Nevjerojatna mapa: Evo kako naša tijela “svijetle” pod različitim emocijama! Istraživanje iz Finske, objavljeno u časopisu Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences ( PNAS ) iz SAD-a, daje dobru osnovu za razumijevanje kako naše tijelo fizički reagira na različita emocionalna stanja. Znanstvenici sa Sveučilišta Aalto su utvrdili da ljudsko tijelo svijetli drugačije na karti […]
Rejoice Musical Soul Food Radio Network CEO Mike Chandler has been working in every aspect of radio for over 30 years. His wife, April Washington
Nationaal Archief / Spaarnestad Photo / Het Leven / Fotograaf onbekend, SFA022812804. Draagbare radio in een strohoed, gemaakt door een Amerikaanse uitvinder. Verenigde Staten van Amerika, Plaats onbekend, 1931. Portable radio in a straw hat, made by an American inventor. 1931. Collectie Spaarnestad Voor meer informatie en voor meer foto’s uit de collectie van Spaarnestad Photo, bezoek onze Beeldbank: www.spaarnestadphoto.nl/ U kunt ons helpen onze kennis van de fotocollecties te verrijken door tags en commentaren toe te voegen. Herkent u mensen of locaties of heeft u een bijzonder verhaal te vertellen bij één van de foto’s, laat dan een reactie achter (als u ingelogd bent bij Flickr) of stuur een mailtje naar: [email protected] You can help us gain more knowledge on the content of our collection by simply adding a comment with information. If you do not wish to log in, you can write an e-mail to: [email protected]
Their smartphones do everything, but can teenagers master old tech and life skills – from reading a map to setting an alarm clock?
NEWLY RELEASED! Details By: Dominique PrinetISBN: 978-0-88839-145-2 [Trade Paperback Color]ISBN: 978-088839-755-3 [Trade Paperback B&W]ISBN: 978-0-88839-234-3 [eBook color] Binding: Trade Paper Size: 5.5" X 8.5"Pages: 280Maps: 15Illustrations/Photos: 190Publication Date: 01 March 2021 Description Table of Contents Sample Chapter CBC Radio North Interview Skies Magazine Article- Crashing Through Ice Recalling some of the most memorable escapades ever conducted in the Canadian Arctic with bush planes, Flying to Extremes takes place in the late ’60s and early ’70s from a base at Yellowknife, in the heart of the Northwest Territories. Beyond recounting so many near-mishaps, this book is also about colourful people: the trappers, prospectors, miners, adventurers and gold-ingot thieves who constituted the fauna at the main bar in Yellowknife in those days. For Arctic dreamers, there was always the flight to the Nahanni River, with its Deadman’s Valley, hot springs, tales of lost or dead prospectors, the many airplanes crashed in pursuit of gold, and much more Nahanni lore.This entertaining book recollects Prinet’s adventures as a young man while capturing the humour, beauty, danger and unique culture of northern communities, in the dramatic landscape of the Canadian Arctic. Readers familiar with the region and those who can only dream of visiting it will both find this title a nostalgic and captivating read. Author Biography In the 1960s, Dominique Prinet worked as a commercial bush pilot in the Canadian Arctic and High Arctic, on floats in the summer and skis in the winter, navigating with an astrocompass since this was long before GPS had been invented. He holds an airline transport pilot licence and has more than 5,000 hours of flying. The stories in this book describe some of the adventures he experienced in northern Canada. Following classical studies in Paris, he took an electrical engineering degree from UBC and an MBA from McGill, paid for by his intensive flying in the Arctic. He worked as VP for Nordair while teaching microeconomics to MBA students at McGill for about 12 years. He moved to Vancouver in 1988 when asked to join Canadian Airlines as their VP Marketing, then went to Tanzania, in East Africa, to turn around the national airline and manage it for five years under a World Bank project. Dominique has climbed several 12,000-foot peaks in the Alps and the Rockies has crossed the Atlantic in a sailing boat and Nepal on foot, flown around North, Central, and South America in a private single-engine plane, and crossed Africa in a small jeep. Much later in life, at 70, he obtained his private helicopter pilot licence. He spent his retirement years as a sailing instructor and instructor evaluator and has published several books on celestial and coastal navigation. Book Reviews “Riveting, harrowing and completely inspiring: Flying to Extremes is a treasure for aviation fanatics, Northerners and for everyone looking for the one book to remind you that life is to be lived and celebrated. Dominique Prinet, mahsi cho for documenting your northern adventures for all future generations. WOW! What a life! What a read! BRAVO!" --Richard VanCamp, Indigenous Tlicho writer from Fort Smith, NWT. Authorof international reputation, and recipient of numerous awards “Flying to Extremes is an exciting recounting of Dominique Prinet's time as a bush pilot in the Northwest Territories from the late 1960s into the 1970s. The book contains his accounts of perilous take-offs and landings, treacherous journeys into the frozen North and takes of local legends. Those takes include the story behind the name "Rapids of the Drowned," near Thebacha, NWT, where five men perished in 1786 due to a miscommunication over the safety of the rapids. Prinet's memoir is a kind of time capsule- readers come to understand what life was like in Yellowknife at this time, including all the dangers that came with living in the North. The book also includes vivid