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We had a brilliant night on Prince's Avenue at the Beat The Clock event.
Beat The Clock is a semi-regular night with 70s and 80s, electronic and disco music all played from vinyl. We've been to a few of their nights and it's always a good do.
This time there were quite a few of us! Myself, Charlotte, Trisha, Chloe, Connor, Jo and James were all there at points during the night.
I danced loads and had a brilliant time!
Ready to head out.
تدري . .
وش اللي حصل من يوم رحيلك . .
! مآعآد به نآس يَـ الغآلي ترآعيني
^_^ إلتقآطات بسيطه للتوآصل
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Comments always appreciated, as long as you keep it clean - I love to hear your feedback! xx
Hull Pride was the last Saturday of July. Both Gemma and Trisha were in Hull for it.
What a great day! Not a long one - we were back home by 4pm, emotionally drained after such an outpouring of emotion!
The parade was amazing, and there was an amazing choir (the AFO Choir) serenading us with ELO's Mr Blue Sky as we paraded past them. It was wonderful!
So much so that next week I'm going to go along and have a session with the AFO Choir myself!
At the start point of the parade.
Comment faire du vieux avec du neuf...
Comment imaginer que l'on a changé le monde...
Rassurez moi, c'est pas le résultat que je vois ? Ce n'est que le processus...
Last week I’ve spent in Berlin. To me Berlin is the greatest city in the world. (The greatest I’ve ever been to of course). I just love everything about it. This time I decided to go by myself. Although my love for the city outweighs everything else, the nights were a different story. The first night after coming back to my hotel I got this pressing feeling of being all alone. The quiet hotel, the empty room, the sterile smell, it just somehow overwhelmed me. Even though the feeling started to fade as the week progressed, it never quite went away. The feeling that you are all alone in a strange city and a strange country really sucks. There’s nobody waiting for you and nobody you can go to to hang out. Since I’m mister nice guy and don’t pick up strange ladies in the streets, or in this case, the Berlin subway which offered plenty of prospects, the only other thing to do at night was to write on walls. Luckily Berlin is a great place to do just that and luckily I’m really in to that.
With this series of photographs (of which I will be uploading one every day) I tried to capture the feeling of the empty and quiet nights in my room. I’d be long happy if even a couple of people get what I was going for. On their own the photos are not all equally great, but as a whole, they make quite a nice compilation. Even if I say so myself :)
This is the first time I tried doing this, so if anybody has any comments or advise, that would be great.
Stay tuned for the rest of the series
Comments
A little bit of an experiment.
Water is a series of shots taken and and pieced together to create the dance.
Comments?
For comment.
Not true.
Ben is sick, sick, sick.
I'm still feeling blah from yesterday.
No shopping was done.
I'm now drinking gin.
Lots of gin.
I will have many comments later I'm sure.
Later.
“Campus Comments” was the campus newspaper published monthly at Mitchell College, in Statesville, North Carolina. An article in The Statesville Daily on Aug. 20, 1941, p. 3, gave a description of the local junior college newspaper. “The Comments used to be amimeographed, and last year it was a small, four-page paper that looked more like a grammar grade gazette than anything else.”
The Daily went on to say that, “They’re putting out a “Welcome to Mitchell” edition September 10th that will be big and good in comparison with other junior college newspapers and with pass editions of Campus Comments.” The September and October 1941 issues of Campus Comments are part of the Local History collection at the Iredell County Public Library and have been digitized made available for viewing on our Flickr site.
The September 1941 issue describes itself as the, “Liveliest Junior College Newspaper In North Carolina” and states, “We believe that this issue is unique in the fact that it is the first of its kind to be published in North Carolina.”
This ambitious campus newspaper publication is made possible by the talents of the paper’s student staff. The editor of the paper in 1941 is Louis Estell Laffoon (1923-2013) from Elkin, N.C. where her father Harvey Franklin Laffoon (1897-1978) is editor of the Elkin Tribune, and president of the Midwestern Press Association.
Other notable members of the papers staff include Statesville native Bill Powell (who graduated from Mitchell, served in WWII, and then returned to N.C. where he became known as William Stevens Powell (1919-2015), author and Professor of History at UNC-Chapel Hill and N.C.’s most distinguished historian. By May 1941, Powell’s younger sister, Frances Elizabeth Powell Gainor (1922-1996) was the papers editor.
