View allAll Photos Tagged disarray
By 6:00PM on July 2, when Maj Gen Richard Anderson's division (lent to Lt Gen James Longstreet), launched its attack on the Union center, the center was in complete disarray, Army of the Potomac commander Maj Gen George Meade and II Corps commander Maj Gen Winfield Hancock having stripped it apart to reinforce the beleaguered left. Consequently Anderson had a fair amount of success, though the echelon attack launched by Maj Gen John Hood 2HRs earlier was also now falling apart. First off, the brigade of Brig Gen Cadmus Wilcox, followed by Col the small Florida brigade of David Lang, helped crumple the last of the Union Sherfy Peach Orchard line being attacked by Brig Gen William Barksdale (of Maj Gen Lafayette McLaws' division), pursuing the remnants of the Union III Corps under Brig Gen Andrew Humphreys towards the Southern end of Cemetery Ridge.
Barksdale's Mississippians had regrouped and were attacking again, capturing 7 Union artillery pieces situated as a desperate rearguard around the Trostle Farm, when suddenly they were hit by a counterattack by II Corps reinforcements under Col George Willard. His forces had been from units that had surrendered at the Siege of Harper's Ferry the year before and had been branded the "Harper's Ferry Cowards". Now the troops redeemed themselves which a charge that shattered the Mississippians, driving them back. On horseback, Brig Gen William Barksdale fell mortally wounded by three bullets and was captured, succumbing the next day. Just as Willard ordered his men to fall back to their starting line, a Confederate shell struck him in the head, killing him instantly.
Meanwhile Wilcox's (and Lang's) brigade began advancing up towards a gap in Cemetery Ridge, until they were thrown into disarray by a suicidal charge of the 1st Minnesota and forced back by Union reinforcements from a line of whatever forces Meade could cobble together.
Following Wilcox and Lane were the brigades of Brig Gens Ambrose Wright and Carnot Posey. Attacking across the open ground between Seminary Ridge and Cemetery Ridge, Wright managed to surprise and crush two Union regiments posted on the Emmittsburg Road, capture two batteries in the process, before making a beeline to the center of the Union line at Cemetery Ridge, where more artillery was captured. It remains unclear how far Wright got, with some stating that he managed to reach the base of Cemetery Ridge and others stating that he had reached the Corpse of Trees atop the ridge-and that for a split second, the Confederate Army had pierced the Union defenses in two. However then Union reinforcements counterattacked. Posey's bridge had been caught up skirmishing with a few companies of Union defenders in the Codori Farm, and failed to support Wright.
The final Confederate brigade of Anderson's division was that of Brig Gen William Mahone. By the end of the war, Mahone would become one of Gen Robert Lee's most capable subordinates, but at Gettysburg he preformed abysmally: being held in reserve by Anderson, he refused to budge, even when ordered by Anderson. And so Longstreet's great assault on July 2, sputtered to a halt.
Gettysburg National Military Park, Gettysburg, Pennsylvania
The second law of thermodynamics states that entropy will tend to increase. Entropy is a measure of disorder. Things do not tend to order themselves when left alone. The candies inside the jar are in disarray because it is spontaneously occurring as such.
I was in Japan for two weeks to film relief efforts through a freelance gig. I ended up connecting with one of those rare, genuine Christian relief organizations called CRASH.
The northern (Tohoku) region of Japan is in a complete state of disarray and constant rebuilding. We were volunteering at a local hatake (はたけ) or farm, digging up a layer of heavy metals spewed out by the tsunami. We walked into the living room for a water break and we fell silent. Completely unlivable, everything tossed about, dirt everywhere, parts missing; chaos with a silent watermark ring through the entire house.
I thought the clock had stopped during the March 11th 9.0 quake and paused solemnly in front of it. "この時間..." I started, "the time here..." The owner bleated out an awkward laugh and said it had stopped from a previous earthquake and, in atypical Japanese fashion, he had never gotten around to fixing it. He paused at the unintended irony of what he just said and looked around at his home.
