Sunday, December 20, 2009

Best Communityhours Letter

Caspar David Friedrich

"It gave the family the dignity of the unknown" (von Kleist).
Muñoz Molina writes of Caspar David Friedrich .
That look so pale eyes fixed that has challenged the portrait painted by his friend Friedrich von Kügelgen, a look of hawk or eagle accentuated by the eyebrows, the flight of the eyebrows, hooked nose.

a child he had seen his brother drowning, sinking to break the ice in which the two skated. Modest celebrity he had enjoyed dissipated completely in the year of his age, shadowed by illness and poverty. He became more reclusive. Got used to taking long walks that began at sunset and lasted all night.
Friedrich stops to quickly draw a view from an elevated position and the boundless forest undulates into the horizon, and draw some farm houses near a stream or the ruins of an abbey, and only a few steps to close the large grove is always moving on the open course so precariously on it by human effort.
Each isolated tree while radiating majesty and threat. A dry oak twists up like a wounded giant. A large fir tree is a huge pagan temple before which a cross erected to guide relief and offers travelers a dubious protection. On a sheet of notebook with a very fine pen, a pencil sharpened almost to breaking, very carefully draw a tree and another tree next to him and another and another, and it seems that the hand acts faster each time and fill the trees horizontally role as an army approaching, the amazing army of Macbeth saw trees moving towards the castle.


accompaniment of Schubert's songs in Winter Journey, which are made at the time late in the life of Friedrich, I use to imagine the obstinate rhythm of their steps, like his drawings help me to hear those songs in which a man has emerged from a house where no one will miss his absence, closing the door behind him and venturing on the roads winter, muffled against cold, with no company but his shadow. Perhaps Friedrich Schubert and move us both equally because they appeal to a sense of helplessness and awe of nature that was what we received from the ancient tales, in which memory is inscribed the great forests of Europe extinct.

Thursday, November 26, 2009

Platypus Speed Sensor

Luis Meléndez (1715-1780)

Felix de Azua analyzes the still lifes Luis Meléndez (1715-1780) in A defiant look .

Melendez's self-portrait in the Louvre. Here the young artist of 30 years (dating from 1746), a handsome young olive, dressed elegantly contained, olive satin jacket, frilly-white waterfall in the shirt, blue silk ribbon and bow collecting Monet. However, what impresses is the insolence of the gaze.

The first mystery is the nature of death itself, these compositions with cheeses, fruits, breads or rabbits. What led to Velazquez Zurbarán, Sanchez Cotan, to give such importance to an issue of poor quality? These still lifes have no connection with the flamingos, which is displayed in abundance, wealth, luxury living and furor of a hugely powerful provinces during the six hundred. The humility of English still life has more poetry than science, and yet the mystery is compelling. Heidegger wanted to imbue meaning poor Van Gogh boots, two broken pieces of leather that embodied the lifetime of work and pain of their own, as if the painting of everyday objects could read our fate. But the English still life is the opposite. There is pathos here, or symbols, and transcendence, even (though his defense Bryson) a form of material life. I think this genre is more mysterious than has been the almost extinct art.

No one that actually looks like twins these pristine objects, supernatural light, visible to an extent that not a mechanical eye can reach. It would be a visible reality in the eyes of angelic or demonic, but not humans. This "reality" is as unreal as that of Mondrian. In either still lifes immediately Melendez notes that are the result of an obsession. They are painted to match the eye from a incredible distance as if the painter had put his nose between grapes and cheese. Apparently, Melendez composing his still lifes, but painted one by one the objects and was adding and arranging on the canvas as it advanced (Hirschaner & Metzger). Melendez is located a few centimeters of a pumpkin under intense light we do not know how to install. After scrutinizing as a myopic, paints even the slightest wrinkle of the epithelium. Then do the same with a bread crust clay. And so on to accommodate the end, a blanket of support. With the addition of the size, of course, is not natural.

managed to alienate all guards, because they never received prestigious orders that his talent deserved and others more mediocre painters managed with ease. They have lost the few major works that gave King Charles during a brief stay in Naples (1748-1752), but it never came to know the real favor. So he was condemned to painting still lifes, genre considered the most low-class by the artistic hierarchy, but sold well.

