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This is a digital photograph of developed film. #feedpumas

Genevieve...on bed...on head. Accidental multiple exposure taken in Cork and Ethiopia

My newly purchased coffee mugs.

Pittsburgh storm a-brewin'.

 

I didn't adjust the colors in this photo at all; only the levels. The sky really was that dark, and the sun really was shining that brightly. Bizarro Pittsburgh!

 

Taken from my office window.

Aberdeen.

The sprockets at the end of the film tore, so the last few frames overlapped. The ovoid feature is from the original photo layer.

Multiple legume planter mounted on a tractor. (file name: ISS_501)

Since beginning classes in August, 80 first year medical students at the Hofstra North Shore-LIJ School of Medicine have been training as emergency medical technicians, working shifts on North Shore-LIJ ambulances and responding to 911 calls. Their training culminated recently in a Multiple Casualty Incident (MCI) conducted at the FDNY Training Center at Randall’s Island. Students were expected to provide emergency care during several different emergency exercises, which were all followed by full debriefing.

 

The MCI day was coordinated by the Fire Department of the City of New York at the department’s Training Academy on Randall’s Island, where more than 2,000 fire fighters and EMS personnel are trained each year.

 

Get more info at medicine.hofstra.edu/about/news/pressreleases/10072013_ra...

Multiple Exposure

 

Multiple Exposure

day thirty five

 

i decided to get quite a bit cut off, a lot ended up on the floor! but in the end, very happy with my new 'bob' cut....

 

Strictly no copying or use of picture without prior consent.

© All rights reserved

Atmosphere==

Multiple Myeloma Research Foundation Laugh for Life==

Pier 60, NYC==

May 2, 2017==

©Patrick McMullan==

Photo - Sylvain Gaboury/PMC==

==

my 2 year old daughter posing in the backyard...

More than 150 wilderness rangers, new and seasoned veterans, from multiple agencies, gathered at the Tallac Historic Site in South Lake Tahoe, June 5-9, to be part of the 2017 Interagency Wilderness Ranger Academy, hosted by the U.S. Forest Service, Bureau of Land Management and Society for Wilderness Stewardship. First year employees received classes on an overview of the Wilderness, cultural geography, ranger safety and public contacts, backpacking and ranger skills, personal risk management and self-care, black bears and archeology. Seasoned and returning rangers received refresher classes on emerging issues and management challenges, wilderness stewardship performance, working with the fire organization, reaching visitors before thet get to the trailhead and career navigation. Later in the week everyone had a chance to sign up for various hands-on instruction in a skill that interested them. Groups met in locations around the lake to work with experts in the field of wilderness first aid, Leave No Trace, stock orientation, crosscut saw and backcountry navigation using a map,compass and GPS. (USDA photo by Les Thomas)

fun to find my image today :)

Kodak 35mm 400 Pentax K1000, SMC Pentax FA 320mm Zoom lens

Arista C-41 color process ©2013auxiliofaux

Southeastern's class 465 Networker Electric Multiple Unit (EMU) number 465164 comprised of coaches 65813, 72926, 72927 and 65860 built by ABB at York Carriageworks (previously BREL) between 1993 and 1994 works 2D38 from Orpington to London Victoria via Herne Hill on 1 April 2015.

 

According to Realtime Trains the route and timings were;

Orpington [ORP] 5............0925.........................0925 1/4....................RT

Petts Wood Junction.......0929.........................0929 1/2....................RT

Bickley Junction[XLY]......0930 1/2...................0930...........................RT

Bromley South [BMS] 1....0934/0935 1/2........0935/0935 3/4........RT

Shortlands [SRT]...............0937 1/2/0938........0937 1/2/0938 1/4...RT

Shortlands Junction.........0939.........................0939 1/2....................RT

Beckenham Junction 2...0940 1/2/0941 1/2..0940 1/2/0941..........RT

Kent House [KTH] 2.........0943 1/2/0944........0942 3/4/0943 1/4..RT

Sydenham Hill [SYH]........0948 1/2/0949.......0947/0948.................1E

Herne Hill [HNH] 2............0954/0954 1/2.......0952 1/4/0953 1/2...RT

Brixton [BRX]......................0956/0956 1/2.......0955 1/4/0956.........RT

Voltaire Road Junction....0958 1/2...................0957 1/2.....................RT