(Soon to be ex-)Japanese Prime Minister Naoto Kan said "In the 65 years after the end of World War II, this is the toughest and the most difficult crisis for Japan."
From his house that he could not live in, the farmer looked out at the field that he could not grow crops in. Maybe time was all he needed. Perhaps the reason why Tona weighed so heavily was the doubt that: time was not enough.
2011. Tona, Japan.
Tombs are now laying on their sides, are open,
broken, or grave stones have been left in disarray.
Many tombs have been uprooted from their
given locations. This cemetery in particular was
in upheaval due to the mississippi river across the
street, the storm surge, flood waters from the broken
levee....etc. There were many reports of tombs, coffins,
and the dead all floating in the flood water.
Merrick Cemetery
St. Bernard Parish in Violet, LA
(next to Camp Hope)
Manchester Art Gallery.
Kitchen interior with a man bringing fish for sale.
By Hendrik Sorgh (1610-1670).
Oil on canvas, 1657.
The housewife on the left tells off one of her maids, who has let the fish seller into the house. His visit disrupts the orderly preparation of the meal and the scene is one of disarray, symbolising worldly concern: a bucket has toppled over, spilling all its contents, and a cat takes the opportunity to steal some fish. Sorgh has painted the kitchen in exquisite detail, from the skinned rabbits and plucked birds, to the fresh fruit and everyday pots and pans. He has included some delicate blue and white Delftware, pottery made in Delft that was inspired by imported Chinese porcelain. There is an implication that if the maid is lax in her kitchen duties, she may also be lax in her moral life. Above her chopping board is The Sacrifice of Isaac, a painting about loyalty and obedience. Seventeenth century Dutch literature often referred to lazy and inefficient maids. One interpretation of this painting might therefore be the good and the bad servant, the careless maid contrasted with her industrious counterpart on the right. Sorgh was active in Rotterdam, where he worked not only as an artist, but also as a bargeman in his father's local shipping business, through which he gained detailed knowledge of the fish markets. His father, Maerten Claesz. Rochusse (or Rokes), obtained the soubriquet ‘de Sorch' (‘careful') after the way in which he handled cargo; his son Hendrick had adopted the name by 1633, when it appears on his marriage certificate, and began signing his paintings that way after 1640.
Negative was damaged, but I kind of like the way it looks anyway. (Is this Prague or Budapest? I can't remember now, and my photos are in disarray.) [Prague confirmed!]
The great palace in Versailles really dissapointed me as the magnificiant building from the outside did not have the grandeur am sure it once had. The museum was a disarray of paintings and furniture just strewn across. I'm not a one to waste time in museum when one can sit in Parisian coffee shops and people watch.
But for some reason I wanted to go the village of Versailles...and boy was I dissppointed. Well that's what I remember....
Antibes (Provençal Occitan: Antíbol in classical norm or Antibo in Mistralian norm) is a resort town in the Alpes-Maritimes department in southeastern France, on the Mediterranean Sea in the Côte d'Azur, located between Cannes and Nice. Integrated to Antibes Juan-les-Pins, the technological park of Sophia-Antipolis is located north east of the city.
Antibes is a leisure-industry town also called Antibes-Juan-les-Pins. The Juan-les-Pins part is the area that many tourists flock to as this is where the beaches and the nightlife can be found.
Due to its naturally protected port, the town of Antibes has long been an important trading centre. Many different people ruled over Antibes until France finally took control.
As the Greek Empire fell into decline, it began incorporating the small towns into its empire. In 43 BC, Antibes (or Antipolis, as it was then called) was officially annexed by Rome and remained so for the next 500 years. The Romans turned Antipolis into the biggest town in the region and a main entry point into Gaul. Roman artefacts such as aqueducts, fortified walls and amphora can still be seen today.
