in the stellar background, greatly confusing navigational readings. Apollo 7 Commander Wally Schirra even had a name for it. He called it the constellation "Urion."
A urine purge was so spectacular that the astronauts usually had their faces plastered to the windows to observe the event, but they were not allowed to photograph it. If the astronauts photographed a urine purge, they would have had to explain the photo to the public when they got home. In the 1960s, one could not use the word "urine" in the news media, which would have placed the NASA public affairs office in a very difficult position. To avoid this, NASA chose not to photographically record it.
Defecation Collection Device
For the collection of solid waste while inside the spacecraft, astronauts used a Defecation Collection Device (DCD). The device consisted mainly of a thin plastic bag with an adhesive rim.
When needed, the astronaut would peel off the protective cover from the adhesive rim of the bag opening. He would then carefully position and adhere it to his buttocks. After use, the astronaut removed the bag and sealed it inside another storage bag. To prevent odor, a small bag of blue deodorant inside the bag was then punctured and mixed with the contents.
All collected solid waste was stored in a special compartment inside the spacecraft and returned to the Earth. Numerous medical and scientific studies were then conducted on the waste to determine how well the astronaut's metabolic functions performed during his extended stay in weightlessness.
Lunar Bathroom Break
On the Lunar Surface When astronauts ventured out on the lunar surface, they had an entirely different set of problems to deal with when using the bathroom. Specifically, they were now totally disconnected from the spacecraft and working in an extremely hostile environment while cocooned in a self-contained, sealed space suit. The equipment used for waste management while on the lunar surface is displayed below.
Urine Transfer System
Before climbing into his space suit for a walk on the Moon, an astronaut would attach to his waist a Urine Collection Transfer System (UCTS). This belt-like apparatus contained a urine collection bag and was connected to the astronaut by, means of a roll-on condom-like device. When nature called, the astronaut was able to urinate directly into the collection bag, where the liquid was stored until he was able to return to the Lunar Module to empty it.
Once back inside the Lunar Module, the astronaut could drain the bag without removing the space suit by means of ay special pressure connector on the leg of the suit. The urine collection bag was attached to this connector by a short, flexible, black rubber tube. The astronaut would attach the urine transfer hose to the connector and drain the bag into a special waste storage area located inside the Lunar Module. In emergencies, this also meant that the bag could be, drained without depressurizing the space suit.
Defecation Collection Device
What an astronaut dreaded most while working on the lunar surface was having to deal with solid body waste.
To accommodate this need, the astronaut wore, in conjunction with the urine collection bag, what was essentially diaper. But NASA did not want the "hero" image of the astronaut diminished by having him wear a diaper so the name of the device was officially changed to: "FECAL MANAGEMENT SUBSYSTEM"
Focus on Eldercare's response to COVID-19
At the purpose when the noxious impacts of COVID-19 showed first in Wuhan, the entire city and therefore the entire of Hubei Province ground to a halt. The lockdown of Wuhan brought remarkable torment and threatening difficulties for several individual occupants therein first focus. Presently, COVID-19 represents those equivalent difficulties for individuals and social welfare frameworks all-inclusive. Especially, it tests our aggregate endeavors to believe one another, particularly the foremost defenseless among us.
As a populace, individuals quite 70 will generally have more fragile insusceptible frameworks and progressively fundamental conditions that obstruct their capacity to battle the infection. They're likewise sure to dwell on bunch day to day environments, nearby people. Floods of COVID-19 passings in nursing homes — first within the Seattle territory, at that time on the brink of Sacramento and now during the country — have underscored this inauspicious reality. Up until now, Californians quite 65 have made up, at any rate, a fourth of the state's affirmed instances of COVID-19.
Be that because it may, guidelines, especially for helping living offices, are unsafely failing to satisfy the expectations in protecting California's older folks from this infection. Luck, Gov. Gavin Newsom's plan on Aging activity, as of now ongoing, presents an opportunity to forcefully address this peril and find how to secure an enormous number of more seasoned Americans.
Helped living focuses are an aid to the Eldercare business and therefore the enormous corporate proprietors that currently command the market. Simultaneously, in any case, an absence of guideline and oversight of staffing levels and capabilities — particularly prerequisites for on-location doctors and much prepared clinical experts — has left the business defenseless against misuse and unfortunate results. One glaring issue that has got to be tended to: helped living focuses are directed by the state Department of Social Services rather than the Department of Public Health.
In any case, it helped to measure maybe a piece of social welfare and clinical consideration conveyance framework, not only a direction for living. Propelled a year ago, Newsom's plan on Aging has framed a warning advisory group, is holding open gatherings and within the fall is planned to offer a 10-year plan which will address issues from lodging and vagrancy to crisis readiness to manhandle and disrespect. The venture has made a "Value Committee" to urge a contribution from a progressively differing gathering of residents and associations, including agents of the crippled network, Native Americans and other ethnic minorities.
Considering the spreading coronavirus general wellbeing emerging, it's basic that the representative's plan on Aging takes on an expansive and genuine open arrangement job. We weren't bothered with elevated level clichés for tending to the wants of the old. We'd like solid arrangements, solid guidelines with implementation teeth and a guarantee to continued oversight.
The Age of COVID-19
Older people who get themselves out of the blue alone without authority over their conditions are at specific hazards for an assortment of serious, even hazardous, physical and psychological well-being conditions, including a subjective decrease. Limitations on the opportunity of development ought to be proportionate and not founded solely on age.
COVID-19, as different irresistible melodies, represents a higher hazard to populaces that live in nearness. This hazard is especially intense in nursing or matured consideration offices, where the infection can spread quickly and has just brought about numerous passings. About 1.5 million older people individuals live in the nursing homes in the US, barring helped living offices and different settings making nearness.
Twenty-three individuals kicked the bucket in a flare-up at an office in Washington State in February and March, and the US Centers for Disease Control detailed 400 additional cases in offices as of April 1. On March 31, wellbeing experts in the Grand East district of France detailed 570 passings of older people in nursing homes.
Older people often end up in nursing homes due to governments' inability to offer adequate social types of assistance for individuals to live freely in the network, approaches that have put millions at included danger of getting the infection as a result of their organization. Governments ought to guarantee the progression of network-based administrations with the goal that individuals don't wind up in organizations without different alternatives.
Expound now on the roles played via care laborers in continuing the lives of the old during that emergency, and who, however dreadful themselves, by and by remain day in and outing inside the bounds of their wards to offer fundamental consideration.
Care supervisor Chang, the woman in charge of the consideration laborers among whom I led my hands-on work, coordinated the change of her ward into a self-sufficient fixed of a unit of care. The passage to her floor is carefully monitored; just fundamental conveyances are permitted, for instance, nourishment and clothing. Since nobody can enter or leave the structure, the flask for the older was transformed into a dozing region for care laborers. Despite the very fact that a lot of consideration laborers have their circle of relatives to require care of, they put that piece of their life under the control of others. Care specialist Lin, whose spouse died at the start of the pandemic, did not have the chance to completely grieve his passing due to incessant understaffing at Sunlight. She came back to figure following the burial service, despite realizing that she not, at now expected to figure at Sunlight to hide her significant other's clinical costs. Lin's arrival says much regarding her promise to her calling, to her colleagues, and to the old she had come to understand so well. My examination with care laborers recommends that it's an enthusiastic association and an awareness of other's expectations that propels them to remain the end of the day in care work. This is often borne out immediately.
Carefully add China is often seen as being grimy and unfortunate, thanks to an excellent extension to its nearby hook up with the realistic consideration required by slight, skilled bodies. Chinese consideration laborers are for the foremost part provincial to urban transients or urban specialists laid far away from previous state-claimed processing plants. In any case, direct consideration is intricate. In any case, its unpredictability goes unrecognized, or maybe disregarded by institutional powers that organize benefits and generalize the old as bodies to chip away at, to the disregard of their social-passionate necessities. As is valid with Sunlight, things which might typically undermine the keenness of care laborers, for instance, the absence of institutional acknowledgment for his or her enthusiastic work, are required to be postponed. Care specialists are currently centered around a shared objective: ensuring the gift assistance of the older. COVID-19 propels care laborers to consider what kind of care is required and the way to offer that care. It fills in as a channel through which the elemental beliefs of care are observed. Care is about common human weakness and our intrinsic association. Care laborers at Sunlight, in their aggregate every minute of everyday endeavors to secure the older, typify this ethic through their consideration. May the respectful regard, they hold of the older in their consideration redound on them and everyone consideration laborers overall who are fighting this pandemic on the bleeding edge!
Like the consideration laborers at Sunlight, the laborers in numerous nations are regarded human life so that we cannot be embarrassed to return clean with the leading edge about ourselves. Salute the spearheading staff who salutes our purposeful endeavors to handle the pandemic in numerous settings around the globe, within the daylight, yet additionally to ensure that veterans are appropriately treated, took care of and washed.
We all hope and pray that the coronavirus will soon be controlled and subdued. And that when the crisis is behind us, that we continue the important work of protecting the elderly and other vulnerable segments of our citizenry.
DONATE paypal.me/pools/c/8obn2hcLVG
How Can I Contribute in Times of COVID-19?
Write your testimony about the concequences from the time of Corona virus (COVID-19). Here is a great knowledge base about the effects of the Corona virus. Thank you for your story! article-directory.org/article/717/40/Emergency-Situations...
Einstein's mother introduced him to the violin at the age of six in an attempt to counteract his academic failures. Einstein eventually became an accomplished amateur violinist, taking particular pleasure in performing Mozart and discussing the parallels between music and mathematics. His son, Hans Albert, recalled that "whenever he felt that he had come to the end of the road or into a difficult situation in his work, he would take refuge in music, and that would usually resolve all the difficulties."
File name: 07_11_000337
Title: Pursuit of Knowledge Under Difficulties
Creator/Contributor: Thompson, Alfred Wordsworth, 1840-1896 (artist); L. Prang & Co. (publisher)
Date issued:
Copyright date: 1878
Physical description note:
Genre: Chromolithographs; Genre prints
Location: Boston Public Library, Print Department
Rights: No known restrictions
Had great difficulty with this challenge.
The challenge to be able to walk around the back of Dolly without her following me back around again. Lovely to be idolised but really Dolly. Tried waiting till she was asleep...no, as soon as I move so does she.
Sooo... I perched her on the back of the lounge and as she is not much of a dare devil, she would need to get her balance 1st before swinging back around.
Hence this photo was taken in the dark and the ISO is a bit high.
Incredible Difficulties Encountered and Overcome on Italian Front.
(At left)
A vivid illustration is here given of the colossal tasks that had to be performed by the Italian and Austrian troops in the fighting between the two nations.