London Victoria [VIC] 7...1003..........................1004 1/2......................1L

 

Since beginning classes in August, 80 first year medical students at the Hofstra North Shore-LIJ School of Medicine have been training as emergency medical technicians, working shifts on North Shore-LIJ ambulances and responding to 911 calls. Their training culminated recently in a Multiple Casualty Incident (MCI) conducted at the FDNY Training Center at Randall’s Island. Students were expected to provide emergency care during several different emergency exercises, which were all followed by full debriefing.

 

The MCI day was coordinated by the Fire Department of the City of New York at the department’s Training Academy on Randall’s Island, where more than 2,000 fire fighters and EMS personnel are trained each year.

 

Get more info at medicine.hofstra.edu/about/news/pressreleases/10072013_ra...

Virgin Trains Class 221 'Super Voyager' diesel multiple unit 221 113 'Sir Walter Raleigh' is pictured at Lancaster whilst working 9S65 11:43 London Euston - Glasgow Central via Birmingham New Street on March 21st, 2019.

FEATURES :

 

- xml driven

- support multiple categories

- support video streaming with buffer

- full screen video mode support

- scrollbar support

- multiple categories/playlists and unlimited amount of videos can be displayed

- on fullscreen mode, bar will auto hide after 5 seconds

- support html and css formated text via xml file

- all content can be changed via a single xml file such as { video url, thumbs url, title and description text }

- supports FLV, MOV, F4V,and H.264 MP4 video (with latest Flash Player 9 installed)

- settings for video gallery in xml file includes{ playFirstVideo, autoPlayNext, defaultVolume}

- easy to use and configure

- centralized coding

- code is fully commented

- help file is included with instruction to use

 

Live demo: www.flashcomponents.net/component/video-gallery-with-mult...

I played around with in-camera multiple exposures again... It's kind of cool... until you notice that Vito's chest on the left is totally see through and you are actually looking at beach, not white fur. LOL

www.kimbersoft.com/

Analysis And Statistics: Who Has Multiple Sclerosis (MS)?

 

The majority experience their 1st signs in between the grows older of 20 and 40. Caucasians have long been actually strongly believed to be more than two times as probably as various other races to cultivate Multiple Sclerosis (MS). But the underrepresentation of cultural as well as ethnological minorities in professional tests calls this opinion into question. Encephalomyelitis Disseminata is actually 2 to 3 opportunities extra usual in females as in men. People whose close relatives have Multiple Sclerosis are a lot more susceptible to cultivating the ailment, but there is no evidence the disease is straight received.

Grazing on Kanab Escalante Planning Area (KEPA) by Harry Barber

For FF: Fictional characters

 

Dr. Jeckyll and Mr. Hyde

 

We can be the best and or be the persons we hate. There's good and evil in everyone, but then, what is good and evil? Are we born good or are we born evil?

 

Note: Chesca is a wonderful person, but she can also be a bitch at times. I just know that behind the bitchiness, she's a good person. And I hope she knows that. And please agree with me that she looks better when she smiles, and she isn't friggin fat!

 

Model: Chesca

The Postcard

 

A postcard that was posted in Brighton on the 1st. August 1971 to:

 

Mr. E.J.C. Harvey & Staff,

Social Services Department,

41, Elm Street,

Ipswich.

 

The message on the back of the card was as follows:

 

"Enjoying the sunshine and

rain!!

At present we are at Devils

Dyke - lovely scenery.

Time is passing far too

quickly now.

This is the life for me -

whoever invented work!!!

See you soon,

D.H."

 

'An Arundel Tomb'

 

'An Arundel Tomb' is a poem by Philip Larkin, written and published in 1956, and subsequently included in his 1964 collection The Whitsun Weddings. It describes the poet's response to seeing a pair of recumbent medieval tomb effigies with their hands joined in Chichester Cathedral.

 

It is described by James Booth as "one of Larkin's greatest poems".