When the Roman Empire fell apart in 476, various barbarian tribes took their turn at Antibes. The main result was destruction and a long period of instability. In the 10th century, Antibes found a protector in Seigneur Rodoart, who built extensive fortified walls around the town and a castle in which to live. For the next 200 years, the town experienced a period of renewal.
Antibes’ prosperity was short-lived, as the whole region fell into disarray for several centuries. The inhabitants of Antibes stayed behind their strong city walls as a succession of wars and epidemics ravaged the countryside. By the end of the 15th century, the entire region had fallen under the protection and control of Louis XI, the king of France. Things returned to a state of relative stability, but the small port of Antibes fell into obscurity.
The area around Antibes finally emerged from its long slumber around the middle of the 19th century, as wealthy people from around Europe discovered the beauty of the place and built luxurious homes here.
In 1926, the old castle of Antibes was bought by the local municipality and restored for use as a museum. Pablo Picasso came to town in 1946 and was invited to stay in the castle. He stayed for six months, painting and drawing many pieces of art as well as crafting ceramics and tapestries. When he departed, he left all his works here, and the castle officially became the Picasso Museum.
Today sport is important and the town hosts the National Training Centre for basketball. On 25 May 1999, the town was the first in the department to sign the State Charter of the Environment, planning projects to conserve the environment and respect the quality of life. 25% of inhabitants are under 25 years of age.
Source Wikipedia
My dad behind the glass panel that just shattered (but thankfully hadn't broken and fallen in disarray) in front of us. Heard a sound like a gunshot but not as loud and lo and behold it just magically split. weird.
It was in the Lynnhaven Mall in Virginia Beach
I couldn't do today's theme for We're Here! because it involved toy cars and the kitchen. Well, the only "toy" cars we have are still in their original packaging because they're "collectibles" (I use that term loosely because they're NASCAR mass-produced things) and my kitchen is in a state of disarray because the weather keeps freezing the pipes and we had to take everything out of the lower cabinets and open them all up...
Anyway, here's a photo of my new phone with a photo of me taking a photo of the phone. And, just for fun, here is the link to the Amazon review I wrote for the red phone case... Enjoy!
Is Stroke normal in men
Consistently, around 800,000 Americans have a stroke. A stroke is an assault brought about by a coagulation or a burst vessel that has sliced off blood stream to the cerebrum. Upwards of 130,000 individuals will pass on every year from stroke-related difficulties, for example, pneumonia or blood clusters.
The Center for Disease Control and Prevention positions stroke as the fifth driving reason for death in the United States. Inquire about demonstrates that men will probably have a stroke, especially men who are African American, Native Alaskan, or Native American. However, that is just the transient hazard. The lifetime hazard is much lower for men than it is for ladies. Men are likewise less inclined to bite the dust from a stroke.
The capacity to perceive stroke indications can spare lives. In the event that you think somebody is having a stroke, call your neighborhood crisis benefits quickly. Consistently numbers.
Normal stroke side effects
For men and ladies, stroke is set apart by a failure to talk or comprehend discourse, a strained expression, and disarray. Somebody who’s having a stroke may likewise experience difficulty talking or comprehension discussion. There are no stroke indications remarkable to men.
The five most basic side effects of a stroke influence a few sections of the body.
Eyes: sudden inconvenience finding in one or both eyes
Face, arms, or legs: sudden loss of motion, shortcoming, or deadness, no doubt on one side of the body
Stomach: hurling or feeling the desire to be debilitated
Body: general weakness or inconvenience relaxing
Head: sudden and extreme cerebral pain with no known cause
Legs: sudden dazedness, inconvenience strolling, or loss of adjust or coordination
The correct side effects differ contingent upon which zone of the cerebrum is influenced. Strokes regularly influence just the left or just the correct side of the cerebrum.
Scientists in a recent report assessed open consciousness of the five most regular stroke manifestations. Their overview found that ladies showed improvement over men in effectively recognizing the indications of a stroke, yet just by a couple rate focuses.
