#Herman schmidt
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vertigoartgore · 8 months ago
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Captain America commission by Italian artist Claudio Castellini.
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theultrablog · 2 days ago
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Pulp Storytime #68: Back In The New York Mood. Based on characters from Pulse-Pounding Pulp by Garnett Elliott.
May 1935. Raucous applause in the Cotton Club. Madame Valeria, formerly Valerie Schmidt, gave her all to introducing one of tonight’s stars, Florence Ziegler. The Australian songbird was competing with Bebe Broussard in a “friendly” competition. Soon, the applause-o-meter was exactly tied, a tie broken by the late arrival of some rowdy staffers from the Australian embassy. They, along with music agent Bert “the Beast” Wilde had messages for Florence… But someone else was sending a message, too. By burning down Ziegler Security Services! Luckily, butler extraordinaire Aldous Bingen was on hand to rush the team to Fifth Avenue, where the smoldering clues led to a hobo camp in Central Park*. At first, there was no sign of an arsonist. But Madame Valeria had a talent besides theatrical introductions… Speaking with the dead! It turns out, their arsonist was also a killer, and not just any killer…But ZSS’s foe Peck, the Swan Street Slicer. And he was ready to slash the party to pieces, cutting Florence and terrifying Bingen. Luckily, the players had an ace in the hole: photographer/gunman Javid Kulfi! He found secret passages through the man camp, and was able to wound the killer in the kneecaps and the stabbing arm. A brief interrogation followed. The miscreant was hired by America’s richest man, Doc Midas, whose office was the top two floors of the Empire State Building. The town wasn’t big enough for Doc and Florence, but a coffin would be the right size. Additional questions were silenced by a sniper! Peck took one right through the eye, and more shots followed. Valeira panicked, fleeing the hobo camp into open ground, getting a hole in the rib cage for her trouble. She faked death. Aldous helped the rest sneak to safety, rescuing Valeria under the cover of Emergency Services. The group regrouped. How could they hope to take on the Midas organization? He was beloved, wealthy, and surrounded by corporate titans. The question was answered with good old detective work. Midas was aided by his Fearsome Four, and they were arrogant enough to be featured in Forbes. I’ll give the summaries below:
“Happy” Herman Haas, war vet and sniper. A dour man who wears elaborate suits and has a passion for fencing. Hap represents Midas Industries as its main White House lobbyist. Joe “Gobbler” Gobbler serves as Doc Midas’s PR man, lawyer, and closest confidant. Small and dapper, he is also the main announcer for the Golden Hour radio program. Joe got his nickname from both his voracious appetite and rapid speaking voice. Francis Todd, a brooding giant of a man and brilliant engineer, who heads the weapons division that created Compound Z. Francis is rumored to be a psychopath, kept out of jail only by Doc’s influence and the legal skills of Joe Gotlieb. Esther Crane: An assertive 34-year-old businesswoman, Esther tends to treat people below her station as “the help,” and that means nearly everybody. Last seen in "The Devil’s Wat."
The party called in every favor they could. They had a lot of friends in New York: it was time to aggressively re-organize. Gobbler Gottlieb was a victim of his own ego. The players had friends and family call him at all hours of day and night, promising prestigious events and canceling, or rebooking. A scheme that could only work a few days, but that’s how long it needed to. For Todd, they tried a legal option. Madame Valeria took a boat onto the East River, searching for and recovering a disappeared body. Todd fought back by clobbering Javid outside of the club. But the bruiser overplayed his hand. Indian millionaire Devika bribed his secretary to turn state’s evidence, and the next day, the bruiser had to trade French cuffs for handcuffs. Happy was easier. The players snuck into his apartment and faked an urgent telegram from Washington. Aldous