Archive for January, 2008

Casual Viewin’ USA

Thursday, January 31st, 2008

Casual Viewin’ USA is a 2001 album by 54-40.

It was compiled by the band’s American distributor, Nettwerk, as a compilation of tracks from several of the band’s albums, including its 2000 titlemate Casual Viewin’.


Track listing

  1. “Casual Viewin’” – 4:44
  2. “Since When” – 4:19
  3. “I Go Blind” – 2:56
  4. “Blue Sky” – 4:02
  5. “Lies to Me” – 3:19
  6. “Baby Ran” – 4:24
  7. “One Gun” – 4:14
  8. “Ocean Pearl” – 3:46
  9. “Love You All” – 4:59
  10. “Nice to Luv You” – 4:22
  11. “She’s a Jones” – 4:25
  12. “Sunday Girl” – 4:41
  13. “Lost & Lazy” – 4:23

Information

Increasing process

Thursday, January 31st, 2008

An increasing process is a stochastic process

<math>(X_t)_{t \in M}</math>

where the random variables <math>X_t</math> which make up the process are increasing almost surely and adapted:

<math>0=X_0 \leq X_1 \leq \cdots . </math>

A continuous increasing process is such a process where the set <math>M</math> is continuous.

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Katakwi District

Thursday, January 31st, 2008

Katakwi is a district in eastern Uganda. Like other Ugandan districts, it is named after its ‘chief town’. In June 2005, the eastern part of the district was curved out to make Amuria district.

For more information visit the government website: http://www.katakwi.go.ug/

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Michael Peterson

Thursday, January 31st, 2008

The name Michael Peterson can mean:-

  • Michael Peterson (author) (b.1943), North Carolina writer convicted of murdering his wife
  • Michael Peterson (surfer) (b.1957), Australian surfer
  • Michael Peterson (singer), American country music artist and songwriter
  • Michael Peterson (artist) (b.1979), American Artist
  • Charles Bronson (prisoner) (born Michael Peterson), English prisoner
  • Michael Peterson, (born 1990)Movie Surfer and Actor

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Clement Meadmore

Thursday, January 31st, 2008

Clement Meadmore (February 9, 1929 - April 19, 2005) was an Australian-American sculptor known for massive outdoor steel sculptures.

Born Clement Lyon Meadmore in Melbourne, Australia in 1929, Clement Meadmore studied aeronautical engineering and then industrial design at the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology. After graduating in 1949, Meadmore designed furniture for several years and, in the 1950s, created his first welded sculptures. He had several one-man exhibits of his sculptures in Melbourne and Sydney between 1954 and 1962.

In 1963 Meadmore moved to New York City. Later, he became an American citizen.

Meadmore used cor-ten steel, aluminum, and occasionally bronze to create colossal outdoor sculptures which combine the elements of abstract expressionism and minimalism. He was an avid amateur drummer and jazz lover who held jam sessions in his home. His fondess for jazz is reflected in the names of several of his works including “Riff” (1996), “Round Midnight” (1996), “Stormy Weather” (1997), “Night and Day” (1979) and “Perdido” (1978).

Meadmore’s sculptures are held by museums, corporate headquarters, and schools internationally including Saint Xavier High School, Ohio; The Art Institute of Chicago; Adachi Outdoor Sculpture Collection, Japan; the National Gallery of Australia; the Art Gallery of Western Australia; Cleveland Museum of Art, Ohio; Portland Art Institute, Oregon; Columbia University, New York ; Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; University of Houston, Texas; Detroit Institute of Art, Michigan; Rhode Island School of Design Museum; Tokyo Metropolitan Art Space, Japan; Columbus Gallery of Fine Art, Ohio; Gallaudet College, Washington D.C; and Princeton University, New Jersey.

Meadmore is the author of How to Make Furniture Without Tools (Pantheon, 1975) ISBN 0-394-73063-1) and The Modern Chair: Classic Designs by Thonet, Breuer, Le Corbusier, Eames and Others (Dover Publications; 1997) ISBN 0-486-29807-8). His work and career were cataloged in 1994 book, The Sculpture of Clement Meadmore by Eric Gibson (Hudson Hills Press; 1994) ISBN 1-55595-098-1).

Meadmore died at the age of 76 in Manhattan from complications of Parkinson’s disease.


External links

  • Clement Meadmore Website.


References

The New York Times, April 21 2005

Information

Unsupportive

Thursday, January 31st, 2008
Wikipedia does not currently have an encyclopedia article for ‘.

You may like to search Wiktionary for[[Wiktionary:Special:Search/|]]” instead.

To begin an article here, feel free to [ edit this page], but please do not create a mere dictionary definition.

Information

Étagère

Thursday, January 31st, 2008

An étagère is a piece of light furniture very similar to the English what-not, which was extensively made in France during the latter part of the 18th century. As the name implies, it consists of a series of stages or shelves for the reception of ornaments or other small articles. Like the what-not it was very often cornerwise in shape, and the best Louis XVI examples in exotic woods are exceedingly graceful and elegant.

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Washburn Field

Thursday, January 31st, 2008

Washburn Field is a 1,500 seater stadium located in Colorado Springs, Colorado. It once was home to the Colorado Springs Blizzard and is still home to the field sports teams from Colorado College.

