View allAll Photos Tagged Unsolved
For a collection of photos about the Huron River Spill, look here: www.flickr.com/photos/ahknaten/collections/72157626327597...
On July 19, 2010, the Huron River in Ann Arbor, Michigan had a pollution spill. The case is unsolved but closed. Booms were setup, the pollution flowed for hours and I witnessed it. Yet no one was ever charged. Someone was able to spill something and get away with it.
20 Days after the spill, I went for a walk around Gallup Park. Here are the photos that I took that day.
After the booms failed the pollutants presumably went downstream and dispersed. The boom failure was due to a rain event, but the initial spill was not. There is a considerable amount of press related to phosphors from fertilizers that focuses on the average citizen, and Gallup Park had an algae bloom that can be caused by pollution from phosphors. Remember, the AAFD report stated an 88% confidence of phosphoric acid in the spill (a DPS report states that the AAFD report with the acid reference may be inaccurate). Also, some reports stated that petroleum was mixed in as well. I know that I could smell something, so the reports that state that it was 'non-odorous' are not complete. I'm not saying that this spill caused all of the algae in Gallup, but unless Ann Arbor tells me that petroleum and acid is allowed to be dumped legally, then this spill could not have helped the environment, and as there were no accident or permit reports, I presume it must have been illegal?
According to the City of Ann Arbor, "A Resident's Guide to Clean Water", Spring 2010 edition:
www.a2gov.org/government/publicservices/systems_planning/...
"Dumping waste into storm drains, ditches, or waterways contaminates drinking water supplies, recreational areas, and wildlife habitat. Plus, it is illegal"
"In Ann Arbor, an ordinance prohibits the use of fertilizers containing phosphorus unless a need is demonstrated through a soil test"
According to the HRWC
"nuisance algae blooms that can result from excess phosphorus entering our freshwaters"
www.hrwc.org/2010/12/michigan-protects-rivers-lakes-with-...
For documents relating to this case, look here:
and here
This is just a closer look at the "drivewayfull" picture that is next. I call this driveway face because I think it's his face cruising by from right to left looking at me, crossing planes maybe, I don't know. I don't expect you to be able to see anything in this, you will probably only see a camera malfunction, however this was taken with an APS camera that can't have "light leaks" or anything. .
Help the Unsolved Mystery Club find out what happened to the legendary aviator Amelia Earhart in this fun Hidden Object Adventure game! Now's your chance to explore some of the facts and theories behind her disappearance in Unsolved Mystery Club: Amelia Earnhart. Find hidden artifacts, solve puzzles, and master perplexing minigames. Put on your thinking cap as you scour detailed scenes and solve one of the greatest mysteries of all time!
October 15, 2015- Mayor Martin Walsh joins Mary Franklin in rasing a flag at Boston City Hall Plaza to note October 15, 2015 as Unsolved Homicides Awareness Day. (Mayor's Office Photo by Isabel Leon)
October 15, 2015- Mayor Martin Walsh joins Mary Franklin in rasing a flag at Boston City Hall Plaza to note October 15, 2015 as Unsolved Homicides Awareness Day. (Mayor's Office Photo by Isabel Leon)
This is a drawing done on a notepad printed poem of mine entitled "Unsolved", as is represented by the incomplete feeling of the coloration.
GWR 5700 Class 0-6-0PT No. 9624 at Birmingham (Snow Hill) on a bleak and cold November day in 1962 with a down pick-up goods train - disposal location still to be verified.
Photograph by Peter Hands
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AKHIL BHARATIYA VIDYARTHI PARISHAD .
02.1'1.2002 CHANGE THE ~POLITICAL CULTURE' OF FAKE AGITATIONS & HOLLOW PROMISES .
Friends, The rhetoric and falsity of 'achievements' is what the SFI-AISF is 'offering' to the student community in the forth-coming election. True to their character, the passivity and incompetence shown by the previous JNUSU in relation to the issues having direct bearing upon students is nothing unusual. And thus remained the trajectory of the JNU 'politics' in one year -the issue remained, the mandate changed, the mandate wasted and the issues remained unsolved. Just for instance, the student community would like to know what the previous JNUSU did with the fullow:ing issues:-, ...... · ·-.
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Tennination of Bus Route No. 621 from Poorvanchal, .
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Irregularity of Buses plying in Route No. 615, .
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Bank Draft Facility in SBI, Extension Branch, JNU, .
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SL Placement Cell, .
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University Level Placement Cell, .
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GIS-Remote Sensing facility in CSRD/SSS, .
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Closure of Internet facility in Library, .
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Concessional Cinema Ticket from Priya, .
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English Remedial Course, .
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Computer Literacy Programme, .
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Pre-Ph.D. Programme in Korean Language, .
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Faculty appointments in SC&SS, CCSEAS and other centers, .
X-Ray Machine in JNU Health Centre, .
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Science School Fellowship I Financial Assistance. .