details of the people Prinet knew in Yellowknife, such as his landlady, Mrs. Lacombe, who regaled her tenants with stories she had acquired during her tenure. Flying to Extremes is filled with stunning colour photographs that show the gorgeous vistas and natural beauty to be found in the territory. Those photographs complement the imagery Prinet constructs with his stories, making the book a fascinating and exciting exploration of the period." --Julia Richards, Canada's History Magazine “Writing with clarity, humour and precision, Prinet flies us into a world of endless snow and ice and dim, grey winter days over a sparsely settled tundra. He recalls a desperate flight through terrible weather, his single-engine plane icing up and heading down, wondering whether he should wake the sports fishermen snoozing peacefully in the overloaded cabin amid boxes of fish and gear to tell them they’re on the verge of crashing. While rescuing his bride from their plane as it sinks through ice, he meets an Indigenous trapper who drove his dog sled through the bush to find out why a plane had landed but not taken off. The adventures—and misadventures—of an Arctic bush pilot make for a bracing read!” --Honourable Pat Carney, Former Federal Cabinet Minister and Senator "Flying to Extremes is an incredible account which many might classify as humanly impossible. Often without daylight and running out of fuel, hindered by unreliable maps, and beaten down to a few feet above the barrens by blotted windshields, Dominique Prinet manages to get home with skill and courage. These pages should be compulsory reading not only for aviation enthusiasts, but for by anyone thinking of throwing in the towel and screaming “I quit!” Dominique Prinet never does.” -- Robert Grant, Northern Bush Pilot, 12,000 hours, author of three books on bush flying in the North. “I have known Dominique Prinet since 1966 when he had a mechanical problem at Coppermine. Flying to Extremes is one of the most insightful books on aviation prior to the 1970’s in the Polar Regions of Canada. This was mostly flying by the seat of your pants. During those early days, navigation was by astrocompass, the odd radio beacon, and paper charts which left large blank areas where you made notes and drew in the landmarks as best you could."-- Ron Sheardown, Northern Bush Pilot, 20,000 hours, Canadian and US Airline Pilot, Alaskan Aviation Hall of Fame “Flying in the polar night by minus 55° F, finding a fuel cache of a few barrels dropped off during the previous summer, filtering the gas and pumping it by hand into the wing tanks, using a gyrocompass reset from sights on the moon and stars, …, and way beyond the reach of radio beacons, such is the daily job of the bush pilot writing the little known story of flying in the north." -- Michel Didier, Ph.D., B-747 captain, Air France “I have never seen, in all my years, a more tenacious, ingenious, obstinate, durable, fantastic young man, whether it be in the Armed Services or in civilian life…His capacity for work is unlimited, his concern for his passengers was almost fatherly, and his sense of responsibility toward his plane and the company which employs him is outstanding." -- Dr Seymour Wishnick, M.D., Chicago (passenger) “As a long-time aviation buff and especially a reader with a strong knowledge of aviation of all sorts including Canadian bush flying... I have to share that I was “blown away” by the scope and quality of the just-released: FLYING TO EXTREMES: Memories of a Northern Bush Pilot, Hancock House Publishers, Surrey, 2021, paperback. I just couldn’t put it down! As an ex-TV/Film producer I’m kicking myself for never having done a documentary with the rich diversity or experiences that author, Dominique Prinet relates in just 280 pages. Too short, too short I say as it left me hungry for more and… excited to refer it to my aviation friends. I was very impressed by the scope and quality of his attention to detail, the balance of content, pacing, ethnocultural observations, and geographic accuracy/descriptions… not to forget his ability to convey key technical aspects of flight and navigation. Bravo Zulu. And so much fun to read too because Prinet can write! Including with modesty, a self-deprecating sense of humour and deep respect, even awe for his subject: the majesty and harsh reality of Canada’s far frozen tundra. In short, it’s a magnificent read… one loaded with a host of amazing characters and scenes – frontier bars and hotels, cagey prospectors, ex-pat Priests, First Nations folk, intense scientist types, fellow pilots and rugged base operators and austere facilities – plus an array of the aircraft he flew. All of which are described – including the quirks and attributes of the Cessna 172, 180, Beaver, Beech 18, Otter, etc – with the sort of intimacy that makes any reader wish that these were their adventures! Life from a near by-gone era.I must tease potential readers by observing that Prinet was one lucky pilot with more than a few close shaves. Yet he was foremost a dedicated, very professional pilot which also made him wise vs just bold. And in that way, I imagine he made his own luck. But how he did it all on such little sleep is amazing. Or carried such incredible loads! With so few Nav aids! In that weather!To aviation enthusiasts of any stripe who pick up this book… you are in for a rare treat!" -- Brian Cotter, Toronto, retired TV/Film producer, CAHS and RCAFA member and life-long connoisseur of fine aviation literature Media Radio Interview with Dominique Prinet on Historia Canadiana.
