Posts written by Moka_Lady

view post Posted: 30/7/2013, 11:09     +2SuperToy Teddy: l'orsacchiotto digitale che parla 30 lingue - NEWS



Supertoy even comes with his own car
(for an additional cost of $199.00)




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view post Posted: 29/7/2013, 18:25     +2Compleanno di Erich Priebke, 100 anni dell'ex ufficiale SS - NEWS

Erich Priebke, il boia delle Fosse Ardeatine:
100 anni
certe date portano a fare dei bilanci della propria vita.



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Il mio personale giudizio:

”Ha condotto una vita da vigliacco,
ma come pochi ha saputo uccidere senza alcuna pietà.”





Edited by Milea - 29/7/2013, 19:29
view post Posted: 22/7/2013, 09:33     +2Addio a Ugo Riccarelli e alla sua letteratura che pulisce il mondo - CAFFE' LETTERARIO

Sì...raramente capita di leggere dei libri

scritti con tale maestria...

Il suo stile era paragonabile a una sinfonia ...

view post Posted: 20/7/2013, 14:44     Angela Micol: le piramidi perdute di Abu Sidhum trovate con Google Earth - CAFFE' LETTERARIO

Two previously unknown sets of heavily worn down
pyramids discovered in Egypt by Google Earth




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An American scientist has discovered two new possible pyramid sites in Egypt, after spending 10 years studying Google Earth. Archeology researcher Angela Micol has pinpointed two areas along the Nile ba-sin, 90 miles apart, both containing unusual shaped mounds.

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One site includes a 620ft-wide triangular plateau that's almost three times the size of the Great Pyramid at Giza. Ms Micol, who is based in North Carolina, now plans to visit the sites to confirm they really are the location of ancient pyramids.

The first area sits alongside the Nile in Upper Egypt, 12 miles from the city of Abu Sidhum. If the plateau found there represents the remains of a genuine pyramid, it would be the largest ever discovered. The discovery was made by archeological researcher Angela Micol, from North Carolina
Ms Micol said: 'Upon closer examination of the formation, this mound appears to have a very flat top and a curiously symmetrical triangular shape that has been heavily eroded with time.'

The second site, 90 miles north, contains a four-sided shape that's 140ft wide. 'It has a distinct square centre, which is very unusual for a mound of this size and it almost seems pyramidal when seen from above,' Ms Micol said. Speaking to Sky News, she added that there were also three smaller mounds: 'si-milar to the diagonal alignment of the Giza Plateau pyramids.

'The images speak for themselves. It's very obvious what the sites may contain, but field research is needed to verify they are, in fact, pyramids.'
Both sites are significant because almost all the known pyramids were built around Cairo. Ms Micol's sites are much further south.

It's not the first archeological breakthrough to have been made thanks to Google Earth - in May last year American Egyptologist Dr Sarah Parcak identified 17 lost pyramids.
And Ms Micol herself has used the program to discover a possible underwater ci-ty off the Yucatan peninsula in Mexico.


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Square mound: A 150ft-wide truncated mound that Ms Micol located
near the ancient and abando-ned town of Dima




EGYPT'S PYRAMIDS


Pyramids were first built in Egypt in the 28th century BC as tombs for the nation's Pharoahs. The most famous Egyptian pyramids are those found at Giza, on the outskirts of Cairo.

Vast and elaborate structures they took many years and up to 100,000 workers to construct. To date there are 138 known pyramids in Egypt.
2700BC - The first stone pyramid was built at Saqqara, just south of Giza, for the pharaoh Djoser. Unlike the later pyramids, it was made by building layers of stone on top of each other, so it resembled a set of steps.

2600BC - The Great Pyramid of Giza was built as a tomb for the Pharoah Khufu (Cheops). Standing 147 metres hihg and weighing an estimated 6,500,000 tonnes, it's the largest ever discovered.

2575-2150BC - The golden age of pyramids. Hundreds were constructed around Cairo.
The new discovery is significant because almost all the 138 known pyramids are located near Cairo. Ms Micol's pyramid sites are much further south.