Cliffs that would seem scarcely possible of scaling by a mountain goat were negotiated by daring soldiers tied together by ropes.
Heavy artillery was pulled up steep mountain sides and swung from peak to peak over valleys hundreds and sometimes thousands of feet below.
(Above)
Austrian mountain troops, clinging like so many flies to the slippery rocks and helping each other along by ropes, are climbing over a mountain pass in order to spring a surprise on an Italian detachment on the other side.
On no other front, either in France or in Russia, were any natural difficulties met with at all comparable to those that became after a time a matter of course to the armies struggling against each other in the Alpine wilds.
=====================================================
The war of the nations: portfolio in rotogravure etchings: compiled from the Mid-week pictorial. New York: New York Times, Co, 1919. Book.
Retrieved from the Library of Congress, www.loc.gov/item/19013740/. (Accessed November 08, 2016.)
Images from "The War of the Nations : Portfolio in Rotogravure Etchings : Compiled from the Mid-Week Pictorial" (New York : New York Times, Co., 1919)
Notes: Selected from "The War of the Nations: Portfolio in Rotogravure Etchings," published by the New York Times shortly after the 1919 armistice. This portfolio compiled selected images from their "Mid-Week Pictorial" newspaper supplements of 1914-19. 528 p. : chiefly ill. ; 42 cm.; hdl.loc.gov/loc.gdc/collgdc.gc000037
Subjects: World War, 1914-1918 --Pictorial works.
New York--New York
Format: Rotogravures --1910-1920.
Rights Info: No known restrictions on reproduction
Repository: Library of Congress, Serials and Government Publications Division, Washington, D.C. 20540
Part Of: Newspaper Pictorials: World War I Rotogravures, 1914-1919 (DLC) sgpwar 19191231
General information about the Newspaper Pictorials: World War I Rotogravures, 1914-1919 digital collection is available at hdl.loc.gov/loc.gdc/collgdc.gc000037
=====================================================
As I had difficulty finding a location with an unobstructed view I missed the arrival of the winner at the finish line by about ten minutes. In case you don't know here are the results:
Geoffrey Ndungu won the Dublin City Marathon for the second year running in a time of 2 hours 11 minutes and 9 seconds. The time was outside last year's course record time of 2:08.33.
Paul Pollock from Belfast was the first Irish man home in ninth place in 2:16.30, ahead of Sean Hehir who finished in 2:17.50.
Magdalene Mukunzi was the first woman home in a time of 2:30.46 which was outside the course record of 2:26.13. Maria McCambridge was the first Irish woman through the finishing line in 2:35.28.
Luke Jones from Wales won the wheelchair section.
A total of 14,300 people registered for this year's race which was without a major sponsor for the first time in 20 years.
From The Encyclopædia Britannica:A Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, Literature And General Information, 11th edition, published in 29 volumes, 1910-1911 [public domain]:
[Cont. from Lincoln 4]
The slavery question presented vexatious difficulties in conducting the war. Congress in August 1861 passed an act (approved August 6th) confiscating rights of slave-owners to slaves employed in hostile service against the Union. On the 30th of August General Fremont by military order declared martial law and confiscation against active enemies, with freedom to their slaves, in the State of Missouri. Believing that under existing conditions such a step was both detrimental in present policy and unauthorized in law, President Lincoln directed him (2nd September) to modify the order to make it conform to the Confiscation Act of Congress, and on the 11th of September annulled the parts of the order which conflicted with this act. Strong political factions were instantly formed for and against military emancipation, and the government was hotly beset by antagonistic counsel. The Unionists of the border slave states were greatly alarmed, but Lincoln by his moderate conservatism held them to the military support of the government.5 Meanwhile he sagaciously prepared the way for the supreme act of statesmanship which the gathering national crisis already dimly foreshadowed. On the 6th of March 1862, he sent a special message to Congress recommending the passage of a resolution offering pecuniary aid from the general government to induce states to adopt gradual abolishment of slavery. Promptly passed by Congress, the resolution produced no immediate result except in its influence on public opinion. A practical step, however, soon followed. In April Congress passed and the president approved (6th April) an act emancipating the slaves in the District of Columbia, with compensation to owners—a measure which Lincoln had proposed when in Congress. Meanwhile slaves of loyal masters were constantly escaping to military camps. Some commanders excluded them altogether; others surrendered them on demand; while still others sheltered and protected them against their owners. Lincoln tolerated this latitude as falling properly within the military discretion pertaining to local army operations. A new case, however, soon demanded his official interference. On the 9th of May 1862 General David Hunter, commanding in the limited areas gained along the southern coast, issued a short order declaring his department under martial law, and adding—“Slavery and martial law in a free country are altogether incompatible. The persons in these three States—Georgia, Florida and South Carolina—heretofore 707 held as slaves are, therefore, declared for ever free.” As soon as this order, by the slow method of communication by sea, reached the newspapers, Lincoln (May 19) published a proclamation declaring it void; adding further, “Whether it be competent for me as commander-in-chief of the army and navy to declare the slaves of any state or states free, and whether at any time or in any case it shall have become a necessity indispensable to the maintenance of the government to exercise such supposed power, are questions which under my responsibility I reserve to myself, and which I cannot feel justified in leaving to the decision of commanders in the field. These are totally different questions from those of police regulations in armies or camps.” But in the same proclamation Lincoln recalled to the public his own proposal and the assent of Congress to compensate states which would adopt voluntary and gradual abolishment. “To the people of these states now,” he added, “I must earnestly appeal. I do not argue. I beseech you to make the argument for yourselves. You cannot, if you would, be blind to the signs of the times.” Meanwhile the anti-slavery sentiment of the North constantly increased. Congress by express act (approved on the 19th of June) prohibited the existence of slavery in all territories outside of states. On July the 12th the president called the representatives of the border slave states to the executive mansion, and once more urged upon them his proposal of compensated emancipation. “If the war continues long,” he said, “as it must if the object be not sooner attained, the institution in your states will be extinguished by mere friction and abrasion—by the mere incidents of the war. It will be gone, and you will have nothing valuable in lieu of it.” Although Lincoln’s appeal brought the border states to no practical decision—the representatives of these states almost without exception opposed the plan—it served to prepare public opinion for his final act. During the month of July his own mind reached the virtual determination to give slavery its coup de grâce; on the 17th he approved a new Confiscation Act, much broader than that of the 6th of August 1861 (which freed only those slaves in military service against the Union) and giving to the president power to employ persons of African descent for the suppression of the rebellion; and on the 22nd he submitted to his cabinet the draft of an emancipation proclamation substantially as afterward issued. Serious military reverses constrained him for the present to withhold it, while on the other hand they served to increase the pressure upon him from anti-slavery men. Horace Greeley having addressed a public letter to him complaining of “the policy you seem to be pursuing with regard to the slaves of the rebels,” the president replied on the 22nd of August, saying, “My paramount object is to save the Union, and not either to save or destroy slavery. If I could save the Union without freeing any slave, I would do it; if I could save it by freeing all the slaves, I would do it; and, if I could do it by freeing some and leaving others alone, I would also do that.” Thus still holding back violent reformers with one hand, and leading up halting conservatives with the other, he on the 13th of September replied among other things to an address from a delegation: “I do not want to issue a document that the whole world will see must necessarily be inoperative like the pope’s bull against the comet.... I view this matter as a practical war measure, to be decided on according to the advantages or disadvantages it may offer to the suppression of the rebellion.... I have not decided against a proclamation of liberty to the slaves, but hold the matter under advisement.”
The year 1862 had opened with important Union victories. Admiral A. H. Foote captured Fort Henry on the 6th of February, and Gen. U. S. Grant captured Fort Donelson on the 16th of February, and won the battle of Shiloh on the 6th and 7th of April. Gen. A. E. Burnside took possession of Roanoke island on the North Carolina coast (7th February). The famous contest between the new ironclads “Monitor” and “Merrimac” (9th April), though indecisive, effectually stopped the career of the Confederate vessel, which was later destroyed by the Confederates themselves. (See Hampton Roads.) Farragut, with a wooden fleet, ran past the twin forts St Philip and Jackson, compelled the surrender of New Orleans (26th April), and gained control of the lower Mississippi. The succeeding three months brought disaster and discouragement to the Union army. M’Clellan’s campaign against Richmond was made abortive by his timorous generalship, and compelled the withdrawal of his army. Pope’s army, advancing against the same city by another line, was beaten back upon Washington in defeat. The tide of war, however, once more turned in the defeat of Lee’s invading army at South Mountain and Antietam in Maryland on the 14th and on the 16th and 17th of September, compelling him to retreat.
With public opinion thus ripened by alternate defeat and victory, President Lincoln, on the 22nd of September 1862, issued his preliminary proclamation of emancipation, giving notice that on the 1st of January 1863, “all persons held as slaves within any state or designated part of a state the people whereof shall then be in rebellion against the United States shall be then, thenceforward and for ever free.” In his message to Congress on the 1st of December following, he again urged his plan of gradual, compensated emancipation (to be completed on the 1st of December 1900) “as a means, not in exclusion of, but additional to, all others for restoring and preserving the national authority throughout the Union.” On the 1st day of January 1863 the final proclamation of emancipation was duly issued, designating the States of Arkansas, Texas, Mississippi, Alabama, Florida, Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina, and certain portions of Louisiana and Virginia, as “this day in rebellion against the United States,” and proclaiming that, in virtue of his authority as commander-in-chief, and as a necessary war measure for suppressing rebellion, “I do order and declare that all persons held as slaves within said designated states and parts of states are and henceforward shall be free,” and pledging the executive and military power of the government to maintain such freedom. The legal validity of these proclamations was never pronounced upon by the national courts; but their decrees gradually enforced by the march of armies were soon recognized by public opinion to be practically irreversible.6 Such dissatisfaction as they caused in the border slave states died out in the stress of war. The systematic enlistment of negroes and their incorporation into the army by regiments, hitherto only tried as exceptional experiments, were now pushed with vigour, and, being followed by several conspicuous instances of their gallantry on the battlefield, added another strong impulse to the sweeping change of popular sentiment. To put the finality of emancipation beyond all question, Lincoln in the winter session of 1863-1864 strongly supported a movement in Congress to abolish slavery by constitutional amendment, but the necessary two-thirds vote of the House of Representatives could not then be obtained. In his annual message of the 6th of December 1864, he urged the immediate passage of the measure. Congress now acted promptly: on the 31st of January 1865, that body by joint resolution proposed to the states the 13th amendment of the Federal Constitution, providing that “neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime, whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States or any place subject to their jurisdiction.” Before the end of that year twenty-seven out of the thirty-six states of the Union (being the required three-fourths) had ratified the 708 amendment, and official proclamation made by President Johnson on the 18th of December 1865, declared it duly adopted.
