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The barn owl (Tyto alba) is the most widely distributed species of owl and one of the most widespread of all birds. It is also referred to as the common barn owl, to distinguish it from other species in its family, Tytonidae, which forms one of the two main lineages of living owls, the other being the typical owls (Strigidae). The barn owl is found almost everywhere in the world except polar and desert regions, in Asia north of the Himalayas, most of Indonesia, and some Pacific islands.[2]
Phylogenetic evidence shows that there are at least three major lineages of barn owl, one in Europe, western Asia and Africa, one in southeast Asia and Australasia, and one in the Americas, and some highly divergent taxa on islands. Accordingly, some authorities split the group into the western barn owl for the group in Europe, western Asia and Africa, the American barn owl for the group in the Americas, and the eastern barn owl for the group in southeast Asia and Australasia. Some taxonomic authorities further split the group, recognising up to five species, and further research needs to be done to clarify the position. There is a considerable variation between the sizes and colour of the approximately 28 subspecies but most are between 33 and 39 cm (13 and 15 in) in length with wingspans ranging from 80 to 95 cm (31 to 37 in). The plumage on head and back is a mottled shade of grey or brown, the underparts vary from white to brown and are sometimes speckled with dark markings. The face is characteristically heart-shaped and is white in most subspecies. This owl does not hoot, but utters an eerie, drawn-out shriek.
The barn owl is nocturnal over most of its range, but in Britain and some Pacific islands, it also hunts by day. Barn owls specialise in hunting animals on the ground and nearly all of their food consists of small mammals which they locate by sound, their hearing being very acute. They usually mate for life unless one of the pair is killed, when a new pair bond may be formed. Breeding takes place at varying times of year according to locality, with a clutch, averaging about four eggs, being laid in a nest in a hollow tree, old building or fissure in a cliff. The female does all the incubation, and she and the young chicks are reliant on the male for food. When large numbers of small prey are readily available, barn owl populations can expand rapidly, and globally the bird is considered to be of least conservation concern. Some subspecies with restricted ranges are more threatened.
The barn owl was one of several species of bird first described in 1769 by the Tyrolean physician and naturalist Giovanni Antonio Scopoli in his Anni Historico-Naturales. He gave it the scientific name Strix alba.[3][4] As more species of owl were described, the genus name Strix came to be used solely for the wood owls in the typical owl family Strigidae, and the barn owl became Tyto alba in the barn owl family Tytonidae. The name literally means "white owl", from the onomatopoeic Ancient Greek tyto (τυτώ) for an owl – compare English "hooter" – and Latin alba, "white".[2] The bird is known by many common names which refer to its appearance, call, habitat, or its eerie, silent flight: white owl, silver owl, demon owl, ghost owl, death owl, night owl, rat owl, church owl, cave owl, stone owl, monkey-faced owl, hissing owl, hobgoblin or hobby owl, dobby owl, white-breasted owl, golden owl, scritch owl, screech owl, straw owl, barnyard owl, and delicate owl.[2][5] "Golden owl" might also refer to the related golden masked owl (T. aurantia). "Hissing owl" and, particularly in the UK and in India, "screech owl", refers to the piercing calls of these birds.[6] The latter name is also applied to a different group of birds, the screech-owls in the genus Megascops.[2]
The ashy-faced owl (T. glaucops) was for some time included in T. alba, and by some authors its populations from the Lesser Antilles still are. Based on DNA evidence, König, Weick & Becking (2009) recognised the American Barn Owl (T. furcata) and the Curaçao Barn Owl (T. bargei) as separate species.[7] They also proposed that T. a. delicatula should be split off as a separate species, to be known as the eastern barn owl, which would include the subspecies T. d. sumbaensis, T. d. meeki, T. d. crassirostris and T. d. interposita.[8] However, the International Ornithological Committee has doubts about this and states that the split of Tyto delicatula from T. alba "may need to be revisited".[9] Some island subspecies are occasionally treated as distinct species, a move which should await further research into barn owl phylogeography. According to Bruce in the Handbook of Birds of the World, Volume 5: Barn-owls to Hummingbirds, "a review of the whole group [is] long overdue".[2] Molecular analysis of mitochondrial DNA shows a separation of the species into two clades, an Old World alba and a New World furcata, but this study did not include T. a. delicatula which the authors seem to have accepted as a separate species. A high amount of genetic variation was also found between the Indonesian T. a. stertens and other members of the alba clade, leading to the separation of stertens into Tyto javanica.[10]
The barn owl has a wider distribution than any other species of owl. Many subspecies have been proposed over the years but several are generally considered to be intergrades between more distinct populations. Twenty to thirty are usually recognised, varying mainly in body proportions, size and colour. Island forms are mostly smaller than mainland ones, and those inhabiting forests have darker plumage and shorter wings than those occurring in open grasslands.[11] Barn owls range in colour from the almost beige-and-white nominate subspecies, erlangeri and niveicauda, to the nearly black-and-brown contempta.[2]
In the Handbook of Birds of the World, Volume 5: Barn-owls to Hummingbirds, the following subspecies are listed:[2] (From Wikipedia)
メンフクロウ(面梟、学名:Tyto alba) は、フクロウ目メンフクロウ科に分類される鳥類の一種。
ネズミやモグラなどの小型哺乳類を捕食する。和名は仮面を付けているように見えることからつけられた。英名:Barn Owl(納屋のフクロウ)は、納屋のような人家に営巣することから付けられた。世界中に広く生息する。
Nonnetjie-uil
(Tyto alba)
The barn owl (Tyto alba) is the most widely distributed species of owl and one of the most widespread of all birds. It is also referred to as the common barn owl, to distinguish it from other species in its family, Tytonidae, which forms one of the two main lineages of living owls, the other being the typical owls (Strigidae). The barn owl is found almost everywhere in the world except polar and desert regions, Asia north of the Himalayas, most of Indonesia, and some Pacific islands.
Phylogenetic evidence shows that there are at least three major lineages of barn owl, one in Europe, western Asia and Africa, one in southeast Asia and Australasia, and one in the Americas, and some highly divergent taxa on islands. Accordingly, some authorities split the group into the western barn owl for the group in Europe, western Asia and Africa, the American barn owl for the group in the Americas, and the eastern barn owl for the group in southeast Asia and Australasia. Some taxonomic authorities further split the group, recognising up to five species, and further research needs to be done to clarify the position. There is a considerable variation between the sizes and colour of the approximately 28 subspecies but most are between 33 and 39 cm (13 and 15 in) in length with wingspans ranging from 80 to 95 cm (31 to 37 in). The plumage on head and back is a mottled shade of grey or brown, the underparts vary from white to brown and are sometimes speckled with dark markings. The face is characteristically heart-shaped and is white in most subspecies. This owl does not hoot, but utters an eerie, drawn-out shriek.
