One Of My Very Own
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EMAIL:
ralh.henry.at.folio.olio@gmail.com
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TEXAS
Snow + Texans =
<>HISTORICAL HAPPENINGS
July 1878: Astronomers in Fort Worth prepare for an eclipse.
1946: Farrokh Bulsara - later known as Freddie Mercury.
May 1918: The entrance to a canvas and steel tree observation post, near Souchez.
1945: Tuskegee Airmen attending a briefing in Ramitelli
November 1943: A Grumman Hellcat burns after a crash landing aboard the USS Enterprise. The pilot escaped without injury with the aid of the ground crew.
1917: A taxi driver and his cab. The balloon on the roof is a container for gas, which was used instead of petrol during The Great War and for some time later.
1916: A Suffragette showing off her “marching costume”, Chicago.
October 1990: U.S. Marines, wearing protective gas masks, improvise a game of chess at their base during Operation Desert Shield. Photo by John Gaps III.
1959: An outdoor hockey game in Sweden ends early, due to natural causes.
1 February 1943: The US 442nd Infantry Regiment was formed and activated.
The regiment is best known for its history as a fighting unit composed almost entirely of American soldiers of Japanese ancestry.
The unit's motto was "Go for Broke".
January 1968: Viet Cong infiltrators launch surprise attacks across South Vietnam, marking the start of the Tet Offensive. Among the insurgents' targets is the U.S. embassy in Saigon.
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A history essay in 2053: Explain the use and role of blogs as a coping mechanism during the Corona Virus Pandemic of 2020.
PEOPLE NOT LIKE US
1990: Tim Curry takes a break while filming IT.
There was a leaking propane canister in the cab and the engine spark ignited it. My apologies to the guy that got blowed up.
Carpe Diem
Drill Sergeant Dad Problems
If I remember correctly it is real. More impressively, nobody died.
Chemists have created and captured Einsteinium, the elusive 99th element of the Periodic Table
Scientists have successfully studied einsteinium — one of the most elusive and heaviest elements on the periodic table — for the first time in decades. The achievement brings chemists closer to discovering the so-called "island of stability," where some of the heftiest and shortest-lived elements are thought to reside.
The U.S. Department of Energy first discovered einsteinium in 1952 in the fall-out of the first hydrogen bomb test. The element does not occur naturally on Earth and can only be produced in microscopic quantities using specialized nuclear reactors. It is also hard to separate from other elements, is highly radioactive and rapidly decays, making it extremely difficult to study.
Researchers from the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) at the University of California, recently created a 233-nanogram sample of pure einsteinium and carried out the first experiments on the element since the 1970s. In doing so they were able to uncover some of the element's fundamental chemical properties for the first time.
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Can we switch quarantine partners for the third wave or are we stuck with the same people as the other waves?
OBJECTS OF INTEREST
Praying Mantis, 23-34 Million Years Old. Perfectly Preserved In Amber
How the stationary lenticular cloud moves in position
All-electric planes like this could change regional air travel
All Hospitals should have Pet visiting hours
3 comments:
Puzzle time:..
Are a slim chance and a fat chance identical
A10 Has that Bloke at the front PISSED HIMSELF?
C9 unless you are using a little butter in the pan to add more flavor. Don't want it to pour out of the pan when you 'flip' it.
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