#CiberDemosCratos #Efemerides 20150626
#SinLugar #EnUnMundoAlterno #ElInformal , #CirCuloDelLátigoNegro #InternationalWorkShop #ArtEtPhotographie #FraternidadFilantroPicaFutorologaDelFalismo
Un diario para las generaciones XYZ.
#PinturaDelDía Prise de l'Hôtel de ville : le Pont d'Arcole. 28 juillet 1830 by Amédée Bourgeois
#FraseDelDia PorPensarEnÉlMañanaOlvidoVivirElPresente, PonchoPochenko
NOM-210-SSA1-2014: Objeto establecer los métodos generales y alternativos de prueba para la determinación de los siguientes indicadores microbianos y patógenos en alimentos, bebidas y agua para uso y consumo humano http://www.dof.gob.mx/nota_detalle.php?codigo=5398468&fecha=26/06/2015
#Acontecimientos
Painting of a barricade on Rue Soufflot (with the Panthéon behind), Paris, June 1848. By Horace Vernet. 1848 – End of the June Days Uprising in Paris. The June Days Uprising (French: les journées de Juin) was an uprising staged by the workers of France from 23 June to 26 June 1848.[1] It was in response to plans to close the National Workshops, created by the Second Republic in order to provide work and a source of income for the unemployed; however, only low pay, dead-end jobs were provided, which barely provided enough money to survive.[2] The National Guard, led by General Louis Eugène Cavaignac, was called out to quell the protests. Things did not go peacefully and over 10,000 people were either killed or injured, while 4,000 insurgents were deported to Algeria. This marked the end of the hopes of a "Democratic and Social Republic" (République démocratique et sociale) and the victory of the liberals over the Radical Republicans.
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1886 – Henri Moissan isolated elemental Fluorine for the first time. Fluorine is a chemical element with symbol F and atomic number 9. It is the lightest halogen and exists as a highly toxic pale yellow diatomic gas at standard conditions. As the most electronegative element, it is extremely reactive: almost all other elements, including some noble gases, form compounds with fluorine.
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1889 – Bangui is founded by Albert Dolisie and Alfred Uzac in what was then the upper reaches of the French Congo.
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1906 – The first Grand Prix motor racing event held. The race was won by Ferenc Szisz driving for the Renault team. FIAT driver Felice Nazzaro finished second, and Albert Clément was third in a Clément-Bayard.
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King George V leaving the Science Museum, London, 1928
1909 – The Science Museum in London comes into existence as an independent entity. http://www.sciencemuseum.org.uk/
Open seven days a week, 10.00-18.00. Entry to the Museum is free, but charges apply for the IMAX 3D Theatre, simulators and for some special exhibitions.
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The Grumman F6F Hellcat was a carrier-based fighter aircraft conceived to replace the earlier F4F Wildcat in United States Navy (USN) service.
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1945 – The United Nations Charter is signed in San Francisco by 50 of the 51 original member countries. http://www.un.org/es/documents/charter/
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1948 – William Shockley files the original patent for the grown-junction transistor, the first bipolar junction transistor. https://classes.soe.ucsc.edu/ee171/Winter06/notes/transistor.pdf
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1959 – Swedish boxer Ingemar Johansson becomes world champion of heavy weight boxing, by defeating American Floyd Patterson on technical knockout after 2 minutes and three seconds in the third round at Yankee Stadium.
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1974 – The Universal Product Code is scanned for the first time to sell a package of Wrigley's chewing gum at the Marsh Supermarket in Troy, Ohio
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2000 – President Clinton announces the completion of the first survey of the entire human genome. http://www.genome.gov/
The human genome is the complete set of genetic information for humans (Homo sapiens). This information is encoded as DNA sequences within the 23 chromosomepairs in cell nuclei and in a small DNA molecule found within individual mitochondria. Human genomes include both protein-coding DNA genes and noncoding DNA.Haploid human genomes (contained in egg and sperm cells) consist of three billion DNA base pairs, while diploid genomes (found in somatic cells) have twice the DNA content.