The barn owl is nocturnal over most of its range, but in Britain and some Pacific islands, it also hunts by day. Barn owls specialise in hunting animals on the ground and nearly all of their food consists of small mammals which they locate by sound, their hearing being very acute. They mate for life unless one of the pair gets killed, when a new pair bond may be formed. Breeding takes place at varying times of year according to locality, with a clutch, averaging about four eggs, being laid in a nest in a hollow tree, old building or fissure in a cliff. The female does all the incubation, and she and the young chicks are reliant on the male for food. When large numbers of small prey are readily available, barn owl populations can expand rapidly, and globally the bird is considered to be of least conservation concern. Some subspecies with restricted ranges are more threatened.
The barn owl was one of several species of bird first described in 1769 by the Tyrolean physician and naturalist Giovanni Antonio Scopoli in his Anni Historico-Naturales. He gave it the scientific name Strix alba. As more species of owl were described, the genus name Strix came to be used solely for the wood owls in the typical owl family Strigidae, and the barn owl became Tyto alba in the barn owl family Tytonidae. The name literally means "white owl", from the onomatopoeic Ancient Greek tyto (τυτώ) for an owl – compare English "hooter" – and Latin alba, "white". The bird is known by many common names which refer to its appearance, call, habitat, or its eerie, silent flight: white owl, silver owl, demon owl, ghost owl, death owl, night owl, rat owl, church owl, cave owl, stone owl, monkey-faced owl, hissing owl, hobgoblin or hobby owl, dobby owl, white-breasted owl, golden owl, scritch owl, screech owl, straw owl, barnyard owl, and delicate owl. "Golden owl" might also refer to the related golden masked owl (T. aurantia). "Hissing owl" and, particularly in the UK and in India, "screech owl", refers to the piercing calls of these birds. The latter name is also applied to a different group of birds, the screech-owls in the genus Megascops.
The ashy-faced owl (T. glaucops) was for some time included in T. alba, and by some authors its populations from the Lesser Antilles still are. Based on DNA evidence, König, Weick & Becking (2009) recognised the American Barn Owl (T. furcata) and the Curaçao Barn Owl (T. bargei) as separate species. They also proposed that T. a. delicatula should be split off as a separate species, to be known as the eastern barn owl, which would include the subspecies T. d. sumbaensis, T. d. meeki, T. d. crassirostris and T. d. interposita. However, the International Ornithological Committee has doubts about this and states that the split of Tyto delicatula from T. alba "may need to be revisited".[9] Some island subspecies are occasionally treated as distinct species, a move which should await further research into barn owl phylogeography. According to Bruce in the Handbook of Birds of the World, Volume 5: Barn-owls to Hummingbirds, "a review of the whole group [is] long overdue". Molecular analysis of mitochondrial DNA shows a separation of the species into two clades, an Old World alba and a New World furcata, but this study did not include T. a. delicatula which the authors seem to have accepted as a separate species. A high amount of genetic variation was also found between the Indonesian T. a. stertens and other members of the alba clade, leading to the separation of stertens into Tyto javanica.
The barn owl has a wider distribution than any other species of owl. Many subspecies have been proposed over the years but several are generally considered to be intergrades between more distinct populations. Twenty to thirty are usually recognised, varying mainly in body proportions, size and colour. Island forms are mostly smaller than mainland ones, and those inhabiting forests have darker plumage and shorter wings than those occurring in open grasslands.[11] Barn owls range in colour from the almost beige-and-white nominate subspecies, erlangeri and niveicauda, to the nearly black-and-brown contempta.
Wikipedia
23 May 2017, Ganyiel South Sudan - A woman pulls a sack of food distributed by WFP in Ganyiel, Unity region, South Sudan. The Executive Director of the United Nations World Food Programme (WFP), David Beasley, and the Director-General of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, Jose Graziano da Silva visited Ganyiel as part of a two-day joint mission of WFP and WFP directors in South Sudan to assess the humanitarian situation in the country. Ganyiel, in Panyijiar county is fully controlled by the opposition forces since the civil war broke out in South Sudan in December 2013. Thousands of people are currently displaced, mostly due to the conflict and the hunger in Unity region. While Leer and Mayendit, both also in Unity state, have been recently declared in famine, Panjiyiar is also in high risk. The malnutrition is very critical, with rates above 30% and Ganyiel has the only stabilisation in all central and southern Unity region.
FAO HANDOUT PHOTOS FOR MEDIA AND OFFICIAL USE. TERMS AND CONDITIONS: PHOTO CREDIT MUST BE GIVEN: ©FAO/ALBERT GONZALEZ FARRAN. EDITORIAL USE ONLY. NO COMMERCIAL USE OR ADVERTISING.
Mitch Hagney
Distributed Urban Agriculture
While the majority of the population now lives in urban areas, the vast majority of our food still comes from far distant rural farms using increasingly destructive strategies to maximize their yield. All of a sudden, however, technology and the market are giving producers the opportunity to scale urban agriculture up to help make cities sustainable. Innovations in remote sensing, data conglomeration, irrigation design, and lighting are enabling farmers to grow healthy produce on a tiny footprint with fewer dangerous chemicals. In the process, urban farmers can reuse waste as construction material and fertilizer, while operating farms distributed throughout cities in derelict and underutilized spaces.
This sweet one is distributing fried rice, sweetmeats and "Moa" to the guests in the festivals. Look at the expression in her eyes!
Hurricane Michael storm response from the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission’s Division of Law Enforcement.
As first responders, FWC officers’ activities have included locating missing persons, enforcing curfews, distributing humanitarian aid to residents, clearing debris from roadways and houses, assisting with medical calls, law enforcement patrols, escorting supply trucks and assisting local police departments and sheriff’s offices with general law enforcement duties.
Members of FWC’s Special Operations Group are working with USAR teams to create highly specialized urban search and rescue units. Officers are providing aid to areas of greatest need in Mexico Beach, Panama City, Marianna, Blountstown, Port St. Joe, Alligator Point and other areas that were severely affected by Hurricane Michael.
FWC photo by Tim Donovan
The staff of Kristen Distributing have their BOOTS ON to let everyone in Aggieland and our troops around the world know that they fully support and stands with them!
Boot Day in Aggieland is Sat November 19th!
* Pick up a FREE maroon Boot Campaign T-SHIRT to wear to the game at University Title or one of these locations (hurry, while supplies last!) CLICK FOR MAP--> maps.google.com/maps/ms?ie=UTF&msa=0&msid=2061418...
* Come by the Big Aggie Ring BEFORE the game and get your own troop-supporting FB pic taken and posted on our page!
* Come by the Shiner Tailgate party outside Reed Arena before the game - one free beer with proof of age while supplies last!
And by all means, GET YOUR BOOTS ON! These are the very boots many of our troops wear while defending our American freedoms around world - lots of styles to choose from. Net proceeds from the sale of every pair of "Give Back Boots" are given to our partner charities who care for our men and women when they come back.
Start shopping here: bit.ly/agybo
Brochure distributed in the Electoral District of Mulgrave leading up to the 2014 Victorian Election for the incumbent MP and Leader of the Opposition Daniel Andrews (also referring to himself as 'Dan' during this election).