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~ There is no end to such genuine problems faced by the students but the last JNUSU did nothing to redress these grievances. One long-standing grievance is of water-scarcity in every hostels, particularly during summers. But no step is being taken to ensure the regular supply of water. In fact, even in Mahi-Mandavi which earlier had 24 hrs. water supply, the condition has significantly deteriorated, not to speak about the other hostels. The enlargement of the nos. of borings together with the adoption of new techniques of water-conservation we propose, could be taken up for the regularization of the water supply. Another 'mischievous' problem that is persisting from long and has alarmingly become disturbing and again towards which the JNUSU had no concern, is the increasing incidents of bag-thefts from the library cocentre. We demand, in this regard, the introduction of token-system as widely practised in other university as well as general libraries. The previous JNUSU also failed to pursue the issue of Mahi-Mandavi Mess facility and instead ended up with a dubious suggestion of 'cooperative society' running the Mess. Firstly, the students would like to know the exact nature of such cooperatives and their mode of functioning. Secondly, would it not be a step towards the 'privatisation' of mess, so often but fakely opposed by the SFI-AISF in campus and CPM in general. A mess run by co-operative society doesn't ensure that privatization -commercialization will not take place. It's high time that the 'political culture' of fake agitations and hollow promises practised by the SFI-AISF should be rejected. With your cooperation and valuable mandate, the ABVP remains committed to do so and resolves to continue to struggle for the genuine student issues. .
VANDE MATARAMI .
CENTRALPANELFORJNUSU .
President Vice President Gen. Secy. Jt. Secretary Shiv Shakti Nath Bakshi Rajmani Borah Vivekanand Upadhyay Amit Singh .
COUNCILLORS FOR JNUSU .
SLL&CS Jitendra Singh Manottam Vinit Neeti Dixit Piyush Kumar Yogesh Prakash Singh s~ Amba Shankar Mriganka Pritam Banerjee Sankalp sss Abhlshek Chaurasia Balkrishna. S. Pawan Mathur SES Manish Kumar Pawan Kumar Jha Manoj Kumar Rai .
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Sd/-Manmath Narayan Singh Chief Campaign Coordinator .
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Quinton has grown considerably in recent years, but Lower Quinton still retains a palpable atmosphere of the past. Friday Street is lined with lined with half-timbered and Georgian houses and the church of St Swithin is one of the most interesting in the area, with the brooding mass of Meon hill beyond, infamous for the unsolved murder of Charles Walton in 1945 with its rumours of witchcraft. An elegant church with north and south aisles and west tower with a tall C15 spire visible for miles around. The south aisle is c 1100 and is thought to have been cut through the Saxon wall of an earlier church, while the north aisle shows the transition from round to pointed arches and is c 1170. The chancel is Early English and above the chancel arch the arms of Elizabeth I are still visible. A clerestory was added in the C15 and the nave has a late C16 oak roof. The aisles end in chapels to Our Lady and St Anne built in the C13 and C14. A Norman font stands by the north door. There are five Armorial windows designed by Geoffrey Webb between 1929-32. Webb asked local school children to suggest subjects to decorate the blank panes. At the end of the Transitional north aisle the Lady Chapel has an east window which incorporates a C14 niche which houses a modern Virgin and Child. Fragments of the original glass fill the tracery and Webb has designed panels depicting the Virgin's Life. The Chancel c 1255, was restored in 1862, when a large window by F. Preedy was inserted in the blank east wall. The south aisle has a chapel dedicated to St Anne which has a double piscina and a triple sedilla, 1340. The jewel of this chapel is an Altar tomb to Joanna, Lady Clopton c 1430 who entered a religious order after the death of her husband. The brass shows her wearing a wimple and a widows barbe. She originally lay next to her husband Sir William, but they were separated in 1749 and his effigy is now lies between the south aisle and the nave. Sir William is depicted in full armour, though he is thought to have been the victim of Parliamentary troops, who damaged the sculpture.
For a collection of photos about the Huron River Spill, look here: www.flickr.com/photos/ahknaten/collections/72157626327597...
On July 19, 2010, the Huron River in Ann Arbor, Michigan had a pollution spill. The case is unsolved but closed. Booms were setup, the pollution flowed for hours and I witnessed it. Yet no one was ever charged. Someone was able to spill something and get away with it.
20 Days after the spill, I went for a walk around Gallup Park. Here are the photos that I took that day.
After the booms failed the pollutants presumably went downstream and dispersed. The boom failure was due to a rain event, but the initial spill was not. There is a considerable amount of press related to phosphors from fertilizers that focuses on the average citizen, and Gallup Park had an algae bloom that can be caused by pollution from phosphors. Remember, the AAFD report stated an 88% confidence of phosphoric acid in the spill (a DPS report states that the AAFD report with the acid reference may be inaccurate). Also, some reports stated that petroleum was mixed in as well. I know that I could smell something, so the reports that state that it was 'non-odorous' are not complete. I'm not saying that this spill caused all of the algae in Gallup, but unless Ann Arbor tells me that petroleum and acid is allowed to be dumped legally, then this spill could not have helped the environment, and as there were no accident or permit reports, I presume it must have been illegal?
According to the City of Ann Arbor, "A Resident's Guide to Clean Water", Spring 2010 edition:
www.a2gov.org/government/publicservices/systems_planning/...