Handling features and ads for the paper was Statesville native, Max Bailey Tharpe (1920-2010), who also after returning from WWII, would become one of N.C.’s most prominent newspaper and commercial photographers. The Max Tharpe Photograph Collection is a part of the Local History collection at the Iredell County Public Library and digitized photographs of his work can be found here on the library’s Flickr page under the “Max Tharpe Photograph Collection.”
Mitchell Community College was started by the Concord Presbytery in 1852 and opened at Concord Presbyterian Female College in the fall of 1856. Following the Civil War, the Presbytery suffered economically and in 1872 they sold the college to a local Statesville businessman Robert Falls Simonton (1827-1876). Simonton changed the name of the college to Simonton Female College.
In 1904 the Concord Presbytery once again took control of Mitchell College. In 1917 the college was renamed Mitchell College in honor of Eliza Mitchell Grant and Margaret Eliot Mitchell who were longtime teachers and administrators at the college. The two sisters began at the college in 1875 and were the daughters of Professor Elisha Mitchell for whom Mount Mitchell is named.
In 1924 the college changed from a four-year to a two-year college. In 1932 the college opened admittance to men and in 1959 the Mitchell College Foundation took control of the college over from the Presbytery and operated it as an independent junior college. In 1973, Mitchell College became a part of the North Carolina Community College system and the name was changed to Mitchell Community College.
Joel Reese, Local History Librarian
Iredell County Public Library
July 26, 2021
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8 Comments on Instagram:
bloodymerry: @goooze это новый или старый?
izyarider: @goooze прививка от малярии в виде джина?
anarchyson: @dol_l_ar так боимся, что пьем беспробудно!
goooze: @bloodymerry старый)
goooze: @dol_l_ar местные говорят, что это не работает. :(
izyarider: @goooze мы Лариам пили перед Килиманджаро и прививки от желтой лихорадки и гепатита сделали.
goooze: @dol_l_ar ну там надо. юар и Намибия проще.
izyarider: @goooze посуше!
Participants in workshop sessions for Gadget Day were given a chance to provide feedback. A complete set of the day's comments can be found at wic.library.upenn.edu/multimedia/docs/gadget-day-feedback...
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From the Doors Open Oshawa website:
The museum, built in the 1920’s and established in 1961, is located in a former car dealership. There are approximately 65 vehicles dating from 1898 to 1981, showcasing the development of the automobile. The building contains its original freight elevator.
Oshawa, Ontario.
Following a discussion on the KAP Forum I tried some tests to see if I could get a kite to fly reliably off the wind. Here are the results:
In this case the Flow Form 16 is the baseline kite. I tested it against a Flow Form 8, and took up as much as 2.5" of bridle line on one side of the Flow Form 16, but never got much deviation. I did not attempt to try changing the tail layout. I was pleased to see how invariant the flight is as a function of bridle tweaking, but it didn't get me any closer to flying off-wind.
Next I used the Flow Form 16 as the base kite, and tried offsetting a 6' rokkaku. In the case of the rokkaku, I took a tip from Ramon and offset the upper bridle by 2" to the left, and 2" to the right, respectively. The photos from each of these offsets is shown above.
I didn't shoot any video, but the flight in both cases was remarkably stable. Before flying either configuration I flew the rokkaku without an offset, and found it flew just off to the right of the Flow Form. This is also echoed in the above photos, in which the right-hand offset flies farther to the right than the left-hand offset does to the left.
Both kites are on 200' of line. The dimensions of the rokkaku are 5' wide by 6' high. I can't quote the dimensions of the Flow Form. I popped all this into CAD and got angles of 20.7 to the left and 24.8 to the right. I didn't shoot any video, but in both cases flight was quite stable. I'm taking this as a potential for a 20 degree offset either way, give or take.
In any case it works, and it's one more tool to add to the list. I'd like to go out and really characterize this at some point (so much bridle offset = so much sky offset). But for now it's nice just to know it's possible.
Professor's comments and grading:
9-9,10 since both shots have deep areas the contrast from shot to shot is not strong -4 [shot 9, btw, would've been good for 9-6]
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I put these up way back in 2009 when I took this RTVF 300 class at Cal State Fullerton. Back then, there were no examples to help me out, so I decided to post my project photos online. If these help you out in any way, please let me know in a comment below. Thanks!