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Illustrations on the front of the pages.

Active Cooling Towers of the Byron Nuclear Generating Station an Illinois Nuclear power Plant Cooling towers from inside the Radioactive Fallout Zone or Nuclear Plume Exposure Zone.

 

Byron Generating Station is a nuclear power plant located near Byron in northern Illinois, about 110 miles west of Chicago.

www.exeloncorp.com/powerplants/byron/Pages/profile.aspx

 

Photo taken by Michael Kappel on a Casual Sunday Drive threw Illinois in Early Winter

 

View the high resolution Image on my picture website

Pictures.MichaelKappel.com

 

Follow Me on Tumblr.com Photo Blog

PhotoBlog.MichaelKappel.com/

Generate London 2015, the conference for web designers, presented by net magazine and Creative Bloq.

 

17 and 18 September 2015 at the Grand Connaught Rooms in London.

 

www.generateconf.com

 

Dazhong Village, site of a new planned dam on the Yangse River. Farmers here would be moved if the Xiaonanhai dam were built, and the area would be flooded. The dam itself, while large, would generate only 10% of the electricity generated by the Three Gorges Dam further downstream. 30/06/2013, Chongqing, China.

Energy Rental supplies generating sets for hire since 1985, providing a service with the highest standards of quality available on the market. The numbers tell the whole story: thousands of live events produced, the most important sporting events in Europe, including football, Formula 1 and Moto GP. The Turin Winter Olympics. And support has been provided to film and TV production studios for live broadcasts of the most important entertainment events.

From Italy to Turkmenistan, from Paris to Moscow. No place is too far away. Every day our clients choose us for our reliability, the high technology of our generating sets and our highly experienced team.

West German postcard by Kolibri Verlag G.m.b.H, Minden-Westf., no. 2275. Photo: Keystone.

 

Blonde and Curvey Diana Dors (1931-1984) was called ‘The English Marilyn Monroe’, to her disgust. In her own words: “I was the first home-grown sex symbol, rather like Britain's naughty seaside postcards." When Marilyn Monroe's first film was shown here [The Asphalt Jungle (1950)], a columnist wrote, 'How much like our Diana Dors she is'."

 

Diana Dors was born Diana Mary Fluck in Swindon, England, in 1931. Her father, Peter Fluck, was a railroad employee. Her mother, Mary Fluck, had almost died from the traumatic birth of her daughter. Because of this trauma, she lavished on Diana everything she had dreamed of: clothes, dance lessons, visits to the cinema. The actresses on the screen caught Diana's attention and she later said that she wanted to be an actress from the age of three. Physically, Diana grew up fast and she looked and acted much older than she was. 'The Siren of Swindon' began her career on stage when she was only 13. The youngest of her class, she trained at the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Arts (LAMDA) in London. At the age of 15, she appeared in her first film, The Shop at Sly Corner (George King, 1947) starring Oskar Homolka. The J. Arthur Rank Organisation offered her a contract and she played several ‘sexy girl in background’ roles in their films. The best of these parts was Charlotte in Oliver Twist (David Lean, 1948) starring Alec Guinness. She made several more films in the late 1940s, including substantial roles in the comedy Here Come The Huggetts (Ken Annakin, 1948), and the 'bad girl' opposite Honor Blackman's more virtuous roles in the cycling comedy A Boy, a Girl and a Bike (Ralph Smart, 1949) and Diamond City (David MacDonald, 1949), a lively British 'Western' set in South Africa's diamond fields. Her appeal stemmed from a combination of glamour and humour, coupled with a lack of vanity. A good example of her early appeal comes in Lady Godiva Rides Again (Frank Launder, 1951) with Dennis Price. It was a light-hearted romp that made fun of the beauty queen business. The American Board of Film Censors banned the film because Diana was showing her navel. However, she's friendly and surprisingly non-threatening in the film, more interested in having fun than in winning. Both critics and the public loved her as a sexy siren.