"Dumping waste into storm drains, ditches, or waterways contaminates drinking water supplies, recreational areas, and wildlife habitat. Plus, it is illegal"
"In Ann Arbor, an ordinance prohibits the use of fertilizers containing phosphorus unless a need is demonstrated through a soil test"
According to the HRWC
"nuisance algae blooms that can result from excess phosphorus entering our freshwaters"
www.hrwc.org/2010/12/michigan-protects-rivers-lakes-with-...
For documents relating to this case, look here:
and here
For a collection of photos about the Huron River Spill, look here: www.flickr.com/photos/ahknaten/collections/72157626327597...
On July 19, 2010, the Huron River in Ann Arbor, Michigan had a pollution spill. The case is unsolved but closed. Booms were setup, the pollution flowed for hours and I witnessed it. Yet no one was ever charged. Someone was able to spill something and get away with it.
20 Days after the spill, I went for a walk around Gallup Park. Here are the photos that I took that day.
After the booms failed the pollutants presumably went downstream and dispersed. The boom failure was due to a rain event, but the initial spill was not. There is a considerable amount of press related to phosphors from fertilizers that focuses on the average citizen, and Gallup Park had an algae bloom that can be caused by pollution from phosphors. Remember, the AAFD report stated an 88% confidence of phosphoric acid in the spill (a DPS report states that the AAFD report with the acid reference may be inaccurate). Also, some reports stated that petroleum was mixed in as well. I know that I could smell something, so the reports that state that it was 'non-odorous' are not complete. I'm not saying that this spill caused all of the algae in Gallup, but unless Ann Arbor tells me that petroleum and acid is allowed to be dumped legally, then this spill could not have helped the environment, and as there were no accident or permit reports, I presume it must have been illegal?
According to the City of Ann Arbor, "A Resident's Guide to Clean Water", Spring 2010 edition:
www.a2gov.org/government/publicservices/systems_planning/...
"Dumping waste into storm drains, ditches, or waterways contaminates drinking water supplies, recreational areas, and wildlife habitat. Plus, it is illegal"
"In Ann Arbor, an ordinance prohibits the use of fertilizers containing phosphorus unless a need is demonstrated through a soil test"
According to the HRWC
"nuisance algae blooms that can result from excess phosphorus entering our freshwaters"
www.hrwc.org/2010/12/michigan-protects-rivers-lakes-with-...
For documents relating to this case, look here:
and here
For a collection of photos about the Huron River Spill, look here: www.flickr.com/photos/ahknaten/collections/72157626327597...
On July 19, 2010, the Huron River in Ann Arbor, Michigan had a pollution spill. The case is unsolved but closed. Booms were setup, the pollution flowed for hours and I witnessed it. Yet no one was ever charged. Someone was able to spill something and get away with it.
20 Days after the spill, I went for a walk around Gallup Park. Here are the photos that I took that day.
After the booms failed the pollutants presumably went downstream and dispersed. The boom failure was due to a rain event, but the initial spill was not. There is a considerable amount of press related to phosphors from fertilizers that focuses on the average citizen, and Gallup Park had an algae bloom that can be caused by pollution from phosphors. Remember, the AAFD report stated an 88% confidence of phosphoric acid in the spill (a DPS report states that the AAFD report with the acid reference may be inaccurate). Also, some reports stated that petroleum was mixed in as well. I know that I could smell something, so the reports that state that it was 'non-odorous' are not complete. I'm not saying that this spill caused all of the algae in Gallup, but unless Ann Arbor tells me that petroleum and acid is allowed to be dumped legally, then this spill could not have helped the environment, and as there were no accident or permit reports, I presume it must have been illegal?
According to the City of Ann Arbor, "A Resident's Guide to Clean Water", Spring 2010 edition:
www.a2gov.org/government/publicservices/systems_planning/...
"Dumping waste into storm drains, ditches, or waterways contaminates drinking water supplies, recreational areas, and wildlife habitat. Plus, it is illegal"
"In Ann Arbor, an ordinance prohibits the use of fertilizers containing phosphorus unless a need is demonstrated through a soil test"
According to the HRWC
"nuisance algae blooms that can result from excess phosphorus entering our freshwaters"
www.hrwc.org/2010/12/michigan-protects-rivers-lakes-with-...
For documents relating to this case, look here:
and here
For a collection of photos about the Huron River Spill, look here: www.flickr.com/photos/ahknaten/collections/72157626327597...
On July 19, 2010, the Huron River in Ann Arbor, Michigan had a pollution spill. The case is unsolved but closed. Booms were setup, the pollution flowed for hours and I witnessed it. Yet no one was ever charged. Someone was able to spill something and get away with it.
20 Days after the spill, I went for a walk around Gallup Park. Here are the photos that I took that day.
After the booms failed the pollutants presumably went downstream and dispersed. The boom failure was due to a rain event, but the initial spill was not. There is a considerable amount of press related to phosphors from fertilizers that focuses on the average citizen, and Gallup Park had an algae bloom that can be caused by pollution from phosphors. Remember, the AAFD report stated an 88% confidence of phosphoric acid in the spill (a DPS report states that the AAFD report with the acid reference may be inaccurate). Also, some reports stated that petroleum was mixed in as well. I know that I could smell something, so the reports that state that it was 'non-odorous' are not complete. I'm not saying that this spill caused all of the algae in Gallup, but unless Ann Arbor tells me that petroleum and acid is allowed to be dumped legally, then this spill could not have helped the environment, and as there were no accident or permit reports, I presume it must have been illegal?
