Monday, 27 August 2012

NEIL ARMSTRONG : One small step (R.I.P.)

Neil Armstrong, first man on the moon, inspired the world
 
  • NAME:Neil Armstrong
  • OCCUPATION:Astronaut, Explorer, Pilot
  • BIRTH DATE:August 05, 1930
  • DEATH DATE:August 25, 2012
  • EDUCATION: Purdue University, University of Cincinnati
    • PLACE OF BIRTH: Wapakoneta, Ohio
    

    Neil Armstrong is gone but the footprints he left on the moon endure. And so does his unmatched place in history. Of all humanity, he was the first to leave Earth and step onto another world. And — it being the television age — he did so while much of humanity watched.

    Neil Amstrong died Aug.25'12 at 82.  Forty-three years ago, he stepped from the Apollo 11 lunar module and onto the dusty surface of the moon, declaring it “one giant leap for mankind".

    More than half a billion people around the world looked on — an irony given Armstrong’s intensely private nature — and what they saw was more than just a technological triumph, or a space race victory by the United States. Although the July 20, 1969 moon landing was born in cold war rivalry, it ultimately transcended politics and became seen as a universal achievement.

    Experiencing the drama of the landing, and watching Armstrong and fellow astronaut Buzz Aldrin hop about on the moon’s surface, inspired countless children to dream of becoming space explorers.

    Five additional two-man crews would follow Armstrong and Aldrin to the moon, with the last landing in 1972 — 40 years ago this December. Since then, humans haven’t ventured beyond low Earth orbit. Space exploration has gone in other, safer but less glorious directions, with an unmanned rover now on Mars.

    Freeze-dried food, cordless power tools and other spinoffs from the Apollo program — is the greatest legacy of Armstrong’s moon walk.

     
    
    (Partial article from "Toronto Star"newspaper and pictures from "US" magazine)
     
    Neil Alden Armstrong (August 5, 1930 – August 25, 2012) was an American astronaut and the first person to walk on the Moon. He was also an aerospace engineer, U.S. Navy pilot, test pilot, and university professor. Before becoming an astronaut, Armstrong was a United States Navy officer and served in the Korean War. (Wikipedia)
     
    
     
     
    

    Tuesday, 14 August 2012

    OLYMPICS 2012 - A touchy story from a 10 yeras old fan!

    Canada’s disqualified 4 x 100 team gets a medal — from a 10-year-old fan


    Justyn Warner is consoled by his fiancee Nikkita Holder after Canada was DQ'd (Sean Kilpatrick, Canadian Press)

    Canada's 4 x 100 relay team might like to distance themselves from the the disqualification which knocked them off the Olympic podium. However, as soon as they arrived home, they got a reminder of how the country was touched by the swirl of emotions they went through after believing they had earned a bronze medal for about 10 minutes before being informed Jared Connaughton had committed a lane violation.
    Here's one "ahhhh" example of how Canadians have reached out to the team.
    Elijah Porter, 10, wrote to the team and sent them his own Timbits hockey medal to take its place.
    Sprinter Justyn Warner tweeted a picture of the medal and handwritten letter on Monday.
    The letter states: "We're Canadians. We persevere. We create better lives for each other. We didn't lose the War of 1812. I hope you like the medal." (680 News)
    It wasn't the only medal the team received to recognize their effort — the decision was just, but it doesn't erase that they burned up the track and showed they were Canada's best 4 x 100 team since 1996 — that nearly brought Canada a medal. Connaughton was also honoured when he arrived home in Charlottetown, P.E.I. on Monday. The way he took ownership for the mistake is a great example of accountability.

    Meantime, how about a hand for young Elijah Porter, presuming it was all his own decision without any encouragement from a parent? Not just any child would give up a token of his own accomplishments. And remember, if any other Canadian children do the same thing, well, imitation is the sincerest form of flattery.