chuckled from a nearby shoeshine booth as the mark headed up to the nation’s capital. Florence tried the personal touch with Esther Crane. Flo found her prey belittling a sales girl at the Macy’s beauty counter. Florence argued from naked self-interest: did Crane really want a scandal she couldn’t 'cover up'? The argument was half convincing��but not fully. Luckily, Florence moves indirectly. She riled up the shopgirl under her breath. Esther continued berating. When the 17-year-old slapped the cosmetics giant in the face… SCANDAL! Crane swore she’d fire everyone in the store, everyone on the block! Florence took the raging chemist outside, leading her to a taxi...and telling the driver ‘pronto to Poughkeepsie’. The next day, the gang pored over newspapers. Their tricks had worked. The only wrinkle was the front page of the Tribune, reporting that a Nazi zeppelin had docked at the Empire State Building! The party loaded itself for bear. It was easy enough for Madame Valeria to lie them into the building. But she was the only master of disguise: the others would be found out soon enough. Another complication arose when she got into Midas’s office… and heard the loud flapping of an oxygen machine! Midas’s alchemical innovation, the one who wanted to sell to the Reich, had given him terminal cancer. Worse, Florence’s nemesis, Klaus Adler, was sitting in the buyer’s chair! But only a fool would count out our gang when their back’s up against it. Selling chemical weapons to foreign powers? The response wasn’t gunfire, but journalism! Florence and Valeria stole janitor disguises so they could break into filing cabinets. Javid and Aldous pretended to be window washers, secretly snapping pics of the conversation. It pained Kulfi not to blow up the zeppelin, but he couldn’t risk metal debris raining over Midtown. But hadn’t they forgotten something? Oh, Bert and the embassy! Both barged into Florence’s dinner party. And they both had amazing offers: Bert promised a world tour, the first of its kind. Florence could dine with queens and sing for sheikhs. She’d be a more common household word than “window”. The Aussie Rep had a much more subdued itinerary. She was a hero in Australia… It was time for her to prove it. Bookings up and down both coasts, bringing joy and hope back to a beleaguered nation. Mutually exclusive from the other offer, and not as lucrative… But she was needed. Florence, once obsessed with fame and glory, a former hobo who had bartered her soul for financial success, chose her country. Bert was utterly irate, and so was Devika (who had accepted a large deposit on her personal jet). But there was no arguing with her: Not money, not fame, not hordes of beautiful women, could overcome her loyalty to the grand old land of Oz. A great send-off to a great character. (The player will stay, luckily.)
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*(That was a real thing, look it up.)
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miastaslow · 3 months ago
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Plebiscyt w Kielcach - wybraliśmy najlepszą ze stu wspólnie przeczytanych lektur
Za nami już sto wspólnie przeczytanych książek! Uczestnicy spotkań i sympatycy kieleckiego Klubu z Kawą nad Książką wspólnie wybrali najlepsze z lektur, z jakimi mierzyliśmy się w naszym klubie. Oto podsumowanie oddanych głosów!
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Niekwestionowanym zwycięzcą okazała się nasza setna wspólna lektura, czyli Pan Lodowego Ogrodu. Tom 1 Jarosława Grzędowicza. Zaraz za Grzędowiczem, z równą ilością głosów i wynikiem drugiego miejsca, uplasowały się dwie powieści napisane przez kobiety: nieco metaforyczny Sen o okapi Mariany Leky oraz Gdzie śpiewają raki Delii Owens.
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Na podium uplasowała się również szkolna lektura, czyli Lalka Bolesława Prusa! Co każe przemyśleć wszechobecną krytykę listy lektur w liceach. :-) Mamy nadzieję, że zgadzacie się z prezentowanymi wynikami. A może mieliście innych faworytów? Podzielcie się z nami swoimi typami!
Kasia Leśniak
Poniżej prezentujemy listę wszystkich przeczytanych wspólnie lektur, biorących udział w plebiscycie:
1. Lekcje pana Kuki, Radek Knapp 2. Dopóki mamy twarze, Clive Staples Lewis 3. Szopka, Zośka Papużanka 4. Korzenie, Alex Haley 5. Poszukiwacze muszelek, Rosamunde Pilcher 6. Bez mojej zgody, Jodi Picoult 7. Smilla w labiryntach śniegu, Peter Hᴓeg 8. Księżniczka z lodu, Camilla Läckberg 9. Dzień, noc i pora niczyja, Ewa Nowacka 10. Miłość w czasach zarazy, Gabriel García Márquez 11. Dom dzienny, dom nocny Olga Tokarczuk 12. Ciemno, prawie noc, Joanna Bator 13. Grek Zorba, Nikos Kazantzakis 14. Szklany klosz, Sylvia Plath 15. Lolita, Vladimir Nabokov 16. Grona gniewu, John Steinbeck 17. Mnich. Romans grozy, Matthew Gregory Lewis 18. Brühl, Józef Ignacy Kraszewski 19. Kwiaty dla Algernona, Daniel Keyes 20. Wielki Gatsby, Francis Scott Fitzgerald 21. Analfabetka, która potrafiła liczyć, Jonas Jonasson 22. Na południe od granicy, na zachód od słońca, Haruki Murakami 23. Szum, Magdalena Tulli 24. Tak sobie myślę..., Jerzy Stuhr 25. Głowa Niobe, Marta Guzowska 26. Pochwała macochy, Mario Vargas Llosa 27. Odwrotniak, Jakub Małecki 28. Po prostu bądź, Magdalena Witkiewicz 29. Masakra, Krzysztof Varga 30. Słowik, Kristin Hannah 31. Ślady, Jakub Małecki 32. Bodo wśród gwiazd, Anna Mieszkowska 33. Czarna bezgwiezdna noc, Stephen King 34. Morderstwo w Orient Expressie, Agatha Christie 35. Czerwona jaskółka, Jason Matthews 36. Tonąca Ruth, Christina Schwarz 37. Ulisses, James Joyce 38. Kobieta w oknie, A. J. Finn 39. Gra w klasy, Julio Cortázar 40. Istota zła, Luca D'Andrea 41. Wielka samotność, Kristin Hannah 42. Patrick Melrose, Edward St Aubyn 43. Listy do pałacu, Jorge Díaz 44. Gwiazdozbiór Psa, Peter Heller 45. Hipopotam, Stephen Fry 46. Siedem sióstr, Lucinda Riley 47. Miłośnik wulkanów, Susan Sontag 48. Tożsamość, Milan Kundera 49. Narcyz i Złotousty, Herman Hesse 50. Iluzjonista, Remigiusz Mróz 51. Lawendowy pył, Danuta Marcinkowska, Ewa Marcinkowska-Schmidt i Klaudyna Schmidt 52. Bez skrupułów, Harlan Coben 53. Maria i Magdalena, Magdalena Samozwaniec 54. Szadź, Igor Brejdygant 55. Wodny nóż, Paolo Bacigalupi 56. Rysa, Igor Brejdygant 57. Pantaleon i wizytantki, Mario Vargas Llosa 58. Gambit królowej, Walter Tevis 59. Klucze królestwa, Archibald Joseph Cronin 60. Miasto niedźwiedzia, Fredrik Backman 61. Tajemniczy przybysz, Mark Twain 62. Tato, William Wharton 63. Gra szklanych paciorków, Herman Hesse 64. Gdzie śpiewają raki, Delia Owens 65. Ludzie na drzewach, Hanya Yanagihara 66. Lalka, Bolesław Prus 67. Wszystko za Everest, Jon Krakauer 68. Domofon, Zygmunt Miłoszewski 69. Jeździec miedziany, Paullina Simons 70. Biała wilczyca, Theresa Révay 71. Kamienny anioł, Katherine Scholes 72. Piękne kłamstwa, Lisa Unger 73. Przygody dobrego wojaka Szwejka podczas wojny światowej, Jaroslav Hašek 74. Żniwa zła, Robert Galbraith 75. Dotknięcie ziemi, Rani Manicka 76. Biegnąca z wilkami, Clarissa Pinkola Estés 77. Lektor, Bernhard Schlink 78. Dygot, Jakub Małecki 79. Siódme wtajemniczenie, Edmund Niziurski 80. Kirke, Madeline Miller 81. Dzieci północy, Salman Rushdie 82. W ciemnej dolinie. Rodzinna tragedia i tajemnica schizofrenii, Robert Kolker 83. Lot ćmy, Ken Follett 84. Światy wzniesiemy nowe, Urszula Jabłońska 85. Czego pragnie kobieta, Zbigniew Lew-Starowicz i Krystyna Romanowska 86. Diabeł, którego znasz. Psychiatria sądowa bez tajemnic, Gwen Adshead i Eileen Horne 87. Azazel, Izaac Asimov 88. Bogowie, groby i uczeni. Powieść o archeologii, C. W. Ceram 89. Wyspa dnia poprzedniego, Umberto Eco 90. Dobry wilk. Tragedia w szwedzkim zoo, Lars Berge 91. Zanim wystygnie kawa, Toshikazu Kawaguchi 92. Jak nie zabiłem swojego ojca i jak bardzo tego żałuję, Mateusz Pakuła 93. Zatoka Francuza, Daphne du Maurier 94. Sen o okapi, Mariana Leky 95. Dożywocie, Marta Kisiel 96. Droga do zapomnienia, Eric Lomax 97. Petersburg. Miasto snu, Joanna Czeczott 98. Nie zaczęło się od ciebie. Jak dziedziczona trauma wpływa na to, kim jesteśmy i jak zakończyć ten proces, Mark Wolynn 99. Miasto Śniących Książek. Powieść z Camonii autorstwa Hildegunsta Rzebiarza Mitów, Walter Moers 100. Pan Lodowego Ogrodu. Tom 1, Jarosław Grzędowicz
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haroldharrisoncollege-rpg · 4 months ago
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Recordatorio, las reservas cierran en el siguiente horario:
2:00 PM - México
3:00 PM - Colombia
4:00 PM - Venezuela
5:00 PM - Argentina/Chile
