#eurite
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detournementsmineurs · 11 days ago
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“Echantillon d'Eurite Globuleux Corse" extrait par l'ingénieur Pierre Barral (circa 1770) et "Vase" en diorite orbiculaire (circa 1780) présentés par Geoffrey Ripert - Anne -L. Poulet Curatorial Fellow, The Frick Collection - lors des journées consacrées à “L'Ornement Précieux III” par L'Ecole des Arts Joailliers au Collège de France, janvier 2025.
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ethisdumbb · 11 months ago
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JLTG brainrot is real … alt versions below !
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thecrazyneographist · 2 years ago
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Eurit
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Questionable. Vertical alphabet.
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realcrimestory · 1 year ago
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Sunday, 3 September, 2023 :p
Ed Grammer
Even though Ed had a good job, a nice home, a loving wife Dorothy and three children it wasn’t enough. It seems that he found what else he was looking for in Mathilda Mizibrocky, a woman who worked for the United Nations. The two of them met while enjoying a night out at the bowling alley. It didn’t take too long before they found their way into bed together.
Unfortunately for Mathilda, she had no idea that her wonderful Ed was not on the market despite dropping numerous hints that he should ask her to marry him. He put her off äwith a number of excuses, the primary of which being their different choices of religion Ed was a Protestant and Mathilda was Roman Catholic. Still, she held out hope and figured if they continued with their activities he might just change his mind one day.
When Dorothy’s father ended up dying she left New York City for Baltimore to stay with her grieving mother. For Ed, this seemed too good to be true. With his wife out of the house, he had ample opportunity to spend as much time as he wished with Mathilda. He told Dorothy that she should spend as much time away as she felt she needed to. It would be months before husband and wife were to reunite, during which time Ed took Mathilda to Chicago for a two-week vacation. While there he was so preoccupied with his mistress that he never wrote his wife a single letter and she began to get concerned.
She called his office to speak with him but was only able to reach his secretary Jean Bilelo. Instead of ratting her boss out she sent him a wire to contact Dorothy. Ed called his wife and made the excuse that his letters (none of which he wrote) must have gotten lost on their way to her. He tried to put her mind at ease but it seems that this is the point in the story that she began to suspect something was going on behind her back.
All this time Mathilda continued to pressure Ed into tying the knot. He continued to point to spiritual differences as the reason they hadn’t done so yet but it was getting more and more difficult to prop up the excuses. Even Dorothy had started to make snide remarks that led him to believe she might know more than she was telling him. She was also threatening to return home in spite of her ill and grieving mother.
In an attempt to convince Dorothy that nothing was going on Ed made a trip to Baltimore to visit his wife. On August 19, 1952, the two of them spent the entire day together before taking a pit stop for drinks before Ed was scheduled to return to New York by train. According to Ed, he indulged in five or six scotches and water while at the bar. Dorothy herself sipped on only one the entire time.
Sometime after midnight on August 20 Officer Paul Hardesty and Sergeant John Eurite could only stand by and watch as a car, seemingly without a driver, sped down the street and ricocheted off a telephone pole and careened onto an embankment and rolled onto its side before rolling onto its side 30 feet from where they were standing. When they looked inside the car they discovered the body of Dorothy Grammer.
Their experienced eyes told them that the crash hadn’t been the reason for this woman’s death. The car’s engine was still running and someone had lodged a rock under the gas peddle. Her head had sustained numerous blows and the interior of the car showed no sign of damage. Also, her purse and eyeglasses were missing from the car. it seemed whoever had killed Dorothy had hoped the car would have crashed, causing a fiery inferno that removed any evidence that a crime had been committed.
It wouldn’t be until the next day that the deceased was identified after which Ed Grammer was notified of his wife’s tragic death. When police learned he’d been in her company only an hour before her death he was brought into the station for questioning. After several hours of interrogation, he finally confessed but gave no explanation for doing it. He simply said he had been drunk on the scotch and after stepping out of the car at the train station had picked up a pipe he found at his feet and beat his wife to death with it. He claimed to not remember if he started the car afterward or placed the rock under the peddle. All he could recall was staggering down the road and catching his train back home to New York. Ed took the pen he was offered and signed his confession, but the story didn’t end there.
