47 posts
Architecture and sky form an abstract picture. Great.
Brombeere blüht im Oktober - heute aufgenommen.
Blackberry blossoming in october - Photo taken today,
Straße in Sakata (Nordwesteen von Honshu). Der Omnibus ist ein Isuzu Gala der zweiten Generation. (Wikipedia)
酒田駅前とバスが通る #駅 #station #bus #いすゞガーラ #日野ポンチョ #バス #酒田市 #動画 (酒田駅) https://www.instagram.com/p/CpOXF-OBF0w/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
the perspective shows a great room
Gorky street in Moscow. Photo by Nikolai Rakhmanov (1967).
wonderful.
Conrad Kiesel: After the Ball
thumbs up!
Award-winning NASA mathematician and computer programmer Melba Mouton is being honored with the naming of a mountain at the Moon’s South Pole. Mouton joined NASA in 1959, just a year after the space agency was established. She was the leader of a team that coded computer programs to calculate spacecraft trajectories and locations. Her contributions were instrumental to landing the first humans on the Moon.
She also led the group of "human computers," who tracked the Echo satellites. Roy and her team's computations helped produce the orbital element timetables by which millions could view the satellite from Earth as it passed overhead.
The towering lunar landmark now known as “Mons Mouton” stands at a height greater than 19,000 feet. The mountain was created over billions of years by lunar impacts. Huge craters lie around its base—some with cliff-like edges that descend into areas of permanent darkness. Mons Mouton is the future landing site of VIPER, our first robotic Moon rover. The rover will explore the Moon’s surface to help gain a better understanding of the origin of lunar water. Here are things to know:
The VIPER mission is managed by our Ames Research Center in California’s Silicon Valley. The approximately 1,000-pound rover will be delivered to the Moon by a commercial vendor as part of our Commercial Lunar Payload Services initiative, delivering science and technology payloads to and near the Moon.
Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space!
really nice.
“Suprematist Dragonflies” dish designed by S. Yakovleva (mold) and L. Grigoryeva (painting). Made at Leningrad Porcelain Factory in early 1960s.
Ely Cathedral in freezing fog l VeronicaJoPo
just good to read the text.
“On July 31, 1968, a young, black man was reading the newspaper when he saw something that he had never seen before. With tears in his eyes, he started running and screaming throughout the house, calling for his mom. He would show his mom, and, she would gasp, seeing something she thought she would never see in her lifetime. Throughout the nation, there were similar reactions.
What they saw was Franklin Armstrong’s first appearance on the iconic comic strip “Peanuts.” Franklin would be 50 years old this year.
Franklin was “born” after a school teacher, Harriet Glickman, had written a letter to creator Charles M. Schulz after Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was shot to death outside his Memphis hotel room.
Glickman, who had kids of her own and having worked with kids, was especially aware of the power of comics among the young. “And my feeling at the time was that I realized that black kids and white kids never saw themselves [depicted] together in the classroom,” she would say.
She would write, “Since the death of Martin Luther King, ‘I’ve been asking myself what I can do to help change those conditions in our society which led to the assassination and which contribute to the vast sea of misunderstanding, hate, fear and violence.‘”
Glickman asked Schulz if he could consider adding a black character to his popular comic strip, which she hoped would bring the country together and show people of color that they are not excluded from American society.
She had written to others as well, but the others feared it was too soon, that it may be costly to their careers, that the syndicate would drop them if they dared do something like that.
Charles Schulz did not have to respond to her letter, he could have just completely ignored it, and everyone would have forgotten about it. But, Schulz did take the time to respond, saying he was intrigued with the idea, but wasn’t sure whether it would be right, coming from him, he didn’t want to make matters worse, he felt that it may sound condescending to people of color.
Glickman did not give up, and continued communicating with Schulz, with Schulz surprisingly responding each time. She would even have black friends write to Schulz and explain to him what it would mean to them and gave him some suggestions on how to introduce such a character without offending anyone. This conversation would continue until one day, Schulz would tell Glickman to check her newspaper on July 31, 1968.
On that date, the cartoon, as created by Schulz, shows Charlie Brown meeting a new character, named Franklin. Other than his color, Franklin was just an ordinary kid who befriends and helps Charlie Brown. Franklin also mentions that his father was “over at Vietnam.” At the end of the series, which lasted three strips, Charlie invites Franklin to spend the night one day so they can continue their friendship.
There was no big announcement, there was no big deal, it was just a natural conversation between two kids, whose obvious differences did not matter to them. And, the fact that Franklin’s father was fighting for this country was also a very strong statement by Schulz.
