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“Attitude is a little thing that makes a big difference.” ― Winston Churchill © 2014 byMaC Photography ift.tt/1kWn4KG - ift.tt/SX0hVD
The Union Pacific locomotive leading this eastbound CSX train on the southeast connection at Deshler, Ohio, is decades younger than this ex-B&O signal. For now, the CPLs continue to stand on the Toledo Subdivision in Deshler.
Il Danubio fa riflettere.
Il Danubio mi ha illuminata. In poco tempo, tante cose. Tante cose fantastiche. Tante cose orribili. Budapest è la città delle cose strane. Budapest è la città delle cose diverse. E' la città delle cose terribili e delle cose fantastiche.
Dove la povertà e la ricchezza si scontrano in quel grezzo e romantico scambio di battute fra lo smog e la pietra bianca usata nell'architettura di tutta la città.
Un'ora in barca. E la solitudine, l'amore, la ricchezza e la povertà si sono manifestate. Assieme, come in una visione.
Il suo smog non mi piace. E' tutto il resto che mi affascina e permea il sentimento che ho per lei di un scivoloso orgoglio che lascia l'amaro e il dolce in bocca. Come una torta al cioccolato e cianuro.
The Make a Difference Area at Summer Camp is located just outside the main walkway to the Moonshine Stage and hosts a wide variety of nonprofit organizations. We hope that the education these groups provide at their booths and during panel discussions in the Soulshine Tent will increase your awareness of important environmental and human rights issues, and inspire you to get involved and take action in a positive way…both locally and around the world!
Have someone the same problems with the photomatix 2.4 and moving objects? I made a comparison between the version 2.1.1 and the "new" 2.4... the result is really sobering :-(
When you have an advice, please let me know.
Discussion in the photomatix-Group:
Seven months makes a big difference.
In the heat of the summer, at the pinnacle of underbrush and Alabama humidity, TCI looks like a different place than in the dead of Winter. I saw an entire building and a third train engine that I had not seen before. Not to mention numerous smaller structures and holes in the Earth big enough to swallow cars.
Quick cell phone shot of my wife walking our Shih Tzu, Murphy, at Nut Island . . . with some disagreement on which direction to be heading. (I know it's not a great 'photograph', but I figured 'what the heck' post it anyway :-)
The Believe in the Cure Cycling Tour Comes to Philadelphia
An Inspirational Journey for an Inspirational Young Man
The power of one individual to make a difference cannot be measured in words, but in actions. John Ellis, a 17-year-old from Pensacola, Fla., was diagnosed with hepatitis B in 2006. Instead of being discouraged by this devastating medical diagnosis, John turned the news into an opportunity to raise awareness about hepatitis B. With a passion for cycling and a desire to help raise funds to find a cure for the disease, John contacted the Hepatitis B Foundation (www.hepb.org) with an idea to organize an East Coast cycling tour. Today, John’s idea has become a reality! The Believe in the Cure Cycling Tour, sponsored by the Hepatitis B Foundation, is a 1,100 mile journey which began on June 2 at John’s high school in Pensacola and ended in Philadelphia on June 23 – John’s 18th birthday!
A group of Hepatitis B Foundation researchers, staff, supporters, friends and family joined John and his riding companion and best friend, Jamaal Warren, for the last leg of their journey from Conshohocken to Kelly Drive in Philadelphia. John and Jamaal were welcomed at their Kelly Drive finish line by the Hepatitis B Foundation; Philadelphia’s Fralinger String Band Mummers; O’Liver, the Hepatitis B Foundation’s mascot; friends and family from Philadelphia and Pensacola and many more. ABC 6’s Health and Medical Reporter, Ali Gorman, served as the event emcee and Councilman Greenlee presented John with a citation from the city of Philadelphia. Dr. Timothy Block, Co-Founder of the Hepatitis B Foundation and Dr. Baruch Blumberg, Nobel laureate who discovered the hepatitis B virus also participated in the event program congratulating John for his extraordinary accomplishments.
About John Ellis and the Believe in the Cure Cycling Tour: John Ellis is an extraordinary young man. He was a healthy teenager, when the results of a routine blood test revealed that he had hepatitis B. This news came just two weeks before his 16th birthday and John recalls emotions of, “being incredibly scared because I didn’t know what having hepatitis B would mean for me.” His fear was further fueled by his doctor who told him that he would eventually need a liver transplant. John’s world was turned upside down. He was frightened and also confused as to how he could have contracted this potentially fatal disease; he had received the hepatitis B vaccine in middle school.