[cont. on Lincoln 6]
Typeface rough for stamping, simplified letterpress, digiboard, puzzles, scrabble and reading text for children with reading difficulties.
nov 20 15-778-ps1 Difficulty identifying this bird species taken in Seaside Heights on the central Jersey Shore. Narrowed down to a Savannah Sparrow, or its subspecies the Ipswich Sparrow (likely).
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A recent internet purchase.
Kodak Solio
Wellington SCP
Paget Self-toning paper
Novex ( = no vexing difficulties !) paper
Gevaert - but this envelope turned out to be empty :(
For photograms and contact printing, 2 1/2x 3 1/2 and quarter plate.
Focus on Eldercare's response to COVID-19
At the purpose when the noxious impacts of COVID-19 showed first in Wuhan, the entire city and therefore the entire of Hubei Province ground to a halt. The lockdown of Wuhan brought remarkable torment and threatening difficulties for several individual occupants therein first focus. Presently, COVID-19 represents those equivalent difficulties for individuals and social welfare frameworks all-inclusive. Especially, it tests our aggregate endeavors to believe one another, particularly the foremost defenseless among us.
As a populace, individuals quite 70 will generally have more fragile insusceptible frameworks and progressively fundamental conditions that obstruct their capacity to battle the infection. They're likewise sure to dwell on bunch day to day environments, nearby people. Floods of COVID-19 passings in nursing homes — first within the Seattle territory, at that time on the brink of Sacramento and now during the country — have underscored this inauspicious reality. Up until now, Californians quite 65 have made up, at any rate, a fourth of the state's affirmed instances of COVID-19.
Be that because it may, guidelines, especially for helping living offices, are unsafely failing to satisfy the expectations in protecting California's older folks from this infection. Luck, Gov. Gavin Newsom's plan on Aging activity, as of now ongoing, presents an opportunity to forcefully address this peril and find how to secure an enormous number of more seasoned Americans.
Helped living focuses are an aid to the Eldercare business and therefore the enormous corporate proprietors that currently command the market. Simultaneously, in any case, an absence of guideline and oversight of staffing levels and capabilities — particularly prerequisites for on-location doctors and much prepared clinical experts — has left the business defenseless against misuse and unfortunate results. One glaring issue that has got to be tended to: helped living focuses are directed by the state Department of Social Services rather than the Department of Public Health.
In any case, it helped to measure maybe a piece of social welfare and clinical consideration conveyance framework, not only a direction for living. Propelled a year ago, Newsom's plan on Aging has framed a warning advisory group, is holding open gatherings and within the fall is planned to offer a 10-year plan which will address issues from lodging and vagrancy to crisis readiness to manhandle and disrespect. The venture has made a "Value Committee" to urge a contribution from a progressively differing gathering of residents and associations, including agents of the crippled network, Native Americans and other ethnic minorities.
Considering the spreading coronavirus general wellbeing emerging, it's basic that the representative's plan on Aging takes on an expansive and genuine open arrangement job. We weren't bothered with elevated level clichés for tending to the wants of the old. We'd like solid arrangements, solid guidelines with implementation teeth and a guarantee to continued oversight.
The Age of COVID-19
Older people who get themselves out of the blue alone without authority over their conditions are at specific hazards for an assortment of serious, even hazardous, physical and psychological well-being conditions, including a subjective decrease. Limitations on the opportunity of development ought to be proportionate and not founded solely on age.
COVID-19, as different irresistible melodies, represents a higher hazard to populaces that live in nearness. This hazard is especially intense in nursing or matured consideration offices, where the infection can spread quickly and has just brought about numerous passings. About 1.5 million older people individuals live in the nursing homes in the US, barring helped living offices and different settings making nearness.
Twenty-three individuals kicked the bucket in a flare-up at an office in Washington State in February and March, and the US Centers for Disease Control detailed 400 additional cases in offices as of April 1. On March 31, wellbeing experts in the Grand East district of France detailed 570 passings of older people in nursing homes.
Older people often end up in nursing homes due to governments' inability to offer adequate social types of assistance for individuals to live freely in the network, approaches that have put millions at included danger of getting the infection as a result of their organization. Governments ought to guarantee the progression of network-based administrations with the goal that individuals don't wind up in organizations without different alternatives.
Expound now on the roles played via care laborers in continuing the lives of the old during that emergency, and who, however dreadful themselves, by and by remain day in and outing inside the bounds of their wards to offer fundamental consideration.
Care supervisor Chang, the woman in charge of the consideration laborers among whom I led my hands-on work, coordinated the change of her ward into a self-sufficient fixed of a unit of care. The passage to her floor is carefully monitored; just fundamental conveyances are permitted, for instance, nourishment and clothing. Since nobody can enter or leave the structure, the flask for the older was transformed into a dozing region for care laborers. Despite the very fact that a lot of consideration laborers have their circle of relatives to require care of, they put that piece of their life under the control of others. Care specialist Lin, whose spouse died at the start of the pandemic, did not have the chance to completely grieve his passing due to incessant understaffing at Sunlight. She came back to figure following the burial service, despite realizing that she not, at now expected to figure at Sunlight to hide her significant other's clinical costs. Lin's arrival says much regarding her promise to her calling, to her colleagues, and to the old she had come to understand so well. My examination with care laborers recommends that it's an enthusiastic association and an awareness of other's expectations that propels them to remain the end of the day in care work. This is often borne out immediately.
Carefully add China is often seen as being grimy and unfortunate, thanks to an excellent extension to its nearby hook up with the realistic consideration required by slight, skilled bodies. Chinese consideration laborers are for the foremost part provincial to urban transients or urban specialists laid far away from previous state-claimed processing plants. In any case, direct consideration is intricate. In any case, its unpredictability goes unrecognized, or maybe disregarded by institutional powers that organize benefits and generalize the old as bodies to chip away at, to the disregard of their social-passionate necessities. As is valid with Sunlight, things which might typically undermine the keenness of care laborers, for instance, the absence of institutional acknowledgment for his or her enthusiastic work, are required to be postponed. Care specialists are currently centered around a shared objective: ensuring the gift assistance of the older. COVID-19 propels care laborers to consider what kind of care is required and the way to offer that care. It fills in as a channel through which the elemental beliefs of care are observed. Care is about common human weakness and our intrinsic association. Care laborers at Sunlight, in their aggregate every minute of everyday endeavors to secure the older, typify this ethic through their consideration. May the respectful regard, they hold of the older in their consideration redound on them and everyone consideration laborers overall who are fighting this pandemic on the bleeding edge!
Like the consideration laborers at Sunlight, the laborers in numerous nations are regarded human life so that we cannot be embarrassed to return clean with the leading edge about ourselves. Salute the spearheading staff who salutes our purposeful endeavors to handle the pandemic in numerous settings around the globe, within the daylight, yet additionally to ensure that veterans are appropriately treated, took care of and washed.
We all hope and pray that the coronavirus will soon be controlled and subdued. And that when the crisis is behind us, that we continue the important work of protecting the elderly and other vulnerable segments of our citizenry.
DONATE paypal.me/pools/c/8obn2hcLVG
How Can I Contribute in Times of COVID-19?
Write your testimony about the concequences from the time of Corona virus (COVID-19). Here is a great knowledge base about the effects of the Corona virus. Thank you for your story! article-directory.org/article/717/40/Emergency-Situations...
Title: Commissariat Difficulties. The Road from Balaklava to Sevastopol, at Kadikoi, During the Wet Weather.
Creator: Simpson, William, 1823-1899 (delineator); Walker, Edmund, active 1836-1882 (lithographer)
Contributors: Day & Son (lithographers); P. & D. Colnaghi & Co. (publisher)
Date: February 9, 1855
Part of: The seat of war in the East ... 1st-2d series
Series: Simpson's Sketches at the Seat of War in the East: First Series
Place: Microdistrict Kadykovka, Balaklava, Sevastopol, Crimea
Physical Description: 1 print: lithograph, color, part of 1 volume (117 prints); 27 x 42 cm on 39 x 57 cm
File: folio_3_dk214_s56_1_059_opt.jpg
Rights: Please cite DeGolyer Library, Southern Methodist University when using this file. A high-resolution version of this file may be obtained for a fee. For details see the sites.smu.edu/cul/degolyer/research/permissions/ web page. For other information, contact degolyer@smu.edu.
For more information and to view the image in high resolution, see: digitalcollections.smu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/eaa/id/1358
View the Europe, Asia, and Australia: Photographs, Manuscripts, and Imprints Collection
File name: 10_03_000939b
Binder label: Laundry
Title: The difficulties of a tub wringer. The convenience of a bench wringer. [back]
Created/Published: N. Y. : Buek & Lindner, Lith.
Date issued: 1870-1900 [approximate]
Genre: Advertising cards
Subject: Women; Laundry; Appliances
Notes: Title from item.
Collection: 19th Century American Trade Cards
Location: Boston Public Library, Print Department
Rights: No known restrictions.
Bamburgh Castle is located in Northumberland
The site was originally the location of a Celtic Brittonic fort known as Din Guarie and may have been the capital of the kingdom of Bernicia from its foundation in c. 420 to 547. After passing between the Britons and the Anglo-Saxons three times, the fort came under Anglo-Saxon control in 590. The fort was destroyed by Vikings in 993, and the Normans later built a new castle on the site, which forms the core of the present one. After a revolt in 1095 supported by the castle's owner, it became the property of the English monarch.
In the 17th century, financial difficulties led to the castle deteriorating, but it was restored by various owners during the 18th and 19th centuries. It was finally bought by the Victorian era industrialist William Armstrong, who completed its restoration. The castle still belongs to the Armstrong family and is open to the public.