10:00 PM - España
RESERVAS DE FACECLAIM:
@Oleshev — Fairfax Aaron Pierre — Charli Alexa Tiziani — Pajarito Ali Bercan — Greg Anya Taylor-Joy — Crush Aubri Ibrag — Rotten Bibi (Kim Hyung-seo — Batman Camila Morrone — aveslocas Charlie Bushnell — RayoMcQueen Choi San — MisaMisa! Choi Soobin — Cosmic Choi Yeon-jun — paticorta Elijah Hewson — Bojack Ethan Cutkosky — Plankton Havana Rose Liu — Remi Herman Tømmeraas — Kumo Hugh Laughton Scott — Wirt Hunter Schafer — Hamlet Inna Nord — Seoan Isabelle Mathers — Z0oombie jackson passaglia — Batman Jacob Elordi — Ice clown Jacob Rott — Gengar Jenna Ortega — Crush Jeon So Mi — Kumo Karolis Inokaitis — dragostea Kiernan Shipka — Erizo Madison Beer — Chappel Roan Maia Reficco — Chihiro Margaret Qualley — Baxter Marisa Tomei — Tía May Mckena Grace — Gata Fiera Meg Donnelly — Sarah Lynn Michael Yerger — Espresso Milo Manheim — un dino Molly gordon — Mape Myha'la Herrold — Mape Lee Felix — shostiplus Lee Min Ho (Lee Know) — bubble tea Lily Rowland — Manzanita Liza Weidemann — Mandarina Olivia Cooke — Kimchi Paul Mescal — 324B21 Pietro Checchi — Malteado Rae Cambra — PrincesaGrumosa Rayce Aaronson — notdean Reneé Rapp — Efímera Sidney Sweeney — Antje Sienna Raine Schmidt — haaheh Timothee Chalamet — Bill Cipher Victoria Pedretti — Fiona Gallagher Vinnie Hacker — Anakin Vinnie Woolston — Efímera
RESERVAS DE VACANTE LABORAL
Bibliotecario — Charli Barman — Kumo Consejera Estudiantil — Tía May Recepcionista — PamBeesly
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openingnightposts · 9 months ago
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hoghtastic · 1 year ago
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Søren Le Schmidt was seen yesterday at the Vogue party at Soho House Copenhagen with Herman, the BF from Alicia.
Maybe Søren dropped Alex a little 😂
It could be. 😆 I was just surprised he doesn’t seem to be presenting a new collection this time.
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onthewaterside-rpg · 1 year ago
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› ROSTROS RESERVADOS:
Arthur Benedetti — Hephaestus
Bridget Satterlee — Moon
Choi Yeonjun — orchid
Cindy Kimberly — Bubbles
Dua Lipa — night
Elena Romashina — blaze
Gracie Adams — Sunflo
Herman tommeraas  — Seven
Hwang Hyun Jin — neon
Joe Alwyn — Sopa de pollo
Josie Lane — strmoon
Jung Wooyoung — lex
Lauren de graaf —Mew
Lera Nerushima — yellow
Lily Easton — blaze
Lucien Laviscount — Incubus
Maia Reficco — cosmos
Mara Lafontan — Amapola
Marissa Long — Alien
Michael Yerger — vaporeon
Nailea Devora — Percy
Noah Beck — Bessel 
Sienna Raine Schmidt — Barbiegirl
Scarlett Leithold — Jackpot
Scott Morton — Hunter
Steph Mandich — Moon
Tanner Reese — Jaws
Timotheé Chalamet — Ferb
Tobias Reuter — Hunter
Victoria Bronova — Tulipán
Vinnie Hacker — Heinlein
Yoo Ji Min (Karina) — astral
La lista actualizada en tiempo real se encuentra aquí: RESERVAS.
› RESERVAS NO EFECTUADAS:
Si tu rostro elegido figura en esta lista pero no está a tu nombre, el pb ha sido previamente reservado, ¡lo sentimos!
Si no figura ni el rostro ni tu pseudónimo, es posible que Tumblr se la haya tragado. ¡Envía nuevamente el mensaje!
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wortzentriert · 2 years ago
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AD 70 AS A POINTER TO THE SECOND ADVENT
By Ken Gentry
AD 70 prefigures the Second Advent; it is theologically linked to it. But this does not imply any concept of double-fulfillment. There is a fundamental difference between prolepsis and double-fulfillment. Let me explain.
In the OT we have several “Day of the Lord” events: against Babylon (Isa 13:9), Jerusalem (Joel 2:1), and others. Each of these is a pointer to the final Day of the Lord (2 Pet 3:10), though each OT version is spoken of as THE (singular) Day of the Lord. This is much like our spiritual resurrection in salvation (John 5:24-25; 1 John 3:14) pointing to our final resurrection at the end of history. Or like the Christian’s being a “new creation” (2 Cor 5:17; Gal 6:15), which is a picture of the consummate new creation (2 Pet 3:10).
These observations represent standard proleptic theology, which is often called: Now-But-Not-Yet theology. This is held by most evangelical theologians.