According to the City of Ann Arbor, "A Resident's Guide to Clean Water", Spring 2010 edition:
www.a2gov.org/government/publicservices/systems_planning/...
"Dumping waste into storm drains, ditches, or waterways contaminates drinking water supplies, recreational areas, and wildlife habitat. Plus, it is illegal"
"In Ann Arbor, an ordinance prohibits the use of fertilizers containing phosphorus unless a need is demonstrated through a soil test"
According to the HRWC
"nuisance algae blooms that can result from excess phosphorus entering our freshwaters"
www.hrwc.org/2010/12/michigan-protects-rivers-lakes-with-...
For documents relating to this case, look here:
and here
For a collection of photos about the Huron River Spill, look here: www.flickr.com/photos/ahknaten/collections/72157626327597...
On July 19, 2010, the Huron River in Ann Arbor, Michigan had a pollution spill. The case is unsolved but closed. Booms were setup, the pollution flowed for hours and I witnessed it. Yet no one was ever charged. Someone was able to spill something and get away with it.
20 Days after the spill, I went for a walk around Gallup Park. Here are the photos that I took that day.
After the booms failed the pollutants presumably went downstream and dispersed. The boom failure was due to a rain event, but the initial spill was not. There is a considerable amount of press related to phosphors from fertilizers that focuses on the average citizen, and Gallup Park had an algae bloom that can be caused by pollution from phosphors. Remember, the AAFD report stated an 88% confidence of phosphoric acid in the spill (a DPS report states that the AAFD report with the acid reference may be inaccurate). Also, some reports stated that petroleum was mixed in as well. I know that I could smell something, so the reports that state that it was 'non-odorous' are not complete. I'm not saying that this spill caused all of the algae in Gallup, but unless Ann Arbor tells me that petroleum and acid is allowed to be dumped legally, then this spill could not have helped the environment, and as there were no accident or permit reports, I presume it must have been illegal?
According to the City of Ann Arbor, "A Resident's Guide to Clean Water", Spring 2010 edition:
www.a2gov.org/government/publicservices/systems_planning/...
"Dumping waste into storm drains, ditches, or waterways contaminates drinking water supplies, recreational areas, and wildlife habitat. Plus, it is illegal"
"In Ann Arbor, an ordinance prohibits the use of fertilizers containing phosphorus unless a need is demonstrated through a soil test"
According to the HRWC
"nuisance algae blooms that can result from excess phosphorus entering our freshwaters"
www.hrwc.org/2010/12/michigan-protects-rivers-lakes-with-...
For documents relating to this case, look here:
and here
Meetings allllll day, watched a lot of buzzfeed unsolved true crime, made batch stir fry for the week whilst on the phone with Hal, then watched The Grand Budapest Hotel!
Fab movie, I had a very fun time watching it!
Below are some of those things the Internet will never let the muggles find out. I have keenly been watching them with the hope that someone will one day solve them, to no avail. Feel free to add your own on the comment section.
1.Cicada 3301
A secret Group that posts Complex puzzles for people...
alien-ufo-sightings.com/2015/06/5-of-my-best-unsolved-mys...
The grave of Billy Hegedus, a teenager murdered in Inverell on October 23, 1996. The murder remains unsolved, after one of his friends, Justin McInerney was eventually acquitted by a Sydney jury. (IMAGE: New Matilda)
NEW MATILDA is one of Australia's oldest and most respected independent online media outlets. All our images are free to use (in good faith), all we ask is that you credit 'New Matilda'. If you want to 'pay it forward', a link to newmatilda.com is always appreciated. Our stories are also all free - we write about some of the most disadvantaged people on earth, so our investigations and reporting don't sit behind a paywall. You can leave your email address here for a free subscription.
For Professionally managed villas around the world 🌎-The Maruca Group
For Details:
please contact us @themarucagroup
Reservations@themarucagroup.com
+1305-218-5216
...with everything that remains unsolved in your heart.
...live in the question.”
- Rainer Maria Rilke, Letters to a Young Poet -
Quinton has grown considerably in recent years, but Lower Quinton still retains a palpable atmosphere of the past. Friday Street is lined with lined with half-timbered and Georgian houses and the church of St Swithin is one of the most interesting in the area, with the brooding mass of Meon hill beyond, infamous for the unsolved murder of Charles Walton in 1945 with its rumours of witchcraft. An elegant church with north and south aisles and west tower with a tall C15 spire visible for miles around. The south aisle is c 1100 and is thought to have been cut through the Saxon wall of an earlier church, while the north aisle shows the transition from round to pointed arches and is c 1170. The chancel is Early English and above the chancel arch the arms of Elizabeth I are still visible. A clerestory was added in the C15 and the nave has a late C16 oak roof. The aisles end in chapels to Our Lady and St Anne built in the C13 and C14. A Norman font stands by the north door. There are five Armorial windows designed by Geoffrey Webb between 1929-32. Webb asked local school children to suggest subjects to decorate the blank panes. At the end of the Transitional north aisle the Lady Chapel has an east window which incorporates a C14 niche which houses a modern Virgin and Child. Fragments of the original glass fill the tracery and Webb has designed panels depicting the Virgin's Life. The Chancel c 1255, was restored in 1862, when a large window by F. Preedy was inserted in the blank east wall. The south aisle has a chapel dedicated to St Anne which has a double piscina and a triple sedilla, 1340. The jewel of this chapel is an Altar tomb to Joanna, Lady Clopton c 1430 who entered a religious order after the death of her husband. The brass shows her wearing a wimple and a widows barbe. She originally lay next to her husband Sir William, but they were separated in 1749 and his effigy is now lies between the south aisle and the nave. Sir William is depicted in full armour, though he is thought to have been the victim of Parliamentary troops, who damaged the sculpture.
