This is a very good documentary on him as it speaks with people who dealt with him on a daily basis, as one of the longest heads of state in the world and how the West allowed his atrocities for the Billion dollars a week the oil reserves made.
Wikipedia entry for Friedl Dicker-Brandeis. She was deported from the Terezin camp to Auschwitz on October 8, 1944, along with 30 of her students, they were all gassed. I scanned the drawing from the book <em>Fireflies in the Dark: The Story of Friedl Dicker-Brandeis and the Children of Terezin</em> by Susan Goldman Rubin.
Sorry I just wanted to share my daughter's story. I wasn't aware links to that site are not allowed.
If allowed, I would still like to share her story as I see some other people are questioning what happened.
This link is from an article from Huff Post who interviewed me after her death. If not allowed please delete this comment.
https://www.huffpost.com/entry/flu-season-deadliest-for-children-cdc_n_5b071a67e4b0784cd2b2e318
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Thank you everyone for their well wishes.
Love to all.
Mom died of cancer. The end was awful. It takes some time, but eventually the memories of the end fade, and the wonderful memories remain.
It’s going to be bad for awhile. I’m sorry for your loss.
Edit - Mom dies of smoking related cancer. Please quit.
This way works:
https://www.amazon.com/Allen-Carrs-Easy-Stop-Smoking/dp/0615482155
[Who is David Shaw](http://www.wikiwand.com/en/David_Shaw_(diver\))
What happened in the video:
> Shaw died on 8 January 2005 while seeking to recover the body of Dreyer. > > Shaw recorded his dive with an underwater camera, and this recording relayed valuable information that allowed researchers to determine that he suffered from an effort-independent expiratory flow which resulted in an inability to match ventilation to the demands of physical work at that great depth. Shaw ran into difficulties when he cut loose Dreyer's harness and the body unexpectedly began to float. (Shaw had been advised by various experts that the body would remain negatively buoyant because the visible parts were reduced to the skeleton. However, within his wetsuit, Dreyer's corpse had turned into a soap-like substance called adipocere, which floats). Shaw had been working with both hands, and so had been resting his can light on the cave floor. The powerful underwater lights that cave divers use are connected by wires to heavy battery canisters, normally worn on the cave diver's waist, or sometimes attached to their tanks. Normally he would have wrapped the wire behind his neck, but he was unable to do so; the lines from the body bag appear to have become entangled with the light head, and the physical effort of trying to free himself led to his death. The next day, both of the bodies floated up to near the surface as the dive team was retrieving their equipment. > > The dive on which Shaw died was the 333rd of his career. At the time of his world record setting dive, he had been diving for just over five years.
It all happened very quickly. The South Tower collapsed, 56 minutes after being struck and The North Tower collapsed after 102 minutes. There just wasn't time to plan and organize rescue effort.
If you want to get a picture how confusing it was, just watch this: https://archive.org/details/cnn200109110848-0929
This an AI generated face. His right ear has that thing. Those teeth are the wrong size. His hair and eyebrows look painted. And his hat has an weird image on it.
https://thispersondoesnotexist.com/ Check here to see other examples of what I mean. These things have trouble with ears and teeth.
I knew someone who was there. He wrote up his story about it, It's quite chilling to read. He obviously survived.
I can't imagine losing someone like you and your friend did. I hope she's not blaming herself in any way, survivor's guilt is all too common.
There's a band called Airs who released a cassette in 2011 with this pic. https://www.discogs.com/Airs-Airs/release/3027312 It shows what the OP pic crops out, which is the police rushing in the front door.
> A young stowaway, Keith Sapsford, 14, falls 200 feet to his death yesterday from a Japan Airlines jet airliner taking off from Sydney, Australia, and bound for Tokyo. Photo was taken by Sydney amateur photographer John Gilpin. The boy had run away from a "boys' town" in Sydney Saturday to see the world.