In fact, many scholars see AD 70 as a microcosm of the final judgment. Consequently, we may expect the same imagery to apply to both AD 70 and the end.
For instance, of those first-century events, Bloesch states: “The catastrophe that befell the Jewish people in A.D. 70 is a sign of the final judgment.” (Donald G. Bloesch, The Last Things: Resurrection, Judgment, Glory [Downers Grove, Ill: InterVarsity, 2004], 84.)
Morris agrees: “a theological unity between the two judgments, and that some of what Jesus says [in the Olivet Discourse] could apply equally well to both.” (Leon Morris, The Gospel according to Matthew [Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1992], 593.)
Mounce concurs: “the coming destruction of Jerusalem was anticipation of the end of the age.” (Robert H. Mounce, Matthew [Peabody, Mass.: 1991], 222.)
Hagner writes: “The fall of Jerusalem is described in quasi-eschatological language and in the same discourse that describes the coming of the Son of Man. The two events are obviously linked in the minds of the disciples (as their question implied, 24.3) and very probably in the mind of the evangelist.” He continues: “There is a theological relationship between the fall of Jerusalem and the end of the age, since both involve judgment. . . . The former is the prefiguration of the latter.” (Thomas E. Schmidt and Moises Silva, To Tell the Mystery: Essays on New Testament Eschatology in Honor of Robert H. Gundry [Sheffield, Eng.: Continuum, 1994], 66.)
Reymond speaks of Christ’s “‘lesser (typical) coming in judgment’ in the destruction of Jerusalem in A.D. 70.” (Robert L. Reymond, A New Systematic Theology [Nashville: Nelson, 1998], 215.)
Alexander calls AD 70 a “prefiguring,”Robertson “a symbol” of the end. (Joseph Addison Alexander, The Gospel according to Matthew Explained [Lynchburg, Vir.: James Family, rep. n.d., (1861]), 345.)
Of AD 70, T. J. Geddert states: “the events were, as do so many events in the OT, to point toward the final judgment.” (in Michael B. Green, Scot McKnight, I. Howard Marshal, eds., Dictionary of Jesus and the Gospels: A Compendium of Contemporary Biblical Scholarship [Downers Grove, Ill: InterVarsity, 1992], 23.)
Bavinck sees AD 70 as “the announcement and preparation of the consummation of the world.” (Herman Bavinck, The Last Things: Hope for This World and the Next, trans. by John Vriend, ed. by John Bolt [Grand Rapids: Baker, 1996], 108.)
Strimple as “a proleptic, typological fulfillment of that final judgment of God.” (Robert B. Strimple in Darrell L. Bock, Three Views on the Millennium and Beyond [Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1999], 64).
In fact, DBI observes that “Scripture portrays God’s judgments throughout history as proleptic pictures of the final judgment.” (Leland Ryken, James C. Wilhoit, Tremper Longman III, eds., Dictionary of Biblical Imagery [Downers Grove, Ill: InterVarsity, 1998], 472.)
Kenneth Gentry
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eagletek · 2 years ago
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Sailor who died at Pearl Harbor finally put to rest over 80 years later
A sailor killed during the Pearl Harbor attack was laid to rest Thursday, over 81 years after the 1941 invasion. Gunner’s Mate 3rd Class Herman Schmidt was 28 years old when Japanese forces attacked the USS Oklahoma at Pearl Harbor in Hawaii. Schmidt, along with over 400 other men from the USS Oklahoma, was initially buried as an unknown soldier. Only 35 of the men on the USS Oklahoma were…
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newswireml · 2 years ago
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'We never forget:' Navy to bury sailor killed at Pearl Harbor after decades-long quest to identify#forget #Navy #bury #sailor #killed #Pearl #Harbor #decadeslong #quest #identify