Hazard elements interesting to men
Certain hazard variables can influence men in an unexpected way. For instance, men brought up in these states have a lifted stroke hazard:
Alabama
Arkansas
Georgia
Louisiana
Mississippi
North Carolina
South Carolina
Tennessee
This bunch of Southeastern states is known as the “Stroke Belt” since stroke death rates are essentially higher in this locale.
Both men and ladies likewise have an expanded danger of stroke in the event that they:
Smoke
have hypertension, coronary illness, or diabetes
mishandle medications or liquor
have had a transient ischemic assault (a little stroke that can last a couple of minutes or hours)
What to do if there should be an occurrence of stroke
The National Stroke Association has built up a simple to-recall system for perceiving stroke side effects. In the event that you think you or somebody around you might have a stroke, you ought to act FAST.
Keep in mind that with regards to a stroke, each second tallies. Treatment for strokes work most successfully inside three hours after the principal indication began. Try not to hold up to check whether the side effects vanish.
The more you hold up to call crisis help, the higher the possibility of mind harm or handicap from the stroke. Watch your cherished one precisely while you sit tight for an emergency vehicle to arrive.
In spite of the fact that you may need to, you shouldn’t drive yourself or your cherished one to the healing center amid a stroke. Restorative consideration might be required while you’re making a trip to the crisis room. Rather, call your nearby crisis benefits quickly and sit tight for the paramedics to arrive. They are prepared to treat and deal with individuals while on a hurry to the doctor’s facility.
In the wake of being admitted to the clinic, a specialist will audit you or your adored one’s manifestations and therapeutic history. They will likewise play out a physical exam and run symptomatic tests to figure out whether a stroke happened.
Treatment choices for stroke
For ischemic stroke
Around 85 percent of strokes are ischemic. This implies a blood coagulation slice off blood stream to the mind. The specialist will regulate a medication called tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) to disintegrate or separate the coagulation. To be successful, this prescription must be regulated inside four hours of the main side effect’s appearance.
In the event that tPA isn’t a possibility for reasons unknown, your specialist will give you a blood more slender or other medication to prevent platelets from bunching and shaping clusters.
Surgery and other intrusive methodology are additionally choices. Your specialist may play out an intra-blood vessel thrombolysis. Amid this system, pharmaceutical is conveyed through a catheter embedded in your upper thigh. The catheter is snaked around the minor corridors in your cerebrum to separate a blood coagulation.
Another alternative includes evacuating the coagulation through a catheter that is embedded through your carotid course and achieves the influenced conduit in the cerebrum. On the off chance that you have plaque development in your veins, your specialist may likewise propose a technique to unblock your conduits.
For hemorrhagic stroke
This kind of stroke happens when a vein in the cerebrum breaks or holes blood. Specialists treat a hemorrhagic stroke uniquely in contrast to they do an ischemic stroke. They likewise treat the stroke diversely relying upon the cause.
Hypertension : Your specialist may give you medication to bring down your circulatory strain to lessen dying.
Aneurysm : Your specialist may propose surgery to cut the aneurysm or piece blood stream to the aneurysm through curl embolization.
Broken courses and veins that burst : Your specialist may prescribe arteriovenous deformity repair to forestall additionally dying.
Standpoint
By and large, men who survive strokes recuperate more rapidly and with preferable wellbeing over ladies do. Men are additionally less inclined to understanding:
stroke-related incapacity
debilitated every day living exercises
sadness
exhaustion
mental debilitation
poorer personal satisfaction after stroke
Inquire about recommends this could be because of pre-stroke physical action and depressive side effects.
It can take a considerable measure of diligent work to recuperate after a stroke. Recovery won’t invert mind harm, however it can help you relearn the aptitudes you may have lost. This incorporates figuring out how to walk or figuring out how to talk.
The time it takes you to recuperate relies on upon the seriousness of the stroke. Albeit a few people take a couple of months to recoup, others may require years-long treatment. Individuals with loss of motion or engine control issues may require long haul inpatient mind.