The problem with Ed’s statement was simple. There were things that he seemingly chose to remember and details he forgot. Despite his inebriated state at the time he killed Dorothy Ed still remembered to take the documents with him that he would turn in the next day at work and to take the suit he was wearing the night before to the dry cleaners. It was the thing he kept out of the confession though that made them the most suspicious once it came to light. That thing was Mathilda.
Even though Ed had confessed to police he acquired the assistance of a competent lawyer to defend him. With this help, he stepped back from his confession and claimed to have never killed Dorothy. He also said that he would have said anything to the police when they questioned him so he could get some sleep.
When it came time for Ed to enter a plea at trial he claimed to be not guilty. This left the prosecution in a bind. With nothing but the confession that was under protest, they had nothing to tie Ed to Dorothy’s murder. No weapon had been found and there were no witnesses to the crime. That is when the prosecution finally learned of Mathilda.
After they located her she spoke of her never-ending love for Ed. She told them that he had always pointed to religion as the reason for the two of them not being married. She now understood the real reason was his marriage to Dorothy.
With this new bit of information the prosecution now finally had a motive for murder. The defense tried to argue that if Ed had killed his wife that it had been a spur-of-the-moment decision, not a planned act. They pointed out that he could have divorced Dorothy and married Mathilda, something she would have gladly done even though her Roman Catholic upbringing strictly forbade her to do so.
Before the proceedings had begun Ed had decided to have a trial by judge rather than by jury. There was no doubt in his mind that the defendant was guilty, but of what crime? First-degree murder carried with it a required death sentence, while second-degree murder meant life imprisonment. So it was up to him whether Ed would live or die.
Ed Grammer would be found guilty of first-degree murder. His appeal would be rejected by the Court of Appeals in the fall of 1953 and on June 11, 1954, he died at the end of a rope for killing his wife.
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snesgsts · 6 years ago
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(1995*) Eurit
*game never released, build date on leaked rom is 1995.
this soundtrack is pretty wild! it makes me think of an electro-industrial earthbound vibe, with maybe some influences from Underworld (rez / cowgirl)
give “Planet Music 4″ a play maybe you’ll hear what i mean.
and then give the rest of the soundtrack a play because it is really good
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barbiesequela · 4 years ago
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"eles estão me observando... são diversos e diversos se comunicando ao mesmo tempo. ainda assim me sinto confortável com eles. não compreendo o que querem dizer mas estão me eletrocutando com todas essas ondas conscientes... é tudo tão invisível mas ao mesmo tempo é tipo um arco-íris me guiando em viagens de infinitas dimensões onde reencontro tantas partes de mim com diversas perspectivas e habilidades incompreendidas pelo meu eu no plano presente... o que queres me dizer sobre esse cinturão tão florido que me mostras constantemente? por que tens esse olhar tão sereno e penetrante? por que consigo escutar tua voz e ainda assim não compreendê-la? me sinto perdido igual a aquele cisto que citei por pouco na terra. onde estão todos os líderes desse templo, Senétratis? estão em teu lar, meu irmão. purificando todos os dias o teu planeta. são dias difíceis e incompreensivelmente necessários. e como são suas aparências? eles sempre aparecerão em formas confortantes que tens em teu cérebro para haver trocas de empatia. a definição será tua. e eles vivem em sociedade? sim, meu amigo. mas chegaram em um ponto de ser sociáveis em inúmeros planos respeitando sempre a liberdade do próximo. viajam pelo que vocês chamam de céu e ainda assim tem comprometimento e responsabilidade com o próprio planeta. por que esses tentam se comunicar e não conseguem? esses são seres de enorme ego e constante soberba recentemente desencarnados de Eurites. estão desesperados vivenciando seus traumas e arrependimentos na vida recente. mas não se preocupe, querido. não é nada do que já não tenhas passado. só não te recordas. talvez um dia todos teus irmãos de plano se lembrem. não somos nós que bloqueamos as recordações. são os próprios seres. Até outro dia, Lima. os contatos aparecerão de repente."
#he
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markerslinger · 8 years ago
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The EURIT Helm was common among early colonists for its price and easy assembly. Not to mention its modular properties and easy upkeep. -M
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flannelmoth · 8 years ago
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Based on Eurite's lore and the tragedies she's dealt with, it probably won't surprise you that the familiar she gave to her adopted child was a crooked hatchet.
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