Michael Schmidt was just 13 months old when his father, Gunner’s Mate Third Class Herman Schmidt, died aboard the USS Oklahoma during the 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor. More than 80 years would pass before advances in DNA technology enabled the military to identify the fallen sailor and bring his remains to his final resting place in Arlington National Cemetery, where he will be buried with full…
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dimity-lawn · 2 years ago
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Here is a list of the names and ages of the victims which can be found at https://trianglefire.ilr.cornell.edu/victimsWitnesses/victimsList.html
Adler, Lizzie, 24
Altman, Anna, 16
Ardito, Annina, 25
Bassino, Rose, 31
Benanti, Vincenza, 22
Berger, Yetta, 18
Bernstein, Essie, 19
Bernstein, Jacob, 38
Bernstein, Morris, 19
Billota, Vincenza, 16
Binowitz, Abraham, 30
Birman, Gussie, 22
Brenman, Rosie, 23
Brenman, Sarah, 17
Brodsky, Ida, 15
Brodsky, Sarah, 21
Brucks, Ada, 18
Brunetti, Laura, 17
Cammarata, Josephine, 17
Caputo, Francesca, 17
Carlisi, Josephine, 31
Caruso, Albina, 20
Ciminello, Annie, 36
Cirrito, Rosina, 18
Cohen, Anna, 25
Colletti, Annie, 30
Cooper, Sarah, 16
Cordiano , Michelina, 25
Dashefsky, Bessie, 25
Del Castillo, Josie, 21
Dockman, Clara, 19
Donick, Kalman, 24
Driansky, Nettie, 21
Eisenberg, Celia, 17
Evans, Dora, 18
Feibisch, Rebecca, 20
Fichtenholtz, Yetta, 18
Fitze, Daisy Lopez, 26
Floresta, Mary, 26
Florin, Max, 23
Franco, Jenne, 16
Friedman, Rose, 18
Gerjuoy, Diana, 18
Gerstein, Molly, 17
Giannattasio, Catherine, 22
Gitlin, Celia, 17
Goldstein, Esther, 20
Goldstein, Lena, 22
Goldstein, Mary, 18
Goldstein, Yetta, 20
Grasso, Rosie, 16
Greb, Bertha, 25
Grossman, Rachel, 18
Herman, Mary, 40
Hochfeld, Esther, 21
Hollander, Fannie, 18
Horowitz, Pauline, 19
Jukofsky, Ida, 19
Kanowitz, Ida, 18
Kaplan, Tessie, 18
Kessler, Beckie, 19
Klein, Jacob, 23
Koppelman, Beckie, 16
Kula, Bertha, 19
Kupferschmidt, Tillie, 16
Kurtz, Benjamin, 19
L'Abbate, Annie, 16
Lansner, Fannie, 21
Lauletta, Maria Giuseppa, 33
Lederman, Jennie, 21
Lehrer, Max, 18
Lehrer, Sam, 19
Leone, Kate, 14
Leventhal, Mary, 22
Levin, Jennie, 19
Levine, Pauline, 19
Liebowitz, Nettie, 23
Liermark, Rose, 19
Maiale, Bettina, 18
Maiale, Frances, 21
Maltese, Catherine, 39
Maltese, Lucia, 20
Maltese, Rosaria, 14
Manaria, Maria, 27
Mankofsky, Rose, 22
Mehl, Rose, 15
Meyers, Yetta, 19
Midolo, Gaetana, 16
Miller, Annie, 16
Neubauer, Beckie, 19
Nicholas, Annie, 18
Nicolosi, Michelina, 21
Nussbaum, Sadie, 18
Oberstein, Julia, 19
Oringer, Rose, 19
Ostrovsky , Beckie, 20
Pack, Annie, 18
Panno, Provindenza, 43
Pasqualicchio, Antonietta, 16
Pearl, Ida, 20
Pildescu, Jennie, 18
Pinelli, Vincenza, 30
Prato, Emilia, 21
Prestifilippo, Concetta, 22
Reines, Beckie, 18
Rosen (Loeb), Louis, 33
Rosen, Fannie, 21
Rosen, Israel, 17
Rosen, Julia, 35
Rosenbaum, Yetta, 22
Rosenberg, Jennie, 21
Rosenfeld, Gussie, 22
Rothstein, Emma, 22
Rotner, Theodore, 22
Sabasowitz, Sarah, 17
Salemi, Santina, 24
Saracino, Sarafina, 25
Saracino, Teresina, 20
Schiffman, Gussie, 18
Schmidt, Theresa, 32
Schneider, Ethel, 20
Schochet, Violet, 21
Schpunt, Golda, 19
Schwartz, Margaret, 24
Seltzer, Jacob, 33
Shapiro, Rosie, 17
Sklover, Ben, 25
Sorkin, Rose, 18
Starr, Annie, 30
Stein, Jennie, 18
Stellino, Jennie, 16
Stiglitz, Jennie, 22
Taback, Sam, 20
Terranova, Clotilde, 22
Tortorelli, Isabella, 17
Utal, Meyer, 23
Uzzo, Catherine, 22
Velakofsky, Frieda, 20
Viviano, Bessie, 15
Weiner, Rosie, 20
Weintraub, Sarah, 17
Weisner, Tessie, 21
Welfowitz, Dora, 21
Wendroff, Bertha, 18
Wilson, Joseph, 22
Wisotsky, Sonia, 17
On this day in 1911, 146 people lost their lives in the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire.
These people were mostly women and many were girls, who had been incredibly brave and faced public violence and police brutality when they had led strikes in order to unionize because they knew how dangerous the working conditions were, but were forced to return to work to support themselves and their families after an impressive strike that did lead to safer conditions to many others in the textile industry.