    Elijah Porter's letter to the Canadian relay team (Twitter)
    Story worth to re-post from: http://ca.sports.yahoo.com/blogs/eh-game/canada-4-x-100-team-gets-medal-10-141118533.html

    Monday, 16 April 2012

    TITANIC - 100 YEARS

     
    Image courtesy of Titanic 100 Halifax
      The Titanic went down after hitting an iceberg about 800 kilometers (500 miles) southeast of Halifax 

    photo

    Fairview Lawn Cemetery

    Over 100 Victims of the sinking of the Titanic are burried at the Fairview Lawn Cemetery, Halifax, Nova Scotia (Canada)
    With 121 graves, Fairview Lawn Cemetery has more Titanic victims interred than any other cemetery in the world. (Nova Scotia Tourism)
    Titanic victim Michel Navratil's grave marker is seen in the Baron de Hirsh Cemetery, a Jewish cemetery, in Halifax on Thursday April 5, 2012. Navratil assumed the name of his friend Louis Hoffman, ki
     A distant relative of a Titanic passenger places a rose on the plaque of 1,512 names of those who died from the Titanic during the 100th anniversary commemorations and memorial dedication of the Titanic disaster in Belfast;Northern Ireland on April 15;2012. The vessel struck an iceberg in the North Atlantic on its maiden voyage on April 14 1912;with the loss of around 1,500 lives. It was built in Belfast's Harland and Wolff shipyard.
    A distant relative of a Titanic passenger places a rose on the plaque of 1,512 names of those who died from the Titanic during the 100th anniversary commemorations and memorial dedication of the Titanic disaster in Belfast;Northern Ireland on April 15;2012. The vessel struck an iceberg in the North Atlantic on its maiden voyage on April 14 1912;with the loss of around 1,500 lives. It was built in Belfast's Harland and Wolff shipyard.


    Of the approximately 130 Canadians aboard the Titanic, two came from Halifax: well-known socialite Helen Slater, who survived, and philanthropist millionaire George Wright, who perished.
    Although about 700 survivors had been rescued by the RMS Carpathia,  some—largely very wealthy—families of the victims who wanted the bodies of their loved ones recovered put pressure on White Star Lines to mount a recovery operation out of Halifax.

    “Halifax is so central to the story, and this isn’t covered in a lot of books about the Titanic, because many books about the Titanic end with the sinking and the rescue operation—the 700 plus people who were rescued by Carpathia and taken to New York City. They might mention the American and British inquiries that occurred afterwards, but very few actually talk about the recovery operation that was mounted out of Halifax"


    Titanic
    A pair of leather children’s shoes believed to be from the "unknown child." (Nova Scotia Tourism)

    Maritime Museum of the Atlantic
    Halifax’s Maritime Museum of the Atlantic is home to a permanent display of the largest collection of wooden Titanic artifacts in the world, including a well-preserved deck chair. (Nova Scotia Tourism)

    Titanic
    Hearses line up on Halifax wharf to take Titanic victims recovered by the CS Minia. (Nova Scotia Archives)

     
    Night of the Bells Saturday, April 14, 7:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m.
                                              Maritime Museum of the Atlantic, 1675 Lower Water Street, Halifax


     A wreath floats in the sea during a service of remembrance aboard the Titanic Memorial Cruise in the western Atlantic Ocean
    A wreath floats after being thrown into the sea during a service of remembrance aboard the Titanic Memorial Cruise, over the Titanic disaster site 100 years after it sank in the western Atlantic Ocean April 15, 2012. The ill-fated Titanic liner hit an iceberg and sank 100 years ago on April 15, 1912 (REUTERS)

     Canadian stamp commemorating the 100th anniversary of the Titanic disaster
    This handout image provided by Canada Post shows a stamp to be unveiled commemorating the 100th anniversary of the Titanic disaster.