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Kingwood (wood)

Thursday, January 31st, 2008

Kingwood is classic furniture wood, almost exclusively used for inlays on very fine furniture. It is purple with many fine darker stripes. It is yielded by Dalbergia cearensis, a smallish tree restricted to a small area in Brazil. Other woods yielded by the same genus are cocobolo, rosewood, tulipwood. A picture can be found at
sveneers.com

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Lost core

Thursday, January 31st, 2008

The lost core process involves making a hollow plastic mould from a metal casting.

The metal casting of the internal shape is made from metal, usually a lead alloy of about 40% lead with other elements added, which vary depending on the company and the item being made.

Once cast, this core is loaded into a press and a plastic formation made around it. The plastic cast, complete with its inner core is then submerged in a liquid which dissolves only the metal, such as lutron. Once the core has been removed the plastic moulding is passed through a wash ready for handling by operators who perform any other required tasks to complete the manufacturing.

Information

London Metal Exchange

Thursday, January 31st, 2008

The London Metal Exchange or LME is the futures exchange with the world’s largest market in options and futures contracts on base and other metals. As the LME offers contracts with daily expiry dates up to three months from trade date, along with longer dated contracts, it also allows for cash trading. It offers hedging, worldwide reference pricing and storage for physical delivery of trades.

It is located at 56 Leadenhall Street, London


History

The London Metal Market and Exchange Company was founded in 1877 but the market traces its origins back to 1571 and the opening of the Royal Exchange. At first only copper was traded, lead and zinc were soon added but only gained official trading status in 1920. The exchange was closed over WW II and did not re-open until 1952. Other metals traded extended to include aluminium (1978), nickel (1979) and aluminium alloy (1992). Base metals are traded through the LME since 2000. The total value of the trade is around $8,500 billion annually.

In 2007, steel started to be traded as a commmodity in the London Metal Exchange.


Markets

There is constant inter-office trading through the London Clearing House but some trading is still done by open outcry in the Ring. There is a morning and an afternoon trade, where each of the eight metal contracts are traded in two blocks with a five minute session for each contract (the sessions last from 11.40 until 13.15 and from 15.10 until 16.35, each session includes a ten minute break). The second trading block in the morning is key to setting the Daily Official Exchange rates. After the official trades there is fifteen minutes of “kerb” trading. Trades are in futures, options and TAPOs (traded average price contracts, a form of Asian option).

There are eleven companies who have exclusive rights to trade in the Ring and around 100 companies involved in the LME in total.

Contrary to popular belief, the precious metals, gold and silver are not traded on the London Metal Exchange, but on the over-the-counter market usually referred to as the London Bullion Market, by the members of the London Bullion Market Association. Platinum and palladium are traded on the London Platinum and Palladium Market. Minor metals are not traded on the LME. Many companies involved in minor metals are members of the Minor Metal Trade Association.


Electronic Trading

The LME finally launched an electronic platform called LME Select. This was developed by a Swedish software house called Cinnober. The platform is a FIX based trading platform, and has a significant and increasing share of the total LME business. Its major strengths are its scalability and reliability.


See also

  • List of futures exchanges


External links

  • London Metal Exchange
  • London Bullion Market Association
  • Minor Metals Trade Association
  • London Platinum and Palladium Market

Information

The Warehouse Theatre

Thursday, January 31st, 2008

The Warehouse Theatre, located in Hope Street, Weymouth, Dorset has been home to the Weymouth Drama Club since 1993. The Drama Club owns and runs the property, which is primarily used for rehearsing forthcoming productions, although also includes:

  • A workshop for building theatre sets
  • An extensive costume and props store
  • A conference meeting room
  • Lighting and sound facilities
  • A kitchen


History

The Warehouse Theatre started out in the c.1930s being the main coal storage for the local Devonish Brewery, located in Hope Square, Weymouth.

When the brewery stopped mass-brewing in 1990 the building was redundant until the Weymouth Drama Club came alonng in 1993. After a good cleaning effort, the space was made available for rehearsal and now holds an extensive costume store that is available for hire to the public, as well as a props store, workshop and lighting and sound facilities.

The building is available for hire to local customers, but is primarily used for rehearsing forthcoming Drama Club productions. Although the organization is an Amateur Dramatic one, many professionals lend their advice and skills to make the productions top quality. There are also several social events that occur during the month

The Club strive to maintain the original character of the building, while maintaining an up-to-date multi-purpose facility. Fundraising events are held at the Warehouse to maintain the upkeep of the space, and also to fund the Drama Club’s productions. The club recently completed a campaign to buy new seating for productions. This is mainly due to Friends of the Club.


Past productions (by year)

In 1997 the club decided to start using the Warehouse Theatre for main productions as well as The Weymouth Pavilion. For a full list of all shows (in both venues), please see the Weymouth Drama Club wikipage.