 

Diana Dors was one of the first celebrities to court the British press. Her first husband and manager Dennis Hamilton believed any publicity could only benefit the ambitious starlet. One stunt was to set up the company Diana Dors Ltd and another was the announcement of Diana as the youngest Rolls Royce owner at 20 (however, she could not drive). Dors got a 'decent' role in the 'women in prison' drama The Weak and the Wicked (J. Lee Thompson, 1954) opposite Glynis Johns and people started to believe she could act and look decorative. She confirmed her talent with a good role in the fantasy A Kid for Two Farthings (Carol Reed, 1955) with Celia Johnson, and her part as a murderess in Yield to the Night (J. Lee Thompson, 1956), loosely based on the true life story of Ruth Ellis, the last woman executed in Britain for murder. Casting off her sex symbol image, Diana portrayed Mary Hilton whose story is told entirely in flashbacks, as she awaits her final sentencing or possible reprieve, and attempts to tie up the loose ends in her life involving her mother, brother, and husband. Michael Brooke writes at BFI Screenonline: "Eyebrows were raised at Dors being offered such a challenging dramatic role, given that her blonde bombshell image at the time was almost exclusively associated with comedy, but she rose to the occasion, managing to evoke considerable sympathy for her condemned but essentially unsympathetic character." Hollywood snapped Dors up but put her in two unsuitable vehicles, the crime thriller The Unholy Wife (John Farrow, 1957) with Rod Steiger, and the comedy I Married a Woman (Hal Kanter, 1958). A very public brawl between her and her husband, Dennis Hamilton, finished her Hollywood career. Diana was pushed fully clothed into her swimming pool at a pool party full of Hollywood A-list celebrities. Hamilton then proceeded to punch the photographer thought to have pushed her into unconsciousness. The celebrities fled and the headlines the following day were 'Ms Dors go home and take Mr Dors with you!'. Her three-movie deal with RKO ended after they cancelled the contract on a moral clause.

 

Diana Dors returned to Britain but never quite attained the level of her pre-Hollywood period. During the 1960s Dors never stopped working but her roles got smaller and the films worse. In the campy horror film Beserk! (Jim O'Connolly, 1967), she played a performer in a cheesy carnival who ends up cut in half by a power saw. The film starred 63-year-old Joan Crawford who played the outrageous owner and ringmaster of a travelling circus, who'll stop at nothing to draw bigger audiences... Dors was often seen on TV both in the US and the UK. She began to pile on the pounds and rapidly went from blowsy to fat. A weighty role was as the ex-wife of Peter Sellers in There's a Girl in My Soup (Roy Boulting, 1970). Her appearance in The Amazing Mr Blunden (Lionel Jeffries, 1972) got a lot of publicity as she played a slatternly Victorian housekeeper in her sixties. Her major television breakthrough came in 1970 when she starred as a brassy matriarch in Keith Waterhouse and Willis Hall's popular ITV sitcom Queenie's Castle (1970-1972). Despite these successes, she continued to accept any role and took small roles in several British sex comedies, such as Adventures of a Taxi Driver (Stanley Long, 1976). Diana Dors died in 1984 from a recurrence of ovarian cancer, first diagnosed two years earlier. She was 52 years old. For over thirty years, she had lived in the headlines, and now she was missed. She had three sons, Mark and Gary Dawson from her second marriage to comedian/TV emcee Richard Dawson, and Jason Lake from her third marriage to actor Alan Lake. Alan Lake committed suicide not long after her death, which generated even more headlines. Her final film, the Nell Dunn adaptation Steaming (Joseph Losey, 1985) starring Vanessa Redgrave, was released a year later. During her career of nearly four decades, the British public loved Diana Dors, and her life, professional and personal, was followed in a whole new way. The media made her life accessible to the British public: she was down to earth, made mistakes, and had a vulnerability about her. The public followed her ups and downs through the many daily newspapers and magazine articles. With 'The Three M's' from Hollywood: Jayne Mansfield, Mamie Van Doren and Marilyn Monroe, DD has left her mark on popular culture by popularising the 1950s blonde bombshell look. David Absalom at British Pictures writes: "She's been a National Joke and a National Disgrace in her time, but when she died we realised we'd lost a National Treasure."

 

Sources: Michael Brooke (BFI Screenonline), David Absalom (British Pictures), Hal Erickson (AllMovie), Denny Jackson (IMDb), DianaDors.com, Wikipedia, and IMDb.

 

And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.

Generate London 2015, the conference for web designers, presented by net magazine and Creative Bloq.

 

17 and 18 September 2015 at the Grand Connaught Rooms in London.

 

www.generateconf.com

 

Navajo Generating Station is a coal-fired powerplant with a power of 2280 megawatts located on the Navajo Indian Reservation, near Page, Arizona, USA. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Navajo_Generating_Station

  

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Rolduc is the name of a medieval abbey in Kerkrade, the Netherlands, which is now a Roman Catholic seminary and an affiliated conferencing center.