 

The Tomb

 

The tomb monument in Chichester Cathedral is now widely identified as that of Richard FitzAlan, 10th. Earl of Arundel (d. 1376) and his second wife, Eleanor of Lancaster (d. 1372).

 

The couple were buried in the chapter house of Lewes Priory, and their monument was probably fashioned by the master mason Henry Yevele: documentary evidence relates to the shipping of two "marble" tombs in January 1375 from Poole Harbour to London at Yevele's behest.

 

Having first been erected at Lewes Priory, the effigies were probably moved to Chichester following the priory's dissolution in 1537. The earliest certain record of their presence in the cathedral dates from 1635.

 

The male figure wears armour, and bears a lion rampant (the arms of the FitzAlan family) on his coat armour, and a lion's head couped as a crest on the helm beneath his head.

 

The female figure wears a veil, wimple, long gown and a mantle, all characteristic of the 14th. century; while beneath the gown, her legs are crossed.

 

In a feature common to many English tombs of this period, the knight has a lion at his feet, while the lady has a dog: the lion indicates valour and nobility, the dog loyalty. He has his right hand ungloved, and her right hand rests on his.

 

By the 19th. century, the Arundel effigies had become badly mutilated, and also separated from one another, being placed against the north wall of the northern outer aisle of the Cathedral, with the woman at the feet of the man.

 

In 1843 Edward Richardson (1812–1869) was commissioned to restore them. It was Richardson who was responsible not only for reuniting them side by side, but also for carving the present joined hands, the originals having been lost.

 

His research was conscientious, and the evidence would suggest that his restoration was reasonably faithful to the original pose. Nevertheless, it was Richardson who was responsible for the precise form of the hands.

 

An additional detail that may have been Richardson's own choice was to depict the knight's empty right-hand gauntlet held in his left hand.

 

The monument is not inscribed, and it is likely that Larkin's reference to "the Latin names around the base" was inspired by a card label placed by the cathedral authorities – which probably, in accordance with the thinking of the time, misidentified the couple as Richard FitzAlan, 11th. Earl of Arundel (d. 1397) and his countess.

 

Although many modern observers have – like Larkin – read the linking of hands as a sign of romantic love and affection, it seems more likely that the gesture's primary meaning was to signify the formal, legal, and sacramental bonds of matrimony.

 

The Poem

 

Larkin visited Chichester Cathedral with his lover Monica Jones in January 1956. He later claimed to have been very moved by the monument; while in an audio recording of the poem, he stated that the effigies were unlike any he had ever seen before, and that he had found them "extremely affecting".

 

The poem was completed on the 20th. February, and first published in the May 1956 issue of the London Magazine.

 

Larkin draws inspiration from the figures to muse on time, mortality, fidelity, and the nature of earthly love. In a letter to Monica written while the poem was still in progress, he identified his chief idea as that of:

 

"The two effigies lasting so long, and

in the end being remarkable only for

something they hadn't perhaps meant

very seriously".

 

Andrew Motion describes Larkin as:

 

"Using the detail of the hands as the

focus for one of his most moving

evocations of the struggle between

time and human tenderness".

 

The poem is as follows:

 

'Side by side, their faces blurred,

The earl and countess lie in stone,

Their proper habits vaguely shown

As jointed armour, stiffened pleat,

And that faint hint of the absurd—

The little dogs under their feet.

 

Such plainness of the pre-baroque

Hardly involves the eye, until

It meets his left-hand gauntlet, still

Clasped empty in the other; and

One sees, with a sharp tender shock,

His hand withdrawn, holding her hand.

 

They would not think to lie so long.

Such faithfulness in effigy

Was just a detail friends would see:

A sculptor’s sweet commissioned grace

Thrown off in helping to prolong

The Latin names around the base.

 

They would not guess how early in

Their supine stationary voyage

The air would change to soundless damage,

Turn the old tenantry away;

How soon succeeding eyes begin

To look, not read. Rigidly they

 

Persisted, linked, through lengths and breadths

Of time. Snow fell, undated. Light

Each summer thronged the glass. A bright

Litter of birdcalls strewed the same

Bone-riddled ground. And up the paths

The endless altered people came,

 

Washing at their identity.