Minutes before their Saturday Shift would have ended, a fire started on the men's floor below them as a result of an incident with a cigar(ette) and the fiber-dense environment. These men contacted the owners two floors above them, so they and the bosses made it out, but in their worry they forgot to warn the floor in between.
These poor people had less of a chance of escape because in their greed the bosses feared that the women might steal thread, so they locked one of the doors and inspected purses every day. The tiny overcrowded elevators couldn't carry many people, and some either jumped or were pushed down the elevator shaft as the panic spread and the unsafe fire escape fell away from the building as people tried to climb down to safety. By the end of it, bodies were piled high beneath the widows and not all were recognizable.
This tragedy could have been avoided, but greed got in the way. Building codes have changed in America to prevent this from happening again, but even today people working in the fashion industry are exploited around the world. Please, remember those who died and consider why we still must change things for the better today.
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immaculatasknight · 4 years ago
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HOW NEW YORK BANKERS INTENTIONALLY ARMED NAZI GERMANY FOR WORLD WAR
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dashflashy-arts · 6 years ago
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crossover AU where random people get stuck there like that SCP infinite Ikea but instead of random creepy deformed “workers” in there the Mall just keeps adding random people in order to fill itself and they can’t really do anything other than interact with each other
...aka the because-I-can-crossover AU
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comicwaren · 6 years ago
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From Dead Man Logan #004, “Sins of the Father - Part 4”
Art by Mike Henderson and Nolan Woodard
Written by Ed Brisson
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nekoannie-chan · 3 years ago
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Reading list guidelines
Hi! This is Annie, here are my reblog guidelines during 2024:
  You MUST to TAG ME in your fic, I know some people discontinued their tag list, unfortunately Dumblr doesn’t notify me and I don’t have enough time to check blog by blog because I follow lots of people.
TAG all the WARNINGS, there’s some topics I’m not comfortable with. Please respect my boundaries and triggers as I respect yours.
Must be posted on Tumblr. I wanna support writers on here, so please, no links to another fanfic platform.
Every Friday a weekly list will be published (unless something happens in my life), so lists will have between 7-42 fics.
Use ‘read more’ if word counts is over 500, please; sometimes I keep fics in my drafts.
Would be amazing if you following, I swear I’m not a bad person, just a grumpy one.
Could take between 1 to 2 months I reblog your work, sometimes I’m slow because of school or personal stuff, also I always plan my queue at least for a month.
If I like your fic, it means I receive the notification and would be on my queue, but if I don’t like it, you can message me and send me the link, ‘cause probably I didn’t receive the notification. Also, if you notice my likes it means I’m putting your work on my queue with the comment.
If you wanna tag me but not be highlighted, you can send me a message and ask it politely.
I just wanna support people, and hope people support me too, so I just do this for fun, I’m no gonna tolerate hate or something negative, so if you send me something like that, I will block you without hesitation; this also applies if someone is rude with me.
I’m okay with dark, smut, fluff, angst, horror, etc., just please, tag properly.
͙♡*♡∞:。.。  。.。:∞♡*♡͙
  Characters and fandoms I read below the break.
❤ Marvel characters I read:
Steve Rogers.
Brock Rumlow.
Runaways.
Tandy Bowen.
Ororo Munroe.
Sue Storm.
Johnny Storm.
Lorna Dane.
Nico Minoru.
Clarice Fong/Ferguson.
Rogue.
John Proudstar.
Stepford Cuckoos.
Logan/Wolverine.
Magik.
PRIDE.
Jubilee.
Sinthea Schmidt.
Janet van Dyne.
Doctor Doom.
Amora.
Felicia Hardy.
Madelyne Pryor.
Mister Sinister.
Rachel Leighton.
Dottie Underwood.
Michael Morbius.
Ana/Satana Helstrom.
Daimon Helstrom.
Lauren Strucker.
Andy Strucker.
Hellfire club.
Jessica Jones.
Jack Rollins.
The divine pairing.
GertChase.
Deanoru.
Thunderblink.
Morgan le Fey.
Tina Minoru.
 ❤ Knives out characters I read:
Ransom Drysdale.
Meg Drysdale.
 ❤ Charmed characters I read read:
Piper Halliwell.
Leo Wyatt.
Prue Halliwell.
Cole Turner.
 ❤ Desperate housewives’ characters I read:
Bree Van de Kamp.
Gabrielle Solis.
Susan Mayer.
Julie Mayer.
Katherine Mayfair.
Angie Bolen.
 ❤ Snowpiercer characters I read:
Lilah Junior “LJ” Folger.
 ❤ Money heist characters I read:
Tokyo.
Pamplona.