    TITANIC - CANADIAN CONNECTION


    HALIFAX CONNECTION

    Considered one of the greatest marine disasters in recorded history, the story of RMS Titanic begins in Southampton, England on April 10, 1912, when the vessel left on her maiden voyage.  For some of those who lost their lives aboard the ill-fated ship, Halifax, Nova Scotia is where the story ended.
    On Sunday, April 14 at 11:40 pm, the Titanic struck a giant iceberg and by 2:20 am on April 15, the “unsinkable ship” was gone. The first vessel to arrive at the scene of the disaster was the Cunard Liner RMS Carpathia and she was able to rescue more than 700 survivors.  On Wednesday, April 17, the day before the Carpathia arrived in New York, the White Star Line dispatched the first of four Canadian vessels to look for bodies in the area of the sinking.
    On April 17, the Halifax-based Cable Steamer Mackay-Bennett set sail with a minister, an undertaker and a cargo of ice, coffins and canvas bags. She arrived at the site on April 20 and spent five days carrying out her grim task.  Her crew was able to recover 306 bodies, 116 of which had to be buried at sea. On April 26, theMackay-Bennett left for Halifax with 190 bodies.  She was relieved by the Minia, also a Halifax-based cable ship. 
    The Minia had been at sea when the Titanic sank, but returned to Halifax in order to collect the necessary supplies before sailing from the Central Wharf on April 22 for the scene of the disaster.  After eight days of searching, the Minia was only able to find 17 bodies, two of which were buried at sea. 
    On May 6, the Canadian government vessel CGS Montmagny left Halifax and recovered four bodies, one of which was buried at sea. The remaining three victims were brought from Louisbourg, Nova Scotia to Halifax by rail.  The fourth and final ship in the recovery effort was the SS Algerine, which sailed from St. John’s, Newfoundland and Labrador on May 16.  The crew of the Algerine found one body, which was shipped to Halifax on the SS Florizel.
    The majority of the bodies were unloaded at the Coal or Flagship Wharf on the Halifax waterfront and  horse-drawn hearses brought the victims to the temporary morgue in the Mayflower Curling Rink. 
    Only 59 of the bodies placed in the morgue were shipped out by train to their families.  The remaining victims of the Titanic were buried in three Halifax cemeteries between May 3 and June 12.  Religious services were held at St. Paul's Church and at the Synagogue on Starr Street. Burial services were held at St. Mary’s Cathedral, Brunswick Street Methodist Church, St. George’s Church and All Saint’s Cathedral.
    Various individuals and businesses expressed their sympathy by donating flowers and wreaths.  The coffins of the unidentified victims were adorned with bouquets of lilies.
    Most of the gravestones, erected in the fall of 1912 and paid for by the White Star Line, are plain granite blocks.  In some cases, however, families, friends or other groups chose to commission a larger and more elaborate gravestone.  All of these more personalized graves, including the striking Celtic cross and the beautiful monument to the “Unknown Child”, are located at Fairview Lawn Cemetery.

    TITANIC NEWS (1) - Titanic photo shows evidence of human remains

    Titanic photo shows evidence of human remains
    A newly released photo from the North Atlantic site of the shipwrecked RMS Titanic shows evidence of human remains, federal officials are saying.

    "RETURN TO TITANIC" MEETS SCIENCE OBJECTIVES,
    REMINDS ALL THAT WRECK SITE IS HALLOWED GROUND
    Expedition Ends Just Prior to U.S. Signing of Titanic Agreement

    Image of the shoes of a Titanic victim photographed in a debris field near the stern of the ship on June 6, 2004, by the ROV Hercules during an expedition returning to the Titanic, launched from the NOAA ship Ronald H. Brown.June 21, 2004 — When NOAA co-sponsored Return to Titanic, a scientific expedition to the site of arguably the world's most memorable shipwreck, the team of explorers and scientists sent their underwater robots to gather scientific data 12,000 feet deep. The mission was to learn how, and how quickly, Titanic was deteriorating from natural and human causes. However, pairs of shoes, suitcases and galley dishes that lie in the debris field were powerful reminders that this is hallowed ground. That’s why steps were taken to protect the wreck. (Click image for larger view of the shoes of a Titanic victim photographed in a debris field near the stern of the ship on June 6, 2004, by the ROV Hercules during an expedition returning to the Titanic, launched from the NOAA ship Ronald H. Brown.