Monday, November 23, 2009

Ge Spacemake Xl1800 F4

black legend

historian Joseph Perez explains why there black legend.
" Spain at that time there was in truth as such (the years in which reigned Carlos V and Felipe II) . What exists is a Catholic monarchy, not necessarily English, who rules the same in Flanders in the Milanese, Naples and in large parts of Germany, India and, of course, in Castile and Aragon. They are the leaders of the House of Austria, and occupy a prominent place in the Europe of his day, sent in diplomatic issues , military, economic. "

"The book came in France today, where watched there an unconditional surrender to the culture that comes from the U.S., his films and their authors, and everything else, and a fierce rejection of his imperial policy. Everything that happened to Spain a few centuries ago. The French are crazy about learning the language, copied his gloves and leather suits, Louis XIV himself adapted the label of the courts of Austria and even Pascal surrendered to Santa Teresa and San Juan de la Cruz ".


" To get an idea of \u200b\u200bthe power that came to have the monarchy Austria goes without saying that your currency - the pieces of eight, the piastres, was the currency in circulation throughout the world until well into the nineteenth century . Without a strong economic base so his immense power would be inexplicable diplomatic, military and political. English were reportedly responsible for the empire and yet, the most important figure in foreign policy was a Frenchman, Granvelle , and its military heroes are the Earl of Egmont (Flemish), Alessandro Farnese (Genoese) or Spinola, Duke of Parma.

" all began when Philip II puts a price on his head William of Orange, the Protestant prince Flanders, which reacts by challenging its legitimacy and its power to face. It was customary in those days to question the royal authority, so to arm himself with arguments flamenco develops an overwhelming propaganda that emphasizes (and exaggerate) the worst of his great enemy : a man capable of murdering the prince Don Carlos, his son (which proved false), who used the Inquisition to kill their enemies and that allowed the greatest cruelties during the conquest of America. "

" black legend built to weaken the power of the House of Austria , but when it comes its decline after the Peace of Westphalia in 1648, the argument is a Spain surrendered to the darkness of the papacy to the advancement of the Enlightenment. late nineteenth century, the Anglo-Saxon nations look down on Latinas. The Black Legend was present. "
says
The Black Legend , just published Gadir. In the essay explains how to build a speech to the English became the paradigm of fanaticism and cruelty, the dogmatic closure around the flag of Catholicism and the pure desire for domination using springs of a powerful state.

Monday, November 9, 2009

How High To Put Curtain Holdbacks

XXI century walls


In this twentieth anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall, is a good time to take a look at the actual walls in the world are. Makes Nicole Muchnik in a recent article, following the census conducted by the geographer Michel Foucher, published in Montreal La Presse. Censa 17 walls with a total of 7,500 miles that they will reach 18,000 km when finished. But there are some more.


1. The wall that separates Israel from Palestine outside the official route of the border (get to enter up to 24 miles to include Israeli settlements). When completed, 10% of the West Bank will be on the Israeli side and isolated from the West Bank. Cost the Israeli government over a million dollars per kilometer, with concrete walls eight feet, with control towers every 300 meters, surrounded by ditches six feet deep, barbed wire fences and roads. Has been condemned by the International Court of Justice.

2. The former Friendship Park or Friendship Park, a few miles from San Diego, between Mexico and the United States, replaced by three parallel walls five meters high. U.S. Begun in 1994, a metal wall a third of its border with Mexico.


3. In the mid 90's the English government raised 8.2 kilometers of fence in Ceuta and Melilla 12. Melilla The Wall was fortified in 2005 to curb migration flow from Africa to Europe, a fence up to six meters, complete with skeins of barbed wire between the two walls, which had "concertinas"-eliminated in 2007 -, or blades, in the upper inner fence separating Melilla from Morocco and caused horrific injuries.

4. The Great Wall Morocco, raised in the desert in 1980 to prevent raids by the Polisario Front, which claims the territory. Two rows of sand embankments along of 2,720 kilometers, reinforced military checkpoints, walls of stone and sand up to 2.5 meters high, with barbed wire, minefields, and ditches. It takes about 120,000 soldiers to guard this sandbar, the maintenance costs two million dollars per year.

5. Saudi Arabia The built since 2007, to guard against terrorists in Yemen in the south and in northern Iraq, the latest barrier along its border. Equipped with a sophisticated radar surveillance system, able to capture any intrusion by land, sea or air along its 9,000 kilometers and cost about 10,000 million dollars.

