#hws antarctic
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Concept: APH Antarctica is a strange French child running around at the research station, and is horribly smart.
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YOU KNOW TECHNO AND PHIL’S NEW SKINS?? THEY’RE JUST SO GREAT. Now have this WIP of some art I’m doing because brain went AE Techno brrrrrr.
#no I didn’t take 5 years to draw that house#maybe like an hour#plz appreciate it#I LOVE THE SHORTER ROUNDER CAPE#+5 points if Phil also has a smaller rounder cape and his and Techno’s are both made of Techno’s original cape#ya know like... Antarctic empire :)#no I will not draw Carl my hands are already dying#now back to hw for me#I’ll finish this some other day I have homework to do#I draw... sometimes
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Avoiding hw so i had this au idea
Dream somehow gets possessed by the fucking egg and with dream's knowledge about the revive book he needs to be stopped.
So family dynamic is canon because I say so and they're all fucking immortal because the gods gave them their powers and antarctic empire his canon and so is business bay but because they're all like centuries old it was a long time ago. And all the dsmp stuff is canon and then they have to team up one last time to fight evil and shit at the gos command but Tommy is a rebel he doesn't like the gods because yeah and his motivation is that the egg toom tubbo. Help -rubi
okay but is business bay also gods
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2019 in books:
David McCullough, 1776: A highly accessible, if somewhat naive, depiction of the year that defined the prospects for American independence. I wouldn’t go there for deep, critical analysis. But for a story of a year, it is well done.
Michael Palin, Erebus: HMS Erebus was a British naval vessel that spent much of its career in Arctic and Antarctic exploration. If you are interested in Victorian era explorations of hard places, a fascinating read.
Emilio Corsetti III, 35 Miles from Shore: The story of an airline crash in the early 1970s in the Caribbean. What happened, why, how, who survived and what we learned. Interesting if not brilliant.
Raymond Thorp, Crow Killer: Old-fashioned tale of the inspiration behind the Robert Redford movie Jeremiah Johnson. As much fantasy as history. But it offers a flavor of a time and a subgroup few Americans would know.
James Corey, Caliban’s War: The second book of “The Expanse” series. The protomolecule is working its mojo, and Earth, Mars and the Belters are none too happy with one another. A fun read of a massive space opera.
Walter Kempowski, All for Nothing: Set in the context of the collapsing Eastern Front during WWII, this story proceeds from the fractured point of view of the Germans who are about to be turned into refugees fleeing oncoming Soviet forces. The book, notably, does not make these Germans sources of sympathy: the mood is dissonant and disordered. A real piece of literature.
Hilary Mantel, Wolf Hall: Because who doesn’t want a point-of-view account of a key counselor to Henry VIII, one who rose to extraordinary wealth and power despite his humble birth and then managed the, how shall we say, removal of Kathrine as Queen? Replaced by Anne Boleyn? Who wouldn’t want to read it? It’s excellent, by the way.
James Corey, Abaddon’s Gate: Book three of The Expanse, and the protomolecule has remade humanity’s relationship to the universe. But we’ll probably screw that up, too. Another good story, filled with actual thought about the problems of space travel and space living.
MIchael Krondl, The Taste of Conquest: The Rise and Fall of the Three Great Cities of Spice: Venice, Lisbon and Amsterdam each in their turn dominated the global spice trade -- a trade that was one of the main stimuli for early colonialism and imperial conquest, and which strongly influenced the rise of the modern corporation as a linch-pin of global capitalism. The book is not as good as it should be, but the story is one that few people know, but should.
Hilary Mantel, Bring Up the Bodies: Hey, it’s time to get rid of Anne Boleyn everyone! Or, at least, to separate her head from her body. And let’s manage the English Reformation, too ... all just a few years before losing our own head. Welcome to the early/middle 1500s in England everyone!
Leigh Perry, A Skeleton in the Family: Who doesn’t have a skeleton living in their house who helps solve mysteries. I mean, who doesn’t?
JK Rowling, Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone: So my son has started reading Harry Potter. So I have started reading Harry Potter. I liked this book: it’s tight, it’s focused, it’s a fun read. I see the appeal.
Terry Pratchett and Neil Gaiman, Good Omens: The answer to the questions: “What if the angels and demons charged with over-seeing Earth as humans go from the Garden of Eden to Armageddon decide that they like Earth and don’t want Armageddon to happen (even if their allies do)? And what if the Anti-Christ were raised in a perfectly mundane family in a perfectly mundane English village? How might it all turn out?” To delightful and funny effect.
JK Rowling, Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets: Meh. Okay. Not as good as book one. But still a good story.