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2003 – The U.S. Supreme Court rules in Lawrence v. Texas that gender-based sodomy laws are unconstitutional. Sodomy typically includes anal sex, oral sex and bestiality. In practice, sodomy laws have rarely been enforced against heterosexual couples.
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2015 – The U.S. Supreme Court rules that same-sex couples have a constitutional right to marriage under the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution.
#FelizAniversário #FelizCumpleaños #HappyBirthday #JoyeuxAnniversaire #BuonCompleanno #Nacimientos
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His Phra Aphai Mani poems describe a fantastical world, where people of all races and religions live and interact together in harmony.
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The Rainbow - Poem by Patrick Branwell Bronte
The shower is past, and the sky
O'erhead is both mild and serene,
Save where a few drops from on high,
Like gems, twinkle over the green:
And glowing fair, in the black north,
The rainbow o'erarches the cloud;
The sun in his glory comes forth,
And larks sweetly warble aloud.
That dismally grim northern sky
Says God in His vengeance once frowned,
And opened His flood-gates on high,
Till obstinate sinners were drowned:
The lively bright south, and that bow,
Say all this dread vengeance is o'er;
These colours that smilingly glow
Say we shall be deluged no more.
Ever blessed be those innocent days,
Ever sweet their remembrance to me;
When often, in silent amaze,
Enraptured, I'd gaze upon thee!
Whilst arching adown the black sky
Thy colours glowed on the green hill,
To catch thee as lightning I'd fly,
But aye you eluded my skill.
From hill unto hill your gay scene
You shifted, whilst crying aloud,
I ran, till at length from the green,
You shifted, at once to the cloud!
So, vain worldly phantoms betray
The youths who too eager pursue,
When ruined and far led astray,
Th' illusion escapes from their view.
Those peaceable days knew no care,
Except what arose from my play,
My favourite lambkin and hare,
And cabin I built o'er the way.
No cares did I say? Ah! I'm wrong:
Even childhood from cares is not free:
Far distant I see a grim throng
Shake horrible lances at me!
One day, I remember it still,
For pranks I had played on the clown
Who lived on the neighbouring hill,
My cabin was trod to the ground.
Who ever felt grief such as I
When crashed by this terrible blow?
Not Priam, the monarch of Troy,
When all his proud towers lay low.
And grief upon grief was my lot:
Soon after, my lambkin was slain;
My hare, having strayed from its cot,
Was chased by the hounds o'er the plain.
What countless calamities teem
From memory's page on my view!
How trifling soever you seem,
Yet once I have wept over you.
Then cease, foolish heart, to repine;
No stage is exempted from care:
If you would true happiness find,
Come follow! and I'll show you where.
But, first, let us take for our guide
The Word which Jehovah has penned;
By this the true path is descried
Which leads to a glorious end.
How narrow this path to our view!
How steep an ascent lies before!
Whilst, foolish fond heart, laid for you
Are dazzling temptations all o'er.
What bye-ways with easy descent
Invite us through pleasures to stray!
Whilst Satan, with hellish intent,
Suggests that we ought to obey.
But trust not the father of lies,
He tempts you with vanity's dream;
His pleasure, when touched, quickly dies,
Like bubbles that dance on the stream.
Look not on the wine when it glows
All ruddy, in vessels of gold;
At last it will sting your repose,
And death at the bottom unfold.
But lo! an unnatural night
Pours suddenly down on the eye;
The sun has withdrawn all his light,
And rolls a black globe o'er the sky!
And hark! what a cry rent the air!
Immortal the terrible sound!
The rocks split with honible tear,
And fearfully shakes all the ground!
The dead from their slumbers awake,
And, leaving their mouldy domain,
Make poor guilty mortals to quake
As pallid they glide o'er the plain!
Sure, Nature's own God is oppressed,
And Nature in agony cries;
The sun in his mourning is dressed,
To tell the sad news through the skies!
