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by Alfredo Fernandes
Alfi Art Production, Divar
41st Tiatr Competition A group of Kala Academy supported by TAG
13.10.2015
more here
joegoauk-tiatr.blogspot.in/2015/10/41st-tiatr-competition...
Diptesh Harmalkar
The good news is that this park now appears to be safe to visit and the decision to have it open twenty four hours a day must have solved the anti-social problems that had resulted in it being closed to the public for extended periods of time.
[WHAT I SAID BACK IN NOVEMBER 2016]
There are two separate parks which may be related but in general most tourist guides are unaware of this fact to the extent that some claim that Anna Livia is located in the park beside the the Museum Luas Tram Stop.
The major park, the one normally associated with the museum, is officially the Croppies Acre 1798 Memorial Park while the smaller park featuring Anna Livia and a small pond is the Croppies Memorial Park. The distinction is important because the larger park has been closed to the public for extended periods.
For many years due to anti-social behaviour, mainly drugs related, the major memorial park was off-limits to the public. There was also problems with homeless people occupying parts of the park. Even today, there was a tent towards one corner of the park. One cannot blame the homeless for taking advantage of the available space.
On Tuesday, 14th June at 2:00 p.m. the Croppies Acre 1798 Memorial Park, Wolfe Tone Quay, Dublin 7 was once again open to the public but I did not get a chance to visit until today [November 7 2016]. Having been conditioned to the park being always closed I found the fact that the gates were partly opened a little bit unsettling and as I was the only person [if one ignores the tent and one person who left immediately I arrived] in the park I was a bit worried that an official might come along and lock the gates without informing me. This has happened to me in the past elsewhere.
Following discussions in 2013 with the Office of Public Works it was agreed that the management of the 4.3 acre Park would transfer from the Office of Public Works to Dublin City Council.
Dublin City Council’s Parks and Landscape Services have carried out an extensive works programme to upgrade the park and make it more accessible for the citizens of Dublin and visitors to the city.
The works include a new circulatory path system, upgrading of the existing pedestrian gates and the provision of a new pedestrian gate at the south west end of the park. Existing memorial structures have been upgraded and general landscape improvement works have been carried out. The total cost of the works, were in the order of €120,000.
To be fair the park was in excellent condition when I visited today but the presence of a tent was a bit worrying as was the careless attitude to properly opening the gates.
The name ‘Croppy’ was used in Ireland in the 1790s and was a reference to the rebels who closely cropped their hair to mimic the French Revolutionaries of the period who cut their hair in contrast to the aristocracy who wore powdered wigs.
Historically the Croppies Acre was located on land under common pasturage and part of what was termed ‘Oxmantown Green’.
In the 17th century, a portion was later presented to the Viceroy, the Duke of Ormond to build a palace, however this was never built and the site was sold to the City Authorities for a Barracks. Built in 1704, it served as a military base for 250 years, it was formally the Royal Barracks and later Collins Barracks.
The Esplanade where the Croppies Acre is located today was fully constructed by the 1850s, complete with boundary walls and ornate railings. During the Great Famine, the Esplanade was the site of a food kitchen. By the 1900s, the land was levelled to form two football pitches for the military. In 1997, the Decorative Arts Section of the National Museum was opened in Collins Barracks and the Memorial Park was subsequently designed and laid out in 1998.
Bovington Tank Museum - Tank Infantry Mark II A12, Matilda CDL
Night fighting always presents problems but searchlights had been tested on tanks as early as 1919. The idea of turning them into an offensive weapon is credited to a Mr A V M Mitzakis from Greece who lived and worked in Britain. Mitzakis interested General Fuller and the Duke of Westminster in his scheme before the war but the British authorities did not take it up until about 1940. The idea was to use a light of such power that it would dazzle the opposition, leaving them temporarily blind and disorientated. Using a carbon arc light the CDL could generate up to 13 million candle power which was made to flicker. This causes the pupil to dilate and contract rapidly, temporarily blinding the viewer.
Churchill, Grant and Matilda tanks were converted to the CDL role. This involved replacing the original turret with the type shown here, which has a vertical slit in the front through which the light shines, covered by a mechanical shutter. The operator sits in the left side of the turret and is provided with asbestos gloves to change the carbons in the lamp. He directs the light onto its target and controls the machine-gun.
Training in Britain was carried out at Lowther Castle near Penrith. Five British and two American battalions were trained on CDL and two of the British units went out to Egypt. In fact the CDL was never employed as intended. A few tanks were used to cover the Rhine Crossing and there were incidents in India after the war but that is all. The term Canal Defence Light is often explained as a disguise but it may well have something to do with arrangements to defend the Suez Canal.
The Name Dover.