Built on a dolerite outcrop, the location was previously home to a fort of the indigenous Celtic Britons known as Din Guarie[3] and may have been the capital of the kingdom of Bernicia, the realm of the Gododdin people,[4] from the realm's foundation in c. 420 until 547, the year of the first written reference to the castle. In that year the citadel was captured by the Anglo-Saxon ruler Ida of Bernicia (Beornice) and became Ida's seat.[5]
The castle was briefly retaken by the Britons from his son Hussa during the war of 590 before being retaken later the same year.[6] In c. 600, Hussa's successor Æthelfrith passed it on to his wife Bebba, from whom the early name Bebbanburh was derived.[7] Vikings destroyed the original fortification in 993.[8]
The Normans built a new castle on the site, which forms the core of the present one. William II unsuccessfully besieged it in 1095 during a revolt supported by its owner, Robert de Mowbray, Earl of Northumbria. After Robert was captured, his wife continued the defence until coerced to surrender by the king's threat to blind her husband.[9]
Bamburgh then became the property of the reigning English monarch. Henry II probably built the keep as it was complete by 1164.[10] Following the Siege of Acre in 1191, and as a reward for his service, King Richard I appointed Sir John Forster the first Governor of Bamburgh Castle.[11] Following the defeat of the Scots at the Battle of Neville's Cross in 1346, King David II was held prisoner at Bamburgh Castle.[9]
During the civil wars at the end of King John's reign, the castle was under the control of Philip of Oldcoates.[12] In 1464 during the Wars of the Roses, it became the first castle in England to be defeated by artillery, at the end of a nine-month siege by Richard Neville, 16th Earl of Warwick, the "Kingmaker", on behalf of the Yorkists.[13]
The Forster family of Northumberland continued to provide the Crown with successive governors of the castle until the Crown granted ownership (or a lease according to some sources) of the church and the castle to another Sir John Forster in the mid 1500s, after the Dissolution of the Monasteries.[14][15] The family retained ownership until Sir William Forster (d. 1700) was posthumously declared bankrupt, and his estates, including the castle, were sold to Lord Crew, Bishop of Durham (husband of his sister Dorothy) under an Act of Parliament to settle the debts in 1704.[10]
Crewe placed the castle in the hands of a board of trustees chaired by Thomas Sharp, the Archdeacon of Northumberland. Following the death of Thomas Sharp, leadership of the board of trustees passed to John Sharp (Thomas Sharp's son) who refurbished the castle keep and court rooms[16] and established a hospital on the site.[17] In 1894, the castle was bought by the Victorian industrialist William Armstrong, who completed the restoration.[18]
During the Second World War, pillboxes were established in the sand dunes to protect the castle and surrounding area from German invasion[19] and, in 1944, a Royal Navy corvette was named HMS Bamborough Castle after the castle.[20] The castle still remains in the ownership of the Armstrong family.[18]
After the War, the castle became a Grade I Listed property. The description included this comment about the status of the building in 1952 and its history:[21]
Archaeology at Bamburgh
Archaeological excavations were started in the 1960s by Brian Hope-Taylor, who discovered the gold plaque known as the Bamburgh Beast as well as the Bamburgh Sword.[24] Since 1996, the Bamburgh Research Project has been investigating the archaeology and history of the Castle and Bamburgh area. The project has concentrated on the fortress site and the early medieval burial ground at the Bowl Hole, to the south of the castle.[25]
During excavations at the Bowl Hole between 1998 and 2007, the remains of 110 individuals from the 7th and 8th century were discovered in that graveyard. Finally, in 2016, they were moved into the crypt of St Aidan's Church, Bamburgh; the crypt can be viewed by visitors through a small gate.[26]
Armstrong and Aviation Artefacts Museum
The castle's laundry rooms feature the Armstrong and Aviation Artefacts Museum, with exhibits about Victorian industrialist William Armstrong and Armstrong Whitworth, the manufacturing company he founded. Displays include engines, artillery and weaponry, and aviation artefacts from two world wars.[27]
The castle features in the ballad The Laidly Worm of Spindleston Heugh written in circa 1270.[28] Late medieval British author Thomas Malory identified Bamburgh Castle with Joyous Gard, the mythical castle home of Sir Launcelot in Arthurian legend.[29]
In literature, Bamburgh, under its Saxon name Bebbanburg, is the home of Uhtred, the main character in Bernard Cornwell's The Saxon Stories. It features either as a significant location or as the inspiration for the protagonist in all books in the series, starting with The Last Kingdom, and the sequels The Pale Horseman, The Lords of the North, Sword Song, The Burning Land, Death of Kings, The Pagan Lord, The Empty Throne, Warriors of the Storm, The Flame Bearer and War of the Wolf.
Anstie (Devizes) Scout Series 1923.
No16 Eighth Scout Law (A Scout Smiles and Whistles Under All Difficulties)
Courage and perseverance have a magical talisman, before which difficulties disappear and obstacles vanish into air
Julie Andrews
Green Sea Turtle, Chelonia mydas, on the Kona Coast, Hawaii. Why it Works: The water’s reflection takes what would be a plain turtle surfacing for air and transforms it into art. Reference number: HI_14_405
I had difficulties trying to get motivated and finishing this landscape after a few weeks absence from painting. My vacation in Western Australia was great, a few rolls of film are going to be mailed tomorrow and I hope some shots will turn out fine.
I think the painting looks better on the screen than in real life and I fear I may have to add a few more touches when I am taking it to class on Tuesday. Overall, to me, this was an exercise and I am finding the scene as such not very inspiring and the colours a bit dull.
I like the sky, though :)
Be it as it may, this is my first landscape painting :)
Beautiful autumn abounds here. The sky's a beautiful, cloudless blue!
I am looking for humorous quotes, for my friends who love quotes out there in Flickrland ... please email them!
This quote, a favorite from my youth, held particular meaning this past two seasons: Watching family and friends endure (and in three cases, succumb to) serious illnesses has been a challenge on many levels. This quote's full of truth. A reminder to be patient in life for what growth comes from challenges, it's full of hope and promise too.
Many friends have inspired me as they face their challenges.
Part of my own solution is to cherish and fuel my mind with the beautiful and fun times around me. Everyday I photograph something beautiful and feel grateful for both the people and the passing moments, too. This mindfulness reshapes the days.
Seeing this beautiful oak tree against this bright , clear blue sky yesterday was such a pleasure! Today, I wanted to share it with all of you.
Celebrate EACH day!
HAPPY BLUE (and orange) Monday!
"Nighty"
nightshooter09
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+2 in comments
What if I can't be all that you need me to be
We've got a good thing going, we have some promises to keep
But my addiction it can be such a detriment
Please believe in this my dear, I am more than penitent
What if everything’s just the way that it will be
Could it be that I am meant to cause you all this grief
My war ships are lying off the coast of your delicate heart
And my aim is steady and true as it's been right from the start
There's a degree of difficulty in dealing with me
From my haunted past comes a daunting task of living through memories.
If we could just hang a mirror on the bedroom wall, stare into the past and forget it all
So when we leave it'll be a quick midnight escape
We'll disconnect ourselves from all of yesterday
I'll dig for water and fashion our very own wishing well
Then we'll throw our coins down hoping to rid of us of this little hell.
I've fallen in love with City & Colours new album.
This song is my favourite.
SO sorry everyone for the personal/technical difficulties I'll try to fix those by next judging.
You girls had the challenge of becoming fashion pixiez. You had to embody the fairy through fashion or become a fairy yourself. Unfortunately this week Victoria had to drop out.
so lets start off with Rose!
Rose: www.flickr.com/photos/69253489@N02/7641564226/in/photostream
Now the colors in this photo ae amazing. I love the big transformation this theme, you look so pretty. Your face is nice aswell, but I wish we had a little bit more contact with your eyes. The pose also could've worked, but this time it didn't because of the camera angle.
Alexa: www.flickr.com/photos/blakelovesdolls/7658406854/
The quality and editing is great as always, although the posing is off. I really wish you would've looked at the camera. the side glance is just not working there. The outfit doesn't do that much justice for her either.
Gavin: www.flickr.com/photos/47127787@N07/7665504214/in/photostream
Now this was what I was looking for, this is awesome. You hit every aspect of a fashion pixie this week from the outfit to the pose to the editing. Great job!
Nina: www.flickr.com/photos/bratzmoviezofficial/7671586068/
The styling is pretty nice, but the photo itself is a bit of a mess. I'm not a real big fan of the editing, and I don't get the concept either. I love your face though, really nice makeup!
Mischa: www.flickr.com/photos/rainbowdoll489/7694724474/
Overall this is another great entry! I really love the effort put into your photos every week it really shows. You really appear to be a fashion pixie! The only critique I have is that it looks like you are falling down, not your best posing.
Siernna: www.flickr.com/photos/55071833@N02/7725001056/
I really see the improvement! I love how much the styling is on the point! Your pose is also efforless and don't get me started on he color palette you chose amazing! The only thing you have to work on is your quality, your photos have been grainy and it doesn't always work to your advantage.
Jenny: www.flickr.com/photos/58153395@N06/7711191676/
You really look great, but this photo does not embody the pixie aspect as much as the others. Your take on this theme is interesting. Your pose is nice and so is your backdrop, but I just fail to see much of pixie.
Rika: www.flickr.com/photos/72298509@N05/7798609920/in/photostream
You look so beautiful and graceful. Your styling is not the best though, there is too much going on in the photo for me to pinpoint the pixie aspect.
Michelle: www.flickr.com/photos/-blackglitter-/7825806928/in/photos...
I love your take on this theme, you look so fresh, and so serene. I ust adore the interaction with those little butterflies. Although the pixie theme is not as strong as the others I am in love with this photo.
Charlotte: www.flickr.com/photos/crushphobia/7694745664/in/photostream
You look nice, but that is about it. There is way too much editing and the pose is just not there. I do not hate the photo though, I see the effort I just need you to push yourself out of your comfort zone.
Mae: www.flickr.com/photos/btyler96/7846602676/
This looks great! Your face is awesome and the scenery is great. That outfit is stellar aswell. The only thing I don't like is your pose, it is too simple for the theme.
Tristyn, Nyssa: No photo
Call-Out:
First place goes to....
1. Gavin! Congratulations on your first, first call-out!
top 3:
2. Mischa
3. Michelle
4. Mae
The rest:
5. Siernna
6. Rose
7. Jenny
8. Rika
9. Alexa
10. Charlotte
11. Nina
Bottom 2:
Tristyn: You photograph beautifully, but you failed to turn in a photo. You did send me a message why.
Nyssa: You have one of the best looks this cyle, but you also failed to turn in a photo. In a modeling world if you miss something without notification will cause the your client to not find a replacement in time, word spreads fast.
So who stays and who goes
Congratulations...
12. Tristyn!
I'm sorry Nyssa you will be greatly missed. Keep on modeling
Next Theme:
Scarves
How many looks can you pull off with scarves. well here is you chance to find out.
Requirements:
1. Incluse at least one scarf
2. doesn't have to be close-up, but it can be
3. Follow the colors on the scarf(ves) for make-up inspirations
Due date: September 3rd
Entries-
Rose: www.flickr.com/photos/84248144@N05/7854068880/in/photostream
Charlotte: www.flickr.com/photos/crushphobia/7873597168/
Jenny: www.flickr.com/photos/58153395@N06/7915685056/
Siernna: www.flickr.com/photos/55071833@N02/7921650688/
Nina: www.flickr.com/photos/bratzmoviezofficial/7925283480/
Alexa: www.flickr.com/photos/blakelovesdolls/7916788410/
Mischa: www.flickr.com/photos/rainbowdoll489/7925073256/in/photos...