Amazon Prime https://www.amazon.com/Senna-Ayrton/dp/B006MGDVFM
Even if you don't like racing - this is an amazing story. Senna was truly a prodigy, and there will never be another like him in his sport.
Some people are recommending baby monitors, but please note that the Mayo clinic says:
>Don't use baby monitors and other commercial devices that claim to reduce the risk of SIDS. The American Academy of Pediatrics discourages the use of monitors and other devices because of ineffectiveness and safety issues.
> You've never met a rich person with old money and a free ride in life.
The above is what I was replying to and the implication that being ultra wealthy COMPLETELY insulates you from hardships and difficulties. I agree with everything you have said in that wealth enables one to deal with most of the shitty things that cause stress in everyday life.
Sorry for the confusion, text mediums are not my favorite way to communicate as you can agrees 100% but still argue to get to that point. Thanks for the links, btw. I am finishing with reading "The Millionaire Next Door" and the self reported data in that second link is something I will spend some time mulling over when I have some free time over the weekend.
The Definition of Mistake is an action, decision or judgement that produces an unwanted or unintentional result. You may not like to hear that, but that's what a mistake means. I'm pretty sure in most cases no one gets behind the wheel of a car in order to kill someone, which would make drinking and driving accidents a mistake. You can argue about stricter punishment for it, that's fine, but most cases are, but definition, a mistake.
There's a really great book about the Marines in the Pacific called "Strong men Armed" that talks about all of the island hopping campaign and it covers a lot of the things you don't normally read about, like Japanese letters to their leadership in mainland Japan and what not. I highly recommend it. Tarawa was horrible but so were all the islands honestly.
https://www.amazon.com/Strong-Men-Armed-Robert-Leckie/dp/0306818876
Jones was a tramp who allegedly had blacksmithing skills and had been hired by another blacksmith, Emanuel Marshall, to do some work as Marshall had more than he could handle. Marshall didn't think Jones's work was satisfactory and refused to pay him. On the night of May 21/22, 1870, Jones broke into Marshall's home and killed Marshall, his grown sister, his wife, his elderly mother, and his three small daughters, using Marshall's own blacksmithing tools.
He was caught very quickly (in large part because he had kept telling everyone who would listen that he was going to go to Marshall's house and either get paid or kill Marshall), convicted and duly hanged.
There is a book about the case, from which I got this photograph. The book also includes a post-execution photo of Jones. It's a good read and I recommend.
> People still could enter the stadium if it's not called early which most games aren't.
>Majority of the time fans still enter the stadium, buy concessions and sit at their seats.
There was no rain in New York City on September 9th. Alleging this picture to be from that day when multiple people have rain jackets on is false.
You can buy other editions of the book (with just the pictures, not the annotations) much cheaper. I own a copy of such an edition. It’s got used ones available here for $11.82.
I didn't realize Whoopi Goldberg was the spokesperson for LDBA.org
The Whitworths (past LBDA president) have written a Good book about Lewy Body Dementia
The Caregivers Guide to Lewy Body Dementia
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Dare. I just started it, so can’t speak to its effectiveness, but it’s got pretty good reviews and is a lot more affordable than a psychiatrist these days, so I figured it was worth a shot.
Thanks for your kind words! No, I've never tried animation, but in the last 6 years I've been doing these weird books which I write and illustrate that are like - I don't know if you are old enough to remember those old Choose Your Own Adventure books? Well, I'm doing something like that, but all the books are from the POV of this cat named Holden Catfield. The first one was called You Are a Cat! Which my publisher let me follow up with a sequel called You Are a Cat in the Zombie Apocalypse! Which did well enough for him to greenlight a third book, a prequel, called You Are a Kitten! You've probably never heard of them because my publisher is very small, and in Wolfville, Nova Scotia. The style of illustration in them is very different than the sketch I posted above, but if you're interested, here's a link to the first book: https://www.amazon.com/You-Are-Cat-Pick-Plot/dp/1894994566/