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This is just a fraction of the stuff that I have, but it's all I have out on display in the house. I have been looking at lots of furniture and office supply stores trying to find just the right cabinet to display my SW stuff in and finally bought this one online a few months ago. The brand name for this cabinet is Tennesco and it is sold on many different office supply websites www.filingsupplies.com/TNN352GLBK-Tennsco-Executive-Metal... It's 52 inches tall, 36 inches wide and 15 inches deep.
Eventually, I'd like to have a few cabinets like this and put all my SW displays and dioramas in chronological order. Right now I just have my favorite dioramas on display. It feels really great to have this stuff out on display without worrying about dust all the time and it's funny to see everyone's reaction when I have people over .
I'm very happy with this cabinet, but it was pretty expensive and the shipping was a real bite in the ass. I was looking for something that was black with adjustable shelves that wasn't mirror backed and had glass doors without frames. If you see any Stereo Cabinet or bookshelves that are similar to this, Please post a link and I would be eternally grateful! Thanks for looking!
Stars, crosses and fractions are abundant in this part of Lapinlahti cemetery.
Wed 27/07/2005 19:07 Helsinki, Finland
exploring only a fraction of this temple fortress can take up to 2 hours, which is well worth the effort, however, as the courtyards within the courtyards reveal even more treasures of artwork with their exquisite carvings depicting saints. they all have in common that they are on the outside walls, with the more divine sculptures lining the inner walls in concentric circles from a central lotus blossom (another link to buddhism there)
Changing fractions from mixed numbers to improper fractions can be challenging to some pupils. Here is a set of flashcards to print, laminate and play as a classroom game. Download for FREE at:
www.tes.co.uk/teaching-resource/Ks2-Mixed-Numbers-to-Impr...
The class assignment was to photograph a Fraction of the Whole and then the Whole. Here's the fraction.
Simplify Fractions Calculator Fractions can be defined as Numbers which are written in form a / b, where 'a' is numerator and 'b' is denominator. Example of fraction is 2 / 5 where 2 is numerator of fraction and 5 is numerator of fraction. Fractions can be simplified or reduced by dividing both numerator and denominator by HCF. This reduced form is also called lowest form of fraction.
In some fraction of proton collisions, two highly energetic quarks (or gluons) are among the outgoing particles. Each quark or gluon quickly evolves into a cluster of particles called a "jet." An event with two jets is called a dijet event. Most are background (from old, known physics), but they are rich in possibilities for new physics: any number of different new heavy particles might decay leading to a dijet event. Thus ATLAS is looking at dijet signals at very high energies, into thousands of GeV, for "bumps" in the mass plots, which could indicate new, exotic particles. So far, nothing new...but the search is just beginning. Learn more.
Credit: ATLAS Experiment © 2011 CERN
Just a fraction of the ephemera (junk?) I collected over twelve years engaged on implementation of UK arms control policy.
Top Row L-R:
Slovenian Army; Italian Arms Control Agency; Azerbaijan National Flag; Azerbaijan Arms Control Agency.
Middle Row L-R:
Hungarian Arms Control Agency; NATO School Oberammergau; Serbian Army.
Bottom Row L-R:
Czech Arms Control Agency; Dutch Arms Control Agency; Croatian Arms Control Agency; Spanish Arms Control Agency.
I have much, much more ephemera from my time as an arms control inspector-interpreter!
A fraction of the people who honored me by attending the open house that my wife, Leona (world's greatest photographer's assistant, BTW) arranged. My birthday was on May 28.
Lighting: Profoto A1X on camera with Soft Bounce.