The following is a list of the productions that have taken place at The Warehouse Theatre:

1997

  • Pride And Prejudice

1998

  • Billy Liar
  • Passion Killers

1999

  • Victoriana
  • Stepping Out

2000

  • Anyone For Breakfast
  • The Ghost Train

2001

  • The Weekend
  • Blithe Spirit

2002

  • The Business Of Murder
  • Murder In Play

2003

  • Unleashed
  • Herbal Bed

2004

  • Unoriginal Sin
  • Wyrd Sisters
  • Love Begins At 50

2005

  • The Enquiry

2006

  • An Inspector Calls

2007

  • Jeffrey Bernard Is Unwell
  • Death Becomes Us


See also

  • Weymouth Drama Club
  • Weymouth Pavilion


External links

  • Official Weymouth Drama Club Website

Information

Moonmilk

Thursday, January 31st, 2008

Moonmilk (sometimes called mondmilch, erroneously (influenced by “mountain”) montmilch or rarely mundmilch) is a white, cheese-like substance found inside caves. It is similar to other deposits, but its unique quality is that it does not harden or turn to stone. It is a precipitate from limestone comprising aggregates of fine crystals of varying composition usually made of carbonate materials, e.g., calcite, hydromagnesite, and gypsum.

Hypotheses about the origin of moonmilk are mixed. Some scientists think it is a bacterial action rather than a chemical one. In this theory, it is thought to be created by the bacterium Macromonas bipunctata. Certain bacterial actions are known to be capable of breaking down stone to form this semiliquid “milk”.

It was originally thought (by Conrad Gesner, 1555) to be created by “moon rays.”


References

  • George W. Moore and Nicholas Sullivan. Speleology: Caves and the Cave Environment, rev. 3rd ed. Dayton, Ohio: Cave Books, 1997. ISBN 0-939748-46-0 (hardcover), ISBN 0-939748-45-2 (paperback).
  • Cave Formations


External links

  • Moonmilk and Cave-dwelling Microbes
  • Micromonas bipunctata

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Basin stand

Thursday, January 31st, 2008

A basin stand is a piece of furniture consisting of a small
table or cabinet, usually supported on three or four legs, and most commonly
made of mahogany, walnut, or rosewood, and made for holding a wash basin and water pitcher.
The smaller varieties were used for rose-water ablutions, or
for hair-powdering. The larger ones, which
possessed receptacles for soap-dishes, were the predecessors of the
modern bathroom wash basin, or sink. Both varieties, often of very
elegant form, were in extensive use throughout a large part of
the 18th century and early-19th century, eventually disappearing with the advent of modern indoor plumbing.


References

Information

European Parliament election, 2004 (Malta)

Thursday, January 31st, 2008

The European Parliament election of 2004 in Cyprus was the election of MEP representing Cyprus constituency for the 2004-2009 term of the European Parliament. It was part of the wider 2004 European election. The vote took place on June 13 and used Single Transferable Vote. The opposition Malta Labour Party polled strongly.


Results


External link

  • All 18 rounds of counting

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Jeremy Broun

Thursday, January 31st, 2008

Jeremy Broun is a British woodworker, furniture designer maker, speaker, and writer.

Broun’s furniture is innovative in the use of technique and form. His Caterpillar Rocking chair
in 1984 ‘is visually stunning, a good combination of colour, structure and practicality… and has the advantage of being a truly original idea : just as Saarinen and his pedestal chairs converted four chairlegs into one’ (An Encyclopedia of Chairs - The Apple Press).

He won a Winston Churchill Travel Scholarship to Sweden, Finland and Italy in 1979 and in the same year was elected a Fellow of The Society of Designer Craftsmen, the original Arts and Crafts Exhibition Society founded by William Morris. Since 1980 he has been a member of the Crafts Council Index of Selected Makers. He has exhibited extensively including The Royal Society of Arts and the Ars Nova Museum in Finland.
His work was included in the ‘First Sale of Contemporary British Crafts’ at Sotheby’s in 1980 and in 2002 at the Centenary exhibition celebrating the Hill House designed by Charles Rennie Mackintosh.

In 1989 he gained The Worshipful Company of Furniture Makers Ambrose Heal Award for his craft documentary films. He has written numerous articles on woodworking and design including “Furniture Today” and “A History of (Furniture) Designer Makers” in 2005.


List of selected books by Jeremy Broun

Information

William David Coolidge

Wednesday, January 30th, 2008

William David Coolidge (Hudson, MA, October 23, 1873–Schenectady, New York, February 3, 1975) was an American physicist, who made major contributions to X-ray machines. He was the director of the General Electric Research Laboratory and a vice-president of the corporation.

He studied electrical engineering from 1891 till 1896 at MIT, and received his doctorate from the University of Leipzig. From 1899 to 1905 he was a research assistant to Arthur A. Noyes of the Chemistry Department at MIT.

Coolidge went to work as a researcher at General Electric new research laboratory in 1905, where he conducted critical experiments that led to the use of tungsten as filaments in light bulbs. In 1913 he invented the Coolidge tube, an improved cathode for use in X-ray machines that allowed for more intense visualization of deep-seated anatomy and tumors. The Coolidge tube, which also utilized a tungsten filament, was a major development in the then-nascent medical specialty of radiology, and its basic design is still in use.

Coolidge was awarded the AIEE Edison Medal in 1927 For his contributions to the incandescent electric lighting and the X-rays art. He rejected this prestigious award in 1926 on the basis that his ductile tungsten patent was invalid. In 1975 he was elected to the National Inventors Hall of Fame, shortly before his death at age 101.