Although Schulz never made a big deal over the inclusion of Franklin, there were many fans, especially in the South, who were very upset by it and that made national news. One Southern editor even said, “I don’t mind you having a black character, but please don’t show them in school together.”
It would eventually lead to a conversation between Schulz and the president of the comic’s distribution company, who was concerned about the introduction of Franklin and how it might affect Schulz’ popularity. Many newspapers during that time had threatened to cut the strip.
Schulz’ response: “I remember telling Larry at the time about Franklin – he wanted me to change it, and we talked about it for a long while on the phone, and I finally sighed and said, “Well, Larry, let’s put it this way: Either you print it just the way I draw it or I quit. How’s that?”
Eventually, Franklin became a regular character in the comic strips, and, despite complaints, Franklin would be shown sitting in front of Peppermint Patty at school and playing center field on her baseball team.
More recently, Franklin is brought up on social media around Thanksgiving time, when the animated 1973 special “A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving” appears. Some people have blamed Schulz for showing Franklin sitting alone on the Thanksgiving table, while the other characters sit across him. But, Schulz did not have the same control over the animated cartoon on a television network that he did on his own comic strip in the newspapers.
But, he did have control over his own comic strip, and, he courageously decided to make a statement because of one brave school teacher who decided to ask a simple question.
Glickman would explain later that her parents were “concerned about others, and the values that they instilled in us about caring for and appreciating everyone of all colors and backgrounds — this is what we knew when we were growing up, that you cared about other people … And so, during the years, we were very aware of the issues of racism and civil rights in this country [when] black people had to sit at the back of the bus, black people couldn’t sit in the same seats in the restaurants that you could sit … Every day I would see, or read, about black children trying to get into school and seeing crowds of white people standing around spitting at them or yelling at them … and the beatings and the dogs and the hosings and the courage of so many people in that time.”
Because of Glickman, because of Schulz, people around the world were introduced to a little boy named Franklin.” (Source: The Jon S. Randal Peace Page, Facebook)
Lost Serenade
A pair of brachiosaurids sing songs forever lost in time.
no comment required
Several kinds of light, kinds of colour make wamth an coolness - wish I was there.
Utrecht
.. in two spheres.
㋡🥀
peaceful..
The Simpsons are coming soon.
Have a seat
the light, the colours ...
Dark Growth, Shinjuku 新宿
great athmosphere
深夜の京阪藤森駅 2019.11.15 6000系ロング特急、5000系、2200系、7200系、9000系
0:00 スタート 0:06 5000系5553F 準急 出町柳行 出発 1:04 6000系6007F 特急 淀屋橋行 通過 1:46 7200系7202F 普通 淀行 3:27 6000系6013F 特急 出町柳行 通過 4:20 2200系2226F 準急 出町柳行 6:21 9000系9004F 普通 寝屋川市行 (前)京阪枚方市駅 2400系&2200系&8000系特急 (次)アルピコ交通 高速バス アルペン諏訪号 茅野行 いすゞガーラ 2019.11.16 朝 辰野PA?&上諏訪駅 <プレイリスト> 鉄道動画集2019年 Railway Movies 京阪6000系2019年- Keihan 6000 Series EMU 京阪ロング特急2013年以降 Keihan Ltd Express 京阪特急2018-2019年 Keihan Limited Express 京阪5000系2017年以降 京阪7000&7200系 2019年 Keihan 京阪9000系 2012年以降 京阪2200系 2017- Keihan 2200 Series EMU 京阪電車201904- Keihan Railways
very nice. For more information, see en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kitamaebune
#酒田 は #北前船 の寄港地だった。それを記念した #石板 が道路に埋め込まれていた #stone #歴史 #酒田市 (Sakata, Yamagata) https://www.instagram.com/p/Cgxmil8h4MB/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
Beautiful. See the beacon so far.
H o m e
“I had to let you go To the setting sun I had to let you go And find a way back home”
― Anathema
photo © ЯMB|2022 ✦ Nachtblau
Just tried to eat a tumblr-picture ...
Lemon Poppy Seed Scones
Fully focused, with her force, and controlling her tool and the situation. Correcting our puppy-view on children - brilliant picture.
Feel the power, see the beauty
The SP Lark Arriving at San Francisco August 25, 1967 – 3 Photos by Marty Bernard Via Flickr: SP 6452, an FP7, with Train 75, the LARK, arriving at the 3rd and Townsend SP depot, San Francisco, CA on August 25, 1967. A Roger Puta Photograph
I hear the seagulls cry ...
Deep Breath
#pascalcampion