At the time of this posting polling suggested Labor was in front and Andrews would become Premier of Victoria.
This was the larger reverse side of the brochure highlighting (apparent) opinions of Andrews from the Mulgrave electorate. It highlights Labor's traditional appeal to health, community services and refugees, as well as a small business operator - which it not traditionally associated with Labor.
Also worth noting the 'local dad' pushing the level crossing removal as a grassroots issue with Labor marketing the removal of 50 level crossings over many years (at a cost up up to $8 billion of state money alone) at individual locations with no big ticket major project to commence in the short term. Around half this number of level crossings are proposed by the Coalition with numerous larger projects such as East West Link.
Finally the ongoing ambulance dispute has been highlighted at the bottom with a large space to one 'Jessica Drummond', presumably the 'Jessica' of a previous mailout (see below). The dispute with the union has seen messages scrawled on the back windows of ambulances in Victoria for some time and has been pushed in this election by both Labor and the union. I wonder how much sympathy it would receive from the genuine long-term unemployed however ...
Old railway waggons used at Iron Knob. The white tanker in the centre was used to distribute ballast water from the ships which came into Whyalla. This was their only source of fresh water - and apparently, it was disgusting!
Iron Knob is a town in South Australia on the Eyre Highway across Eyre Peninsula. At the 2006 census, Iron Knob and the surrounding area had a population of 199. The town obtained its name from its proximity to large deposits of iron ore, most notably Iron Monarch which outcropped prominently from the relatively flat, surrounding landscape.
Iron ore was first mined by the Broken Hill Proprietary Company at Iron Knob for use as flux in lead smelters at Port Pirie. The iron ore proved to be of such high quality (upwards of 60% purity) that it led to the development of the Australian steel industry. It supplied iron to Newcastle for and steel works established at Newcastle and Port Kembla in the 1910s and 1920s and Whyalla in the 1930s. The iron ore was transported by railway to Whyalla where it was either smelted or dispatched by sea.
21% of the steel required for the construction of the Sydney Harbor Bridge was quarried at Iron Knob and smelted at Port Kembla, New South Wales. The remaining 79% was imported from England.
In the 1920s, iron ore from Iron Knob was exported to Holland (now the Netherlands) and the United States of America. Prior to World War II, iron ore from Iron Knob was also exported to Japan. In the financial year 1935-36, 291,961 tonnes of ore from Iron Knob was shipped there via the seaport of Whyalla.
This became a matter of some controversy in the late 1930s due in part to Australia's known reserves at the time being limited to Iron Knob and Yampi Sound in Western Australia. Japan was also considered an 'aggressor' nation following acts of war against China in 1937. Waterfront workers and seamen protested against the export of iron ore to Japan, leading to strikes and arrests. Iron ore from Iron Knob was also exported to America, Germany and Great Britain during the 1930s.
Additional deposits of iron ore were developed by the Broken Hill Proprietary Company further south along the Middleback Range, including Iron Princess, Iron Prince (1932), Iron Baron, Iron Knight, Iron Duchess and Iron Duke.
In 1937, output from the Middleback Range, mostly from Iron Monarch was estimated at 2 mtpa. In 1939, it was referred to in England as the highest grade deposit of iron ore known in the world. In 1943, the iron Knob deposit was still delivering an average ore great of 64 percent metallic content. In 1949, 99% of Australian demand for iron ore was met by supply from Iron Knob and associated mines in South Australia, having risen from 95% in 1943.
Quarrying for iron at Iron Knob and Iron Monarch ended in 1998. When the mine closed down in 1998, the town's population reduced to 200. Iron Knob was under threat of becoming a ghost town. However, due to rising prices of housing elsewhere, the town has attracted new residents seeking low cost residences. A home could be purchased for approximately A$35,000–70,000 and vacant land could be purchased for less than A$15,000.
In 2010, Onesteel (now Arrium Ltd) announced that it would return to Iron Knob to reopen the Iron Monarch mine. The Iron Monarch mine was prepared for reopening by Arrium Ltd in 2013. As of 2015, both Iron Monarch and Iron Duke continue to produce iron ore for export and for smelting at the Whyalla steelworks.
In the early days of mining at Iron Knob, ironstone was carted by oxen to Hummock Hill (now known as Whyalla). Approximately 300 tonnes was delivered in a good week. Construction of a private railway greatly increased transportation rates and by 1939, 9,000 tonnes of ore was delivered daily to Whyalla by rail. Later trains carried 2000 ton loads.
Ships operated by the then BHP company were similarly named Iron This and Iron That, some of which were built by the company at the Whyalla steelworks.
Movie: Barn Own on Kauai
The barn owl (Tyto alba) is the most widely distributed species of owl and one of the most widespread of all birds. It is also referred to as the common barn owl, to distinguish it from other species in its family, Tytonidae, which forms one of the two main lineages of living owls, the other being the typical owls (Strigidae). The barn owl is found almost everywhere in the world except polar and desert regions, in Asia north of the Himalayas, most of Indonesia, and some Pacific islands.[2]
Phylogenetic evidence shows that there are at least three major lineages of barn owl, one in Europe, western Asia and Africa, one in southeast Asia and Australasia, and one in the Americas, and some highly divergent taxa on islands. Accordingly, some authorities split the group into the western barn owl for the group in Europe, western Asia and Africa, the American barn owl for the group in the Americas, and the eastern barn owl for the group in southeast Asia and Australasia. Some taxonomic authorities further split the group, recognising up to five species, and further research needs to be done to clarify the position. There is a considerable variation between the sizes and colour of the approximately 28 subspecies but most are between 33 and 39 cm (13 and 15 in) in length with wingspans ranging from 80 to 95 cm (31 to 37 in). The plumage on head and back is a mottled shade of grey or brown, the underparts vary from white to brown and are sometimes speckled with dark markings. The face is characteristically heart-shaped and is white in most subspecies. This owl does not hoot, but utters an eerie, drawn-out shriek.
The barn owl is nocturnal over most of its range, but in Britain and some Pacific islands, it also hunts by day. Barn owls specialise in hunting animals on the ground and nearly all of their food consists of small mammals which they locate by sound, their hearing being very acute. They usually mate for life unless one of the pair is killed, when a new pair bond may be formed. Breeding takes place at varying times of year according to locality, with a clutch, averaging about four eggs, being laid in a nest in a hollow tree, old building or fissure in a cliff. The female does all the incubation, and she and the young chicks are reliant on the male for food. When large numbers of small prey are readily available, barn owl populations can expand rapidly, and globally the bird is considered to be of least conservation concern. Some subspecies with restricted ranges are more threatened.