Patents

  • Coolidge, , Coolidge tube
  • Coolidge, , “X-ray tube
  • Coolidge, , “X-ray apparatus
  • Coolidge, , “Stereoscopic x-ray apparatus
  • Coolidge, , “X-ray apparatus
  • Coolidge, , “X-ray apparatus
  • Coolidge, , “X-ray apparatus
  • Coolidge, , “X-ray apparatus
  • Coolidge, , “X-ray apparatus
  • Coolidge, , “X-ray tube shield”
  • Coolidge, , “X-ray device
  • Coolidge, , “X-ray apparatus
  • Coolidge, , “X-ray apparatus
  • Coolidge, , “X-ray apparatus
  • Coolidge, , “X-ray apparatus and method
  • Coolidge, , “X-ray apparatus
  • Coolidge, , “X-ray apparatus
  • Coolidge, , “X-ray apparatus
  • Coolidge, , “X-ray device
  • Coolidge, , “X-ray anode
  • Coolidge, , “X-ray tube
  • Coolidge, , “X-ray tube
  • Coolidge, , “X-ray device
  • Coolidge, , “X-ray device


External links

  • National Academy of Sciences Memorial Biography of Coolidge
  • The Cathode Ray Tube site
  • William Coolidge’s Case File at The Franklin Institute with info about his 1926 Franklin Award for the x-ray tube
  • IEEE History Site Wiiliam D. Coolidge

Information

Ridgeway Clocks

Wednesday, January 30th, 2008

Ridgeway Clocks is a division of Howard Miller Company, and is a producer of longcase clocks, mantle clocks, and wall clocks. The company’s facilities are located in Ridgeway, Virginia.

The company is the manufacturer of the oldest continuously produced line of grandfather clocks in the United States. The company was founded in 1926 as the “Gravely Furniture Company.” It was not until 1962 that the company began manufacturing grandfather clocks.

Zeeland, Michigan based Howard Miller Clock Company, the world’s largest manufacturer of grandfather clocks, acquired Ridgeway in November 2004 from Pulaski Furniture Corporation. Pulaski had previously acquired the Gravely Furniture Company in 1985.


External links

  • Official website of Ridgeway Clock Company

Information

Sling (furniture)

Wednesday, January 30th, 2008

Sling furniture is usually a suspended, free-swinging chair or bed that is made of a framework connected to hanging straps or rope. When attached to poles or a frame for carrying, a sling becomes a stretcher, a simple form of litter.


Sport slings

In mountain climbing, slings are either seats or beds that climbers use for rest or sleep.
The SKY Chair is a hanging fabric chair.


Fetish sex slings

Sex slings are also used in the BDSM activities. Usually made of black leather, these slings are used to position the bottom with legs raised and spread to facilitate various sex acts. They are often used for fisting anal sex, or multipositioning for sexual comfort, or discomfort if that is the main purpose.
Many products facilitate such positioning but few are truly user available in their home due to space restrictions. However some bed attachments have overcome the real estate needed to utilize these apparatus.

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K Street

Wednesday, January 30th, 2008

K Street can refer to:

  • K Street (Washington, D.C.), a street located in Washington, D.C.
  • K Street (TV series), an HBO television series
  • K-Street Advisors, a political consultancy in Stockholm, Sweden.

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List of basic cooking topics

Wednesday, January 30th, 2008

Cooking is an act of preparing food for eating. It encompasses a vast range of methods, tools and combinations of ingredients to improve the flavour or digestibility of food. It generally requires the selection, measurement and combining of ingredients in an ordered procedure in an effort to achieve the desired result. Basic topics in cooking include:


Nature of cooking

Main article: Cooking
  • Chef
  • Cuisine


History of cooking

  • History of Chinese cuisine


Styles of cooking

  • Cajun cuisine
  • Chinese cuisine
  • English cuisine
  • French cuisine
  • Japanese cuisine
  • Vietnamese cuisine


Basic ingredients

  • Cooking fats and oils

    • Butter
    • Olive oil
    • Sunflower oil
    • Beef fat
      • Dripping
      • Tallow
    • Rapeseed oil
    • Canola oil
    • Peanut oil
  • Meat
    • Beef
    • Fish
    • Mutton
    • Poultry
    • Pork


Cooking techniques

Some major hot cooking techniques:

  1. Baking

    1. Baking Blind
    2. Broiling
    3. FlashBake
  2. Boiling
    1. Blanching
    2. Braising
    3. Coddling
    4. Double steaming
    5. Infusion
    6. Poaching
    7. Pressure cooking
    8. Simmering
    9. Steaming
    10. Steeping
    11. Stewing
    12. Vacuum flask cooking
  3. Frying
    1. Deep frying
    2. Hot salt frying
    3. Hot sand frying
    4. Pan frying
    5. Pressure frying
    6. Sautéing
    7. Stir frying
  4. Microwaving
  5. Roasting
    1. Barbecuing
    2. Grilling
    3. Rotisserie
    4. Searing
  6. Smoking


Other preparation techniques

Some cool techniques

  1. Brining
  2. Drying
  3. Grinding (e.g. sesame seeds to produce tahini), chopping, slicing finely, grating, etc..
  4. Julienning
  5. Marinating
  6. Mincing
  7. Pickling
  8. Salting
  9. Seasoning
  10. Sprouting
  11. Sugaring