6. The green line that divides the island of Cyprus and its capital . 180 kilometers is patrolled by peacekeepers UN is impassable and prevents any normal relationship between Turkish Cypriots and Greek Cypriots.

7. Those in cities like Baghdad separating the Sunni Shia communities . The U.S. military in 2007 began building a barrier of 5 kilometers long and 3.6 meters high in the Iraqi capital, surrounding the district of Adhamiya.

8. Which has risen in the city Padua, Italy, to isolate an African immigrant neighborhood.


9. The fact that the regional government of Rio de Janeiro (home of the Olympic Games in 2016) started lifting last March to hedge some favelas. Plans to build 11 kilometers of walls.

10. The 88 walls that are known by the euphemism of Peace Lines in Belfast, that dismantle the city walls that neither Catholics nor Protestants want to bring down, because the fear remains.

11. The range of 4 kilometers wide and 250 long divides North Korea and South Korea since the end of the war between the two countries in 1953. Is the demilitarized zone.

12. electrified barrier that Botswana installed in 2003, under the pretext of preventing the passage of a supposedly sick cattle from FMD from Zimbabwe, in fact to keep out the thousands of migrants trying to reach a richer Botswana. A barbed wire fence of 2.5 meters high and 500 kilometers long.

13. The Wall India and Pakistan (both with nuclear weapons) separated by walls and barbed wire about half of their common border (2,900 miles).

14. The Wall Kashmir. Five hundred miles of fence extending along the disputed Line of Control in Kashmir controlled by India.

15. The Wall India and Bangladesh. India is building along its 4,000 km border with Bangladesh, a security fence.


16. The Wall Iran and Pakistan. On its border with Pakistan, Iran is building a concrete wall about three feet thick and over 3 meters tall.

17. The Wall Iraq and Kuwait. The barrier is 190 kilometers and was built at the end of the first Gulf War by order of the Security Council of the UN. This is an electrified fence with barbed wire, sand walls and ditches.

18. The Wall Uzbekistan. In the north, a large barbed wire fence separates it from Kisrguistán. In the south, an electrified wire (380 volts) and minefields covering part of the border with Afghanistan.

19. The Wall Thailand and Malaysia. In the 70 two governments agreed to build concrete walls topped with wire along part of their common border. Since 2007, Thailand built a wall of 75 kilometers.

20. Brunei The Wall. Brunei is building a security fence along its 20-kilometer border with Limbang Malaysian region.

21. The Wall Egypt and Gaza. Separation at the Rafah crossing between the Palestinian Gaza and Egypt was built by Egyptian and Israeli governments after the peace treaty that both countries signed in 1979.

22. The ghettos volunteers for fear of robbers, terrorists, youth. as gated communities, gated communities in the United States, designed to preserve a lifestyle that might offend the sensibilities of the inhabitants of troubled neighborhoods that surround them. There are over a hundred around Los Angeles, watched 24 hours a day.

23. The virtual fence 45 kilometers Boeing has built between Mexico and Arizona , not a physical wall but qualifies as a wall, using thermal sensors, motion detectors and surveillance radars. (The National Security Agency United States estimates that the cost of securing the borders, between now and 2015 will be 178,000 million dollars).

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Value Of Old Pop Bottles

The symbols of this country called Spain


If you wonder where are the symbols of this country called Spain, Miguel Angel Aguilar responds with wisdom and subtle humor in this article . We
Constitution, we flag, anthem and we have national holiday. In other words, more than one hundred words, over a hundred reasons, I would say Joaquín Sabina, to consider ourselves almost a country. The flag is from a competition organized by King Carlos III to better distinguish the ships of the Royal Navy. Too bad it was so late, because the great moments of our history since the Reconquista, the saga of the Almogávares, the Grand Master in Italy, the Marquis of Spinola in Flanders or the discovery and conquest of America were made under the banner of Our Lord or King of his domain, with no reference to the rojigualda . The song ended up being the former Royal March , which one musician, Jose de las Casas, in the era of General Franco's nationalist euphoria, made some arrangements to register your name as private property in the General Society of Authors until it was nationalized in 1997. The date of the National Day, October 12 was also decided a few years ago after some hesitation.