The barn owl was one of several species of bird first described in 1769 by the Tyrolean physician and naturalist Giovanni Antonio Scopoli in his Anni Historico-Naturales. He gave it the scientific name Strix alba.[3][4] As more species of owl were described, the genus name Strix came to be used solely for the wood owls in the typical owl family Strigidae, and the barn owl became Tyto alba in the barn owl family Tytonidae. The name literally means "white owl", from the onomatopoeic Ancient Greek tyto (τυτώ) for an owl – compare English "hooter" – and Latin alba, "white".[2] The bird is known by many common names which refer to its appearance, call, habitat, or its eerie, silent flight: white owl, silver owl, demon owl, ghost owl, death owl, night owl, rat owl, church owl, cave owl, stone owl, monkey-faced owl, hissing owl, hobgoblin or hobby owl, dobby owl, white-breasted owl, golden owl, scritch owl, screech owl, straw owl, barnyard owl, and delicate owl.[2][5] "Golden owl" might also refer to the related golden masked owl (T. aurantia). "Hissing owl" and, particularly in the UK and in India, "screech owl", refers to the piercing calls of these birds.[6] The latter name is also applied to a different group of birds, the screech-owls in the genus Megascops.[2]
The ashy-faced owl (T. glaucops) was for some time included in T. alba, and by some authors its populations from the Lesser Antilles still are. Based on DNA evidence, König, Weick & Becking (2009) recognised the American Barn Owl (T. furcata) and the Curaçao Barn Owl (T. bargei) as separate species.[7] They also proposed that T. a. delicatula should be split off as a separate species, to be known as the eastern barn owl, which would include the subspecies T. d. sumbaensis, T. d. meeki, T. d. crassirostris and T. d. interposita.[8] However, the International Ornithological Committee has doubts about this and states that the split of Tyto delicatula from T. alba "may need to be revisited".[9] Some island subspecies are occasionally treated as distinct species, a move which should await further research into barn owl phylogeography. According to Bruce in the Handbook of Birds of the World, Volume 5: Barn-owls to Hummingbirds, "a review of the whole group [is] long overdue".[2] Molecular analysis of mitochondrial DNA shows a separation of the species into two clades, an Old World alba and a New World furcata, but this study did not include T. a. delicatula which the authors seem to have accepted as a separate species. A high amount of genetic variation was also found between the Indonesian T. a. stertens and other members of the alba clade, leading to the separation of stertens into Tyto javanica.[10]
The barn owl has a wider distribution than any other species of owl. Many subspecies have been proposed over the years but several are generally considered to be intergrades between more distinct populations. Twenty to thirty are usually recognised, varying mainly in body proportions, size and colour. Island forms are mostly smaller than mainland ones, and those inhabiting forests have darker plumage and shorter wings than those occurring in open grasslands.[11] Barn owls range in colour from the almost beige-and-white nominate subspecies, erlangeri and niveicauda, to the nearly black-and-brown contempta.[2]
In the Handbook of Birds of the World, Volume 5: Barn-owls to Hummingbirds, the following subspecies are listed:[2] (From Wikipedia)
メンフクロウ(面梟、学名:Tyto alba) は、フクロウ目メンフクロウ科に分類される鳥類の一種。
ネズミやモグラなどの小型哺乳類を捕食する。和名は仮面を付けているように見えることからつけられた。英名:Barn Owl(納屋のフクロウ)は、納屋のような人家に営巣することから付けられた。世界中に広く生息する。
© This photograph is copyrighted. Under no circumstances can it be reproduced, distributed, modified, copied, posted to websites or printed or published in media or other medium or used for commercial or other uses without the prior written consent and permission of the photographer.
Residents of Za'atari refugee camp wait for bread. Save the Children distributes bread to residents of Za'atari refugee camp. The organisation, in partnership with the World Food Programme, distributes more than a quarter of a million loaves of bread every day to the almost 70,000 Syrian refugees living in the camp.
Save the Children organises all food distribution in Za'atari. The organisation also works with children, providing safe places to play, psychosocial support, education and newborn nutrition support.
University of Michigan Robotics PhD student Jana Plavlasek, left, speaks with attendees on day four of the Distributed Teaching Collaborative Summer Session at the Ford Motor Company Robotics Building on the North Campus of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor on Wednesday, June 28, 2023.
Participants from Berea College, Howard University, Kennesaw State University, and Morehouse College spent the final week of June at the University of Michigan College of Engineering Robotics Department participating in the Distributed Teaching Collaborative Summer Session in Ann Arbor, Michigan. The program, which began with the new Robotics 101 course in Fall 2020 being remotely taught to Morehouse and Spelman College students, enables instructors from different institutions, including Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) and Minority Serving Institutions (MSIs), to benefit from open-source resources available for new course development at R1 institutions. This collaboration provides students from HBCUs and MSIs with access to cutting-edge robotics education and helps promote equity in STEM fields.
In March of this year Robotics PhD student Jana Pavlasek and Professor Chad Jenkins were awarded the Claudia Joan Alexander Trailblazer Award for their work developing the new course for undergraduate students, Rob 102: Introduction to AI and Programming. Their commitment to creating opportunity in AI and Robotics continues to extend beyond the University of Michigan. In Fall 2023, Robotics 102 will be offered in this collaborative distributed format to the partner schools. This initiative will help to provide equitable opportunities for students from diverse backgrounds to learn and grow in the field of robotics.
Photo: Brenda Ahearn/University of Michigan, College of Engineering, Communications and Marketing
Photos Courtesy of PSP/FSU
© All rights reserved. May not be reproduced or distributed without express written permission. For more information, please contact atullo@troopersfund.org
Loved ones recall slain trooper
Buzz up! By Michael Hasch, TRIBUNE-REVIEW
Tuesday, December 13, 2005
Cpl. Joseph Pokorny was many things -- a fearless policeman, an avid hunter, a private person who would give a friend the shirt off his back -- but most of all, he was a devoted father.
"He cared for his kids more than anything in the world," said his brother, Frank Pokorny, wiping tears from his eyes Monday outside his family's home in Beaver County.
Pokorny, 45, of Moon, a 22-year state police veteran, was shot and killed while making a traffic stop early yesterday near the Rosslyn Farms on-ramp to the Parkway West in Carnegie.
"He was a dedicated trooper and devoted father to his two children," said Robinson District Judge Carla Swearingen, one of the small but trusted circle of people Pokorny called friends.
Pokorny opted to work a steady midnight shift so he could be home during the day with his son, Joseph, 17, known as Jake, and daughter, Alexandre, 15, known as Ali.
"If he gave you his word, he stood by it. His biggest priority was his children. Everybody that knew him liked him," said Swearingen.
Pokorny was nearly 6 feet tall and 200 pounds, but he was small in childhood and learned at an early age how to defend himself from larger bullies, Frank Pokorny said.
"He was extremely fearless. He didn't take anything from anybody. He was a very hard-nosed person," his brother said.
Joseph Pokorny received a letter of commendation for bravery after an incident on July 8 when state police began chasing a man suspected of drunken driving and pulling a gun on a trooper.
When troopers tried to end the high-speed chase by putting spike strips on the Beaver Valley Expressway, the motorist turned around and began driving the wrong way.