Basic cooking concepts

  • Cookbook
  • Cooking oil
  • Cooking weights and measures (includes conversions and equivalencies common in cooking)
  • Cuisine
  • Cutting board
  • Eating
  • Flavor
  • Food
  • Food and cooking hygiene
  • Foodborne illness
  • Food preservation
  • Ingredients
  • International food terms - useful when reading about food and recipes from different countries
  • Maillard reaction
  • Oven
  • Recipe, List of recipes
  • Restaurant
  • Staple
  • Stove


Famous chefs

  • Julia Child
  • Auguste Escoffier
  • Alton Brown
  • Jamie Oliver
  • Wolfgang Puck
  • Swedish Chef


Cooking lists

  • Cocktails
  • Cookbooks
  • Cooking utensils


See also

  • Food writing
  • Nutrition
  • Culinary profession


External links

Information

Psychotic break

Tuesday, January 29th, 2008

“Psychotic break” is a (layman) term used to describe the first time that a person experiences an episode of primary psychosis.

Psychiatrists may informally use the term “psychotic break” in hindsight to describe the first episode of psychosis in a patient who has been diagnosed with the chronic condition of schizophrenia.

Please see the topics psychosis and schizophrenia for more information.

Information

Christmas Day (Trading) Act 2004

Tuesday, January 29th, 2008

The Christmas Day (Trading) Act 2004 is an Act of Parliament of the Parliament of the United Kingdom that prevents shops over 280 m²/3,000 sq ft from opening on Christmas Day. The Act only applies in England and Wales. Shops smaller than the limit are not affected.

The Act was introduced to the House of Commons by Kevan Jones, MP for North Durham as a Private Member’s Bill on 7 January 2004. The Act was passed by both the Commons and the House of Lords, and received Royal Assent on 28 October, coming into force on 9 December 2004.

The aim of the Act was to keep Christmas Day a “special” day, whereby all major retailers would be closed. Although it was traditional for major retailers to close on 25 December, some retailers, such as Woolworths began to open some stores in the late 1990s. Both religious groups and shop worker unions were against the idea of Christmas openings, leading to pressure on the Government to pass legislation to prevent the practice.

In 2006, the Scottish Parliament debated a similar law that would apply to shops in Scotland. A key difference was the proposal for the Scottish law to apply on New Year’s Day too.


External links

  • Text of the Act
  • Department of Trade and Industry Factsheet

Information

Digital Process Communications

Tuesday, January 29th, 2008

Digital Process Communications protocols originated with the first smart transmitters for process measurement made by Honeywell in the 1980s. Since then other process instrument manufacturers have produced smart transmitters. Smart communication protocols have evolved into various standardised types. The HART protocol and DE protocol are two such process communication digital protocols.

Information

Euphranor

Tuesday, January 29th, 2008

Euphranor of Corinth (middle of the 4th century BC) was the only Greek artist who excelled both as a sculptor and as a painter.

From Pliny the Elder we have lists of his works; among the paintings, a cavalry battle, a Theseus, and the feigned madness of Odysseus; among the statues, Paris, Leto with her children Apollo and Artemis, Philip and Alexander in chariots.

Unfortunately we are unable among existing statues to identify any which are copies from works of Euphranor (but see a series of attributions by Six in Jahrbuch, 1909, 7 foil.). He appears to have resembled his contemporary Lysippus, notably in the attention he paid to symmetry, in his preference for bodily forms slighter than those usual in earlier art, and in his love of heroic subjects. He wrote a treatise on proportions.


References

Information

Government Warehouse

Tuesday, January 29th, 2008

The Government Warehouse is a plot device used in movies, television series, and novels, a scenario used in role-playing games, and a belief of some conspiracy theorists. The concept is that there is a secret government warehouse where various items are stored of whose existence the government wants the general populace to remain ignorant.


Plot device in fiction

In fiction, the Government Warehouse is a plot device used for conveniently disposing of story elements that have fulfilled their purpose in a story, but that would cause consistency or continuity problems for subsequent (or previous) stories in the same fictional setting were they to remain. In many cases, the story items disposed of are of such a nature that they would make it difficult to set up the necessary tensions and conflicts for other stories in the same fictional setting, as they would make such tensions and conflicts simple to resolve.

A secondary purpose of the Government Warehouse plot device is to satirize the ineptitude of governments, the premise being that if a government found itself in possession of an extraordinary object or person, it would simply catalogue it and lose it in a vast filing system. For example, in the film Forever Young, Mel Gibson played an experimental suspended animation subject, who was frozen in a capsule, which was forgotten about and stored in a Government Warehouse until two children stumbled upon it while playing.

Perhaps the most well-known instances of the Government Warehouse plot device are the movie Raiders of the Lost Ark and the television series The X-Files. At the end of Raiders of the Lost Ark, the Ark of the Covenant is hidden away in a warehouse owned by the US Government, explaining its disappearance from the fictional universe of the Indiana Jones films. (The shot of the warehouse is an allusion to the final scene of Citizen Kane, where there is a similar shot of a private warehouse.) The satirical television series Family Guy duplicates this scene, only instead of the Ark it is actor James Woods in a box. In the closing of an episode of NBC’s “The Office”, entitled Conflict Resolution, a similar scene is created using a box full of complaints made by Dwight Schrute, and other characters. The television series, The X-Files, is replete with characters and objects with unusual properties and powers that would complicate the fictional setting, or make it too simple for characters to achieve the goals that they quest for, and the Government Warehouse plot device is heavily used to explain the absence of the characters and objects, and to make the goals difficult to achieve. The plot device is in fact a central element of the series. A typical example is found in the pilot episode.