Yet surely some victory's gained,
Important, and novel, and great,
Since Death has his captives unchained,
And widely thrown open his gate!
Yes, victory great as a God
Could gain over hell, death, and sin,
This moment's achieved by the blood
Of Jesus, our crucified King.
But all the dread conflict is o'er;
Lo! cloud after cloud rolls away;
And heaven, serene as before,
Breaks forth in the splendour of day!
And all the sweet landscape around,
Emerged from the ocean of night,
With groves, woods, and villages crowned,
Astonish and fill with delight!
But see! where that crowd melts away,
Three crosses sad spectacles show!
Our Guide has not led us astray;
Heart! this is the secret you'd know,
Two thieves, and a crucified God
Hangs awfully mangled between!
Whilst fast from His veins spouting blood
Runs, dyeing with purple the green!
Behold! the red flood rolls along,
And forming a bason below,
Is termed in Emanuel's song
The fount for uncleanness and woe.
Immerged in that precious tide,
The soul quickly loses its stains,
Though deeper than crimson they're dyed,
And 'scapes from its sorrows and pains.
This fountain is opened for you:
Go, wash, without money or price;
And instantly formed anew,
You'll lose all your woes in a trice.
Then cease, foolish heart, to repine,
No stage is exempted from care;
If you would true happiness find,
'Tis on Calvary, seek for it there.
The Spider And The Fly - Poem by Patrick Branwell Bronte
The sun shines bright, the morning's fair,
The gossamers float on the air,
The dew-gems twinkle in the glare,
The spider's loom
Is closely plied, with artful care,
Even in my room.
See how she moves in zigzag line,
And draws along her silken twine,
Too soft for touch, for sight too fine,
Nicely cementing:
And makes her polished drapery shine,
The edge indenting.
Her silken ware is gaily spread,
And now she weaves herself a bed,
Where, hiding all but just her head,
She watching lies
For moths or gnats, entangled spread,
Or buzzing flies.
You cunning pest! why, forward, dare
So near to lay your bloody snare!
But you to kingly courts repair
With fell design,
And spread with kindred courtiers there
Entangling twine.
Ah, silly fly! will you advance?
I see you in the sunbeam dance:
Attracted by the silken glance
In that dread loom;
Or blindly led, by fatal chance,
To meet your doom.
Ah! think not, 'tis the velvet flue
Of hare, or rabbit, tempts your view;
Or silken threads of dazzling hue,
To ease your wing,
The foaming savage, couched for you,
Is on the spring.
Entangled! freed! and yet again
You touch! 'tis o'er, that plaintive strain,
That mournful buzz, that struggle vain,
Proclaim your doom:
Up to the murderous den you're ta'en,
Your bloody tomb!
So thoughtless youths will trifling play
With dangers on their giddy way,
Or madly err in open day
Through passions fell,
And fall, though warned oft, a prey
To death and hell!
But hark! the fluttering leafy trees
Proclaim the gently swelling breeze,
Whilst through my window, by degrees,
Its breathings play:
The spider's web, all tattered flees,
Like thought, away.
Thus worldlings lean on broken props,
And idly weave their cobweb-hopes,
And hang o'er hell by spider's ropes,
Whilst sins enthral;
Affliction blows, their joy elopes,
And down they fall!
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Self caricature of Branwell (1847) in bed waiting to die.
John Lennon – the reincarnation of Branwell Brontë? - See more at: http://personalityspirituality.net/2009/07/10/john-lennon-the-reincarnation-of-branwell-bronte/#sthash.nGCY51rF.dpuf
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Pearl Buck in 1932, about the timeThe Good Earth was published.
Buck spent most of her life before 1934 in China. Her novel The Good Earth was the best-selling fiction book in the United States in 1931 and 1932 and won the Pulitzer Prize in 1932. In 1938, she was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature "for her rich and truly epic descriptions of peasant life in China and for her biographical masterpieces". She was the first American woman to win the Nobel Prize for Literature.