When Pokorny saw the motorist trying to ram the side of a police car, he steered his cruiser into the path of the speeding car, hitting it head-on in a fiery collision.
"He saved one of our guys by taking on the other guy head-on," said state police Cpl. Kenneth Yuhas, one of several troopers offering condolences and support yesterday to Pokorny's parents, Florence and Joseph R. Pokorny, in Center Township.
"He actually put his life on the line by ramming the vehicle and stopping (it)," said Col. Jeffrey Miller, the head of the state police. "He was a very aggressive and conscientious corporal, always out there backing up the troops."
Pokorny, who joined the state police in 1983 after graduation from Indiana University in Bloomington, Ind., spent much of his career working dangerous undercover narcotics and vice details, his brother said.
In 1990, he joined the state police Tactical Narcotics Team based in Greensburg, Westmoreland County.
"He would never tell me stories about it except that it was scary and it was ugly," Frank Pokorny said. "(Other troopers) tell me he was always the first one through the front door with the battering ram."
Tom Alexander, who was Pokorny's football coach at Center Area High School, remembers "Joey" as a student who gave his all on the football field and in the classroom.
"Joey was one of those kids who played hard. He chose a rough career. He was a good student," Alexander said.
Pokorny's smile is what impressed state police Cpl. David Bova. "The thing I'll miss the most is his laugh and his big smile," Bova said.
"He was a great kid, a great adult who was fun-loving in high school but took his job seriously," said Anthony Mendicino, principal of Center Area High School, where Pokorny graduated in 1978.
Frank Pokorny said his brother did not decide to pursue a career in law enforcement until his last semester in school.
Following his promotion to corporal in September 2000, Joseph Pokorny served at various stations --including Belle Vernon, Fayette County -- until January 2003 when he became the vice supervisor for Troop B headquarters in Washington County.
Pokorny, who also is survived by a sister, Laura Hill, of Center, became a patrol supervisor in Moon in July 2004, but refused to be tied to a desk reading reports.
"He was, like, caffeinated. He was high-speed. He would go out and get the job done. He was not a slug," said Trooper Robin Mungo, a state police spokeswoman.
"He always wanted to be out on the road with the guys," Yuhas said.
But Frank Pokorny said his brother was "a very private" man.
"He certainly was not a mixer. He had a very small circle of friends. He was very guarded until you earned his trust and respect. Then he'd give you the shirt off his back," Frank Pokorny said.
"He was like a brother to me," said Ronald Evans, who often went hunting with the Pokorny brothers. "He was a great guy, the best. You knew you could count on him."
Crystal Hoffman, who lives near Joseph Pokorny's home in the Sharon Hill Manor neighborhood of Moon, said she regularly returned Pokorny's golden retriever when it broke free of its tether and ended up at her home.
"I didn't know Joe well, but he seemed to have a very a good sense of humor. He seemed like the kind of guy who really enjoyed life," Hoffman said.
The Pokorny brothers were avid hunters who made a number of trips together to hunt elk out West.
They last saw each other last week when Joseph Pokorny visited his brother's home in Hanover, Beaver County.
"He went out in the back woods to go hunting. He was an incredible woodsman. When he came back, he said he saw a buck but didn't shoot it. He smiled and said, 'I didn't want to.'"
Frank Pokorny, known as "Fearless Frank" for his special teams play for the Steelers in 1985 and '86, made no effort to hide his pain and tears.
"He was my older brother. I loved and miss everything about him."
Defense Distributed (2013)
The Liberator is a 3D-printable single shot handgun, designed by Defense Distributed and released to the Internet on May 6, 2013. It was downloaded over 100,000 times in the two days before the US Department of State demanded its takedown. Its name relates to the FP-45 Liberator, a $2 gun produced by the USA in 1942 to be dropped in Europe and Asia to arm rebels.
Defense Distributed is an online, open-source organization that designs firearms, or “wiki weapons”, that may be downloaded from the Internet and “printed” with a 3D printer.
The debate around the Liberator gun can be seen as a critique on copyright and regulations of digital designs - should CAD-constructions and open designs be censored? Defense Distributed stated that “The problem is not the object but what you do with it. Just as with a cooking knife.” (Wilson, 2013). Wilson is indirectly referring to the unofficial slogan of the NRA (National Rifle Association) - “Guns don’t kill people. People kill people”. The release of The Liberator has been described as “the greatest piece of political performance art of [the 21st] century.” (Blouin News, 29.3.2013)
“Any users, found to replicate, reproduce, circulate, distribute, download, manipulate or otherwise use my images without my written consent will be in breach of copyright laws as well as contract laws.”
“The Eye Moment photos by Nolan H. Rhodes”
nrhodesphotos@yahoo.com
This is an example of a large soldering iron as found on many older Distributing Frames. These were on the order of 100 watts and meant for heavy use. Sometimes called soldering coppers.
IOM distributes solar radios to survivors of typhoon Haiyan still living in temporary shelters in western Visayas, Philippines. © IOM 2014 (Photo by Alan Motus)
Heat coils were used on the protector side of the MDF. Their main use was to ground outside cable pairs under high voltage or current conditions.
The largest school district in Iowa is not going to finish the year in the classroom but through distance learning. A big first step is making sure students have access to technology at home. I dropped by North and Roosevelt high schools as laptops were being distributed to high school seniors in need.
IOM distributes solar radios to survivors of typhoon Haiyan still living in temporary shelters in western Visayas, Philippines. © IOM 2014 (Photo by Alan Motus)
UNFPA is on the ground addressing the urgent and acute needs of women and girls, including those of pregnant women and lactating mothers. UNFPA is supporting the Provincial and District Government to distribute Female Dignity Kits to hundreds of newly-arrived displaced women and girls and provide psychosocial counseling and support. These Dignity Kits contain essential and culturally-appropriate items to support personal and feminine hygiene, including soap, reusable menstrual pads, capulanas (traditional cloths), underwear, and more.
Amina Daúde, 25 years old, traveled by boat to Pemba with her husband and three children, and upon arrival, received a dignity kit from UNFPA. “Life is the most valuable thing I have at this moment and the Dignity Kit that I received from UNFPA greatly complements it,” she says.
“I came with nothing, nothing at all. Now, my dignity is recovered as I'll be able to have my menstrual hygiene relaxed, I'll be able to wear the capulanas and cover myself as well as wearing the masks for prevention and control of Covid-19."
Photo: Alex Muianga/UNFPA Mozambique
Araucaria heterophylla is a distinctive conifer, a member of the ancient and now disjointly distributed family Araucariaceae.
As its vernacular name Norfolk Island Pine implies, the tree is endemic to Norfolk Island, a small island in the Pacific Ocean between Australia, New Zealand and New Caledonia. The genus Araucaria occurs across the South Pacific, especially concentrated in New Caledonia (about 700 km due north of Norfolk Island) where 13 closely related and similar-appearing species are found.
It is sometimes called a 'star pine', 'triangle tree' or 'living christmas tree', due to its symmetrical shape as a sapling, although it is not a true pine.