According to a Mr Deacon he served in C Squadron, 49th RTR when the regiment was stationed in Kent and the names Dover, Deal and Derne (?) were chosen for his troop (they were previously named with M words and Dover is believed to have been Mastiff). At this time the Matilda was a gun tank but the regiment subsequently converted to CDL but retained the names.
During a visit to the Tank Museum Mr Deacon appears to have convinced the Curator at the time, probably General Duncan, that this exhibit was his actual tank and it seems that Dover corporation was asked to supply suitable transfers of the town's crest to flank the name on each side. Nobody in Dover council at present has any recollection of this.
"If you have a marketing problem staring you in the face, call us."
Poster Illustration
Agency: Sullivan Hass Cole
Art Director: Jerry Sullivan
Illustration © 1997 Bill Mayer
La democratización de la economía vía el crédito solidario en el campo y la ciudad, de las compras y contrataciones del Estado a las mipymes, así como las facilidades brindadas al empresario emprendedor han ayudado a crear 236 mil empleos en dos años.
Foto: Presidencia República Dominicana
El liberalismo se inventó para oponerse a la democracia. El problema que dio origen al liberalismo fue el de contener a las clases peligrosas, primero en el núcleo y después en todo el sistema mundial. La solución liberal consistía en conceder acceso limitado al poder político y una participacion limitada en la plusvalía económca, a niveles que no amenazaran el proceso de incesante acumulación de capital ni el sistema estatal que lo sostenía.
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Meet Bambi, the Pitbull. She is the one of the most gentle dogs I've ever known and she is our "grand-doggy." A number of years ago our son went to an outdoor "Adopt a Pet" event. He had set up a booth to help out with no intention of adopting a pet himself. However, Bambi was one of the "mascot pets" that weekend and was allowed to roam free. She made her way over to our son, began wagging her tail, whimpering, and licking his hand when he petted her. The rest is history....Bambi went home with our son and now has a happy life. She is old, has a hip problem, so really doesn't like to walk far, but loves car rides. Our son bought a doggie ramp so that she can get into his truck with ease and then they go crusin' all around town!
Family problem, father and mather is fighting but daughter very sad, this picture can use for kid and children problem, family broken concept
This is the fifth day of Carnival festivities. There were the more traditional parades having historical themes, then competitions in costume and pan orchestras, the Children’s’ Parade, an adult parade/competition and now this parade on the fifth and last day of Carnival. Some participants have a float-like apparatus they carry, all operated by a single person. And, there is the parade of bands.
A band is an organized group of folks. People join certain bands of their liking. Bands provide the music, support personnel and vehicles as the wee-wee wagon, a truck for drink, and sometimes a truck for rest. It can cost upward to $700 for membership. They usually have a particular theme in dress and the uniforms, or costumes, are sometimes provided. The accompanied “music” is a large truck and trailer stacked high with speakers the size of a VW bug and capable of shattering the most hardy eardrum. I wore earplugs. Enjoy the photographs of the last day of Carnival 2015.
Took me about 5 seconds to get a shot with the flare problem on the D750. Probably won't happen very often in real-life shooting but looks like I'll have to send it back when Nikon does the recall at the end of January.
Historic car racing (Tasman Revival 2014), Sydney, Australia.
He was waiting for a tow back to the pits after this race had finished.
20141129-IMG_0410
Saturday.
And already, our days in the heather-thatched cottage are coming to an end, as we leave here in two days. Oh dearie dearie me.
But before then, a major problem, in that we are running out of clean clothes. With our dongle-provided mega-slow internet connection, I find a post code of a laundrette in Hexham. With bags of rancid washing, we climb into the car and drive to the bright lights of Hexham.
The laundrette, or laundry, will do our clothes, and do them in three hours, so disaster averted. Waitrose opened at eight, so we stocked up on beer/cider and also got croissants for breakfast. So, despite being at the northern extreme of the empire, we could have a French style breakfast.
Outside, all was grey and gloomy; a light drizzle fell, so after discovering the car radio could pick up DAB radio, we tried the radio we brought inside, and with the radio in the one place in the living room that could pick up a signal, we sat listening to Danny Baker and his milk bottle-inspired stories.
As you do.
I look at some leaflets, and recall listening to a funny radio show by Mark Steel about Barnard’s Castle. The Bowes Museum looks like a French Chateu, has paintings and stuff. Which is why in ten minutes, we have loaded up the car and are heading to County Durham, again.
Up through Hexham, pausing to collect our freshly laundered washing, then up along narrow wall-lined lanes, up in the to foothills. Oddly, it all looked familiar, then it clicked: this was the road we travelled when we came up for a wedding on an old RAF friend of mine.
Anyway, past the Traveller’s Rest pub, and along roads that went up and down like a roller coaster, until the rad began to climb up and up. And just kept going. Soon we were ount on the moors, travelling along a road lined with wooden posts, used to find it when the snow fell. It was wonderfully bleak stuff.