Sometimes items are recovered from Government Warehouses in order to construct derived fictional settings. In the first episode of the late-80s War of the Worlds television series a triad of war machines are collected from a Government Warehouse (”Hangar 15″) where they had been stored since an invasion in 1953, thus linking the television series to the 1953 film The War of the Worlds.

In the 2006 film Click, the warehouse serves a similar purpose; however, it is not owned by a government but by Bed Bath & Beyond.


Real-World “Government Warehouses”

The government warehouses of fiction and conspiracy theories have a number of analogues in the real world, although some are not run by official national governments. Historically, the template is the Great Library of Alexandria, which held an extensive collection of written works but was repeatedly destroyed during the first millennium AD. Perhaps the most prominent Government Warehouse in the modern era is Area 51, a US Air Force base in Nevada which is said to house alien artifacts. The Vatican Secret Archives [1] are alleged to hold the secrets of the Knights Templar (a similar allegation is levelled at the Louvre in Paris). Many prominent museums have extensive archives which often lay undisturbed for decades, such as the Cairo Museum in Egypt, which was found in 2002 to have 80,000 items - more than half the museum’s collection - stored away in its vaults. [2]


RPG scenarios

The concept of a Government Warehouse has been used as a fun scenario for role-playing games:

  • — an attempt to construct an RPG scenario of a Government Warehouse containing every famous item ever mentioned in fiction or a conspiracy theory as being lost or suppressed
  • — Notice that in this later version the introduction has been removed and replaced by seals denoting United States government agencies and a purported security classification notice, giving a greater impression of realism.
  • — an even more detailed attempt to do the same thing, that even includes a classification system for the objects, and includes objects that logically could not possibly be contained in such a warehouse (The planet Earth was demolished in the plot(s) of the Hitch-Hiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, therefore the spaceship Heart of Gold could not be stored in a Government Warehouse on Earth.)


References


External links

  • Screenshot of the Government Warehouse from Raiders of the Lost Ark
  • Warehouse 23 allegedly run by a joint venture between the US Government and the Illuminati, this is actually (and openly) run by Steve Jackson Games. Readers can submit new items.

Information

Ridgeway Clocks

Tuesday, January 29th, 2008

Ridgeway Clocks is a division of Howard Miller Company, and is a producer of longcase clocks, mantle clocks, and wall clocks. The company’s facilities are located in Ridgeway, Virginia.

The company is the manufacturer of the oldest continuously produced line of grandfather clocks in the United States. The company was founded in 1926 as the “Gravely Furniture Company.” It was not until 1962 that the company began manufacturing grandfather clocks.

Zeeland, Michigan based Howard Miller Clock Company, the world’s largest manufacturer of grandfather clocks, acquired Ridgeway in November 2004 from Pulaski Furniture Corporation. Pulaski had previously acquired the Gravely Furniture Company in 1985.


External links

  • Official website of Ridgeway Clock Company

Information

Mundus furniture

Monday, January 28th, 2008

Mundus was the name of a furniture-manufacturing company, active (at least) in several places in the Austro-Hungarian Empire, at the end of the 19th century and early 20th century.

Factories seem to have existed in multiple locations, as the products carry diverse labels, such as “Budapest”, “Borlova”, “Czechoslovakia”, etc. Some of the furniture was co-signed with “Jacob and Josef Kohn”.

In 1914 Mundus merged with J. & J. Kohn, and in 1922 with Gebrüder Thonet.


External links

  • The story of bentwood
  • A history of J&J Kohn

Information

Business in Hampshire

Monday, January 28th, 2008

Hampshire’s total economy (worth £22.9bn) is the largest economy in England outside London, providing almost 3% of total GDP for the UK as a whole.


Economy

See Hampshire#Economy for more information.


Law & regulations

Hampshire Trading Standards Service originated from the initial introduction of the Weights and Measures Act, and is still better known as the Inspectors of Weights and Measures. Trading Standards Service activities are still primarily enforcement of the Weights and Measures Act, but also has the following responsibilities, in whole or in part, as of 31st March 1988;