Help the Unsolved Mystery Club find out what happened to the legendary aviator Amelia Earhart in this fun Hidden Object Adventure game! Now's your chance to explore some of the facts and theories behind her disappearance in Unsolved Mystery Club: Amelia Earnhart. Find hidden artifacts, solve puzzles, and master perplexing minigames. Put on your thinking cap as you scour detailed scenes and solve one of the greatest mysteries of all time!
Defunct Schools-an episode of Unsolved Mysteries was shot using this school when a man acting suspicous hid bloody sheets behind it,and then was spotted by a couple as they were out for a sunday drive.
For a collection of photos about the Huron River Spill, look here: www.flickr.com/photos/ahknaten/collections/72157626327597...
On July 19, 2010, the Huron River in Ann Arbor, Michigan had a pollution spill. The case is unsolved but closed. Booms were setup, the pollution flowed for hours and I witnessed it. Yet no one was ever charged. Someone was able to spill something and get away with it.
20 Days after the spill, I went for a walk around Gallup Park. Here are the photos that I took that day.
After the booms failed the pollutants presumably went downstream and dispersed. The boom failure was due to a rain event, but the initial spill was not. There is a considerable amount of press related to phosphors from fertilizers that focuses on the average citizen, and Gallup Park had an algae bloom that can be caused by pollution from phosphors. Remember, the AAFD report stated an 88% confidence of phosphoric acid in the spill (a DPS report states that the AAFD report with the acid reference may be inaccurate). Also, some reports stated that petroleum was mixed in as well. I know that I could smell something, so the reports that state that it was 'non-odorous' are not complete. I'm not saying that this spill caused all of the algae in Gallup, but unless Ann Arbor tells me that petroleum and acid is allowed to be dumped legally, then this spill could not have helped the environment, and as there were no accident or permit reports, I presume it must have been illegal?
According to the City of Ann Arbor, "A Resident's Guide to Clean Water", Spring 2010 edition:
www.a2gov.org/government/publicservices/systems_planning/...
"Dumping waste into storm drains, ditches, or waterways contaminates drinking water supplies, recreational areas, and wildlife habitat. Plus, it is illegal"
"In Ann Arbor, an ordinance prohibits the use of fertilizers containing phosphorus unless a need is demonstrated through a soil test"
According to the HRWC
"nuisance algae blooms that can result from excess phosphorus entering our freshwaters"
www.hrwc.org/2010/12/michigan-protects-rivers-lakes-with-...
For documents relating to this case, look here:
and here
For a collection of photos about the Huron River Spill, look here: www.flickr.com/photos/ahknaten/collections/72157626327597...
This is a series of photos taken July 19, 2010 of a still unsolved pollution spill in the Huron River, Ann Arbor, Michigan. Photos are taken from 7:31 pm to 9:12pm on July 19th. First video taken at 6:49pm, last video taken at 9:01pm. No rain, so event was not caused by rain. Photos taken near pedestrian bridge, located near Nichols Arboretum and Mitchell Field. This case is still unsolved.
NOTE: This spill was not caused by a rain event. It rained that night, but the initial flushing/dumping was NOT caused by a rain event. Booms were in the water before the river rose.
For documents relating to this case, look here:
and here
The AAFD photos and my photos are the only known photos of this event. I tried giving these photos to University of Michigan Police (who investigated the spill that ran through University of Michigan grounds), but they weren't interested in entering them as evidence. So you won't find these photos in the official police record of the spill. But, I saw it and you can see it here.
The most beautiful women in TV and Movie History now become Barbie Collector Dolls created by acclaimed re-paint Artist Donna Brinkley.
Jacquelyn (Jaclyn) Ellen Smith has been known as the world's Most Beautiful Woman, she was born in Houston, Texas, the daughter of Margaret Ellen and Jack Smith, a dentist. She attended Trinity University in San Antonio.
After college, Smith moved to New York City with hopes of dancing with the ballet. Her career aspirations shifted to modeling and acting as she found work in television commercials and print ads, including one for Listerene mouthwash. She landed a job as a Breck girl for Breck Shampoo in 1971, and a few years later joined another popular model/actress, Farrah Fawcett, as a spokesmodel for Wella Balsam shampoo.