Michelle: www.flickr.com/photos/-blackglitter-/7924512638/in/photos...
As I had difficulty finding a location with an unobstructed view I missed the arrival of the winner at the finish line by about ten minutes. In case you don't know here are the results:
Geoffrey Ndungu won the Dublin City Marathon for the second year running in a time of 2 hours 11 minutes and 9 seconds. The time was outside last year's course record time of 2:08.33.
Paul Pollock from Belfast was the first Irish man home in ninth place in 2:16.30, ahead of Sean Hehir who finished in 2:17.50.
Magdalene Mukunzi was the first woman home in a time of 2:30.46 which was outside the course record of 2:26.13. Maria McCambridge was the first Irish woman through the finishing line in 2:35.28.
Luke Jones from Wales won the wheelchair section.
A total of 14,300 people registered for this year's race which was without a major sponsor for the first time in 20 years.
KAILASH & MANASAROVAR TOUR WITH HELICOPTER
ॐ नम: शिवाय ।
Trip Duration :
Kathmandu- Kailash Yatra- Kathmandu :12 Days
Lucknow- Kailash Yatra- Lucknow : 10 Days
Difficulty : Moderate
Highest Altitude : 5670 m
Best Season : May to June and September
Route : Kathmandu (or Lucknow ) - Nepalgunj - Simikot - Hilsa - Mansarovar - Kailash / Hilsa - Simikot - Nepalgunj - Kathmandu (or Lucknow )
ITINERARY
Day 01: Kathmandu (1337m):
Welcome to Kathmandu international airport, transfer to hotel. Evening program briefing.
Hotel: Park Village Resort or Hotel Himalaya or similar.
Meals: Welcome drink and Dinner.
Day 02: Kathmandu to Nepalgunj (168m):
(ARRIVE FROM LUCKNOW )
Morning visit Pashupatinath temple. After lunch, transfer to domestic airport to fly about 55 minutes to Nepalgunj. Arrival transfer and check in to the hotel.
Hotel: Siddhartha, sneha or Batiak.
Meals: Welcome drink and Dinner.
Day 03: Nepalgunj to Simikot (3000m):
Early in the morning fly about 50 minutes to Simikot. Arrival received from airport and transfer to hotel. The day is for acclimatization, Simikot excursion and Visit Shiva temple.
Hotel: Sun Valley Resort
Meals: Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner & Tea/Coffee.
Day 04: Simikot to Hilsa (3700m) / Purang (3800m):
After breakfast uplifted to Hilsa by chartered helicopter. Cross over the Karnali River to Sher and drive to Purang. After lunch visit Khojarnath Monastery.
Hotel: Ximalayaor / Hotel Purang Inn
Meals: Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner & Tea/Coffee.
Day 05 :Purang: Acclimatization:
The day is free for acclimatization and Purang City Excursion.
Hotel: Ximalayaor / Hotel Purang Inn
Meals: Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner & Tea/Coffee.
Day 06: Purang to Mansarovar (4580m):
Drive about an hour to Lake Manasarovar. Start Manasarovar Parikrama (Kora) (circumambulation). On the way Perform holy Dip & Pooja. Reach Chiu Gompa for overnight stay. .
Hotel: Lake View / Parmartha Ashram or Similar.
Meals: Bed tea & breakfast at Purang, hot case packed Lunch while making Manasarovar Parikrama & Evening hot Dinner at Camp.
Day 07: Mansarovar to Driaphuk (4890m):
This is first day of the Kailash Parikrama (Kora). Start after breakfast as earlier as possible, walk about 13 km within about 7 hours. One can ride personal horse.
Hotel: Xisapangma, or Mud house.
Meals: bed tea and breakfast at Darchen, packed Lunch with fruits and Chocolates, Dinner at Driaphuk Camp with hot soup and energy drink.
Day 08: Driaphuk to Zuthulphuk (4790m):
Today is the day to Pass Dolma-La (5,670m) above sea level. The weather will be unpredictable in Dolma-La, any time can change and start snow storm. So we try to start our walk journey about 9 hours as earlier as possible. Devine view of Gauri Kund is available on the way while descending from Dolma-La.
Hotel: Zhuthulphuk Guest house.
Meals: Morning bed tea & breakfast at Driaphuk, packed Lunch with fruits, chocolates and cookies while trekking & Evening hot Dinner at Camp.
Day 09: Zuthulphuk to Hillsa - Simikot:
Trek about 3 hours to end the Parikrama (Kora) of Kailash at (Mani Wall). Proceed to Purang. Imbark to Tibet and drive to Hilsa. Helilift to Simikot for Overnight stay.
Hotel: SunVallyeResort o Similar.
Meals: Morning bed tea & breakfast at Zhuthulphuk. Lunch & Evening hot Dinner at Camp.
Day 10: Simikot / Nepalgunj
Airlift by Helicopter to Simikot, fly to Nepalgunj. Arrival receive and transfer to hotel.
Hotel: Siddhartha, sneha or Batiak.
Meals: Breakfast at Simikot, Lunch and Dinner.
Day 11: Nepalgunj to Kathmandu:
(DEPARTURE TO LUCKHNOW)
After breakfast at hotel, transfer to Nepalgunj airport. Fly to Kathmandu, arrival transfer and check in to the hotel.
Hotel: Park Village Resort or Hotel Himalaya or similar.
Meals: Breakfast at Nepalgunj, Lunch and Dinner.
Day 12: Departure:
After breakfast at hotel, the day is free until your transfer to International Airport for your onward journey.
Hotel: No
Meals: Breakfast
Package cost GROUP JOIN BASIS for Indian Nationalities:
KATHMANDU - KAILASH YATRA- KATHMANDU:- INR 165,000 PER PERSON NETT.
LUCKHNOW - KAILASH YATRA- LUCKHNOW :- INR 157,000 PER PERSON NETT.
[ WRITE US BACK FOR B2B RATE FOR SELF GROUP: MINIMUM 25 PAX ]
Cost Includes:
- Airports pick up and drop services.
- Double sharing full board AP basis 4 star hotel in Kathmandu, as per itinerary
- A visit of Pashupatinath Temple.
- Scheduled flight Kathmandu – Nepalgunj - Kathmandu.
-( PICKUP/ DROP FROM LUCKHNOW FOR 10 DAYS GROUP)
- Scheduled flight Nepalgunj – Simikot – Nepalgunj
- Charter helicopter flight share by 5-6 person Simikot – Hilsa - Simikot
- Double sharing hotel in Nepalgunj and 3or 4pax in Simikot and Tibet.
- Three meals in a day.
- Transport by Tourist Bus as per group sizes /Truck for Luggage.
- Nepali Team Leader and Supporting Sherpa Team and Medical Insurance of staffs.
- English speaking Tibetan guide, Chinese visa fee of Client and staff.
- Duffel Bag ( a large bag to keep the yatris luggage for the trip) heavy Jacket (returnable after trip).
- All camping and cooking equipment .
- Yak for Kailash parikrama luggage only and All entrance and conservation fee of Tibet.
- Upper Humla permit fee for client and Helicopter landing.
- Oxygen cylinder and first add medicines.
Cost Excludes:
- All beverages during trip and in Kathmandu, Nepalgunj and Simikot.
- Extra rooms bills due to flight delays due to weather conditions.
- Stick and a water bottle.
- Insurance of clients and evacuation cost.
- Personal horse riding charges during Kailash Parikrama
- Domestic excess baggage charges and airport taxes.
- Tips for supporting staff
For inquiry & Booking :
Nepal Travel and Tour Pvt. Ltd.
Kathmandu, Nepal.
holiday@nepaltravelandtour.com
+977-14249214 (Hunting line)
+977-9851053909 (Whatsapp)
+977-9801053909 (Mobile)
+977-9818373800 (Mobile)
#nepaltravelandtour #kailash #manasarovar
The SAAB construction team, led by Erik Bratt, entered into the first study works over a supersonic fighter by the end of 1947. Sweden had difficulties with access to German research. Different aerodynamic concepts were considered. The serious drawback in research was also the lack of a suitable aerodynamic tunnel.
In 1949, together with the Flygvapnet (Swedish Air Force), tactical and technical conditions for a new fighter were set. The aeroplane was intended to intercept supersonic enemy fighters and bombers. Its combat success was to be assured by good performance, manoeuvrability and efficient armament (including guided missiles). For night operations and use of guided missiles easier, target radar as envisaged.
Ground attack capabilities were also taken into consideration. The fighter ought to have supersonic speed and achieve a high rate of climb. Combat range should cover Sweden's entire territory. Use of alternative aerodromes as well as straight sections of road was thought of, including the ability of short take off and landing speed. Its small dimensions should make transportation by road and sheltering easy, already a feature of Swedish fighters.
Service ought to easy for ground checks and quick recreating of combat capabilities. Designers faced a serious problem of matching the contradicting factors. At that time the speed of an aircraft was achieved with the costs of its manoeuvrability, range and an increased take off and landing length. Such requirements, imposed by the Swedish military authorities, demanded a creation of such an aerodynamic configuration, which could match all the contradictions. Initially, Eric Bratt and his team adopted the "clean delta" design. By the end of 1951, after analysis, the "double delta" design had been chosen.
Such a design featured a big wing area with low drag. It allowed the plane to gain better supersonic speed flight characteristics. The use of a flowing fuselage-wing chord into a constant profile with a big lifting surface aerofoil, allowed for the placement of large capacity fuel tanks. There was also a lot of room for the undercarriage, strong armament and leading edge air intakes.
To check the correctness of the aerodynamics (and to save money), the designer applied non-conventional research methods. Initially there were cardboard flying models, then ram jet models. Finally, after the deciding authorities approved the design, work on the turbojet powered aircraft started.
The test aeroplane flew for the first time in late January 1952. This allowed for checks on the wing design, steering quality and stability. The air intakes, being an important factor, were fixed to make them more efficient for the engine. It allowed to resign from the air intake adjustment system, simplifying the aircraft's equipment.
Eventually, in May 1952, the mock-up of the fighter, J35 Draken (dragon), was shown to the public. The Rolls-Royce Avon 200 turbojet engine, which was built as the RM6 at the Volvo Flygmotor plant, powered the aeroplane. In August 1953, the SAAB Works received an order for four prototypes: one for static tests, three for flight tests.
By the end of October 1955, the first prototype took to the air for the first time. By the end of January 1956, it achieved supersonic speeds in level flight, without engaging the afterburners. In following flights it crossed the sound barrier in a climb. The next two prototypes were flown at the beginning of 1956. Now the aeroplane had to face hard air force tests. The complete program of in-flight tests came through with no serious problems, which was due to the experiments previously held. The J35 became a big technical success.