Gilbert King, Devil in the Grove: Thurgood Marshall, the Groveland Boys, and the Dawn of a New America: A broad pastiche of events surrounding one of the many civil rights cases of the 1940s and 50s: the abuses and murders of several African American men accused of raping a white woman in Lakeland, FL, in 1949. With a whole lot of associated discussions of other cases, the NAACP, corrupt and criminal law enforcement, race riots, and the like. A good read. And how can it be that the bastard George HW Bush, put Clarence Thomas on the Supreme Court to fill a seat once held by the staggering legal figure that was Thurgood Marshall. Shameful is the only word.
JK Rowling, Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban: Certainly better than the Chamber of Secrets. A darker turn. But beginning to get padded as readers demanded “more” if not “better.”
James Corey, Cibola Burn: Book 4 of The Expanse ... and I didn’t like it. It seemed like filler, a book written to a contract deadline. Maybe it will pay off in the end. But another one like that and I’m not going to care.
Tom Phillips, Humans: A Brief History of How We Fucked It All Up: Did you know our oldest known ancestor, Lucy, probably died by falling out of a tree? If stories about how people have messed things up, have suffered both intentional and unintentional consequences, turn you on, do I ever have the book for you. Schadenfreude much?
JK Rowling, Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire: Dear lord is this book long. Why? No doubt because the fans wanted it to be. But it is as gratuitously padded as any book I have ever read. It’s okay. But I wasn’t particularly impressed. Perhaps another six Quidditch matches would have helped ....
Adam Higginbotham, Midnight in Chernobyl: Thought the HBO miniseries was scary? It was tame. I mean: the Soviets, with their level of “technical prowess” and their industrial “quality control checks” ran the facility. Heck, Chernobyl wasn’t even their first disaster. Let’s just put it this way: the actual fuel piles in each of the FOUR Chernobyl reactors were so big that: 1) different sections had different characteristics, and didn’t all operate at the same rates or temperatures; and 2) the monitoring equipment couldn’t record how all of the pile was operating at any time. Happy now? Russia still has 10 Chernobyl-style reactors in operation. Enjoy your good night’s sleep everyone!
JK Rowling, Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince: Yes, yes: I know. This isn’t Order of the Phoenix. Well, I read Order of the Phoenix many years ago, and thought it was deeply annoying. A pile of words with little point. A way to keep the audience happy with long passages about very little.
Meanwhile, I, like my son, roared through Half-Blood Prince. A ripping good tale. Much tighter than the last several of the series.
JK Rowling, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: A fine read. A bit slow getting going: let’s go here! Let’s go there! Let’s recap the plot! But after the first 1/3 or so, the story got moving and I enjoyed it. Didn’t expect great literature; didn’t get great literature. But then again, I deeply appreciate how much pleasure my son got from this, and how excited my daughter is to engage with it. If it hadn’t been conceived and written, it seems like there’d be a Harry Potter sized hole in the universe.
Neil Gaiman, American Gods: In all honesty, I didn’t really like the first 2/3 of this book: too many tangents; too many sub-stories for the sake of sub-stories. And I’m still not sure I think it was a great book. But I really enjoyed the last third of it, and there were moments, vignettes, and sentences that truly blew me away. So I am glad I stayed with it.
Kameron Hurley, The Light Brigade: A sci fi story of soldiers apparently engaged in a war with Mars who are transported to the battlefield as beams of light. One gets unhinged from time. I am not sure it was worth the work, and I came to understand it was based on a short story and so, at times, it seemed a bit one-trick pony-ish. But it had its share of moments.
Daniel James Brown, The Boys in the Boat: A bit slow going at first, but it grows more compelling as it moved forward. This is the story of the 1936 crew (rowing) team at the University of Washington that went to Berlin and won the gold medal as Adolf Hitler watched. An interesting story about crew as a sport (about which I knew basically nothing), and life in Depression-era Washington state -- with a little, somewhat gratuitous, commentary about life in Nazi Germany layered in. One takeaway? The actor Hugh Laurie’s father was the lead oarsman on the British crew at Berlin in 1936. Hugh Laurie rowed crew at Cambridge as well.
James Corey, Nemesis Games: The next in the Expanse series. Much more enjoyable than the last one, but still a bit strained. One heck of a plot “twist.” A perfectly lovely way to relax; didn’t change my life. Some interesting character twists. But also a lot of “here are some giant developments (a lot of giant stuff) that give us lots of things to write about going forward!”