Charlie's Angels
On March 21, 1976, Smith first played Kelly Garrett in Charlie's Angels; the show was aired as a movie of the week, starring Smith, Kate Jackson and Farrah Fawcett (billed as Farrah Fawcett-Majors) as private investigators for Townsend Associates, a detective agency run by a reclusive multi-millionaire whom the women had never met. Voiced by John Forsythe, the Charles Townsend character presented cases and dispensed advice via a speakerphone to his core team of three female employees, to whom he referred as Angels. They were aided in the office and occasionally in the field by two male associates, played by character actors David Doyle and David Ogden Stiers. The program earned a huge Nielsen rating, causing the network to air it a second time and okay production for a series, with all of the principal characters save the one played by Stiers. The series formally debuted on September 22, 1976, and ran for five seasons. The show would become a smash success not only in the U.S. but, in successive years, in syndication around the world, spawning a cottage industry of peripheral products, particularly in the show's first three seasons, including several series of bubble gum cards, two sets of fashion dolls, numerous posters, puzzles, and school supplies, novelizations of episodes, toy vans, and a board game, all featuring Smith's likeness. The Angels also appeared on the covers of magazines around the world, from countless fan magazines to TV Guide (four times) to Time Magazine.
Fawcett departed at the end of the first season, and Cheryl Ladd was a successful addition to the cast, remaining until the end of the series. Jackson departed at the end of the third season, and proved harder to replace, as first Shelley Hack and then Tanya Roberts were brought in to try re-igniting the chemistry, media attention and ratings success enjoyed by the earlier teams. Smith played her role for all five seasons of Charlie's Angels until 1981, also portraying the Garrett character in a guest appearance in the 1977 pilot episode of The San Pedro Beach Bums, and in a cameo in the 2003 feature film Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle. Christina Chambers portrayed Smith in the television film Behind the Camera: The Unauthorized Story of Charlie's Angels.
Smith's first acting venture outside the Angels mold was the CBS-TV movie of the week Escape from Bogen County (1977). Then came a leading role in Joyce Haber's The Users with Tony Curtis and John Forsythe in 1978. In 1980, Smith starred with Robert Mitchum in the suspense thriller Nightkill. She then starred in the title role of the television movie Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy in 1981, receiving a Golden Globe Best Actress nomination for her performance but lost to Jane Seymour. In 1983, Smith starred as Jennifer Parker in the TV movie Rage of Angels, based on the novel by Sidney Sheldon. The film was the highest rated in the Nielsen ratings the week it aired. Smith reprised the role in the 1986 sequel, Rage of Angels: The Story Continues.
In 1988, she appeared with Robert Wagner in Windmills of the Gods. That same year she was offered the chance to star opposite Richard Chamberlain in the adaptation of Robert Ludlum's The Bourne Identity. Smith was Chamberlain's first choice as his leading lady but she had just wrapped up with the Windmills of the Gods shoot and declined the part. The role was offered to Lesley-Anne Down who wanted her husband to photograph the film. Producers refused and again offered the role to Smith, who then accepted.
In 1989, Smith starred in Settle the Score. This film again proved her Nielsen ratings clout. Other television movies and miniseries in which Smith appeared include George Washington, The Night They Saved Christmas, Florence Nightingale, Sentimental Journey, Lies Before Kisses, The Rape of Dr. Willis, In the Arms of a Killer, and several TV versions of Danielle Steel novels, including Kaleidoscope and Family Album. Smith starred in the 1985 feature film Deja Vu, which was directed by her then-husband Tony Richmond. In 1989, she played the title role in Christine Cromwell, a mystery television series based in San Francisco, but which only lasted one season. That same year, she received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.
From 2002 to 2004, Smith had a recurring role as Vanessa Cavanaugh in the TV series The District, which starred Craig T. Nelson. She reprised her role as Kelly Garrett for a short cameo in the 2003 Charlie's Angels feature film. Her appearance at the 2006 Emmy telecast led Bravo TV’s producers to cast Smith as the celebrity host of Bravo’s weekly competitive reality series, Shear Genius, which began airing in March 2007. Shear Genius (Season 2) began airing on June 25, 2008.
In March 2010, Smith returned to acting after a five year absence with a guest role on the NBC television drama Law and Order: Special Victims Unit. In February 2012, it was announced that Smith would be guest-starring on CSI: Crime Scene Investigation, as the mother of David Hodges (played by Wallace Langham).
In 1985, Smith entered the business world with the introduction of her collection of women's apparel for Kmart. She pioneered the concept of celebrities developing their own brands rather than merely endorsing others. A season 15 episode of The Simpsons (The Fat and the Furries) lampooned Smith's many business successes, portraying her as having her own line of axe heads. In May 2009, Smith allowed a documentary crew to profile her home life, design philosophy and relationship with Kmart in an online video series sponsored by Kmart. Her foray into home furnishings was extended to Kmart stores in the fall of 2008, with the chain's introduction of its Jaclyn Smith Today product line of bedding and bath accessories.