    The expedition included Robert D. Ballard, who discovered the historic wreck in 1985 and who today still has strong feelings about protecting the site. NOAA took a step to further protect Titanic in April 2001 when, in accordance with the Titanic Maritime Memorial Act, NOAA published "Guidelines for Research, Exploration and Salvage of RMS Titanic." Though the guidelines provided a model of conduct based on international archaeological standards, they were voluntary guidelines, without enforcement authority.

    Image of the starboard railing near the bow of the Titanic photographed on June 1, 2004, by the ROV Hercules during an expedition returning to the shipwreck of the Titanic.The protection of Titanic took a major step forward Friday just after the Return to Titanic mission concluded, when the U.S. ambassador in London signed an international agreement that will lead to enforcement authority and increased protection of the wreck site. When Congress passes enabling legislation, the agreement will come into force for the U.S. It will realize a goal long sought by Ballard and will provide for the signing nations, an international extension of NOAA's 2001 guidelines, but this time with law enforcement power replacing voluntary guidelines. (Click image for larger view of the starboard railing near the bow of the Titanic photographed on June 1, 2004, by the ROV Hercules during an expedition returning to the shipwreck of the Titanic.

    NOAA leadership on this issue dates to 1985 when Nancy Foster, former assistant administrator of the NOAA Ocean Service, testified before Congress on a House Resolution to protect Titanic. "This agreement has potential as a model for protection of other shipwrecks and submerged marine resources well beyond the territorial jurisdiction of nations," said NOAA General Counsel Jim Walpole.

    Image of a port side forward expansion joint on the boat deck of the bow section of the shipwreck Titanic as photographed June 1, 2004, by ROV Hercules deployed from the NOAA ship Ronald H. Brown. NOAA also played a significant role on the U.S. delegation during negotiation of the agreement by the four nations most closely associated with Titanic—the United States, Canada, France and the United Kingdom, which signed the agreement in November 2003. The agreement must be ratified by at least two of those nations to be effective. Concerted action by these countries would effectively foreclose unregulated salvage and other potentially harmful activities that would disturb the integrity of the wreck site. (Click image for larger view of a port side forward expansion joint on the boat deck of the bow section of the shipwreck Titanic as photographed June 1, 2004, by ROV Hercules deployed from the NOAA ship Ronald H. Brown.

    Under the agreement, Titanic will be designated an international maritime memorial to those who perished there and whose remains should be respected. It will also protect the scientific, cultural and historical significance of the wreck site by regulating, within the jurisdiction of the signatories, dives to the Titanic shipwreck.

    The Titanic Maritime Memorial Act was signed into law by President Ronald Reagan in 1986 and directs the Department of State to forward the signed agreement and recommended implementing legislation to Congress. The agreement does not apply to the existing collection of 6,000 Titanic artifacts that have already been salvaged pursuant to admiralty court orders, but it is consistent with those orders as well as current scientific principles of historic and cultural resource conservation.

    The 2004 return trip to Titanic was not an easy one. The explorers and the crew of NOAA ship Ronald H. Brown battled weather so difficult it sometimes kept the remotely-operated vehicles (ROVs) lashed to the deck of the tossing ship when they should have been relocating Titanic or gathering scientific data and images of the wreck. When the sea state did allow operations, technical problems with the underwater robots or electrical glitches in their long umbilical cords caused further delays.

    Technicians from Ballard's Institute for Exploration soon had the ROVs ready for deployment, and when "windows" of good weather appeared, the underwater robots began their four-hour dive to the deep cold waters where the remains of the great ship and more than 1,500 of her crewmembers and passengers lie.

    Copy from NOAA Magazine (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration)
    Credit NOAA / Institute for Exploration/University of Rhode Island or NOAA—IFE/URI.)