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Source





view post Posted: 26/6/2013, 17:26     +2Noland, il pitbull orfano adottato dalla gatta Lurlene - Animals

Puppy love!
Cat nurses one-week-old Pitbull


VIDEO

Lurlene the cat welcomed Noland the puppy
to her 'unusual little family' after he was orphaned.



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Edited by Milea - 27/6/2013, 20:48
view post Posted: 26/6/2013, 16:40     +1British Museum: l'arte erotica giapponese degli Shunga vietata ai minori - NEWS




Kinoe no komatsu 喜能会之故真通


Woodblock print, shunga. Woman being violated by an octopus. With inscription.
Opening from the illustrated book 'Kinoe no komatsu'.


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view post Posted: 24/6/2013, 19:14     +1Edna St.Vincent Millay: la poetessa dell’Età del Jazz - Pensieri e poesie

I Shall Forget You Presently, My Dear



I shall forget you presently, my dear,
So make the most of this, your little day,
Your little month, your little half a year,
Ere I forget, or die, or move away,
And we are done forever; by and by
I shall forget you, as I said, but now,
If you entreat me with your loveliest lie
I will protest you with my favorite vow.
I would indeed that love were longer-lived,
And oaths were not so brittle as they are,
But so it is, and nature has contrived
To struggle on without a break thus far,—
Whether or not we find what we are seeking
Is idle, biologically speaking.







Tra breve io ti scorderò mio caro,
perciò assapora il tuo piccolo giorno,
mese o semestre e godi quanto puoi;
sia che ti scordi, o ti lasci, od io muoia,
tra di noi finirà; col tempo, dico, ti
dimenticherò, comunque ora, se
m’incanti con splendide menzogne, ti
assicuro la mia migliore promessa.
Anch’io vorrei che gli amici durassero e
non fossero inezie i giuramenti, ma tant’è,
la Natura si è ingegnata fin qui di
perpetuarsi senza sosta a che noi troviamo
quel che cerchiamo è
biologicamente irrilevante.




view post Posted: 22/6/2013, 16:07     Animals - Animals

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Snub-nosed Monkeys, the monkey who went into the cold. The heavy fur of China’s snub-nosed monkey is a boon in subzero winters. Its quirky face could help too. Not yet two, a golden snub-nosed monkey perches in a highland forest in China's Zhouzhi National Nature Reserve. Maturity comes by age seven. Life span is unknown.





view post Posted: 22/6/2013, 13:57     +2Flying animals - Animals



Il gufo mimetico. Palude Okefenokee, Georgia, USA
Fonte






view post Posted: 21/6/2013, 09:10     +1Creedmoor State Hospital, viaggio nell'ospedale psichiatrico abbandonato - NEWS

Inside Creedmoor State Hospital’s Building 25



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In Queens Village, mere inches of brick and mortar separate the world we know from one of the strangest places in the city. Creedmoor Psychiatric Center’s Building 25 has undergone something of a transformation over its 40 years of neglect, but it couldn’t have done it alone. Once a haven for New York’s cast-out mentally ill, the long-abandoned ward is very much inhabited today…

Creedmoor

Creedmoor was founded in 1912 as the Farm Colony of Brooklyn State Hospital, one of hundreds of similar psychiatric wards established at the turn of the century to house and rehabilitate those who were ill equipped to function on their own. Rejected by mainstream society, hundreds of thousands of mentally disturbed individuals, many afflicted with psychosis and schizophrenia, were transferred from urban centers across the country to outlying pastoral areas where fresh air, closeness to nature, and the healing power of work was thought to be their best bet for rehabilitation.

As the 20th century progressed, asylums across the country became overrun with patients, and many institutions became desperately understaffed and dangerously underfunded. Living conditions at some psychiatric wards grew dire-patient abuse and neglect was not uncommon. Creedmoor State Hospital was habitually under scrutiny during this period, beginning in the 1940s with an outbreak of dysentery that resulted from unsanitary living conditions in the wards.