Smith has been married four times. Her first marriage was to actor Roger Davis (1968–1975). She married Dennis Cole, an actor who had appeared on Charlie's Angels in 1977 and 1978. Cole appeared on the show two more times before the couple divorced in 1981. Cole's son from a previous marriage, Joe Cole, with whom Smith had maintained a relationship after her divorce from his father, was murdered in 1991 during a robbery; the case remains unsolved. Smith married filmmaker Tony Richmond in 1981, with whom she had two children, Gaston (born 1982) and Spencer Margaret (born 1985), before divorcing Richmond in 1989. Smith has been married to Houston cardiothoracic surgeon[12] Brad Allen since 1997.
Smith battled breast cancer in 2003. In 2010, Smith was featured in 1 a Minute, a documentary about breast cancer.
On September 22, 2009, TMZ.com picked up a Honduran newspaper's false online report that Smith had been hospitalized in a private medical center there; TMZ later retracted the story, reporting that Smith was well and at home in California. Smith posted on her Twitter page, denouncing the Honduran newspaper story as false— Jaclyn is safe and home with her family. She is not in Honduras. It is a lie.
* A number of style mavens and magazine polls have attested to Smith's popularity and declared her one of the most beautiful women in the world. The difficult-to-please Mr. Blackwell once named her "The World's Best Dressed Woman". In 1979, McCall's ran a poll of "Whose Face Most Women Would Like To Have"; Smith topped the list. Smith has had more #1 acting projects than any other actress in Hollywood, and she has often been called the "Queen of the miniseries".
* In 1985, McCall's named her as one of "America's 10 Best Bodies;. People named Smith twice in its annual list of the Most Beautiful People in the World In the April 1984 issue of People, Smith was voted as one of the Ten Great Faces of Our Time. In 1985, Ladies' Home Journal sampled 2,000 men and women in 100 different locations in the United States to determine America's Favorite Women; Smith came in the top of the list as the Most Beautiful Woman in America, with actress Linda Evans coming in second. TV Guide magazine readers voted Smith as the Most Beautiful Woman On Television in 1991.
* Comic strip artist Sy Barry modeled the luscious Diana Palmer, wife of The Phantom, after Smith.
* The French band Air was inspired by Smith's Charlie's Angels character Kelly Garrett to record the song Kelly Watch the Stars for their critically acclaimed 1998 album Moon Safari, and the track was released as a single.
In 2012 beauty critics around the world voted Jaclyn Smith as the Most Beautiful Woman of all time along side Grace Kelly.
Opened in 1866 at a cost of £27,000 to build.
In the winter of 2002/3 the pier sustained significant storm damage.
In 2003 two arson attacks (crimes still unsolved) destroyed it.
We've had so much fun doing research for this run! If you're secretly fascinated by Unsolved Murders, Scary Back Alleys, Public Executions, Burying Grounds or Witchcraft - you don't want to miss it!
WARNING - NOT for scaredy cats!
Get in the spirit - wear a costume!
Devil's Night After-Party Immediately Following Run!
(Downtown Boston Location - to be announced)
Saturday, October 30th @ 4:00 pm
My Note: Apparently a fabrication on the part of an illustrator (sic) journalist (1936 equivalent of a modern day 'blogger') creating a story to explain the unsolved 1865 murders of two children in the area. (The Bussey Woods Murders)
Boston Public Library
644 South St., Roslindale, "Murder Chamber" House
File name: 08_06_035136
Title: 644 South St., Roslindale, "Murder Chamber" House
Creator/Contributor: Jones, Leslie, 1886-1967 (photographer)
Date created: 1936-04
Physical description: 1 negative : film, black & white; 3 1/8 x 4 1/4 in.
Genre: Film negatives
Subject: Historic buildings; Roslindale (Boston, Mass.)
Notes: Title and date from information provided by Leslie Jones or the Boston Public Library on the negative or negative sleeve.
Collection: Leslie Jones Collection
Location: Boston Public Library, Print Department
Rights: Copyright Leslie Jones.
Preferred credit: Courtesy of the Boston Public Library, Leslie Jones Collection.
dieses foto und blut 1/3 sind mit lebensmittelfarbe entstanden
this and pic blut 1/3 were made with food coloring
Three years since the Wolfeboro mother was murdered. I'm sure the people who gathered at the State House today feel better for doing so, but I doubt they've spurred the police into action. At the time of her death there was some suggestion a police officer, or someone known to the police was involved but, amazingly, no one followed up on that lead.
As I type I can hear a diesel engine, but when I look up I see my kitchen. Since nothing in there is diesel powered I must not have heard anything at all.
For a collection of photos about the Huron River Spill, look here: www.flickr.com/photos/ahknaten/collections/72157626327597...
This is a series of photos taken July 19, 2010 of a still unsolved pollution spill in the Huron River, Ann Arbor, Michigan. Photos are taken from 7:31 pm to 9:12pm on July 19th. First video taken at 6:49pm, last video taken at 9:01pm. No rain, so event was not caused by rain. Photos taken near pedestrian bridge, located near Nichols Arboretum and Mitchell Field. This case is still unsolved.
NOTE: This spill was not caused by a rain event. It rained that night, but the initial flushing/dumping was NOT caused by a rain event. Booms were in the water before the river rose.