John turned to the Hepatitis B Foundation to learn more about his disease. The Foundation is the only national nonprofit organization solely dedicated to finding a cure and improving the quality of life for those affected with hepatitis B worldwide. Hepatitis B is the most common serious liver infection in the world. It is caused by the hepatitis B virus (HBV) that attacks liver cells and can lead to cirrhosis, liver failure and liver cancer. The virus is transmitted through infected blood. In the U.S., 1 out of 20 persons (or 12 million Americans) have been infected with HBV.
Armed with information about hepatitis B and with a conviction to improve his health, John gave up a junk food diet and began exercising. He purchased a $50 bike from a local bike store and started riding it everywhere – to school, to work and just for fun. “I knew I wanted to ride for a cause. People need to become more aware about hepatitis B and how it affects us,” said John. John has shown us courage in the truest sense of the word. He is approaching his chronic hepatitis B diagnosis with a positive attitude and embarking on this cycling tour to prove to himself that he can overcome obstacles placed in his path. Knowing that there is no cure for hepatitis B does not dampen his spirits. “If I believe in my heart that things will work out for the best, then who’s to say I’m not cured,” said John.
Sponsors of the Cycling Tour include NutriSystem, CP Commercial Printing, Monster Graphics, Bikes Plus (Pensacola, Fla.), Fox Rothschild LLP, High Swartz LLP, Newman’s Own Organic, Clif Bars, and Enterprise Rent-A-Car. For more on the Believe in the Cure Cycling Tour and a blog following John’s journey, visit the Hepatitis B Foundation at www.hepb.org or contact 215-489-4900.
This photo uses a different perspective, making the waterfall and swimming hole look larger by standing in the middle of it.
Monkeypox vs Chickenpox - know the key difference
Symptoms like rashes and nausea making you confused and misinterpret chickenpox with monkeypox? Let's know the difference. Know more
By: Dr. Savy
terzit.com
Kit-Ling Tjon Pian Gi, 'Friends 10', acrylic on canvas, 80x80cm, 2019 - USD 900
What: Solo exhibition One can make a difference – Kit-Ling Tjon Pian Gi
When: August 01-August 31, 2019
Where: Readytex Art Gallery (RAG) (also on Facebook), Steenbakkerijstraat 30, Paramaribo, Suriname
PHOTO Courtesy Readytex Art Gallery, 2019
I just had to share this with everyone, the small picture next to me was taken a little over 2 years ago.
Yes it is me, and really shows how much I have changed in appearance since November 2007. Most of these changes have occurred on their own and according to my Doctors at both the VA in Palo Alto and Stanford Medical Center have said this may happen to 1 in 5 to 10 million people over the age of 50. Needles to say going 24/7 was of necessity .
An automatic, mechanical calculator first designed by Charles Babbage in 1822, and if completed would have been he first calculator/computer ever developed. The columns held the values of the polynomials, and the machine programmed by shifting the discs to the initial set of polynomial values, then cranking it up to determine each new set of values. As it was, after the costs of building the device skyrocketed, the British government removed financial support, ending the project. This device was the first one built in 1991 based on Babbage's designs, and despite a few minor errors works flawlessly.
Science Museum of London, South Kensington, London, United Kingdom
The container ship OOCL Seattle and the Washington State Ferry Walla Walla pass each other in Elliott Bay, Seattle.
Huge difference between the La Marzocco single basket (at the right) and the one from an E-61 machine.
On Nov. 19, the Gillings School hosted the annual World of Difference dinner to honor its generous supporters.
From left to right: Michael Smith, Special Assistant to the President, My Brother's Keeper Initiative; James Cole Jr., Deputy Secretary of Education, US Department of Education; Kim Hunter Reed, Deputy Under Secretary, US Department of Education; Joy Thomas Moore, Executive Producer of All the Difference; Krishaun Branch, Featured in All the Difference; Robert Henderson, Featured in All the Difference; Marcia Cantarella, PhD, Author/Consultant on Higher Education, Access and Diversity; Tod Lending, Director and Producer of All the Difference; Wes Moore, Bestselling Author and Founder/CEO of BridgeEdU; and B. Cameron Webb, White House Fellow, White House Office of Cabinet Affairs.
Credit: POV / The American Documentary Inc.