The light was sensational, illuminating the rolling hills, covered with heather; glowing purple in the sunlight.
The road then started to descend, then drop like a stone into the town of Stanhope. We crossed the river, then the road reared up like a bucking bronko once again, in triple hairpin bends. Then we were crossing moors again, sunlight playing on the rolling moors. The fields were unfenced, so as well as the ducking and diving road, there were the silly sheep to contend with, who were prone to just wandering across the road.
A lone descent once again this time towards Barnard’s Castle, into a fine market town, the high street lined with interesting shops, and at the far end, a round building, around which a roundabout had been built. As you do.
We turned left to the Bowes Museum, and although we knew it was built to look like a French Chateau, to see it there, in the wilds of County Durham, is quite extraordinary.
We were able to par on the wide driveway, walk across the ornamental garden, thus ruining peoples shots, and up the steps leading to the terrace and entrance. The museum has just opened an exhibition of the French designer Yves Saint Laurent, is that how you spell it? Anyway, fashionistas of all ages were there, and us looking like two parcels of scruff. We paid for the ordinary entrance with out the YSL ticket.
We go for lunch, with it being near two, and order a snack: fish chowder for me, and rarebit for Jools, which did look very nice. But then I did just order and eat fish, other than fried, for the second time this trip.
Up the grand staircase to the top floor to look at the art galleries, with wonderful renaissance art from all over Europe. Wonderful stuff, and well worth the entrance feel of nine English pounds. Sadly, the swan automaton was being serviced, so we did not see that, just a film of it. But still wonderful.
Back outside, we walk to the town for a wander and for me to take shots. I am thirsty so we go to a tea rooms and i have a scone and a pot of tea. All very civilised. We walk up and down the main street, I buy a couple of books i have been hunting from a fine 2nd hand shop, then it is time to walk back to the car for the drive back.
Jools drives so I can take shots, as the road is so wonderful, and I mention how much our friend Tony in NZ would love to use GSV to travel along this road whilst on his long night shifts at work. And how thrilled he would be that we were talking about him. Tony, you must come over. Or we come over there.
Back along the same way, pausing to look at the old ford in Stanhope, before the final climb back over the moors to Hexham and then onto the cottage. Not bad for half a day.
Young man caught in the act of intimidating a guest of the photographer who promptly took his flash photo and demanded that he make amends starting now. Miami, Fl
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Top Team Vietnam’s problem solving games provide an experience in dealing with problem analysis and competition among teams which have to identify, define or scope a problem or opportunity and come up with options and alternatives and choose the most suitable one, define action steps, allocate tasks and develop a follow-up or control mechanism to achieve the tasks within a given time.
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In Top Team Vietnam’s cooperative games on the other hand marks are awarded for measurable achievements plus performance as a team (using criteria such as cooperation within team, listening to each other’s ideas and opinions, level of participation of all individual team members etc.)
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An event by Top Team Vietnam (see www.topteam.co) In Phan Thiet for the American International School, organized by Singapore-based Transinex Travel & Tours
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Gente vcs lembram que dois esmaltes meus vieram com problema??? Pra quem não viu aqui ta o link www.flickr.com/photos/kassia_affeldt/4710914906/ www.flickr.com/photos/kassia_affeldt/4709485587/ , então eu mandei um e-mail pra hits logo depois d ocorrido e eles me pediram o nome da loja que me vendeu pq é a loja que ta fazendo isso com os pincéis pra ser melhor pra nail art, mas eles pediram pra loja para de fazer isso, agora se vão para eu não sei.
Ai onte chegou esse pacote com 3 pincéis novinhos (precisava só de 2) e me mandaram tbm um esmalte, o 682 da nova coleção deles. Preciso dizer que adorei o atendimento deles???
Obrigada Hits, sempre resolvendo os problemas (pelo menos todos os que eu tive, foram solucionados!)
Beijoos meninas!
Edit: meninas que forem fazer alguma reclamação/sugestão/dúvida com a Speciallita, utilizem esse e-mail sac.virtual@speciallita.com.br, somente neste eles respondem, ou utilizem o telefone que está no site.
Beijos
There was a problem with that picture....so, i'm re-posting....
Thank you, my friends for visits and comments!
Kiss
Andreia
max tuta noronha says:
Depois da enxada um relax.
Um beijinho.
Posted 7 hours ago.
achuka says:
Hi, I'm an admin for a group called One To One, and we'd love to have this added to the group!
Add this photo to One To One?
Posted 5 hours ago.
bezuchov says:
esplêndida composição, e cores e atmosfera para um esplêndido design campestre; dá una sensação de cansaço e de desejado descanso no mesmo tempo :-))))
Posted 2 hours ago.
smiling_da_vinci says:
This tells a story.... Very good, Andreia. Tudo certo?
Posted 8 minutes ago.