is clear that nothing more appropriate to celebrate the National Day military parade. But here, among us, the parade drew tradition conflict, which divided the English in winners and losers. Because for nearly 40 years of Franco the parade was the victory parade that began with the first one held in Madrid on May 10, 1939, 40 days after the last part of war-chief's headquarters, dated Burgos on April 1 above. His text read: "In this day, captive and disarmed the Red Army troops reached their final national military objectives. The war is over. "Realized the end of the war but it meant the continuation of victory from the named third triumphant year. To reach peace and harmony would begin to wait for reconciling the Constitution of 1978.


still remember Lieutenant General Manuel Gutiérrez Mellado, vice president and defense minister, determined to adapt the military symbols, to push the shifting allegiances of the military Franco Rey, replace the parade the victory parade by the Armed Forces . It was at times difficult to begin construction of a new pride where all the English could match. They had finished the victorious celebrations that involved other English plunge in memory humiliating defeat. To do so is sought in our history sometimes match they were outside the fratricidal guerracivilismo that fans have been so insistent. They wanted to find times when all we had been fighting together in the same direction or at least without facing each other with weapons in hand. It was not easy, because even the victors of 1939, or who had erected in his heirs, the process in terms of treason against his dead reconciliatory efforts, in addition to conjecture drag that would bring other material damages.

Armed Forces ceased to be part of that threat that prevented the recovery of freedom by the English and was made a full year warranty, and a support for the foreign policy of our country. Spain ceased to be a country occupied by their armies, as in the days of General superlative, who had erected in ensuring continuity of his regime. Franco did promise that the former combatants concentrated in the Cerro de Garabitas up to 1961, according to which all would be "bound and tied it under guard faithful of our army "evaporated because the Army was able to stop being Franco, preferred to be in Spain and be under the command of constitutional government.
The military parade yesterday coincided with the 20th anniversary of the first participation of the Armed Forces English military in international peacekeeping missions. During these years, our men have been deployed in Central America, the Balkans, Africa, Lebanon, Iraq or Afghanistan, always under orders from the government of the day, braving the risks and part of the job and without having committed improper attitudes. It is an honor to join its ranks. They deserved the applause they received on the Castellana.

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

African Skirt In Dance

Outstanding works of the Thyssen gallery in Madrid


Great page that offered videos of the most interesting Thyssen gallery in Madrid. Including the elegant portrait Domenico Ghirlandaio made Giovanna Tornabuoni, a jewel of Quattrocento Florentine painting that I like most of the museum. In the legend reads an epigram of Martial: "Oh, art, if you were able to represent the customs and the soul does not exist in the world a more beautiful").

The Annunciation diptych Van Eyck in 1934, a painting that plays to be sculpture, worked in grisaille, with that wonderful game of mirror of the Virgin, a successful trompe l'oeil.


The hotel room of Edward Hopper, 1931. A self-absorbed girl rests at the edge of a bed in a cold hotel room, while CONACULTA a role, with luggage without undoing at his feet.


The St. Catherine of Alexandria of Caravaggio , 1598. The artist plays with the luxuries (clothing, pad, colors) of an Oriental court, which belonged to Catherine, and threats of martyrdom, which announces the palm (the wheel of torture, the sword has to decapitate), and as distrustful view of the court that served as a model. You

:
Untitled (Green Purple), 1961, Rothko.
Man with Clarinet, 1911-1912, by Picasso. The thaw in Vétheuil
, 1881, by Monet.
Fränzi before a carved chair, 1910, Kirchner.
Christ and the Samaritan, c. 1310-1311, of Buoninsegna.
Portrait of Henry VIII of England , c. 1537, by Hans Holbein.


Sunday, September 20, 2009

Teck Deck Liveonline.com

Picasso: La Joie de vivre

Mario Vargas Llosa
said these two paintings by Picasso museum in Antibes.
The most notable piece that showcases the museum is Antibes Ulysses and the Sirens, which seems to infect the rolling waves and enticing music that evoked Homer hangs to the wall where the magnificent triptych. The protagonist is not only Odysseus, here we are all human beings are tied to the fragile neck, ears wide open and crazy with desire, trying to break the cords that bind us to sanity and prudence, to surrender to the temptations of life, that sometimes, as in this case, have a form of singing, and female fish. You can not describe a masterpiece: it is felt, not explained. Not only is it disturbing and exquisite in it is the craftsmanship, the steely intuition, sensitivity and good taste. In the masterpieces, plastic, literary or musical, there is always a shady area that escapes the rational apprehension, which penetrates the deepest recesses of the person as a sudden revelation, transferable and personal. The catalog says that Picasso painted Ulysses and the Sirens in just three days of September 1947.