  • Agriculture Act 1970 (Part IV)
  • Agriculture Produce (Grading and Marking) Acts 1928 and 1931
  • Animal Health Act 1981
  • Business Names Act 1985
  • Celluloid and Cinematograph Act 1922
  • Consumer Credit Act 1974
  • Consumer Protection Act 1987
  • Control of Pollution Act 1974
  • Energy Conservation Act 1981
  • Estate Agents Act 1979
  • European Communities Act 1972
  • Explosives Acts 1875 and 1923
  • Fabrics (Misdescription) Act 1913
  • Fair Trading Act 1973
  • Fireworks Act 1951
  • Food Act 1984
  • Hallmarking Act 1973
  • Health and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974
  • Medicines Act 1968
  • Motor Cycle Noise Act 1987
  • Performing Animals (Regulation) Act 1925
  • Petroleum (Regulations) Act 1928 and 1936
  • Poisons Act 1972
  • Prices Acts 1974 and 1975
  • Road Traffic Acts 1972 and 1974
  • Road Traffic (Foreign Vehicles) Act 1972
  • Telecommunications Act 1984
  • Tourism (Sleeping Accommodation Price Display) Order 1977
  • Trade Descriptions Acts 1968 and 1972
  • Trading Representations (Disabled Persons) Act 1958
  • Trading Representations (Disabled Persons~ Amendment Act 1972
  • Trading Stamps Act 1964
  • Transport Act 1978
  • Unsolicited Goods and Services Acts 1971 and 1975
  • Weights and Measures Act 1985

Today the Hampshire County Council Regulatory Services Commission publishes advice on local business advice on its web site[1].


Small business advice

Advice for new businesses is available from a number of private ventures and government funded schemes. Advice is available from Business Link, Department of Trade and Industry and the Inland Revenue.


Business award schemes

Hampshire County Council and the Economic Development Office sponsor a number of local business awards.


Business directories

These web sites provide information on local Hampshire businesses (as opposed to UK-wide Business directories);

  • Hampshire County Council
  • iHampshire
  • South Online


Business parks & premises

Basingstoke

  • Basing View (offices)
  • Chineham Business Park (offices / light industrial)
  • Crockford Lane (offices / light industrial)
  • Daneshill East (industrial warehouse)
  • Hampshire International Business Park (offices / light industrial)
  • Houndmills Industrial Estate (industrial / warehouse)
  • Intec Business Park (offices / Technical park)
  • Kingsland Bersford Centre
  • Moniton Estate (industrial)
  • Viables Business Park (offices)
  • West Ham Industrial Estate (industrial / warehouse)

East Hampshire

  • Hazleton Industrial Estate (industrial)
  • Hazleton Industrial Park (industrial / warehouse)
  • Petersfield Business Park (industrial / warehouse)
  • Wessex Gate, Horndean (industrial)
  • Westfield Estate, Horndean (offices / light industrial)

Eastleigh

  • Barton Park (industrial / warehouse)
  • Boyatt Wood (industrial / warehouse)
  • Chandlers Ford Industrial Estate (offices / industrial / warehouse)
  • Hampshire Corporate Park (offices)
  • Phoenix Park (industrial)
  • Southampton International Park (offices / industrial / warehouse)
  • Tower Park (industrial / warehouse)
  • Turnpike (offices)

Fareham

  • Apex Centre (industrial)
  • Bridge Industries (industrial / office)
  • Cams Hall (office)
  • Duncan Road (industrial / warehouse)
  • Fareham Enterprise Centre (offices)
  • Fareham Heights (industrial / warehouse / offices)
  • Fareham Industrial Park (industrial / warehouse / offices)
  • Fort Fareham (industrial / warehouse)
  • Fort Wallington (industrial)
  • Kites Croft (industrial / warehouse / offices)
  • Murrills Trading Estate (industrial / warehouse)
  • Newgate Lane (industrial / warehouse)
  • Palmerston Lane (industrial / warehouse)
  • Pennant Park (industrial / warehouse / office)
  • Portchester Park (industrial / warehouse)
  • Segensworth (offices / industrial / warehouse)
  • Solent Business Park (offices)
  • Speedfields Park (industrial / warehouse)
  • Talisman Business Centre (industrial / warehouse)

Gosport

  • Clarence Wharf (industrial)
  • Cranbourne Road (industrial)
  • Fareham Road (industrial / warehouse)
  • Fort Brockhurst (industrial)
  • Forton Road (industrial)
  • Harbour Road (industrial)
  • Heritage Business Park (freehold)
  • Quay Lane (industrial)
  • Westfield Industrial Estate (industrial)

Hart (district)

  • Ancells Farm (offices)
  • Bartley Osborne Way (offices)
  • Blackbushe Business Park (industrial)
  • Murrell Green Business Park (industrial)
  • Pale Lane Farm (offices / industrial / warehouse)
  • Redfields Park (offices / industrial)
  • Sandy Lane Business Park (offices)
  • Waterfront (offices)

Havant

  • Aysgarth Road (industrial)
  • Brambles Business Centre (offices)
  • Brambles Industrial Estate (office / industrial / warehouse / leisure)
  • Brockhampton North Industrial Estate (industrial)
  • Byngs Business Park (industrial)
  • Kingscroft Business Park (industrial)
  • Oakwood Centre (offices)
  • North Havant Industrial Estate (industrial / warehouse)
  • Parkwood Centre (industrial / warehouse / offices)
  • Brambles Farm (industrial)
  • Stratfield Park (industrial)
  • Waterlooville Industrial Estate (industrial)