Still, individuals who have had a stroke can live long and satisfying lives on the off chance that they complete restoration and cling to solid ways of life that can counteract future strokes.
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Amid the dance of magenta disarray, a portal of serenity stands unshaken, offering a glimpse into a tranquil expanse beyond.
I took apart the entire center console of my 2004 Mazda 6s the other weekend to fix two problems. Success on both!
Having a garage really helps for working on stuff like this. You have to disconnect the car's battery, which means the locks and alarm are dead. While I worked on the stereo at my work bench, the car was safely locked away in the garage. No worries.
There's never a mess that Pete will take responsibility for. We are the ones who have to deal with the aftermath.
Last minute decision to take the drone up. I haven't charged the batteries since before I went into the hospital, so my flight time was limited, and on top of that, I can't seem to locate the chargers. I think they were never unpacked from returning home on Dec 22. Another thing in disarray to figure out I guess, but at least I'm here to figure it out.
Like, so old.
Things that are gone and/or retired:
- the Viewsonic monitors - one was mine, bought with my Sony VAIO desktop; the other was Abe's until he replaced it with a Viewsonic LCD.
- the B&W G3 tower - technically my first Mac. I got it free, and only days before...
- the 12" G4 Powerbook - my first NEW Mac. I waited and waited until after MWSF '04 to order it, and took this basically right after it arrived.
- the desk chair - it was free, as is the case of most college student furniture. I bought my HM with my tax return months later.
- the cell phone - my first, actually. Then I had another CellOne Nokia and two Sprint phones before my inevitable iPhones.
- the office! This is from about a month before we moved downtown, so it's in a state of semi-disarray.
Things that are still current:
- the desk lamp (IKEA!)
- the desk (old!)
The life's work of Reverend Morris H. Coers, the Garden of Hope is located high on a hilltop in the Peaselburg neighborhood of Covington, Kentucky, overlooking the city and Interstate 71/75 below. Constructed between 1956 and 1958, the garden was based on a visit that Coers had made to Palestine in 1938, and was meant to give those in the region the ability to experience some of the sites that the reverend visited in the Levant. Following Coers's death in 1960, the garden fell into disarray and disrepair, with the attraction having never been as successful or popular as projected during his lifetime. Several nonprofits have come and gone over the years to look after the garden, but this has been inconsistent. However, the garden is still a charming locale to visit, and features mature landscaping, a replica of what Coers believed was christ's tomb, a small chapel modeled on old Spanish missions, and a carpenter shop based on one Coers visited in Palestine.
An apparent fire near the Armitage Brown Line CTA stop caused major disruption for northbound Red Line riders this evening.
triblocal.com/evanston/2012/05/29/extra-alarm-fire-shuts-...
Near North, Chicago, Illinois.
North & Clybourn CTA Red Line stop.
Tuesday, May 29, 2012.
2nd August
Last summer I went 5 weeks without going home, so I guess one day out of 4 and a half weeks isn't bad really.
That's my darling Benny curled up in the suitcase lid - I actually took this before I left for Menorca, which was July 18th, but this fits for August 2nd too.
We got home at 2.20am this morning, to find our house all in disarray. We've had new windows fitted while we were away, & new paint in some rooms.
My Mom threw an absolute fit when she saw the house. She wouldn't stop until almost 4am. I was so angry & upset. She was just yelling because nobody had tidied up after themselves. When I went into my room I found my window chime (which I'd pushed to the edge of the curtain rail so that it wasn't in their way) cut straight through. & I don't mean the string was cut through - they'd actually cut through part of my window chime & then left part of it hanging there along with the string. & then, all my prized teddies (these teddies had either been given to me the day I was born, or had been passed down the family from my great-grandma) had been thrown all over my floor & some of them were missing. I just wanted to cry & cry.