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was an American artist and storyteller, known for his series of wordless novels using wood engraving, and his illustrations for juvenile and adult books. His wordless novels have influenced the development of the graphic novel. Strongly associated with his wood engravings, he also worked in watercolor, oil, brush and ink, lithography and mezzotint.
Beowulf wrestles with Grendel - Lynd Ward
Lynd Ward - Wood Engraving for "Prelude to a Million Years" 1933
God’s Man: Arrest, Imprisonment, Escape, Pursuers gloat after the Artist falls from a cliff.
https://shrineodreams.wordpress.com/2013/02/02/lynd-ward/
Wild Pilgrimage: The Young Man is introduced to political theory; he thinks that he is pulled from the pit of ignorance; he sees the cause of all injustice (echoing the lynch scene);he and the Philosopher will change the world!
Wild Pilgrimage: The Young Man sees the factory floor as Hell; company police break up a workers’ meeting; the Young Man realizes that he is assaulting his own humanity.
Frankenstein - Lynd Ward
Frankenstein - Lynd Ward
Frankenstein - Lynd Ward
Prelude to a Million Years (10)
PortFolio : http://en.wahooart.com/@/LyndWard
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was a Francophone and French poet, author and politician from Martinique. He was "one of the founders of the négritude movement in Francophone literature".[1] He wrote such works as Une Tempête, a response to Shakespeare’s play The Tempest, and Discours sur le colonialisme (Discourse on Colonialism), an essay describing the strife between the colonizers and the colonized.
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Giuseppe Taddei and Giuseppe di Stefano sing, "In un coupé" from La Bohème by Giacomo Puccini. Orchestra Sinfonica di Roma della RAI https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uRzn-kMuIGE
"Nemico della Patria" Giuseppe Taddei - Andrea Chénier https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7PE6Ztlm1BM
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Luciano Pavarotti: Natale a Notre Dame (Montreal Symphony Orchestra, Franz Paul Decker Conductor, 1978) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RtWOy_bqE-I
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Prism, per grande orchestra (1980) -- New York Philharmonic diretta da Zubin Mehta https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CJBjgV-klgA
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Christmas Island's adult red crabs begin their migration from the forest to the Indian Ocean where they breed and spawn.
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His designs include the I ♥ NY logo,his Bob Dylan poster, the DC bullet logo used by DC Comicsfrom 1977 to 2005, and the Brooklyn Brewery logo. He also founded New York Magazine with Clay Felker in 1968.
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One of the most celebrated and respected conductors of the 20th century, he served as music director of the La Scala opera house in Milan, principal conductor of the London Symphony Orchestra, principal guest conductor of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, music director of the Vienna State Opera, and principal conductor of the Berlin Philharmonicorchestra.
Mozart: Requiem In D Minor, K.626 - 1. Introitus: Requiem (Live From Dom, Salzburg / 1999 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NT5jIqbdOwQ
Gustav Mahler
Symphony No 9
1 Andante comodo
2 Im Tempo eines gemächlichen Ländlers.
3 Rondo-Burleske. Allegro assai.
4 Adagio. Sehr langsam und noch zurückhaltend
Lucerne Festival Orchestra
Claudio Abbado, conductor
Lucerne, August 2010
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1937-2013 Robert Coleman Richardson, American physicist and academic, ⅓ 1996 Nobel Prize, for discovery of the property of superfluidity ( is a state of matter in which the matter behaves like a fluid with zero viscosity) in helium-3 atoms in the Cornell University Laboratory of Atomic and Solid State Physics.
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LUCIA DI LAMMERMOOR - GAETANO DONIZETTI - 2006
Lucia - Patrizia Ciofi
Edgardo - Rolando Villazon
Enrico - Roberto Frontali
Raimondo - Roberto Scandiuzzi
Arturo - Florian Laconi
Alisa - Marie-Nicole Lemieux
Normanno - Christian Jean
Conductor - Marco Guidarini
Orchestra - Orchestre Philharmonique de Nice
Chorus - Choeurs des Opéras de Région
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