    Sunday, 18 March 2012

    100 HISTORIC FIGURES - How Many Do You Know? (The results)

    100 HISTORIC FIGURES THROUGHOUT HISTORY
    HOW MANY DO YOU KNOW?


    Answer: (by Rony Kamel)

    1. Bill Gates, Microsoft founder
    2. Homer, Greek poet
    3. Cui Jian, Chinese singer
    4. Vladimir Lenin, Russian revolutionary
    5. Pavel Korchagin, Russian artist
    6. Bill Clinton, former U.S. President
    7. Peter the Great, Russian leader
    8. Margaret Thatcher
    9. Bruce Lee, martial arts - actor

    10. Winston Churchill
    11. Henri Matisse, French artist
    12. Genghis Khan, Mongolian warlord
    13. Napoleon Bonaparte, French military leader
    14. Che Guevara, Marxist revolutionary
    15. Fidel Castro, former Cuban leader
    16. Marlon Brando, actor
    17. Yasser Arafat, former Palestinian leader
    18. Julius Caesar, Roman emperor
    19. Gen. Claire Lee Chennault, WW II U.S. aviator
    20. Luciano Pavarotti, singer
    21. George W. Bush, former U.S. President
    22. The Prince of Wales
    23. Liu Xiang, Chinese Olympic hurdler
    24. Kofi Annan, former UN Secretary General
    25. Zhang An, the painter
    26. Mikhail Gorbachev, former Russian leader
    27. Li Tiezi, the painter
    28. Dante Alighieri, Florentine poet
    29. Dai Dudu, the painter
    30. Pele, Brazilian footballer
    31. Guan Yu, Chinese warlord
    32. Ramses II, Egyptian pharaoh
    33. Charles De Gaulle, French general
    34. Albert Nobel, Swedish chemist who founded the Nobel prizes
    35. Franklin Roosevelt, former U.S. President
    36. Ernest Hemingway, American novelist
    37. Elvis Presley, American singer
    38. Robert Oppenheimer, U.S. physicist
    39. William Shakespeare, playwright
    40. Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, composer
    41. Steven Spielberg, U.S. film director
    42. Pablo Picasso, Spanish painter
    43. Marie Curie, physicist and pioneer of radioactivity
    44. Zhou Enlai, first Premier of the People’s Republic of China
    45. Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe, German writer
    46. Laozi, Chinese philosopher
    47. Marilyn Monroe, American actress
    48. Salvador Dali, Spanish painter
    49. Dowager Cixi, former ruler of China
    50. Ariel Sharon, former Israeli Prime Minister
    51. Qi Baishi, Chinese painter

    52. Qin Shi Huang, former Chinese Emperor
    53. Mother Teresa, Roman Catholic missionary
    54. Song Qingling, Chinese politician
    55. Rabindranath Tagore, Indian poet
    56. Otto Von Bismarck, German statesman
    57. Run Run Shaw, Chinese media mogul
    58. Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Swiss philosopher
    59. Audrey Hepburn, actress
    60. Ludwig Van Beethoven, German composer
    61. Adolf Hitler, Nazi leader
    62. Benito Mussolini, Italian fascist leader
    63. Saddam Hussein, former Iraq president
    64. Maxim Gorky, Russian writer
    65. Sun Yat-Sen, Chinese revolutionary
    66. Den Xiaoping, Chinese revolutionary
    67. Alexander Pushkin, Russian author
    68. Lu Xun, Chinese writer
    69. Joseph Stalin, former Soviet Union leader
    70. Leonardo Da Vinci, Italian painter
    71. Karl Marx, German philosopher
    72. Friedrich Nietzsche, German philosopher
    73. Abraham Lincoln, former U.S. President
    74. Mao Zedong, Chinese dictator
    75. Charlie Chaplin, British actor
    76. Henry Ford, founder of Ford motor company
    77. Lei Feng, Chinese soldier
    78. Norman Bethune, Canadian physician
    79. Sigmund Freud, Austrian psychiatrist
    80. Juan Antonio Samaranch, former International Olympic Committee president
    81. Chiang Kai Shek, Chinese general
    83. Leo Tolstoy, Russian novelist
    84. Li Bai, Chinese poet
    82. The Queen
    85. Corneliu Baba, Romanian painter
    86. Auguste Rodin, French artist
    87. Dwight Eisenhower, former U.S. President
    88. Michael Jordan, U.S. basketball player
    89. Hideki Tojo, former Japanese Prime Minister
    90. Michelangelo, Italian Renaissance painter
    91. Yi Sun-Sin, Korean naval commander
    92. Mike Tyson, American boxer
    93. Vladimir Putin, Russian Prime Minister
    94. Hans Christian Andersen, Danish author
    95. Shirley Temple, American actress
    96. Albert Einstein, German physicist
    97. Moses, Hebrew religious leader
    98. Confucius, Chinese philosopher
    99. Ghandi, Indian spiritual leader
    100. Vincent Van Gogh, Dutch painter
    101. Toulouse Lautrec, French painter
    102. Marcel Duchamp, French artist

