• "This program will provide a means of access and financial aid that will further my professional pursuits, benefiting both my ca...
    www.facebook.com
    "This program will provide a means of access and financial aid that will further my professional pursuits, benefiting both my career as a landscape architect and the communities that I serve." Stephanie Onwenu, ASLAWe are proud to congratulate Stephanie for being selected as a participant in the 2024-2026 Licensure Advancement Program!This program, supported by the ASLA Fund, offers financial assistance and educational tools to help underrepresented individuals pursuing their landscape architecture licensure. Participants receive up to $3,500 to cover LARE fees, access to exam prep resources, and guidance from experienced mentors.Learn more about how this program is paving the way for future landscape architects: https://www.asla.org/wclap.aspx#LandscapeArchitecture #WomenInLandscapeArchitecture
    0 Comments ·0 Shares ·198 Views
  • Photos from Architectural Designs - House Plans's post
    www.facebook.com
    Love the secluded home office in this home!What do you like about Transitional Style Plan #22597DR ?1,990 SqFt3 Beds2.5 Baths1 Car GarageHead to www.architecturaldesigns.com/22597DR to see more!
    0 Comments ·0 Shares ·196 Views
  • 0 Comments ·0 Shares ·154 Views
  • 0 Comments ·0 Shares ·179 Views
  • Section 31 - Official Trailer
    www.facebook.com
    Section 31 - Official Trailerhttps://adapt.one/editorial/link/282/Section+31+-+Official+Trailer/Star Trek: Section 31's Michelle Yeoh as Emperor Philippa Georgiou who joins a secret division of Starfleet. Tasked with protecting the United Federation of Planets, she also must face the sins of her past.
    0 Comments ·0 Shares ·227 Views
  • Akira - The documentary trailer
    www.facebook.com
    Akira - The documentary trailerhttps://adapt.one/editorial/link/277/Akira+-+The+documentary+trailer/In 1988, AKIRA exploded onto the scene, redefining anime forever. But how did this groundbreaking film make its way to the USA and ignite a cultural revolution in the West?
    0 Comments ·0 Shares ·225 Views
  • Wikipedia picture of the day for December 9
    en.wikipedia.org
    Leucojum vernum, commonly called the spring snowflake, is a species of flowering plant in the family Amaryllidaceae. It is native to central and southern Europe from Belgium to Ukraine. L.vernum is cultivated as an ornamental plant for its white flowers in spring. The plant multiplies in favourable conditions to form clumps. Each plant bears a single white flower with greenish marks near the tip of the tepal, on a stem about 10 to 20 centimetres (3.9 to 7.9 inches) tall, occasionally more. The Latin specific epithet vernum means 'relating to spring'; its close relative, L.aestivum, blooms in summer. This photograph of a L.vernum flower, taken in Bamberg, Germany, was focus-stacked from 32 separate images.Photograph credit: Reinhold MllerRecently featured: Jean RitchieUgandan kobGreat Yarmouth Town HallArchiveMore featured pictures
    0 Comments ·0 Shares ·105 Views
  • On this day: December 9
    en.wikipedia.org
    December 9: International Anti-Corruption DayFirst computer mouse1688 In the only substantial military action in England during the Glorious Revolution, forces loyal to William of Orange were decisively victorious at the Battle of Reading.1897 French actress, journalist and leading suffragette Marguerite Durand founded the feminist newspaper La Fronde.1968 Douglas Engelbart gave what became known as "The Mother of All Demos", publicly debuting the computer mouse (pictured), hypertext, and the bit-mapped graphical user interface using the computer system NLS.2008 Rod Blagojevich, the governor of Illinois, was arrested on corruption charges, including for attempting to sell the U.S. Senate seat being vacated by president-elect Barack Obama.Joseph Desha (b.1768)Fritz Haber (b.1868)Alister Murdoch (b.1912)Eliane Morissens (d.2006)More anniversaries: December 8December 9December 10ArchiveBy emailList of days of the yearAbout
    0 Comments ·0 Shares ·107 Views
  • A Woman Appeared on the English Stage for the First Time on This Day in 1660, Transforming the World of Theater Forever
    www.smithsonianmag.com