The trees grow to a height of 50–65 m, with straight vertical trunks and symmetrical branches, even in the face of incessant onshore winds that can contort most other species.
The leaves are awl-shaped, 1-1.5 cm long, about 1 mm thick at the base on young trees, and incurved, 5–10 mm long and variably 2–4 mm broad on older trees.
The Royal Botanic Gardens in Sydney, New South Wales, were opened to the public in 1816.
The gardens are open every day of the year, and access is free.
Situated east of the Sydney Opera House, and overlooking Farm Cove, the gardens occupy 30 hectares in area, and are bordered by: the Cahill Expressway to the south and west, Art Gallery road to the east, and Sydney Harbour to the north.
The first farm on the Australian continent, at Farm Cove, was established in 1788 by Governor Phillip. Although that farm failed, the land has been in constant cultivation since that time, as ways were found to make the relatively infertile soils more productive.
Admiral Arthur Phillip RN (11 October 1738 – 31 August 1814) was the first Governor of New South Wales, and founder of the settlement which became Sydney
The Botanic Gardens were founded on this site by Governor Macquarie in 1816 as part of the Governor's Domain. Australia's long history of collection and study of plants began with the appointment of the first Colonial Botanist, Charles Fraser, in 1817.
The Botanic Gardens is thus the oldest scientific institution in Australia and, from the earliest days, has played a major role in the acclimatisation of plants from other regions.
Wikipedia
pettirosso / European Robin/ Erithacus rubecula
(from my window!)
©Chiar@s.
All images are the property of Chiara Sibona.
Using these images without permission is in violation of international copyright laws (633/41 DPR19/78-Disg 154/97-L.248/2000)
All materials may be not copied, reproduced, distributed,
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without written permission of Chiara Sibona.
Every violation will be persued penally.
The largest school district in Iowa is not going to finish the year in the classroom but through distance learning. A big first step is making sure students have access to technology at home. I dropped by North and Roosevelt high schools as laptops were being distributed to high school seniors in need.
Consumers Distributing went bankrupt in 1996 - this retail space was taken over by Blockbuster, and closed before it was out of business in Canada. The removal of the Blockbuster Video signage revealed the older Consumers signs.
Model: Maritza Anain
Visa/Styling : Maritza Anain
Photographer: Qsimple
Location: Beach and Dunes Hoek van Holland Netherlands
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Description PeteSeeger:
Washington, D.C. Pete Seeger, noted folk singer entertaining at the opening of the Washington labor canteen, sponsored by the United Federal Labor Canteen, sponsored by the Federal Workers of American, Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO). First lady Eleanor Roosevelt seen at center. 1212 18th St. N.W., Washington, D.C. Photograph by Joseph A. Horne, February 1944.
Source Photograph by Joseph A. Horne. Via Library of Congress.
Date 13 February 1944(1944-02-13)
Author Joseph A. Horne
Permission PD USGov
Until recently when the question of responsibility came up, supporters would say, "Well, HE was NEVER a communist. They just had a witch hunt going on." Was that true? Well now we're moving so far to the left and by legal means, so that has become a non-issue.
This should be of interest:
Activism
Pre-1950
In 1936, at the age of 17, Pete Seeger joined the Young Communist League (YCL), then at the height of its popularity and influence. In 1942 he became a member of the Communist Party itself (see quotation below). He drifted away from the Party in the 1950's, but remained an unrepentant Stalinist.
In the spring of 1941, the twenty-one year old Seeger performed as a member of the Almanac Singers along with Millard Lampell, Cisco Houston, Woody Guthrie, Butch and Bess Lomax Hawes, and Lee Hays. Seeger and the Almanacs cut several albums of 78s on Keynote and other labels, Songs for John Doe (recorded in late February or March and released in May, 1941), the Talking Union, and an album each of sea chanteys and pioneer songs. Written by Millard Lampell, Songs for John Doe was performed by Lampell, Seeger, and Hays, joined by Josh White and Sam Gary. It contained lines such as, "It wouldn't be much thrill to die for Du Pont in Brazil", that were sharply critical of Roosevelt's unprecedented peacetime draft (enacted in September, 1940). This anti-war/anti-draft tone reflected the Communist Party line after the 1939 Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact, which maintained the war was "phony" and a mere pretext for big American corporations (many, if not most of whom had actively supported and helped to re-arm Hitler's Germany as a bulwark against Communism) to get Hitler to attack Soviet Russia, a line of argument that Seeger has said he believed to be true at the time and which was adhered to by many members of the Young Communist League (YCL), of which he was a member. Though nominally members of the Popular Front, which was allied with Roosevelt and more moderate liberals, the YCL's members were still smarting over the memory of Roosevelt and Churchill's arms embargo to Loyalist Spain (which Roosevelt later called a mistake) and the alliance was fraying in the confusing welter of events.
A June 16, 1941, review in Time magazine, which under its owner Henry Luce had become very interventionist, denounced the Almanacs' John Doe, accusing it of scrupulously echoing what it called "the mendacious Moscow tune" that "Franklin Roosevelt is leading an unwilling people into a J. P. Morgan war". Eleanor Roosevelt, a fan of folk music, reportedly found the album "in bad taste," though President Roosevelt, when the album was shown to him, merely observed, correctly as it turned out, that few people would ever hear it. More alarmist was the reaction of eminent German-born Harvard Professor of Government, Carl Joachim Friedrich an adviser on domestic propaganda to the US military. In a review in the June 1941 Atlantic Monthly, entitled "The Poison in Our System", acting as a one man judge and jury, he pronounced Songs for John Doe "strictly subversive and illegal", "whether Communist or Nazi financed" and "a matter for the attorney general", observing further that that "mere" legal "suppression" would not be sufficient to counteract this type of populist poison[20], the poison being folk music, and the ease with which it could be spread.
At that point, the U.S. had not yet entered the war but was energetically re-arming. African Americans were barred from working in defense plants, a situation that greatly angered African Americans and white progressives. Black union leaders A. Philip Randolph, Bayard Rustin, and A. J. Muste began planning a huge march on Washington to protest racial discrimination in war industries and to urge desegregation of the armed forces. The march, which many regard as the first manifestation of the Civil Rights Movement, was canceled after President Roosevelt issued Executive Order 8802 (The Fair Employment Act) of June 25, 1941, barring discrimination in hiring by companies holding federal contracts for defense work. This Presidential act diffused black anger considerably, although the US army still refused to desegregate, declining to participate in what it called "social engineering".