 ❤ Grey’s anatomy characters I read:
 Izzie Stevens.
Cristina Yang.
Amelia Sheperd.
Callie Torres.
Denny Duquette.
Stephanie Edwards.
Erica Hahn.
Nicole Herman.
 ❤ 9-1-1 characters I read:
Evan “Buck” Buckley.
Howie Han.
Maddie Buckley.
Abby Clark.
 ❤ American Horror story characters I read:
Misty Day.
Moira O’Hara.
Fiona Goode.
Lana Winters.
Cordelia Foxx.
Ally Mayfair-Richards.
Mallory.
 ❤ The Walking Dead characters I read:
Andrea Harrison.
Glenn Rhee.
Rosita Espinosa.
 ❤ Battle Royale characters I read:
Mistuko Souma.
Shūya Nanahara.
 ❤ Other stuff I read:
Original horror/terror stories.
Any horror movie killer.
Any Frank Grillo characters.
Any Ko Shibasaki characters.
Tomie.
Nanno.
 ❤ I’m not reading:
No pedo fics.
No underage smut.
No toilet, bodily fluids, bestiality.
No incest.
No A/B/O.
No RPF.
No Social Media AU.
Staron.
Steggy.
Romanogers.
Taserbones.
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matchamorphosis · 3 years ago
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I’m going book shopping tomorrow, might you have some recommendations?
here you go! hope your shopping goes well ♡
━ norwegian wood by haruki murakami
━ the master and margarita by mikhail bulgakov
━ the art of happiness by dalai lama
━ a clockwork orange by anthony burgess
━ a river out of eden by richard dawkins
━ the divine comedy by dante
━ the idiot by elif batumen
━ five point something by chetan bhagat
━ the brief wondrous life of oscar wao by junot diaz
━ the rules of attraction by bret easton ellis
━ been down so long it looks like up to me by richard farina
━ the gate of angels by penelope fitzgerald
━ the collective by don lee
━ on beauty by zodie smith
━ I am charlotte simmons by tom wolfe
━ murals by mahmoud darwish
━ men in the sun by ghassan kanafani
━ out of place by edward said
━ one flew over the cuckoos nest by ken kessey
━ a streetcar named desire by tennessee williams
━ just kids by patti smith
━ the perks of being a wallflower by stephen chbosky
━ to the light house by virginia wolf
━ by grand central station, I sat down and wept by elizabeth smart
━ pilgrim at tinker creek by annie dillard
━ the myth of sisyphus by albert camus
━ the benefactor by susan sontag
━ a thousand mornings by mary oliver
━ 1984 and animal farm by george orwell
━ baghdad diaries by nuha al-radi
━ dead poets society by tom schulman
━ naked lunch by william s. burroughs
━ sula by toni morrison
━ the four agreements by don miguel ruiz
━ not that bad by rachel gray
━ the art of thinking clearly by rolf dobelli
━ the invisible life of addie laroe by v. e. schwab
━ the mystery of love by don miguel ruiz
━ the loneliness companion by shrein h. bahram
━ the butterfly garden by dot hutcherson
━ orientalism by edward w. said
━ the trouble with being born by emil cioran
━ embroideries by marjane satrabi
━ such a fun age by keily reid
━ freedom is a constant struggle by angela davis
━ my brilliant friend by elena ferrante
━ the hundred years’ war on palestine by rashid khalad
━ our body and other parties by carmen maria machado
━ the body keeps count by besse kolk
━ on earth we’re briefly gorgeous by ocean vuong
━ in search of fatima by ghada karmi
━ minor detail by adania shibili
━ midnight library by matt haig
━ orbiting jupiter by gary d. schmidt
━ the collective by don lee
━ reading lolita in tehran by azar nafisi
━ the dean's december + more die of heartbreak by saul bellow
━ four quartets by t. s. eliot
━ shamela + tom jones by henry fielding
━ madame bovary by gustave flaubert
━ the diary of anne frank by anne frank
━ in the penal colony + the trial by franz kafka
━ the confidence-man by herman melville
━ invitation to a beheading + pnin by vladimir nabokov
━ the country of the pointed firs by sarah orne jewett
━ persepolis by marjane satrapi
━ the language police by diane ravitch
━ the net of dreams by julie salamon
━ one thousand and one nights by scheherazade
━ the emigrants by W.G. sebald
━ the stone diaries by carol shields
━ the engineer of human souls by josef skvorecky
━ loitering with intent + the prime of miss jean brodie by muriel spark
━ confessions of zeno by italo svevo
━ address unknown by katherine kressman taylor
━ a summons to memphis by peter taylor
━ back when we were grownups + st. maybe by anne taylor
━ aunt julia and the scriptwriter by mario vargas llosa
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