For documents relating to this case, look here:
and here
The AAFD photos and my photos are the only known photos of this event. I tried giving these photos to University of Michigan Police (who investigated the spill that ran through University of Michigan grounds), but they weren't interested in entering them as evidence. So you won't find these photos in the official police record of the spill. But, I saw it and you can see it here.
For a collection of photos about the Huron River Spill, look here: www.flickr.com/photos/ahknaten/collections/72157626327597...
On July 19, 2010, the Huron River in Ann Arbor, Michigan had a pollution spill. The case is unsolved but closed. Booms were setup, the pollution flowed for hours and I witnessed it. Yet no one was ever charged. Someone was able to spill something and get away with it.
20 Days after the spill, I went for a walk around Gallup Park. Here are the photos that I took that day.
After the booms failed the pollutants presumably went downstream and dispersed. The boom failure was due to a rain event, but the initial spill was not. There is a considerable amount of press related to phosphors from fertilizers that focuses on the average citizen, and Gallup Park had an algae bloom that can be caused by pollution from phosphors. Remember, the AAFD report stated an 88% confidence of phosphoric acid in the spill (a DPS report states that the AAFD report with the acid reference may be inaccurate). Also, some reports stated that petroleum was mixed in as well. I know that I could smell something, so the reports that state that it was 'non-odorous' are not complete. I'm not saying that this spill caused all of the algae in Gallup, but unless Ann Arbor tells me that petroleum and acid is allowed to be dumped legally, then this spill could not have helped the environment, and as there were no accident or permit reports, I presume it must have been illegal?
According to the City of Ann Arbor, "A Resident's Guide to Clean Water", Spring 2010 edition:
www.a2gov.org/government/publicservices/systems_planning/...
"Dumping waste into storm drains, ditches, or waterways contaminates drinking water supplies, recreational areas, and wildlife habitat. Plus, it is illegal"
"In Ann Arbor, an ordinance prohibits the use of fertilizers containing phosphorus unless a need is demonstrated through a soil test"
According to the HRWC
"nuisance algae blooms that can result from excess phosphorus entering our freshwaters"
www.hrwc.org/2010/12/michigan-protects-rivers-lakes-with-...
For documents relating to this case, look here:
and here
Have patience with everything that is unsolved in your heart
and try too see your questions with love, like rooms that are
closed, or like books in an completely strange language.
Don't search for answers, that cannot yet be given,
because you would not be able to live them.
It matters too live everything.
Live now the questions.
Maybe you will gradually, without knowing,
find yourself one day in the answer.
Rainer Maria Rilke
Found in the burned out trunk of his car in the desert near Flagstaff. He had disappeared from Albuquerque. No arrests have ever been made.
1977-1994
Quinton has grown considerably in recent years, but Lower Quinton still retains a palpable atmosphere of the past. Friday Street is lined with lined with half-timbered and Georgian houses and the church of St Swithin is one of the most interesting in the area, with the brooding mass of Meon hill beyond, infamous for the unsolved murder of Charles Walton in 1945 with its rumours of witchcraft. An elegant church with north and south aisles and west tower with a tall C15 spire visible for miles around. The south aisle is c 1100 and is thought to have been cut through the Saxon wall of an earlier church, while the north aisle shows the transition from round to pointed arches and is c 1170. The chancel is Early English and above the chancel arch the arms of Elizabeth I are still visible. A clerestory was added in the C15 and the nave has a late C16 oak roof. The aisles end in chapels to Our Lady and St Anne built in the C13 and C14. A Norman font stands by the north door. There are five Armorial windows designed by Geoffrey Webb between 1929-32. Webb asked local school children to suggest subjects to decorate the blank panes. At the end of the Transitional north aisle the Lady Chapel has an east window which incorporates a C14 niche which houses a modern Virgin and Child. Fragments of the original glass fill the tracery and Webb has designed panels depicting the Virgin's Life. The Chancel c 1255, was restored in 1862, when a large window by F. Preedy was inserted in the blank east wall. The south aisle has a chapel dedicated to St Anne which has a double piscina and a triple sedilla, 1340. The jewel of this chapel is an Altar tomb to Joanna, Lady Clopton c 1430 who entered a religious order after the death of her husband. The brass shows her wearing a wimple and a widows barbe. She originally lay next to her husband Sir William, but they were separated in 1749 and his effigy is now lies between the south aisle and the nave. Sir William is depicted in full armour, though he is thought to have been the victim of Parliamentary troops, who damaged the sculpture.
Am dritten Jahrestag seiner Ermordung, wurde mit einer Kundgebung am Ort der Tat in Berlin Neukölln dem damals 22jährigen Burak B. gedacht. An der Feierstunde nahmen auch die Eltern von Burak B., sowie Faruk Arslan, der Vater der in Mölln ermordeten Kinder teil.
Burak B. wurde von einem bis heute unbekannten Täter erschossen. Die Anwälte der Familie, sowie eine Initiative zur Erinnerung an Burak B. vermuten den Täter, der auch zwei weitere Jugendliche bei dem Angriff schwer verletzte, im rechtsextremistischen Umfeld. Sie weisen auf Ähnlichkeiten mit den Morden das Nationalsozialistischen Untergrunds (NSU) hin. Zudem gebe es in rechtsextremen Kreisen Hinweise auf Täterwissen.