Roosevelt's order came three days after Hitler broke the non-aggression pact and invaded the Soviet Union. The Communist Party now immediately directed its members to get behind the draft, and it also forbade participation in strikes for the duration of the war (angering some leftists). Copies of Songs for John Doe were removed from sale, and the remaining inventory destroyed, though a few copies may exist in the hands of private collectors. The Almanac Singers' Talking Union album, on the other hand, was reissued as an LP by Folkways (FH 5285A) in 1955 and is still available. The following year the Almanacs issued Dear Mr. President, an album in support of Roosevelt and the war effort. The title song, "Dear Mr. President", was a solo by Pete Seeger, and its lines expressed his life-long credo:
Now, Mr. President, / We haven't always agreed in the past, I know, / But that ain't at all important now. / What is important is what we got to do, / We got to lick Mr. Hitler, and until we do, / Other things can wait.//
Now, as I think of our great land . . . / I know it ain't perfect, but it will be someday, / Just give us a little time. // This is the reason that I want to fight, / Not 'cause everything's perfect, or everything's right. / No, it's just the opposite: I'm fightin' because / I want a better America, and better laws, / And better homes, and jobs, and schools, / And no more Jim Crow, and no more rules like / "You can't ride on this train 'cause you're a Negro," / "You can't live here 'cause you're a Jew,"/ "You can't work here 'cause you're a union man."//
So, Mr. President, / We got this one big job to do / That's lick Mr. Hitler and when we're through, / Let no one else ever take his place / To trample down the human race. / So what I want is you to give me a gun / So we can hurry up and get the job done.
Seeger's critics, however, have continued to bring up the Almanacs' repudiated Songs for John Doe. In 1942, a year after the John Doe album's brief appearance (and disappearance), the FBI decided that the now-pro-war Almanacs were still endangering the war effort by subverting recruitment. According to the New York World Telegram (Feb. 14, 1942), Carl Friedrich's 1941 article "The Poison in Our System" was printed up as a pamphlet and distributed by the Council for Democracy (an organization that Friedrich founded and headed) and was shown to the Almanac's employers in order to keep them off the air.[21] Coincidentally, defamatory reviews and gossip items appeared in New York newspapers whenever they performed in public, and ultimately the Almanacs had to disband.
Seeger served in the US Army in the Pacific. He was trained as an airplane mechanic, but was reassigned to entertain the American troops with music. Later, when people asked him what he did in the war, he always answered "I strummed my banjo". After returning from service, Seeger and others established People's Songs, conceived as a nationwide organization with branches on both coasts that was designed to "Create, promote and distribute songs of labor and the American People"[22] With Pete Seeger as its director, People's Songs worked for the 1948 presidential campaign of Roosevelt's former Secretary of Agriculture and Vice President, Henry A. Wallace, who ran as a third party candidate on the Progressive Party ticket. Despite having attracted enormous crowds nationwide, however, Wallace only won in New York City, and, in the red-baiting frenzy that followed, he was excoriated (as Roosevelt had not been) for accepting the help in his campaign of Communists and fellow travelers such as Seeger and singer Paul Robeson.[23]
For much more go to this link:
Bottles/Pottery And Clay Pipes Recovered From The Vetch Field Football Pitch. Former Home Ground Of Swansea City Afc (1912-2005). A selection of these were shown, as part of the history of the SWANS / VETCH FIELD at an exhibition in Swansea museum in 2012.
www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ysu_DYJU81c&feature=related
Take Me To The
LIBERTY.
When you ever come to Wales
Then Cardiff you must pass
For forty miles on down the road
There’s quality and class.
Now if it’s top flight football
You’d always wished to see
Then head on down to my home ground
In a place called Swansea.
And when you’ve seen it once or twice
I know that you will say
I want to be a Swansea Jack
And I’d really like to stay.
Even though the Vetch fields gone
The old ground by the sea
Where we stood on the north bank,
T'was the only place to be
Amongst the throngs, where we sang our songs;
By the Fans they call Jack army.
So come on down, to our new ground
It's name is Liberty.
And be a part, of a great new start
In Welsh footballing history.
Mitch Hagney
Distributed Urban Agriculture
While the majority of the population now lives in urban areas, the vast majority of our food still comes from far distant rural farms using increasingly destructive strategies to maximize their yield. All of a sudden, however, technology and the market are giving producers the opportunity to scale urban agriculture up to help make cities sustainable. Innovations in remote sensing, data conglomeration, irrigation design, and lighting are enabling farmers to grow healthy produce on a tiny footprint with fewer dangerous chemicals. In the process, urban farmers can reuse waste as construction material and fertilizer, while operating farms distributed throughout cities in derelict and underutilized spaces.
© All rights reserved. This image is copyrighted to Tim Wood; Any users, found to replicate, reproduce, circulate, distribute, download, manipulate or otherwise use my images without my written consent will be in breach of copyright laws. Please contact me at woodrot147@aol.com for express permission to use any of my photographs.
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Think Of A Man J. Ezekial 10: Long Road Trip will become a last 10th film releasing on July 2, 2024.
Rated: G.
Directed Written & Produced by: Jimmy Kimmel.
Production Company: Nickelodeon Movies, & Williams Street.
Distributed by: Paramount Pictures & 20th Century Fox.
Running time: 995 Minutes.
- Summary -
Man J. Ezekial gets told to go on a road trip with his cartoon friends and his cartoon kids and live action/cgi people and muppet characters by 4 police officers or face 38 years in prison.
Note for 10 Films of Think Of A Man J. Ezekial:
Think Of A Man J. Ezekial, Think Of A Man J. Ezekial 2: Merry Christmas, Think Of A Man J. Ezekial 3: A Day Without Tears, Think Of A Man J. Ezekial 4: What Happened To SpongeBob & Meatwad?, Think Of A Man J. Ezekial 5: SpongeBob & Meatwad's Word Play, Think Of A Man J. Ezekial 6: Man's Trip To Marianna FL, Think Of A Man J. Ezekial 7: Halloween Halloween, Think Of A Man J. Ezekial 8: Road Adventure, Think Of A Man J. Ezekial 9: Gulf Shores AL & Foley AL, & Think Of A Man J. Ezekial 10: Long Road Trip will be similar to Space Jam (1996) by having cartoon characters appearing with Live Action/CGI People.
Note for 10 Films of Think Of A Man J. Ezekial:
Think Of A Man J. Ezekial, Think Of A Man J. Ezekial 2: Merry Christmas, Think Of A Man J. Ezekial 3: A Day Without Tears, Think Of A Man J. Ezekial 4: What Happened To SpongeBob & Meatwad?, Think Of A Man J. Ezekial 5: SpongeBob & Meatwad's Word Play, Think Of A Man J. Ezekial 6: Man's Trip To Marianna FL, Think Of A Man J. Ezekial 7: Halloween Halloween, Think Of A Man J. Ezekial 8: Road Adventure, Think Of A Man J. Ezekial 9: Gulf Shores AL & Foley AL, & Think Of A Man J. Ezekial 10: Long Road Trip will be similar to SpongeBob episode Funny Pants & SpongeBob episode Not Normal & SpongeBob episode Krusty Dogs & SpongeBob episode Idiot Box & SpongeBob episode Can You Spare a Dime? & SpongeBob episode Breath of Fresh Squidward by having Squidward like and love everyone and SpongeBob and not have SpongeBob be annoying at all ever again.