    (Osama bin Laden, founder of al Qaeda, is behind George W. Bush, no 21


    ABBEY ROAD meets CHARLIE BROWN
    The Peanuts’ gang Charlie Brown, Lucy, Snoopy, Woodstock, & Marcie (by )

    ABBEY ROAD meets THE BEATLES
    It might be interesting to mention how to the left of the picture (parked next to the zebra crossing) is a white Volkswagen Beetle motor-car which belonged to one of the people living in the block of flats across from the recording studio. After the album was released, the number plate (LMW 281F) was stolen repeatedly from the car. The crossing is also a very popular destination for Beatles fans and there is even a webcam featuring it! (From "moillusions)


    SINKING HOUSE ILLUSION
    

    The first photo was taken under an angle, giving you impression the house is sinking, while infact the camera was tilted to the right. (By )

    ILLUSION: 100 FAMOUS PEOPLE - How Many Do You Know?

    ILLUSION: 100 FAMOUS PEOPLE THROUGHOUT HISTORY
    (from "Mighty Optical Illusions")



    HOW MANY DO YOU KNOW?

    Check next posting for results.

    How LENIN can score!

    JUST A PILE OF GARBAGE:
    [shadowillusion.jpg]
    Photo created by Shigeo Fukada


    SWEET & SPOOKY:
    Two Sisters in the Skull - by artist Karl Kwasny

    SOME OF US CHANGE
    by DeviantArt user MelloLover. 

    TWO BOYS BACK TO BACK
    by Karl Kwasny

    YOUNG LADY-OLD CLEANER LADY

    Sunday, 11 March 2012

    Top 10 Movie Trilogies

    Top 10 Movie Trilogies

    1. Top 10 Movie Trilogies
    George Lucas’ 3D-ifying of “The Phantom Menace” raked in a surprising amount of money at the box office last week, prompting us to look back at the high-grossing movie trilogies of all times. Ground rules: Franchises with more than three films like "Mission Impossible" and "Pirates of the Caribbean" are not included. Rereleases are included in the box office totals, like last year's reissue of "Toy Story" and "Toy Story 2" in 3D. And box office totals are domestic grosses and are not adjusted for inflation. Click on the photo to see how the biggest trilogies ranked, and which movie in each series earned the most money.

    
    ALVIN AND THE CHIPMUNKS- $566,028,876
    Top 10 Movie TrilogiesAlvin And The Chipmunks: The Squeakquel (2009) -- $219,614,612
    Alvin And The Chipmunks (2007) -- $ 217,326,974

    Alvin And The Chipmunks: Chipwrecked (2011) -- $129,087,240


    ICE AGE - $568,080,573
    1. Top 10 Trilogies Gallery 2010 …
    Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs (2009) - $196,363,405
    Ice Age: The Meltdown
    (2006) - $195,329,763
    Ice Age
    (2002) - $176,387,405


    THE MATRIX - $592,135,491
    Top 10 Trilogies Gallery 2010 …

    The Matrix Reloaded (2003) - $281,492,479 The Matrix (1999) - $171,383,253 The Matrix Revolutions (2003) - $139,259,759



    JURASSIC PARK - $766,989,054
    1. Top 10 Trilogies Jurassic …
    Jurassic Park (1993) - $356,748,415
    The Lost World: Jurassic Park (1997) - $229,074,524 Jurassic Park III (2001) - $181,166,115