    A worker sews a costume at the Royal Shakespeare Theatre in 2021 in Stratford-upon-Avon, England. Darren Staples / Getty ImagesThe audience at the Kings Company production of Othello on December 8, 1660, heard an unusual prologue before the play began. The Woman playes to day, mistake me not, one of the actors read aloud. No Man in Gown, or Page in Petty-Coat; / A Woman to my knowledge The meaning of this cryptic message became clear as Desdemona entered in Act I, Scene III. Instead of being played by a man or a boy in makeup, the ill-fated wife of Othello was played by a woman. For the first time in the history of English theater, a woman played a role on the professional stage.For many reasons, 1660 was a landmark year for British theater. On May 29, Charles II had returned to London from exile in the Netherlands and laid claim to power. After 11 years of republican rule, the restoration of the monarchy meant more than just the public display of Oliver Cromwells exhumed and severed head outside of Westminster.It also meant that the English stage was revived and its rules could be rewritten, 18 years after theaters were closed during the English Civil War to prevent civic calamitya nod to the political power and social relevance of the eras theatrical performances.Only two theater companiesthe Dukes and the Kingswere granted royal permission to open theaters in the city once Charles II took back power, according to Jean Marsden in The Cambridge Companion to Shakespeare on Stage.The two rival companies split the existing stock of plays between themselves. Of Shakespeares most popular plays for mid-17th-century audiences, the Kings Company got Othello and Julius Caesar; the Dukes Company got Hamlet.Despite their admiration for Shakespeare's genius, writers also admitted that his works were far from perfect and that his beauties were offset by a variety of 'faults, Marsden wrote. The nature of these faults was to determine the form in which plays were staged and whether they were staged at all.Some edits and modifications were implemented with the goal of polishing Shakespeares language to fit more contemporary voices, trimming down lengthy plots, and adapting 16th-century plays to 17th-century Londons smaller theaters.The most radical and longest-lasting change, however, was the introduction of women to the stage.Margaret Hughes by Sir Peter Lely 1672 Public domain via Wikimedia CommonsThe practice of having women play women's roles was noteworthy and even exciting to a Restoration audience, Marsden wrote. They were as much a part of theatrical spectacle as the fine scenery and special effects that the new playhouses allowed.Despite the excitement that the first professional actress brought to the Kings Company production of Othello in Londons Vere Street Theater on this day in 1660, a glaring mystery remains, even for modern theater fans. No one knows who played Desdemona.By some accounts, Desdemona was played by Margaret Hughes, one of the first few actresses hired by the Kings Company in 1660. A cast list from a production of Othello nine years later lists Hughes as Desdemona. Despite the long gap in time, theater critic Rosamond Gilder argued in Enter the Actress, a role belonged to the actor or actress who first played it to the publics satisfaction and was only given up on retirement or under extraordinary circumstances.The other likeliest contender is Anne Marshall, another one of the Kings Company's leading actresses who came to specialize in tragedy, playing roles similar to Desdemona in other productions, according to Elizabeth Howe in The First English Actresses.In any case, Hughes, Marshall or whichever actress played Desdemona did so successfully and much to the pleasure of theatergoers and monarch alike. Two years after the premiere, Charles II issued patents to each of the two theater companies, ensuring, among other things, that women could play womens parts so long as their recreations [may be] esteemed not only harmless delight, but useful and instructive representations of human life. Get the latest stories in your inbox every weekday.Filed Under: England, London, On This Day in History, Theater, William Shakespeare, Women's History, Women's Rights
    0 Comments ·0 Shares ·110 Views
  • ChatGPTs second birthday: What will gen AI (and the world) look like in another 2 years?
    venturebeat.com
    We've come a long way in 2 years. Gen AI is the future, but how is it reshaping enterprise? And when will we reach AGI and superintelligence?Read More
    0 Comments ·0 Shares ·94 Views