The hospital had spiraled completely out of control by 1974 when the state ordered an inquiry into an outbreak of crime on the Creedmoor campus. Within 20 months, three rapes were reported, 22 assaults, 52 fires, 130 burglaries, six instances of suicide, a shooting, a riot, and an attempted murder, prompting an investigation into all downstate mental hospitals. As late as 1984, the violent ward of Creedmoor Psychiatric Center was rocked with scandal following the death of a patient, who had been struck in the throat by a staff member while restrained in a straitjacket.

In the late 20th Century, the development of antipsychotic medications and new standards of treatment for the mentally ill accelerated a trend toward deinstitutionalization. A series of dramatic budget cuts and dwindling patient populations led to the closing of farm colonies across the United States, and a marked decline at Creedmoor. The campus continues to operate today, housing only a few hundred patients and providing outpatient services, leaving its turbulent past behind. Many of the buildings have been sold off to new tenants. Others, like Building 25, lie fallow.

The building was an active ward until some time in the 1970s, and retains many mementos from its days as a residence and treatment center for the mentally ill. With peeling paint, dusty furniture, and dark corridors, the lower floors are typical of a long-abandoned hospital, but upstairs, the effect of time has taken a grotesque turn.

The smell alone is enough to drive anyone to the verge of madness, but the visual is even more appalling. For 40 years, generations of pigeons have defecated on the fourth floor of Building 25, far removed from their dim-witted dealings with the human world, assembling a monument all their own. Guano accumulates in grey mounds under popular roosts, with the tallest columns reaching several feet in height. Like the myriad formations of a cavern, Buiding 25’s guano stalagmites are a work in progress-pigeons roost at every turn, and they’re awfully dubious of outsiders. Violent outbursts of flight punctuate an otherworldly soundscape of low, rumbling coos. The filth acts as an acoustic insulator, making every movement impossibly close.

Two levels down and a world away from the top floor, a kitchen is filled with years’ worth of garbage intersected by narrow pathways. A living room, kept relatively tidy, features a sitting area with an array of chairs, including a homemade toilet. Loosely organized objects litter every surface-toiletries, clothing, hundreds of dead D batteries. Some of the belongings looked as if they hadn’t been touched for decades, but a newspaper dated to only a few weeks before confirmed my suspicion that someone was still living here.

I found him snoozing peacefully in a light-filled dayroom, surrounded by a series of patient murals. Once painted over, images of faraway lands, country gardens, and the Holy Mother are coming to light again as time peels back the layers. The image was surprising, unforgettably human, and imprudent to photograph. Declining to introduce myself, I passed once more through the dark, decaying halls of Building 25, leaving its charms, horrors, and mysteries for the birds. Back on solid ground, its impression wouldn’t fade for months-Building 25 has a way of recurring in dreams…



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The first glimpse of Building 25′s fourth floor from the central stairwell. That’s not gravel.


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These dropping formations formed under the pipes of a sprinkler system the birds frequented.


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Overgrowth covered most of the windows, casting green light over much of the interior.


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Furniture stacked in a cafeteria on Building 25′s third floor.



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These chairs are popular with urban explorers, one went as far as covering the upholstery with fake blood


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Metallic sheets are bolted to this bathroom wall in lieu of mirrors, which patients could use as a weapon



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A tiny toy collection arranged on a windowsill.



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Even in the 70s, this equipment was outdated, and left behind.



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Did this mural prophesy the current condition of the top floor?



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An uninviting hallway on Creedmoor’s fourth floor.



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Satan’s sandbox.



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This bathroom held the largest volume of fecal matter.



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And I thought gas station toilets were filthy.



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The guano gives some rooms the look of an indoor desert.



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Anyone for musical chairs?



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An incongruous Virgin emerges from an infested day room.



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A glimpse at the Creedmoor squat. Source





Edited by Milea - 21/6/2013, 10:17
292 replies since 5/5/2012