Alan Stern and David Grinspoon, Chasing New Horizons: the story of the New Horizons mission to Pluto. Interesting behind the scenes look at how the mission got funded, planned and implemented. Accessible in terms of the explanations; thick with bureaucratic story-telling and summary. It turns out this stuff is really, really hard. Interesting, but it didn’t blow me away.
And to end the year, I am reading: Christopher Moore, Lamb: The Gospel According to Biff, Christ's Childhood Pal: What if 13 year old Jesus had a buddy who, 2000 years later, wrote a gospel that filled in those missing years of Joshua’s (as Biff calls Jesus) life? Well, here’s your answer.
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Paper Model Airplane Pdf
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Make Your Own Paper Airplane! Fold paper in half. Unfold and then fold the corners into the center line. Fold the top edges to the center. Fold the plane in half. Finally, fold the wings down to meet the bottom edge of the plane’s body. This guide includes instructions to make two paper airplane designs. Mar 01, 2016 M.A.G. – Fokker D VII paper model (1/64 scale) Nieuport 11 paper model (1/64 scale) Sopwith Baby N-2071 (Blackburn built) paper model (1/64 scale) Taylorcraft Auster Antarctic paper model. RAF (Royal Aircraft Factory) SE5 A paper model (1/64 scale) Fokker E. Fokker Dr.I Paper Model. Fokker D.VII Paper Model. Supercharge a Paper Airplane - Instructions on how to Turn a paper model airplane into a motorized airplane. The Kit does cost, but you can download the paper airplane model for free. JASDF Paper Airplane - Flying paper airplane from Japan Air Self-Defense Forse.
Printable Papercraft Aircraft Originally posted 2018-08-03 17:19:33.
WelcomeWelcome to the new download system. We hope you enjoy this change brought to you by you Paper Modelers Team !!
Paper Airplane Model Pdf
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The templates will make it much easier to fold the paper airplanes, and the finished models will be much more attractive. Click desired paper airplane name or icon in the table, it will direct to the template PDF. Download sample template free of charge. But if you want to get a high-resolution, watermark-free and editable PDF file, you need to get a premium version. If you need daily, weekly, monthly calendar, menu planner or any other planners templates for 2020 and beyond, please use the search bar at the top to find a template you need.
Isobuster pro 3.8 professional license key. The art of building scale models out of card stock or paper is hundreds of years old, and was and still is enjoyed by people around the world. It is an inexpensive, relaxing and very creative hobby. If you like to work with your hands and want to create 3D models out of flat sheets of paper, this hobby is for you. Every model offered here is a high quality, 1/32 scale, exact replica of a real aircraft. There are models designed for modelers of every ability level.
All you need is good pair of scissors, card stock, good glue, a computer printer, and patience. Models are offered in digital form as PDF files which can be printed on most standard computer printers. Each model kit contains detailed illustrated instruction and pages with model parts.
A paper toy is a little toy 3D model that can be built by cutting and folding paper. Use tape or glue to hold the edges together. Simply choose a template below, print it out, and get to work! Make a paper toy! Our free papercraft models come in mostly PDF printable form and are available for download. Others include image form, such as jpg or png.
FREE Download Books, Ebook Download Full PDF, Download All Books PDF. Of the new distance champion paper airplane and how it broke the world record. Few works in world literature have inspired so vast an audience, in nations with. And powerful vimana (fast aircraft) hurled a single projectile (rocket) charged with the power of.
Simply print out the model, cut out the parts, closely follow the instructions and let the fun begins. If you make a mistake, no problem. Just print it out again.
Paper Model Airplane Pdf Printable
We are here to share the joy of paper modeling with others, not to make money. The costs of the aircraft cover operation costs. We know we cannot prevent you from giving away or uploading these files. However, we kindly ask you to not disperse the model PDF's.
Paper Planes Pdf Free Download Pdf
Welcome to Instructables eBook, Ultimate Paper Airplanes! Paper airplanes are beloved for a reason: they're cheap, easy, and awesome. You can create a wide range of styles and designs, all from a simple sheet of paper. From complex designs resembling origami to the most simple airplane shapes, you can find them on Instructables! The Instructables editors have chosen some of our best paper airplane projects to educate and inspire you to make great things with easily-available tools. Instructables is the most popular project-sharing community on the Internet. Since August 2005, Instructables has provided easy publishing tools to enable passionate, creative people to share their most innovative projects, recipes, skills, and ideas. Instructables has over 40,000 projects covering all subjects, including crafts, art, electronics, kids, home improvement, pets, outdoors, reuse, bikes, cars, robotics, food, decorating, woodworking, costuming, games, and life in general.
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Paper Model Airplanes
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