This time other fraction, Wolfpack. This is one of my favourite nation of Lego Castle. Maybe that gatehouse will be a part of something bigger :) I want to build big fortress based on modular elements, which could be useable in other models. But I’m not sure that my computer has enough power, we will see ;)
If you like my projects, please support my Lego Ideas sets:
ideas.lego.com/projects/416d8d9e-eb83-4b52-b5c0-1601f3295aa8
and
ideas.lego.com/projects/f202a55e-19bc-4b60-bcf7-4ea862bd2e06
This time other fraction, Wolfpack. This is one of my favourite nation of Lego Castle. Maybe that gatehouse will be a part of something bigger :) I want to build big fortress based on modular elements, which could be useable in other models. But I’m not sure that my computer has enough power, we will see ;)
If you like my projects, please support my Lego Ideas sets:
ideas.lego.com/projects/416d8d9e-eb83-4b52-b5c0-1601f3295aa8
and
ideas.lego.com/projects/f202a55e-19bc-4b60-bcf7-4ea862bd2e06
This is just a fraction of the stuff that I have, but it's all I have out on display in the house. I have been looking at lots of furniture and office supply stores trying to find just the right cabinet to display my SW stuff in and finally bought this one online a few months ago. The brand name for this cabinet is Tennesco and it is sold on many different office supply websites www.filingsupplies.com/TNN352GLBK-Tennsco-Executive-Metal... It's 52 inches tall, 36 inches wide and 15 inches deep.
Eventually, I'd like to have a few cabinets like this and put all my SW displays and dioramas in chronological order. Right now I just have my favorite dioramas on display. It feels really great to have this stuff out on display without worrying about dust all the time and it's funny to see everyone's reaction when I have people over .
I'm very happy with this cabinet, but it was pretty expensive and the shipping was a real bite in the ass. I was looking for something that was black with adjustable shelves that wasn't mirror backed and had glass doors without frames. If you see any Stereo Cabinet or bookshelves that are similar to this, Please post a link and I would be eternally grateful! Thanks for looking!
@ Madonna in den Trümmern, Köln
Funeral Monologue from Synecdoche, New York.
I love it.
"Everything is more complicated than you think. You only see a tenth of what is true. There are a million little strings attached to every choice you make; you can destroy your life every time you choose. But maybe you won't know for twenty years. And you may never ever trace it to its source. And you only get one chance to play it out. Just try and figure out your own divorce. And they say there is no fate, but there is: it's what you create. And even though the world goes on for eons and eons, you are only here for a fraction of a fraction of a second. Most of your time is spent being dead or not yet born. But while alive, you wait in vain, wasting years, for a phone call or a letter or a look from someone or something to make it all right. And it never comes or it seems to but it doesn't really. And so you spend your time in vague regret or vaguer hope that something good will come along. Something to make you feel connected, something to make you feel whole, something to make you feel loved. And the truth is I feel so angry, and the truth is I feel so fucking sad, and the truth is I've felt so fucking hurt for so fucking long and for just as long I've been pretending I'm OK, just to get along, just for, I don't know why, maybe because no one wants to hear about my misery, because they have their own. Well, fuck everybody. Amen. "
Corniglia is a frazione ("fraction") of the commune of Vernazza in the province of La Spezia, Liguria, northern Italy. Unlike the other localities of the Cinque Terre, Corniglia is not directly adjacent to the sea. Instead, it is on the top of a promontory about 100 metres high, surrounded on three sides by vineyards and terraces and the fourth side descends steeply to the sea. To reach Corniglia, it is necessary to climb the Lardarina, a long brick flight of steps composed of 33 flights with 382 steps or, otherwise follow a vehicular road that, from the station, leads to the village. Sometimes a small bus runs up and down here.
The village stretches along the main road, Fieschi Road, and the houses have one side facing this road and the other facing the sea. Corniglia is characterised by narrow roads and a terrace obtained in the rock from which all other four Cinque Terre's villages, two on one side and two on the other, can be seen. The town planning structure presents also original characteristics compared to those of the other villages: the houses are lower set, and only more recently higher, similar to those of the villages of the hinterland.
Corniglia is mentioned in a famous novella of Giovanni Boccaccio's Decameron and in the novel The Invisible Circus by Jennifer Egan.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
These are screenshots of the Goalfinder's animation on math on the site, the animations cover the concept using real life examples