Kellyanne Conway: Bowling Green Attackers Were Covfefe Immigrants
Historian Toby Haggith has been trying to complete a project the British government had started near the end of World War II, but never finished. The government collected footage from the Bergen-Belsen concentration camps to prove what happened there. A rough cut was made into a film, but shelved. Now, however, that rough cut has been turned into a final cut.
The Swell Maps - in session for John Peel - March 18, 1980 - BBC Radio 1 - Past Daily Soundbooth: Session Edition - The Peel Years.
And so have much anticipated episodes of Only Fools and Horses and Eastenders. Cover Story: Radio Times at 90 is a free exhibition at the Museum of London…
It's an old-fashioned skill, but it's still relevant in today's world.
The myth of Prester John, a priest-king of phenomenal wealth and power somewhere in the East, was a popular theme in medieval writings and had remarkable staying power.
Les émotions les plus courantes déclenchent des sensations corporelles fortes, ont découvert des scientifiques finlandais qui ont aussi réussi à les cartographier distinctement dans le corps.
Explore compiled by Martin van der Ven and Hans Knot's 30995 photos on Flickr!
Google photos has a hidden map in its app where you will be able to find out when and where a picture was taken, but you can also disable the feature.
*A Blackwell's Book of the Year* *A Waterstones Best Popular Science Book of 2022* *A Telegraph Best Book for Summer 2022* *As heard on BBC Radio 4 Woman's Hour* 'Excellent ... one of those rare pop-science books that make you look at the whole world differently' The Daily Telegraph ***** 'Riveting' Mail on Sunday ***** 'Captivating' Guardian, Book of the Day 'Compelling' Observer Before the nineteenth century, the term normal was rarely ever associated with human behaviour. Normal was a term used in maths: people weren't normal - triangles were. But from the 1830s, this branch of science really took off across Europe and North America, with a proliferation of IQ tests, sex studies, a census of hallucinations - even a UK beauty map (which concluded the women in Aberdeen were "the most repellent"). This book tells the surprising history how the very notion of the normal came about, how it shaped us all, often while entrenching oppressive values. Sarah Chaney looks at why we're still asking the internet: Do I have a normal body? Is my sex life normal? Are my kids normal? And along the way, she challenges why we ever thought it might be a desirable thing to be. B&W integrated
À l'ère d’Internet et des GPS, les cartes routières sont un peu démodées, mais pas celles de Jean-Louis Rheault : « Le GPS, c'est pour montrer comment se rendre quelque part, mais une carte illustrée, c’est pourquoi on veut se rendre là », affirme le cartographe-illustrateur.
Lumping millions—billions!—of people together arbitrarily by their birthdates sounds ridiculous in the abstract.
See nine decades of front pages from the TV and radio magazine, covering events including world war two, the moon landings and Doctor Who
A story of a girl with epilepsy whose doctor stimulated her brain via implanted electrodes which triggered her to laugh, feel joy and make up answers for why she laughed is the inspiration behind Patrick House's most recent book about the mysteries of consciousness.
Mega Rare Record From Israel With Unique Art Picture Cover, Were Printed To Some Of The Radio Stations In Israel Only . The Picture Cover Is IN VG+ Condition, The Record Is EX.
Μια ήπειρος χωρισμένη στα δυο
l'incredibile storia del matematico inglese ALAN TURING
MIKEE COJUANGCO-JAWORSKI’S election to the International Olympic Committee (IOC) Executive Board underlines the Philippines’s coveted niche in the world sports map. But according to Cojuangco-Jaworski, her appointment to the powerful POC body doesn’t equate to the country being accorded a “special treatment” by the movement. “No additional support from the…
Experts believe the village once spread across more than 100 acres of what is now farmland at Naunton Hall in Rendlesham near Woodbridge, Suffolk.
This post may contain affiliate links. As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases. Reddit user: bezzleford Related maps:
Award-winning photojournalist Jonas Bendiksen manipulated the images in his recent work, The Book of Veles, intending to be found out.