My brother couldn't find some of his things, but that's because he'd left all the windowers to move his stuff. I, on the other hand, had moved all of my furture, & teddies, & tables, & instruments, onto the other side of the room, well away from the windows. So there was no reason for why my things were missing. Also, a box with a gift in from my parents which I'd placed very carefully away - SHUT - had been opened & left in a different place.
& I couldn't even tell my Mom this or she'd have continued being upset. We found my brother's stuff after a while, & then we found some of my teddies, shoved under things mostly, but the one which has been passed down the family is still missing. I've checked under everything now, & on top of all the surfaces in my room, under my bed, the side of my bed . . . I can't find it anywhere. I'm still really upset.
I was up til 6am, when I finally got to sleep. I slept all wrapped up because the temperature change was so horrible. In the morning the internet had gone so I had to go up to school to use the internet - 3 groups of lets (out of 5) now have swine flu, so I was extra careful when touching hard surfaces.
In the evening I just packed a little, & then watched TV with my parents. At 1am I went to my room to finish packing & ironing my clothes. It would have been helpful if my Mom had helped with the ironing, but during her massive fit last night I offered to do it all by myself (just to make her happy) but there was so much of it! Between packing & ironing it took me til 3am to finish packing. My brother stayed with me, watching Dodgeball, until I'd finished, then he hugged me goodnight & said to wake him up before I left in the morning.
163/365
Rajnagar mill, Ahmedabad, Gujarat is an abandoned mill since years which was open for public few months ago.
Ahmedabad was once called the ‘Manchester of the East’ due to the large number of textile mills in the city. Sadly, however, the ‘Manchester of the East’ fell into decline as the years went by and by the 1980s not only were the mills shut down but also lakhs of people lost their jobs! The entire industry was in disarray even as no remedial action was taken.
Tombs are now laying on their sides, are open,
broken, or grave stones have been left in disarray.
Many tombs have been uprooted from their
given locations. This cemetery in particular was
in upheaval due to the mississippi river across the
street, the storm surge, flood waters from the broken
levee....etc. There were many reports of tombs, coffins,
and the dead all floating in the flood water.
Merrick Cemetery
St. Bernard Parish in Violet, LA
(next to Camp Hope)
Fingal was our last stop of the day. Dad and I had to have a chuckle at the name "Fingal" because it just sounds so silly. But it's a cute, quiet community with a lovely park and some neat old buildings!
This old place got my attention right away! I can only hope someone is fixing it up? Or wants to? I mean, you can't let this place go to waste! As always, I wished to see inside. But it was posted. Boo. From what I could see through the windows it was in a state of disarray. Through the windows you can see beautiful trim and even solid old doors. I think there is hope for this place yet! Dear whoever owns this house: may I please come see inside? I promise I won't sue you if I fall through the floor! I'm just insanely curious about old houses and history.
Read more here:
pictureprairieplaces.weebly.com/adventures/se-nd-day-trip...
I discovered this location while driving to the franco-cypriot school in Nicosia, Cyprus. These are governmental buildings next to the police academy. The complex is to be destroyed in the near future. I was interested in catching the effects of time on official government owned buildings.
The Ultraist Studios drawing board in an appealling state of disarray. Currently working on: SPY GUY #1, page 5.
#3 of 100 Acquaintances.
This is John or Big John as we sometimes call him. There was also a little stint as "hellboy" but that's a long story.
We are expanding the office and my favorite green wall got chopped down. You might remember the wall and clock from this photo. Anyway, most of my corner of the office is in disarray because even though we have clocks on our wrists, computers, desk phones, cell phones, and other various places; we all rely on the "the clock". It's easy to see and easy to read. I don't have to waste much energy looking at it. In fact, I've spent over a year looking at it various times throughout the day.
For most of yesterday it was on my desk. Then we discussed where to put it that would make us all happy. For some reason we just couldn't decid. At some point during the conversation I mentioned that I needed a big chain to wear it around my neck like Flava Flav.
Not too long after that I spot this, well as you can guess I scrambled to my bag as quickly as possible to catch the moment. Thus John ends up being Acquaintance #3.