     TOY STORY - $883,194,478
    1.  Top 10 Trilogies Toy Story …

    Toy Story 3 (2010) - $415,004,880 Toy Story 2 (1999) - $245,823,397 Toy Story (1995) - $191,773,049
    Toy Story/Toy Story 2 in 3D (2009) - $30,593,152
     



    THE LORD OF THE RINGS - $1,031,169,477 
    1. Top 10 Trilogies Gallery 2010 …
    The Return of the King (2003) - $376,853,002
    The Two Towers (2002) - $340,478,898 The Fellowship of the Ring (2001) - $313,837,577



    STAR WARS: EPISODES IV-VI - $1,060,476,463

    1. Top 10 Trilogies Gallery 2010 …
    A New Hope (1977) - $460,998,007
    Return of the Jedi (1983) - $309,206,384
    The Empire Strikes Back (1980) - $290,272,072 
    *Includes the 1997 "Special Edition" releases.


    TRANSFORMERS - $1,073,748,606
    1. Top 10 Movie Trilogies

    Tranformers: Revenge of The Fallen (2009) -- $402,111,870
    Transformers: Dark Of The Moon
    (2011) -- $352,390,543
    Transformers
    (2007) -- $319,246,193



    SPIDER-MAN - $1,113,614,571 
    1. Spider-Man Top 10 Trilogi …
    Spider-Man (2002) - $403,706,375 Spider-Man 2 (2004) - $373,377,893 Spider-Man 3 (2007) - $336,530,303



    STAR WARS: EPISODES I-III - $1,122,003,582
    1.  Top 10 Trilogies Gallery 2010 …
    The Phantom Menace (1999) - $431,065,444
    Revenge of the Sith (2005) - $380,262,555 Attack of the Clones (2002) - $310,675,583
    *Includes IMAX re-releases.

    Wednesday, 29 February 2012

    LEAP YEAR - 10 things about February 29

    Leap year: 10 things about 29 February

    The "leap day" of 29 February exists for purely astronomical reasons, but has always prompted less scientific curiosities.

    Here are 10 things to consider - for one day only. Until 2016, that is.

    1. The leap year's extra day is necessary because of the "messiness" of our Solar System. One Earth year (a complete orbit around the Sun) does not take an exact number of whole days (one complete spin of the Earth on its axis). In fact, it takes 365.2422 days, give or take.

    2. Until Julius Caesar came to power, people observed a 355-day calendar - with an extra 22-day month every two years. But it was a convoluted solution to the problem and feast days began sliding into different seasons. So Caesar ordered his astronomer, Sosigenes, to simplify things. Sosigenes opted for the 365-day year with an extra day every four years to scoop up the extra hours. This is how the 29 February was born. It was then fine-tuned by Pope Gregory XIII (see below).

    3. Every fourth year is a leap year, as a rule of thumb. But that's not the end of the story. A year that is divisible by 100, but not by 400, is not. So 2000 was a leap year, as was 1600. But 1700, 1800 and 1900 are not leap years. "It seems a bit arbitrary," says Ian Stewart, emeritus professor of mathematics at Warwick University. But there's a good reason behind it.

    "The year is 365 days and a quarter long - but not exactly. If it was exactly, then you could say it was every four years. But it is very slightly less." The answer arrived at by Pope Gregory XIII and his astronomers when they introduced the Gregorian calendar in 1582, was to lose three leap days every 400 years. The maths has hung together ever since. It will need to be rethought in about 10,000 years' time, Stewart warns. But by then mankind might have come up with a new system.

    4. Why is February 29, not February 31, a leap year day? All the other months have 30 or 31 days, but February suffered from the ego of Roman Emperor Caesar Augustus, says Stewart. Under Julius Caesar, February had 30 days, but when Caesar Augustus was emperor he was peeved that his month - August - had only 29 days, whereas the month named after his predecessor Julius - July - had 31. "He pinched a couple of days for August to make it the same as July. And it was poor old February that lost out," says Prof Stewart.