 

The 12th century abbey church is an example of Mosan art. The crypt and the choir and chancel above have a cloverleaf pattern. The interior of both the church and the crypt contains richly carved capitals. Remarkable is the fact that the columns in the crypt all have a different design. In 1853, the young architect Pierre Cuypers was commissioned to restore the crypt and to reinstate as much as possible the original Romanesque fabric.

 

The cloisters are largely 18th century. The abbey has a richly decorated Rococo library with an important collection of books. During the Middle Ages, the Rolduc library was one of the most famous libraries in the Meuse region. The history of the abbey was recorded in the so-called Annales Rodenses, a chronicle about the years between 1104-1157.

 

History

 

In 1104, a young priest by the name of Ailbertus of Antoing founded an Augustinian abbey in the Land of Rode, near the river Wurm. The abbey was called Kloosterrade, which later became 's-Hertogenrade (in French: Rode-le-Duc or Rolduc), after the ducal castle that was built across the Wurm. Ailbertus died in 1111 and his bones were later interred in the crypt. In 1136 the land of Rode, including the abbey, fell into the hands of the Duchy of Limburg. Kloosterrade was considered to be their family church. Several dukes of Limburg are buried at Rolduc, such as Walram III, whose cenotaph can be found in the nave of the church. During the 12th century and 13th century the abbey flourished. Several other communities were founded by Kloosterrade. In 1250 the abbey owned more than 3,000 hectares of land.

 

During the 14th, 15th and 16th centuries times were harder for the abbey in both spiritual and material terms. The buildings were heavily damaged during the Eighty Years War. Materialistically, the abbey began to prosper again in the late 17th century when revenue was generated from the exploitation of coal mines. In around 1775, Rolduc employed 350 mineworkers.

 

The abbey was dissolved by the French in 1796 and the buildings stood empty for 35 years. In 1815, when the Kingdom of the Netherlands was formed (see Vienna Congress), the border was drawn through the ancient land of Rode, separating the abbey from the castle. The eastern part (including the castle) became Prussian Herzogenrath and the western part (including the abbey) became part of the Dutch municipality of Kerkrade.

 

In the 19th century Rolduc became a famous boarding school run by Jesuits, and a seminary of the Diocese of Roermond.

 

The former abbey is now a secondary school (Charlemagne College, formerly College Rolduc), a Roman Catholic seminary, and the Rolduc Congress Center.

 

Rolduc

  

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Disclaimer – All backgrounds in the photos in this post are generated by the Photoroom AI Background Change app

 

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A series of AI-generated pictures of "Snake Lady" in different art styles.

To be continued.

Pictures made with Midjourney.

 

I'm always happy to accept invites to groups as long as I can see their content. Should I see "this group is not available to you", my photos won't be made available to that group. Thanks for your understanding.

Fractal image generated using Apophysis

An AI generated film from still photograph showing the hardship of Salford life in 1974

Generate London 2015, the conference for web designers, presented by net magazine and Creative Bloq.

 

17 and 18 September 2015 at the Grand Connaught Rooms in London.

 

www.generateconf.com

 

Generate London 2015, the conference for web designers, presented by net magazine and Creative Bloq.

 

17 and 18 September 2015 at the Grand Connaught Rooms in London.

 

www.generateconf.com

 

computer generated fractals

Hoover Dam

Holga 120N

Kodak TMAX 100

XTOL (10 min)

www.jimshootsfilm.com

Limerick Generating Station along Schuykill River, Pottstown, PA

 

From United Airlines flight 933 from FRA to IAD

Generate London 2015, the conference for web designers, presented by net magazine and Creative Bloq.

 

17 and 18 September 2015 at the Grand Connaught Rooms in London.

 

www.generateconf.com

 

Generate London 2015, the conference for web designers, presented by net magazine and Creative Bloq.

 

17 and 18 September 2015 at the Grand Connaught Rooms in London.

 

www.generateconf.com

 

Created using an ai generated art program. I'm finally learning to better "Direct" this ai generation program to get the results I've been wanting. These are my latest creations...

Generated 2023-10-27

Edited 2025-02-02

I enjoy every comment, fav, and invite.

Only polite & tasteful comments please!

 

Generate London 2015, the conference for web designers, presented by net magazine and Creative Bloq.

 

17 and 18 September 2015 at the Grand Connaught Rooms in London.

 

www.generateconf.com

 

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