Production started after the air force tests. In 1958 the first serial J35 A was flown although the first types weren?t fully capable operationally, as they had inadequate radio equipment.
The next version, Sk 35C, flown in December 1959, was intended for pilot training. At the end of 1959, production of the J35 B started. It was the first fully equipped combat aeroplane and could be engaged into Sweden's Automatic Air Defence System, STRIL 60.
By the end of December 1960 the J35 D entered production, being significantly improved.
In June 1963 the reconnaissance plane, the S 35 E, was flown. At the beginning of the Sixties, work on the new fighter, the J35 F, started.
The J35 F featured improved cockpit equipment and a new canopy, similar to that of the S 35 E. The engine was given an improved afterburner. The aeroplane was also equipped with a new weapons control system. It was based on a new radar sight with an enlarged seeking and tracing range and a heat seeking direction finder. The number of hard points was increased to eight - two under the fuselage and six under the wings. Gunnery armament was limited to a single starboard canon. Two American Hughes air-to-air missiles, produced at SAAB, were applied to the aeroplane. The first, the RB28 (the Swedish version of the AIM-4C), had an infra-red guidance system. The second, the RB27 (American AIB-26B), was equipped with a semi-active radar guidance system (the missile was aimed at the reflected radio wave source, emitted by the radar sight of the attacking aircraft). Apart from that, Sidewinder missiles were still in use. The aeroplane could also carry bombs (2 x 500kg under the fuselage and 6 x 100kg under the wings), unguided missile launchers and/or auxiliary fuel tanks (two under the fuselage).
230 aeroplanes were produced in the F1 and F2 sub versions. The J35 F came into service in 1965. Production ended in 1977.
In total, 615 J35 Draken aeroplanes were produced.
By the end of the Seventies, the decision to modernise the J35 F was taken. It was completed between 1987-91, by overhauling 66 aircraft and changing the designation to the J35 J. The aeroplane featured improved radio equipment, utilised to co-operate with the AIM-9L Sidewinder air-to-air missile. It increased the aeroplane's fight manoeuvre capabilities. The "Draken" was the first Swedish supersonic fighter and also marked its place in world aviation history as, paving the way for new technical and aerodynamic concepts.
French postcard by Editions F. Nugeron, no. 5. Photo: Collection de l'ecole de Cinema Camiris. Clint Eastwood in Heartbreak Ridge (Clint Eastwood, 1986).
American film actor and director Clint Eastwood (1930) rose to fame as the Man with No Name in Sergio Leone's classic Spaghetti Westerns Per un pugno di dollari/A Fistful of Dollars (1964), Per qualche dollaro in più/For a Few Dollars More (1965), and Il buono, il brutto, il cattivo/The Good, the Bad and the Ugly (1966). Later in the US, he played hard-edge police inspector Harry Callahan in the five Dirty Harry films, which elevated him to superstar status, and he directed and produced such award-winning masterpieces as Unforgiven (1992), Mystic River (2003) and Million Dollar Baby (2004).
Clinton ‘Clint’ Eastwood, Jr. was born in San Francisco, California in 1930. His parents were Clinton Eastwood, Sr., a steelworker and migrant worker, and Margaret Ruth (Runner) Eastwood, a factory worker. Clint has a younger sister, Jeanne. Because of his father's difficulty in finding steady work during the depression, Eastwood moved with his family from one Northern California town to another, attending some eight elementary schools in the process. Later he had odd jobs as a firefighter and lumberjack in Oregon, as well as a steelworker in Seattle. In 1951, Eastwood was drafted into the US Army, where he was a swimming instructor during the Korean War. He briefly attended Los Angeles City College but dropped out to pursue acting. Eastwood married Maggie Johnson in 1953, six months after they met on a blind date. However, their matrimony would not prove altogether smooth, with Eastwood believing that he had married too early. In 1954, the good-looking Eastwood with his towering height and slender frame got a contract at Universal. At first, he was criticized for his stiff manner, his squint, and for hissing his lines through his teeth. His first acting role was an uncredited bit part as a laboratory assistant in the Sci-Fi horror film Revenge of the Creature (Jack Arnold, 1955). Over the next three years, he more bit parts in such films as Lady Godiva of Coventry (Arthur Lubin, 1955), Tarantula (Jack Arnold, 1955), and the war drama Away All Boats (Joseph Pevney, 1956) with George Nader and Lex Barker. His first bigger roles were in the B-Western Ambush at Cimarron Pass (Jodie Copelan, 1958), and the war film Lafayette Escadrille (William A. Wellman, 1958), starring Tab Hunter and Etchika Choureau. In 1959, he became a TV star as Rowdy Yates in the Western series Rawhide (1959–1966). Although Rawhide never won an Emmy, it was a rating success for several years. During a trial separation from Maggie Johnson, an affair with dancer Roxanne Tunis produced Eastwood’s first child, Kimber Tunis (1964). An intensely private person, Clint Eastwood was rarely featured in the tabloid press. However, he had more affairs, e.g. with actresses Catherine Deneuve, Inger Stevens and Jean Seberg. After a reconciliation, he had two children with Johnson: Kyle Eastwood (1968) and Alison Eastwood (1972), though he was not present at either birth. Johnson filed for legal separation in 1978, but the pair officially divorced in 1984.
In late 1963, Clint Eastwood's Rawhide co-star Eric Fleming rejected an offer to star in an Italian-made Western. Eastwood, who in turn saw the film as an opportunity to escape from his Rawhide image, signed the contract. The Western was called Per un pugno di dollari/A Fistful of Dollars (1964), to be directed in a remote region of Spain by the then relatively unknown Sergio Leone. A Fistful of Dollars, also with Gian Maria Volonté and Marianne Koch, was a remake of Akira Kurosawa's Yojimbo (1961). Eastwood played a cynical gunfighter who comes to a small border town, torn apart by two feuding families. Hiring himself out as a mercenary, the lone drifter plays one side against the other until nothing remains of either side. Eastwood started to develop a minimalist acting style and created the character's distinctive visual style. Although a non-smoker, Leone insisted Eastwood smoke cigars as an essential ingredient of the ‘mask’ he was attempting to create for the loner character. Per un pugno di dollari/A Fistful of Dollars (Sergio Leone, 1964) was the first instalment of the Dollars trilogy. Later, United Artists, who distributed it in the US, coined another term for it: the Man With No Name trilogy. ‘The second part was Per qualche dollaro in più/For a Few Dollars More (Sergio Leone, 1965), a richer, more mythologized film that focused on two ruthless bounty hunters (Eastwood and Lee Van Cleef) who form a tenuous partnership to hunt down a wanted bandit (Gian Maria Volontè). Both films were a huge success in Italy. They both contain all of Leone's eventual trademarks: taciturn characters, precise framing, extreme close-ups, and the haunting music of Ennio Morricone. Eastwood also appeared in a segment of Dino De Laurentiis’ five-part anthology production Le Streghe/The Witches (Vittorio De Sica a.o., 1967). But his performance opposite De Laurentiis' wife Silvana Mangano did not please the critics. Eastwood then played in the third and best Dollars film, Il buono, il brutto, il cattivo/The Good, the Bad and the Ugly (Sergio Leone, 1966). Again he played the mysterious Man with No Name, wearing the same trademark poncho (reportedly without ever having washed it). Lee Van Cleef returned as a ruthless fortune seeker, with Eli Wallach portraying the cunning Mexican bandit Tuco Ramirez. Yuri German at AllMovie: “Immensely entertaining and beautifully shot in Techniscope by Tonino Delli Colli, the movie is a virtually definitive 'spaghetti western,' rivalled only by Leone's own Once Upon a Time in the West (1968).” The Dollars trilogy was not released in the United States until 1967, when A Fistful of Dollars opened in January, followed by For a Few Dollars More in May, and The Good, the Bad and the Ugly in December. Eastwood redubbed his dialogue for the American releases. All the films were commercially successful, particularly The Good, the Bad and the Ugly which turned Eastwood into a major film star. All three films received bad reviews and began a battle for Eastwood to win American film critics' respect. According to IMDb, Sergio Leone asked Eastwood, Wallach, and Van Cleef to appear again in C'era una volta il West/Once Upon A Time in the West (Sergio Leone, 1968), but they all declined when they heard that their characters were going to be killed off in the first five minutes.
Stardom brought more roles for Clint Eastwood. He signed to star in the American revisionist western Hang 'Em High (Ted Post, 1968), playing a man who takes up a Marshal's badge and seeks revenge as a lawman after being lynched by vigilantes and left for dead. Using money earned from the Dollars trilogy, accountant and Eastwood advisor Irving Leonard helped establish Eastwood's own production company, Malpaso Productions, named after Malpaso Creek on Eastwood's property in Monterey County, California. Leonard arranged for Hang 'Em High to be a joint production with United Artists. Hang 'Em High was widely praised by critics, and when it opened in July 1968, it had an unprecedented opening weekend in United Artists' history. His following film was Coogan's Bluff (Don Siegel, 1968), about an Arizona deputy sheriff tracking a wanted psychopathic criminal (Don Stroud) through the streets of New York City. Don Siegel was a Universal contract director who later became Eastwood's close friend, forming a partnership that would last more than ten years and produce five films. Coogan’s Bluff was controversial for its portrayal of violence, Eastwood's role in creating the prototype for the macho cop of the Dirty Harry film series. Coogan's Bluff also became the first collaboration with Argentine composer Lalo Schifrin, who would later compose the jazzy score to several Eastwood films in the 1970s and 1980s, including the Dirty Harry films. Eastwood played the right-hand man of squad commander Richard Burton in the war epic Where Eagles Dare (Brian G. Hutton, 1968), about a World War II squad parachuting into a Gestapo stronghold in the alpine mountains. Eastwood then branched out to star in the only musical of his career, Paint Your Wagon (Joshua Logan, 1969). Then, Eastwood starred in the Western Two Mules for Sister Sara (Don Sigel, 1970), with Shirley MacLaine, and as one of a group of Americans who steal a fortune in gold from the Nazis, in the World War II film Kelly's Heroes (Brian G. Hutton, 1970)). Kelly's Heroes was the last film in which Eastwood appeared, which was not produced by his own Malpaso Productions.