    5. The tradition of a woman proposing on a leap year has been attributed to various historical figures. One, although much disputed, was St Bridget in the 5th Century. She is said to have complained to St Patrick that women had to wait too long for their suitors to propose. St Patrick then supposedly gave women a single day in a leap year to pop the question - the last day of the shortest month. Another popular story is that Queen Margaret of Scotland brought in a law setting fines for men who turned down marriage proposals put by women on a leap year. Sceptics have pointed out that Margaret was five years old at the time and living far away in Norway. The tradition is not thought to have become commonplace until the 19th Century.

    It is believed that the right of every woman to propose on this day goes back to the times when the leap year day was not recognised by English law. It was believed that if the day had no legal status, it was acceptable to break with tradition.

    6. A prayer has been written by a female cleric for people planning a leap year day marriage proposal. The prayer, for 29 February, asks for blessings on the engaged couple. It reminds them that wedding plans should not overtake preparations for a lifetime together. The prayer has been taken from Pocket Prayers of Blessing by the Venerable Jan McFarlane, Archdeacon of Norwich:

    "God of love, please bless N and N as they prepare for the commitment of marriage. May the plans for the wedding not overtake the more important preparation for their lifetime together. Please bless their family and friends as they prepare for this special day and may your blessing be upon them now and always. Amen."

    7. The practice of women proposing in a leap year is different around the world. In Denmark, it is not supposed to be 29 but 24 February, which hails back to the time of Julius Caesar. A refusal to marry by Danish men means they must give the woman 12 pairs of gloves. In Finland, it is not gloves but fabric for a skirt and in Greece, marriage in a leap year is considered unlucky, leading many couples to avoid it.


    Line up of "leaplings" from 1928

    8. The chance of being born on a leap day is often said to be one in 1,461. Four years is 1,460 days and adding one for the leap year you have 1,461. So, odds of 1/1,461.

    But Stewart points out that is very slightly out, owing to the loss of the three leap years every 400 years. In any case, babies are more likely to be born at certain times of the year rather than others, due to a range of other factors, he says. Babies born on 29 February are known as "leapers" or "leaplings".

    9. Other calendars apart from the Gregorian require leap years. The modern Iranian calendar is a solar calendar with eight leap days inserted into a 33-year cycle. The Indian National Calendar and the Revised Bangla Calendar of Bangladesh arrange their leap years so that the leap day is always close to 29 February in the Gregorian calendar.

    10. Explorer Christopher Columbus used the lunar eclipse of 29 February 1504 to his advantage during his final trip to the West Indies. After several months of being stranded with his crew on the island of Jamaica, relations with the indigenous population broke down and they refused to continue helping with food and provisions. Columbus, knowing a lunar eclipse was due, consulted his almanac and then gathered the native chiefs on 29 February. He told that God was to punish them by painting the Moon red. During the eclipse, he said that God would withdraw the punishment if they starting co-operating again. The panicked chiefs agreed and the Moon began emerging from its shadow.

    Also of a supernatural nature, on 29 February 1692 the first warrants were issued in the Salem witchcraft trials in Massachusetts.




    Friday, 10 February 2012

    IN HONOR OF ALL OF OUR ARMED FORCES

    
    The night before the burial of her husband 2nd Lt. James Cathey of the United States Marine Corps, killed in Iraq, Katherine Cathey refused to leave the casket, asking to sleep next to his body for the last time. The Marines made a bed for her, tucking in the sheets below the flag. Before she fell asleep, she opened her laptop computer and played songs that reminded her of him, and one of the Mari...nes asked if she wanted them to continue standing watch as she slept. "I think it would be kind of nice if you kept doing it" she said. "I think that's what he would have wanted".

    -Not sure what is more honorable: Being married to this faithful wife to the end or the Marine standing next to the casket watching over them both.

    IN HONOR OF ALL OF OUR ARMED FORCES PLEASE SHARE THIS.
     
    Be kind, for everyone you meet is fighting a hard battle.Plato, Greek author & philosopher in Athens (427 BC - 347 BC)