Now, helpless in the hollow of

An unarmorial age, a trough

Of smoke in slow suspended skeins

Above their scrap of history,

Only an attitude remains:

 

Time has transfigured them into

Untruth. The stone fidelity

They hardly meant has come to be

Their final blazon, and to prove

Our almost-instinct almost true:

What will survive of us is love.'

 

The final line is among the most quoted of all of Larkin's work. When read out of context, it may be understood as a sentimental endorsement of love enduring beyond the grave.

 

However, the poem as a whole is rather more nuanced, and challenges a simple romantic interpretation, even if in the end it is conceded to have:

 

"An inevitable ring of truth – if only

because we want so much to hear it".

 

James Booth describes it as possessing:

 

"A mix of stark pessimism

and yearning despair".

 

Larkin himself wrote at the end of the manuscript draft of the poem:

 

"Love isn't stronger than death just

because statues hold hands for six

hundred years."

 

However he later commented in an interview:

 

"I think what survives of us is love, whether in

the simple biological sense or just in terms of

responding to life, making it happier, even if it's

only making a joke."

 

Larkin wrote in a letter to Monica Jones, shortly after the poem's first publication, that he found it "embarrassingly bad!", because it was trying to be too clever.

 

In another letter to Robert Conquest he described it as "a bit timey" (i.e. with too much emphasis on time).

 

Larkin later reiterated that he never really liked the poem, partly because it was unduly romantic, and partly for other reasons:

 

"Technically it's a bit muddy in the

middle – the fourth and fifth stanzas

seem trudging somehow, with awful

rhymes like voyage/damage.

Everything went wrong with that poem:

I got the hands wrong – it's right-hand

gauntlet really – and anyway the hands

were a nineteenth-century addition, not

pre-Baroque at all."

 

Larkin was disappointed to learn that the hand-joining gesture was not as unusual as he had thought:

 

"A schoolmaster sent me a number of

illustrations of other tombs having the

same feature, so clearly it is in no way

unique."

 

Legacy

 

The poem was one of three read at Larkin's memorial service in Westminster Abbey in February 1986. Its two final lines are also inscribed on the memorial stone to Larkin unveiled in December 2016 in Poets' Corner in the Abbey.

 

Concert for Bangladesh

 

So what else happened on the day that the card was posted?

 

Well, on the 1st. of August 1971, In New York City, 40,000 people attended the Concert for Bangladesh.

 

Jackie Stewart

 

Also on that day, the German Grand Prix at the Nürburgring was won by Jackie Stewart.

Atmosphere==

Multiple Myeloma Research Foundation Laugh for Life==

Pier 60, NYC==

May 2, 2017==

©Patrick McMullan==

Photo - Sylvain Gaboury/PMC==

==

Since beginning classes in August, 80 first year medical students at the Hofstra North Shore-LIJ School of Medicine have been training as emergency medical technicians, working shifts on North Shore-LIJ ambulances and responding to 911 calls. Their training culminated recently in a Multiple Casualty Incident (MCI) conducted at the FDNY Training Center at Randall’s Island. Students were expected to provide emergency care during several different emergency exercises, which were all followed by full debriefing.

 

The MCI day was coordinated by the Fire Department of the City of New York at the department’s Training Academy on Randall’s Island, where more than 2,000 fire fighters and EMS personnel are trained each year.

 

Get more info at medicine.hofstra.edu/about/news/pressreleases/10072013_ra...

Each of the strollers in this photo holds four children... unfortunately, I didn't have my camera ready until they were far down the sidewalk.

Multiple Exposure Images captured from Stevenston beach in Ayrshire

January 3, 2010.

Shot with Olympus Pen EE-S on Fujichrome Provia 100 slide film, expired April, 2001. Crossdeveloped in Tetenal Colortec C-41 for 4 minutes, 5 minutes bleach fix, 3 minutes water rinse, 1 minute stabilizer (depleted solution). – View large.

They say opportunity knocks many times on the same door; its jus that depending on your choices that door may be at a different place in time each time...

Atmosphere==

Multiple Myeloma Research Foundation Laugh for Life==

Pier 60, NYC==

May 2, 2017==

©Patrick McMullan==

Photo - Sylvain Gaboury/PMC==

==

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