Note for 10 Films of Think Of A Man J. Ezekial:
since Squidward will love and like everyone and SpongeBob in Think Of A Man J. Ezekial, Think Of A Man J. Ezekial 2: Merry Christmas, Think Of A Man J. Ezekial 3: A Day Without Tears, Think Of A Man J. Ezekial 4: What Happened To SpongeBob & Meatwad?, Think Of A Man J. Ezekial 5: SpongeBob & Meatwad's Word Play, Think Of A Man J. Ezekial 6: Man's Trip To Marianna FL, Think Of A Man J. Ezekial 7: Halloween Halloween, Think Of A Man J. Ezekial 8: Road Adventure, Think Of A Man J. Ezekial 9: Gulf Shores AL & Foley AL, & Think Of A Man J. Ezekial 10: Long Road Trip SpongeBob will not be annoying at all ever again.
Note:
Think Of A Man J. Ezekial 10: Long Road Trip was supposed to become a last 10th film releasing on Friday August 3, 2007 but when nothing happened it got delayed & moved forward to Tuesday July 2, 2024.
Note for this film:
Ernie, Bert, Herry Monster, Cookie Monster, and Prairie Dawn both sing their song "I Think That It Is Wonderful" at night on Trout Bayou Circle Milton FL, outside standing by NO OUTLET SPEED LIMIT 15 SIGN & outside on S Garcon Point Rd Milton FL, standing by LEFT CURVE 10 M.P.H. SIGN & outside on Aileron Ave 32506 off by Hwy 98 32506 standing by SPEED BUMPS 20 M.P.H. SIGN & SPEED LIMIT 25 SIGN.
- Production -
This film will begin filming in Milton FL, Jay FL, Pace FL, Gulf Shores AL, Foley AL, Chipley FL, Marianna FL, Crestview FL, Austin TX, Brunswick, NJ, North Charleston, SC, Las Vegas NV, New Jersey, Tinley Park, IL, Chicago IL, Mobile AL, Miami Beach FL, and all other states and cities on February 3, 2024-May 6, 2024.
Note:
This is the last film to complete the trilogy.
State Representative Michael Carbone and Danny Seiden speaking with attendees at the 2023 Annual Awards Celebration hosted by the Arizona Chamber of Commerce & Industry at Republic National Distributing Company in Phoenix, Arizona.
Please attribute to Gage Skidmore if used elsewhere.
Think Of A Man J. Ezekial 10: Long Road Trip will become a last 10th film releasing on July 2, 2024.
Rated: G.
Directed Written & Produced by: Jimmy Kimmel.
Production Company: Nickelodeon Movies, & Williams Street.
Distributed by: Paramount Pictures & 20th Century Fox.
Running time: 995 Minutes.
- Summary -
Man J. Ezekial gets told to go on a road trip with his cartoon friends and his cartoon kids and live action/cgi people and muppet characters by 4 police officers or face 38 years in prison.
Note for 10 Films of Think Of A Man J. Ezekial:
Think Of A Man J. Ezekial, Think Of A Man J. Ezekial 2: Merry Christmas, Think Of A Man J. Ezekial 3: A Day Without Tears, Think Of A Man J. Ezekial 4: What Happened To SpongeBob & Meatwad?, Think Of A Man J. Ezekial 5: SpongeBob & Meatwad's Word Play, Think Of A Man J. Ezekial 6: Man's Trip To Marianna FL, Think Of A Man J. Ezekial 7: Halloween Halloween, Think Of A Man J. Ezekial 8: Road Adventure, Think Of A Man J. Ezekial 9: Gulf Shores AL & Foley AL, & Think Of A Man J. Ezekial 10: Long Road Trip will be similar to Space Jam (1996) by having cartoon characters appearing with Live Action/CGI People.
Note for 10 Films of Think Of A Man J. Ezekial:
Think Of A Man J. Ezekial, Think Of A Man J. Ezekial 2: Merry Christmas, Think Of A Man J. Ezekial 3: A Day Without Tears, Think Of A Man J. Ezekial 4: What Happened To SpongeBob & Meatwad?, Think Of A Man J. Ezekial 5: SpongeBob & Meatwad's Word Play, Think Of A Man J. Ezekial 6: Man's Trip To Marianna FL, Think Of A Man J. Ezekial 7: Halloween Halloween, Think Of A Man J. Ezekial 8: Road Adventure, Think Of A Man J. Ezekial 9: Gulf Shores AL & Foley AL, & Think Of A Man J. Ezekial 10: Long Road Trip will be similar to SpongeBob episode Funny Pants & SpongeBob episode Not Normal & SpongeBob episode Krusty Dogs & SpongeBob episode Idiot Box & SpongeBob episode Can You Spare a Dime? & SpongeBob episode Breath of Fresh Squidward by having Squidward like and love everyone and SpongeBob and not have SpongeBob be annoying at all ever again.
Note for 10 Films of Think Of A Man J. Ezekial:
since Squidward will love and like everyone and SpongeBob in Think Of A Man J. Ezekial, Think Of A Man J. Ezekial 2: Merry Christmas, Think Of A Man J. Ezekial 3: A Day Without Tears, Think Of A Man J. Ezekial 4: What Happened To SpongeBob & Meatwad?, Think Of A Man J. Ezekial 5: SpongeBob & Meatwad's Word Play, Think Of A Man J. Ezekial 6: Man's Trip To Marianna FL, Think Of A Man J. Ezekial 7: Halloween Halloween, Think Of A Man J. Ezekial 8: Road Adventure, Think Of A Man J. Ezekial 9: Gulf Shores AL & Foley AL, & Think Of A Man J. Ezekial 10: Long Road Trip SpongeBob will not be annoying at all ever again.
Note:
Think Of A Man J. Ezekial 10: Long Road Trip was supposed to become a last 10th film releasing on Friday August 3, 2007 but when nothing happened it got delayed & moved forward to Tuesday July 2, 2024.
Note for this film:
Ernie, Bert, Herry Monster, Cookie Monster, and Prairie Dawn both sing their song "I Think That It Is Wonderful" at night on Trout Bayou Circle Milton FL, outside standing by NO OUTLET SPEED LIMIT 15 SIGN & outside on S Garcon Point Rd Milton FL, standing by LEFT CURVE 10 M.P.H. SIGN & outside on Aileron Ave 32506 off by Hwy 98 32506 standing by SPEED BUMPS 20 M.P.H. SIGN & SPEED LIMIT 25 SIGN.
- Production -
This film will begin filming in Milton FL, Jay FL, Pace FL, Gulf Shores AL, Foley AL, Chipley FL, Marianna FL, Crestview FL, Austin TX, Brunswick, NJ, North Charleston, SC, Las Vegas NV, New Jersey, Tinley Park, IL, Chicago IL, Mobile AL, Miami Beach FL, and all other states and cities on February 3, 2024-May 6, 2024.
Note:
This is the last film to complete the trilogy.
SIN India led a 4-member delegation of Indian manufacturing experts from the IITs and IISc to the UK 16-19 June 2014. Follow us on Twitter @UKinIndia.