La Joie de vivre (The Joy of Living) , a year earlier, was made and remade several times, a fascinating process to document a Polish photographer friend of Picasso, Michel Sima. His images take us to the intimacy of a company that not only the famous painter's gaze seems in a trance state while working Luciferian. Also, your hands, your posture and even gladiator swollen veins of his temples testify to the state of frenzy, feverish tension, which was forged the painting. She is what its name says: a party where a centaur and a faun flutes accompany a dance nymph (traits refer to those of Françoise Gilot, the companion of the time) and jumps of joy of two goats at the edge of a sea with sandy beaches, vineyards and solar luminosity. Pagan and mythological reminiscence exudes today: the circumstances may have changed, the sets and the gods, but the joy, excitement and pleasure that life and love provided remain the same and establish a common denominator among us, whom we preceded and those who are going to happen. Permanence in time that gives the memories and reminiscences of Picasso mythological character of lived experience and actual.



Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Wards Ap Biology Lab 2

Should we fear the flu virus spread?


Throughout the twentieth century there have been three major flu epidemics.

Between 1918-1920, the so-called English flu . It is the first time that a mutation appears influenza A (H1 N1). Infected 20% of the population. He could have killed fifty million people, between 2.5 - 5% of the population of Earth. Probably originated in China or the United States.

In 1957, the so-called Asian flu . Caused by another subtype, the A (H2N2). It originated in China. Caused about a million dead, mostly from secondary bacterial pneumonia. Mainly affected the elderly.

In 1968-1970, other flu originated in China, Hong Kong. Was caused by a new subtype, the A (H3N2), probably a genetic recombination with other viruses of avian origin.


World War I ended in 1918 with 10 million dead. English flu that year killed 40 to 50 million people when it had been difficult to pinpoint, some have raised the figure to 100 million -. It was the worst of the three global flu epidemics of the twentieth century, and in fact the worst pandemic of any kind in history. The virus that caused no came from pigs, but the birds, but it was H1N1, like the present. The H1N1 virus was a bird until 1918, and was the English flu who became a typical human strain.

As the English press was not subject to the restrictions of the war and reported on the flu, the Allies began to call the English flu pandemic. The first case occurred at Camp Funston (Kansas) on March 4, 1918. Only caused a mild respiratory disease, though highly contagious, like any flu. In April and had spread throughout North America and, aided by American troops throughout Europe. The second wave

mortal began Aug. 22 in Brest, France, port of entry for U.S. soldiers. It was the same virus, but sometime in the summer, became mortal. Those affected by the first wave were immunized. Causing pneumonia and died two days after the first symptoms. The flu may have killed 25 million people in the first 25 weeks, for comparison, AIDS killed 25 million in the first 25 years.

The 1918 virus had no gene for human type : it was a bird flu virus, but with 25 mutations that distinguished it from an avian influenza virus common. The virus of English flu multiplied 50 times more than the flu after a day of infection, and 39,000 times more after four days. In laboratory tests kill all mice in less than a week.

The rapid spread of the disease might be due to the massive movements of troops and modern transportation systems, as well as weakening by the stress of combat and chemical attacks. The remedies used to be home. For example, in the village of Pinar de Rabanera Burgos, it was with so-called O pills, syrup, homemade medicine, mallow flower, chamomile or tea.


The World Health Organization (WHO) urges "prepare for a pandemic." To occur would be mild , but warned that the so-called English flu of 1918, which killed millions of people, also began hesitantly.
"I think we must be aware and respectful of the fact that influenza moves in ways that we can not predict ."
Perhaps the biggest problem with which we are now is that of the exaggeration.

This quote from a doctor who fought with the English flu in 1918 can reassure
"Facts have shown that mortality from this disease is primarily a question of medical and financial resources. In villages where the epidemic was raging ... sufficed the arrival of new medical ... (Y) a few thousand pesetas ... to immediately changed the appearance of the disease, has revived confidence and reduced the proportion of severe and fatal cases.
Ángel Sánchez de Val, influenza Sepsis (Cartagena, 1919).