Clint Eastwood’s next film, The Beguiled (Don Siegel, 1970), was a tale of a wounded Union soldier, held captive by the sexually repressed matron of a southern girl's school. Upon release, the film received major recognition in France but in the US it was a box office flop. Eastwood's career reached a turning point with Dirty Harry (Don Siegel, 1971), The film centres around a hard-edged San Francisco police inspector named Harry Callahan who is determined to stop a psychotic killer by any means. Dirty Harry achieved huge success after its release in December 1971. It was Siegel's highest-grossing film to date and the start of a series of films featuring the character Harry Callahan. He next starred in the loner Western Joe Kidd (John Sturges, 1972). In 1973, Eastwood directed his first western, High Plains Drifter, in which he starred alongside Verna Bloom. The revisionist film received a mixed reception but was a major box office success. Eastwood next turned his attention towards Breezy (Clint Eastwood, 1973), a film about love blossoming between a middle-aged man and a teenage girl. During casting for the film Eastwood met actress Sondra Locke, who would become an important figure in his life. He reprised his role as Detective Harry Callahan in Magnum Force (Ted Post, 1973). This sequel to Dirty Harry was about a group of rogue young officers (including David Soul and Robert Urich) in the San Francisco Police Force who systematically exterminate the city's worst criminals. Eastwood teamed up with Jeff Bridges in the buddy action caper Thunderbolt and Lightfoot (Michael Cimino, 1974). Eastwood's acting was noted by critics but was overshadowed by Bridges who was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor. His next film The Eiger Sanction (Clint Eastwood, 1975), based on Trevanian's spy novel, was a commercial and critical failure. His next film The Outlaw Josey Wales (Clint Eastwood, 1976) was widely acclaimed, with many critics and viewers seeing Eastwood's role as an iconic one that related to America's ancestral past and the destiny of the nation after the American Civil War. The third Dirty Harry film, The Enforcer (James Fargo, 1976) had Harry partnered with a new female officer (Tyne Daly) to face a San Francisco Bay terrorist organization. The film, culminating in a shootout on Alcatraz island, was a major commercial success grossing $100 million worldwide. In 1977, he directed and starred in The Gauntlet opposite Sondra Locke. Eastwood portrays a down-and-out cop who falls in love with a prostitute he is assigned to escort from Las Vegas to Phoenix, to testify against the mafia. In 1978 Eastwood starred with Locke and an orang-utan called Clyde in Every Which Way but Loose. Panned by critics, the film proved a surprising success and became the second-highest-grossing film of 1978. Eastwood then starred in the thriller Escape from Alcatraz (1979), the last of his films to be directed by Don Siegel. The film was a major success and marked the beginning of a critically acclaimed period for Eastwood. Eastwood's relationship with Sondra Locke had begun in 1975 during the production of The Outlaw Josey Wales. They lived together for almost fourteen years, during which Locke remained married (in name only) to her gay husband, Gordon Anderson. Eastwood befriended Locke's husband and purchased a house in Crescent Heights for Anderson and his male lover.
In 1980, Clint Eastwood’s nonstop success was broken by Bronco Billy, which he directed and in which played the lead role. The film was liked by critics, but a rare commercial disappointment in Eastwood's career. Later that year, he starred in Any Which Way You Can (Buddy Van Horn, 1980), which ranked among the top five highest-grossing films of the year. In 1982, Eastwood directed and starred in Honkytonk Man, as a struggling Western singer who, accompanied by his young nephew (played by real-life son Kyle) goes to Nashville, Tennessee. In the same year, Eastwood directed, produced, and starred in the Cold War-themed Firefox alongside Freddie Jones. Then, Eastwood directed and starred in the fourth Dirty Harry film, Sudden Impact (1983), the darkest and most violent of the series. ‘Go ahead, make my day’, uttered by Eastwood in the film, became one of cinema's immortal lines. Sudden Impact was the last film in which he starred with Locke. The film was the most commercially successful of the Dirty Harry films, earning $70 million and receiving very positive reviews. In the provocative thriller Tightrope (Richard Tuggle, 1984), Eastwood starred opposite Geneviève Bujold. His real-life daughter Alison, then eleven, also appeared in the film. It was another critical and commercial hit. Eastwood next starred in the period comedy City Heat (Richard Benjamin, 1984) alongside Burt Reynolds. Eastwood revisited the Western genre when he directed and starred in Pale Rider (Clint Eastwood, 1985), based on the classic Western Shane (George Stevens, 1953). It became one of Eastwood's most successful films to date and was hailed as one of the best films of 1985 and the best Western to appear for a considerable period. He co-starred with Marsha Mason in the military drama Heartbreak Ridge (Clint Eastwood, 1986), about the 1983 United States invasion of Grenada. Then followed the fifth and final film in the Dirty Harry series The Dead Pool (Buddy Van Horn, 1988), with Patricia Clarkson, Liam Neeson, and a young Jim Carrey. It is generally viewed as the weakest film of the series. Eastwood began working on smaller, more personal projects and experienced a lull in his career between 1988 and 1992. Always interested in jazz, he directed Bird (Clint Eastwood, 1988), a biopic starring Forest Whitaker as jazz musician Charlie ‘Bird’ Parker. Eastman himself is a prolific jazz pianist who occasionally shows up to play the piano at his Carmel, CA restaurant, The Hog's Breath Inn. He received two Golden Globes for Bird, but the film was a commercial failure. Jim Carrey would again appear with Eastwood in the poorly received comedy Pink Cadillac (Buddy Van Horn, 1989) alongside Bernadette Peters. In 1989, while his partner Sondra Locke was away directing the film Impulse (1990), Eastwood had the locks changed on their Bel-Air home and ordered her possessions to be boxed and put in storage. During the last three years of his cohabitation with Locke, Eastwood fathered two children in secrecy with flight attendant Jacelyn Reeves, Scott Reeves (1986), and Kathryn Reeves (1988). Eastwood finally presented both children to the public in 2002.
In 1990, Clint Eastwood began living with actress Frances Fisher, whom he had met on the set of Pink Cadillac in 1988. They had a daughter, Francesca Fisher-Eastwood (1993). Eastwood and Fisher ended their relationship in early 1995. Eastwood directed and starred in White Hunter Black Heart (1990), an adaptation of Peter Viertel's roman à clef, about John Huston and the making of the classic film The African Queen (1951). Later in 1990, he directed and co-starred with Charlie Sheen in The Rookie, a buddy cop action film. Eastwood revisited the Western genre in the self-directed film Unforgiven (1992), in which he played an ageing ex-gunfighter long past his prime. Unforgiven was a major commercial and critical success; and was nominated for nine Academy Awards, and won four, including Best Picture and Best Director for Eastwood. Eastwood played Frank Horrigan in the Secret Service thriller In the Line of Fire (Wolfgang Petersen, 1993) co-starring John Malkovich. The film was among the top 10 box office performers that year, earning a reported $200 million. Later in 1993, Eastwood directed and co-starred with Kevin Costner in A Perfect World. At the 1994 Cannes Film Festival Eastwood received France's Ordre des Arts et des Lettres medal, and in 1995, he was awarded the Irving G. Thalberg Memorial Award at the 67th Academy Awards. Opposite Meryl Streep, he starred in the romantic picture The Bridges of Madison County (Clint Eastwood, 1995), another commercial and critical success. The film was nominated for a Golden Globe for Best Picture and won a César Award in France for Best Foreign Film. In early 1995, Eastwood began dating Dina Ruiz, a television news anchor 35 years his junior, whom he had first met when she interviewed him in 1993. They married in 1996. The couple has one daughter, Morgan Eastwood (1996). In 1997, Eastwood directed and starred in the political thriller Absolute Power, alongside Gene Hackman. Later in 1997, Eastwood directed Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil, starring John Cusack, Kevin Spacey, and Jude Law. He directed and starred in True Crime (1999), as a journalist and recovering alcoholic, who has to cover the execution of murderer Frank Beechum (Isaiah Washington). In 2000, he directed and starred in Space Cowboys alongside Tommy Lee Jones as veteran ex-test pilots sent into space to repair an old Soviet satellite.
Clint Eastwood played an ex-FBI agent chasing a sadistic killer (Jeff Daniels) in the thriller Blood Work (2002). He directed and scored the crime drama Mystic River (2003), dealing with themes of murder, vigilantism, and sexual abuse. The film starred Sean Penn, Kevin Bacon, and Tim Robbins and won two Academy Awards – Best Actor for Penn and Best Supporting Actor for Robbins – with Eastwood garnering nominations for Best Director and Best Picture. The following year Eastwood found further critical and commercial success when he directed, produced, scored, and starred in the boxing drama Million Dollar Baby, (2004). He played a cantankerous trainer who forms a bond with a female boxer (Hilary Swank). The film won four Academy Awards for Best Picture, Best Director, Best Actress (Swank), and Best Supporting Actor (Morgan Freeman). At age 74 Eastwood became the oldest of eighteen directors to have directed two or more Best Picture winners. In 2006, he directed two films about World War II's Battle of Iwo Jima. The first, Flags of Our Fathers, focused on the men who raised the American flag on top of Mount Suribachi and featured the film debut of Eastwood's son Scott. This was followed by Letters from Iwo Jima, which dealt with the tactics of the Japanese soldiers on the island and the letters they wrote home to family members. Eastwood next directed Changeling (2008), based on a true story set in the late 1920s. Angelina Jolie stars as a woman reunited with her missing son only to realize he is an impostor. Eastwood ended a four-year self-imposed acting hiatus by appearing in Gran Torino (2008), which he also directed, produced, and partly scored with his son Kyle and Jamie Cullum. Gran Torino eventually grossed over $268 million in theatres worldwide, becoming the highest-grossing film of Eastwood's career so far. Eastwood's 30th directorial outing came with Invictus, a film based on the story of the South African team at the 1995 Rugby World Cup, with Morgan Freeman as Nelson Mandela. In 2010, Eastwood directed the drama Hereafter, with Matt Damon as a psychic, and in 2011, J. Edgar, a biopic of FBI director J. Edgar Hoover, with Leonardo DiCaprio in the title role. Eastwood starred in the baseball drama Trouble with the Curve (Robert Lorenz, 2012), as a veteran baseball scout who travels with his daughter for a final scouting trip. Director Lorenz worked with Eastwood as an assistant director on several films. Clint Eastwood is also politically active and served as the nonpartisan mayor of Carmel-by-the-Sea, California from 1986 to 1988. Shawn Dwyer at TCM: “Although a registered Republican since the early-1950s, Eastwood's politics, like the man himself, were that of a true iconoclast. Over the years he had voted for candidates from both parties and publicly denounced the wars in Vietnam and Iraq. And while he had initially wished President Barack Obama well during the start of his first term in office, Eastwood, became a vocal booster for Republican candidate Mitt Romney in the 2012 election, dissatisfied with what he viewed as Obama's inability to govern.” But cinema is Eastwood’s major career. He has contributed to over 50 films as an actor, director, producer, and composer. According to the box office revenue tracking website, Box Office Mojo, films featuring Eastwood have grossed a total of more than US $1.68 billion domestically, with an average of $37 million per film.