Portsmouth

  • Acorn Business Park (offices)
  • Bilton Business Park (industrial / warehouse)
  • Blueprint (industrial)
  • Challenge Enterprise Centre (managed offices)
  • Dundas Industrial Estate (industrial / warehouse)
  • Fairways Business Centre (industrial)
  • Farlington Road (industrial / warehouse / retail)
  • Fitzherbert Industrial Estate (industrial / warehouse / retail)
  • Flathouse Quay (industrial)
  • Fratton (industrial)
  • Limberline Estate (industrial / warehouse)
  • North Harbour Business Park (offices)
  • Portchester Park (industrial)
  • Portsmouth Enterprise Centre (managed offices / industrial)
  • Quadra Point (industrial / warehouse)
  • Railway Triangle (industrial / warehouse)
  • Shawcross Industrial Estate (industrial)
  • Walton Road (industrial / warehouse)
  • Warrier Business Centre (managed offices)
  • Western Road Industrial Estate (industrial / warehouse)

Rushmoor

  • Bellevue Enterprise Centre (office / industrial)
  • Bellevue Industrial Estate (industrial)
  • Blackwater Valley (industrial)
  • Deadbrook Lane (industrial / warehouse)
  • Eastern Road (industrial)
  • Farnborough Aerodrome (research & development)
  • Holder Road (offices / warehouse)
  • Invincible Road (industrial)
  • North Lane (industrial)
  • Redan Hill Estate (industrial)
  • Southwood Business Park (offices)

Southampton

  • Bernard Street (offices / warehouse)
  • Centurion Industrial Park (warehouse / industrial)
  • City Industrial Park (industrial / warehouse)
  • Hazel Road & Willments Yard (industrial / warehouse)
  • Kemps Quay (industrial)
  • Millbrook Trading Estate (industrial / warehouse / offices)
  • Millbrook Industrial Estate (industrial / warehouse)
  • Solent Business Centre (industrial / warehouse)
  • Trinity Manor Industrial Estate (industrial / warehouse)
  • Western Docks (industrial / warehouse)


See also

  • Hampshire
  • Small business
  • Business Link


External links

  • Hampshire Business Awards [2]
  • Hampshire County Council [3]

Information

Casual Day Has Gone Too Far

Monday, January 28th, 2008
Dilbert Book
“Casual Day Has Gone Too Far”
Book No.: 9
Dates: February 15 1995 -</br> November 19 1995
Published: september 1 1996
Author: Scott Adams

Casual Day Has Gone Too Far is the 9th Dilbert book by Scott Adams. It features 280 strips across 128 pages with and includes an introduction by Scott Adams Its genre is humour and is sold at the retail price of £6.99 in the UK.


Plot

It features around the stories of;

  • Dilbert, The main character and engineer.
  • Dogbert, Dilbert’s pet.
  • Wally, Dilbert’s co-worker.
  • Alice, Dilbert’s co-worker.
  • The Pointy Haired Boss, The boss.
  • Catbert, The Evil Director of Human Resources.

and many more.

Information

Tulipwood

Monday, January 28th, 2008

Most commonly, Tulipwood is the yellowish greenish wood yielded from the tuliptree, which is found on the Eastern side of North America and also in some parts of China. In the United States, it is commonly known as tulip poplar or yellow poplar, even though the tree is not related to the poplars. In fact, the reference to poplar is a result of the tree’s height, which can exceed 100 feet. The wood is very light, but very strong and is used in many applications, including furniture, joinery and moldings. It can also be stained very easily and is often used as a low-cost alternative to walnut and cherry in furniture and doors.

Tulipwood is also known as “Brazilian tulipwood” and is a classic high-quality wood, very dense with a lovely figure. It is used for inlays in furniture and for small turned items. Available only in small sizes, it is rarely used in the solid for luxury furniture. Like other woods with a pronounced figure it is rather strongly subject to fashion.

In the nineteenth century Brazilian tulipwood was thought to be the product of Physocalymma scaberrima, but in the twentieth century it became clear it was yielded by a species of Dalbergia. At some point it was misidentified as Dalbergia frutescens var. tomentosa, a misidentification which can still be found in books aimed at the woodworker. For some decades it has been known to be yielded by Dalbergia decipularis, a species restricted to a small area in Brazil.

There also exists the Australian “tulipwood”, the common name of Harpullia pendula, among others.

Information

Non-inertial reference frame

Monday, January 28th, 2008

A non-inertial reference frame is one in which a body is observed to violate Newton’s Laws of Motion, see inertial frame. The prime example of such a non-inertial frame is one using “earth fixed” coordinates, in which body motion is measured with respect to points on the (rotating in space) earth.

Measurement of bodies moving with respect to non-inertial reference frames require fictitious forces (such as the Coriolis force or the centrifugal force) deriving from acceleration of the reference frame itself to account for the observed motion.

That a given frame is non-inertial can be detected by its violation of Newton’s laws. For example, the rotation of the Earth can be observed from the rotating (with respect to inertial space) gravity vector acting on a Foucault pendulum to change its plane of vibration with respect to its surroundings.

Information

Proper frame

Monday, January 28th, 2008

A proper frame is a reference frame that is attached to an object. It is a frame that is sometimes described as co-moving with the object. It has the effect of making the object seem stationary, which is useful for many types of calculations.

For example, a freely falling elevator is a proper frame for a free falling object in the elevator, while the surface of the Earth is not.

Proper frames can be inertial as well as non-inertial as in the example above.

Information

  • Bedroom Furniture, Bedroom Set The bedroom furniture, bedroom sets and bedroom furniture collections below are priced as groups, however you can mix-and-match the pieces for a custom