Sources: Shawn Dwyer (TCM), Yuri German (AllMovie), Bruce Eder (AllMovie), Wikipedia, and IMDb.
And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.
Difficulty in analyzing low-abundance isotopes from samples where similar high-abundance isotopes interfere with the process led Battelle scientist to develop an advanced laser analysis technique with high sensitivity and isotopic selectivity. The technique may provide quicker answers to such problems as isotopic dating of samples using krypton or noble gasses.
Terms of Use: Our images are freely and publicly available for use with the credit line, "Courtesy of Pacific Northwest National Laboratory"; Please use provided caption information for use in appropriate context.
Stuffed Peppers -- one of my favourites. Not really hard in terms of difficulty, but it takes a bit of time to put together. Lately, Noella has been very interested in watching me cook....I'll attach her booster seat to a high seat (or if it's safe and there is space, I'll sit her on the counter for a real front-row seat), which means making these time-consuming dishes is possible because she just wants to watch, taste, chat and sometimes help (sprinkling on cheese, stirring etc...) She just loves it, and so do I to be honest.
I've been making these peppers for years. They are good especially this time of year when peppers are in season and so aren't too expensive. Noella also likes them. She'll eat the inside bit, but she especially likes the peppers. They start out blanched in boiling water and then get nice and roasty soft in the oven.
STUFFED BELL PEPPERS
Original recipe from Cook's Illustrated Magazine
Peppers and Rice:
water
salt
4 medium red, yellow or orange bell peppers
1/2 cup long-grain rice (I usually use a bit more)
Sauce:
1 cup chopped onion (I usually use a bit less)
diced pepper tops (from the tops cut off the peppers you just boiled)
3/4 lb lean ground beef
2 minced garlic cloves
14 1/2 oz can diced tomatoes, drained, reserve 1/4 cup juice
1 1/4 cups shredded Monterey Jack cheese
2 TB parsley
salt and pepper to taste
Topping:
reserved tomato juice from tomatoes
2 TB ketchup or chili suace
Oven temp: 350 F
Peppers and Rice:
Bring water to a boil in a large pot (the recipe says 4 quarts water, I just fill a large pot 3/4 full). Add salt. Cut tops off peppers and remove innards. Add peppers to water and boil 3 to 5 minutes, just to soften peppers. Remove peppers, draining off excess water and place on paper towels. Return water to a boil, add rice and boil until tender, about 13 minutes (I usually do a bit more time). Drain rice and set aside (Sara Moulton calls this method of making rice "Rice for the rice impaired" since you don't have to fiddle with exact amounts of rice and water, but rather just drain the rice once it's cooked like you would pasta).
Sauce:
In skillet cook ground beef, onion, and diced pepper tops until beef is cooked and veggies are softened. Drain off any fat (if there is any and you wish to do so). Return to skillet. Add garlic and cook for another 30 seconds. Transfer mixture to a boil and add the rice. Stir in tomatoes, 1 cup shredded cheese, parsley, salt and pepper.
Topping:
Mix both together.
Assembly:
Place peppers cut side up in baking dish. Fill peppers, Spoon 2 TB topping mixture over each filled pepper and sprinkle each with 1 TB remaining cheese (or use extra cheese for the topping, as I did). Bake unti cheese is browned and filling is heated through, about 25 minutes. Serve immediately.
As I had difficulty finding a location with an unobstructed view I missed the arrival of the winner at the finish line by about ten minutes. In case you don't know here are the results:
Geoffrey Ndungu won the Dublin City Marathon for the second year running in a time of 2 hours 11 minutes and 9 seconds. The time was outside last year's course record time of 2:08.33.
Paul Pollock from Belfast was the first Irish man home in ninth place in 2:16.30, ahead of Sean Hehir who finished in 2:17.50.
Magdalene Mukunzi was the first woman home in a time of 2:30.46 which was outside the course record of 2:26.13. Maria McCambridge was the first Irish woman through the finishing line in 2:35.28.
Luke Jones from Wales won the wheelchair section.
A total of 14,300 people registered for this year's race which was without a major sponsor for the first time in 20 years.
View from back wall of castle - those dots are people!
***
To describe Peveril Castle in Derbyshire as 'disability friendly' would be about as far removed from the truth as you can get. These days I have difficulties getting about but, having read about the castle for many years, I was not prepared for the shock of seeing it perched on a crag high above the village of Castleton. The books never mentioned that bit!
This was to be my personal Everest and the only way I got up there was with frequent pauses and the use of a very stout folding monopod, not a flimsy job but a real stout Slik Pro Pod 600 which doubles as a superb walking pole. It helped me get up, it balanced me while I was there and served as a good brake on the way down again. Whether I was wise to go up is another matter as I then came down with a massive attack of shingles shortly after... which may imply that I over-stressed myself.
Peveril is a post-Conquest (1066) castle with a design and position that would not look out of place in Game of Thrones. The castle and later town were the centre of Norman knight William Peveril's lands in Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire and is first recorded in 1086. Peveril chose a rocky outcrop high above a cave - which you can also visit - but it later passed into royal hands. King Henry II hosted King Malcolm IV of Scotland here in 1157.
While essentially a Norman structure there was some later building in the 13th century which added better walls and some towers. One of my photos shows the join between old and new material. John of Gaunt, Duke of Lancaster, later owned the castle in the 14th century and ordered some material to be stripped from it. It was later robbed of even more stone by the locals. It still belongs to the Duchy of Lancaster but is now cared-for by English Heritage.
The Norman keep remains in fair condition, on two sides, while the sentry's wall walk facing the town is still visible. This is surprisingly low inside the castle (my chest height) due to the interior being raised with soil and clay. Of course the steep drop to the village increases the exterior height of the surviving wall on the outside.
One of the best features of Peveril today is the approx 1/200 scale model behind the English Heritage shop which allows visually handicapped people to touch the castle and experience its shape and design. As built the castle was entered from an outer bailey on an adjoining crag. One then passed over a bridge or drawbridge into the main bailey. Little of the outer bailey survives and modern entry is via a smaller postern gate which faced the town. This is reached by a steep and zig-zagging footpath.
It does not appear to have been seriously attacked but history does record an opposed eviction by William De Ferrers in 1216 on the orders of King John. The steep drop to the rear and side of the site renders it almost invulnerable to anyone without a helicopter while the front was tough enough for me wearing loose clothes and trainers. Doing it in chain mail would have been dire!
One of the main difficulty, when models are photographed in a studio, is to give the viewer
the right perception of its size without taking attention away from it. This model is long by 38 inches,or 96.5 cm. Although I have made models as long as 6 feet, I like to stay between 3 to 4 feet. Indeed models of this level of details, finish - and cost - are best to be displayed within a showcase which in the case of this model would be of a size like 45 inches in the length, 15 inches in the width, and 24 inches high, which is considerable and akin to the size of a small table.
The driver gets back into the cab of 43003 after calling the signalman to find out there was signalling difficulties ahead. The guard leans out to find out whats happening so he can tell the passengers about yet more delays. The train was the 1000 London Paddington to Paignton, the location is somewhere between Swindon and Bath.
* Signs of danger to the patient (h1n1) a would be:
1 - adults.
- Difficulty or shortness of breath.
- Blueness face.
- Bloody phlegm.
- Pain in the chest.
- Disruption in the level of the state of mind or mental health.
- High temperature for more than 3 days despite the use of medicines and treatments.
- A decrease in blood pressure.
2 - for children:
- Difficulty or rapid breathing.
- Lack of awareness.
- Difficulty in awakening the child to sleep
- Weakness or lack of desire to play.
* Guidelines and general advice for the prevention of avian flu (h1n1) a.
1 - wear a protective mask in crowded places.
2 - when the symptoms of influenza and to prevent the transmission of the disease in contact must be maintained at a distance of not less than one meter in contact with others.
3 - cover your nose and mouth when sneezing or coughing.
4 - Develop a tissue paper used carefully in bags inside the trash baskets in a blanket.
5 - Washing hands with soap and warm water several times a day.
6 - Cleaning tools that are hard to touch detergents several times a day.
7 - to stay home and consult a doctor if the following symptoms: chest pain, shortness of breath, bloody sputum appearance, lack of improvement in symptoms after 3 days.
8 - Ensure the implementation of the children of such procedures.
..
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Delicate Arch trail.
Length: 3 miles roundtrip
Difficulty: Moderate
Description: Delicate Arch is the most recognizable arch in Arches National Park, and perhaps anywhere in the world. It also happens to be located along one of the most dynamic hiking trails within Arches National Park. More than 480 feet above the parking lot and trailhead in the valley below, Delicate Arch is hidden in a bowl at the top of one of the park’s famous sandstone fins. Delicate Arch is freestanding, and magnificently alone in the natural sandstone bowl, standing out against the multitude of horizontal planes around it. The arch was once part of the upper section of the fin, until erosion took its toll upon the sandstone throughout the years, and now Delicate Arch is all that remains of that Entrada sandstone formation.
The Delicate Arch Trailhead is located on the Wolfe Ranch turnoff, which is 11.5 miles up the Arches Entrance Road. The right turn to Delicate Arch is advertised at the turnoff, and the trailhead is on the left side of the road, at the ranch. The trail is rugged and steep, especially near the end as it mounts the sloped side of the sandstone fin. Along the way, visitors will pass a pioneer homestead, Ute Indian petroglyphs, an overgrown streambed, throngs of juniper, a smaller arch, and the famous slickrock for which the Moab area is world-famous.
Delicate Arch Trailhead
The trail starts at a fairly large parking lot off the side of the road, passes the old Wolfe Homestead, and then crosses a bridge over Salt Wash.
Wolfe Ranch
This homestead was built by a disabled Civil War vet, John Wesley Wolfe, in 1888 and inhabited until 1910, when the aging owner moved back to Ohio.
Ute Petroglyphs
This panel of rock art is attributed to the Ute culture. In includes a number of bighorn sheep, horses and dogs.
Frame Arch
Frame Arch is next to invisible when compared with the splendor of Delicate Arch just around the corner; most hikers barely even recognize the arch on its own merits. However, Frame Arch is famous for being the perfect window through which to photograph Delicate Arch, and many people use it to frame their shots of its more photogenic sibling, as its name suggests.
Delicate Arch
Delicate Arch has graced many magazine covers, mantle pieces, coffee tables, stamps, license plates, and a variety of other media. It is an international attraction, and has drawn its fair share of abuse over the years, including (now illegal) climbing, and ignorant pyrotechnics.
Thursday, September 06, 2012