I’m here today to give you some news! I’m releasing a skin and I hosted a sim model contest. This is some of the girls who entered. Thank you!! ( P.S * I forgot to add Nora Cruz to the group picture....
Cult drama offers a satisfying finale, though how it gets there is open to interpretation.
Como se te perdesse, assim te quero. Como se não te visse (favas douradas Sob um amarelo) assim te apreendo brusco Inamovível, e te respiro inteiro Um arco-íris de ar em águas profundas. Como se tudo o mais me permitisses, A mim me fotografo nuns portões de ferro Ocres, altos, e eu mesma diluída e mínima No dissoluto de toda despedida. Como se te perdesse nos trens, nas estações Ou contornando um círculo de águas Removente ave, assim te somo a mim: De redes e de anseios inundada. - Hilda Hilst -
Celebsweek.com is more than just a platform for emerging stars to promote themselves, it's a one-stop-shop for discovering Biography of Actors
In 1898, this absolutely stunningly beautiful woman posed in a promotional postcard shot for Wyckoff, Seamans and Benedict. Comments on my post about the Miss International Secretary competition of 1958 showed there is still interest in the work and conditions of typewriting secretaries. However, it was not just secretaries who relied on typewriters as work tools and on their typing ability for a living. There were, for example, copytakers at newspapers and radio and TV stations, women who typed in census and election details, women who took dictation, and women who transcribed manuscripts into typescripts. The skill of women typists was vital in many lines of business, including the media, as well as in government. Fast, efficient, high-quality work cannot be quantified, yet that is what people tried to do with typists in the US in 1947. “Time and motion” were words that conveyed a notion which sent a chill down the spine of workers back then. “Chief executive officers”, “personnel managers” and “industrial officers” weren’t much known. But “time and motion” experts were the source of much fear and uncertainty. They posed the question: “Is there an answer to the production drive?” Mrs Stibbets became one such “time and motion” expert. In this US office scene from 65 years ago, Mrs Stibbets, a supervisor of typists, checks a recording apparatus which showed the number of keystrokes each person achieved each day. The standard number was 45,000 keystrokes, and a bonus was paid for each 1000 keystrokes a day over the standard. Typists started work at 8.30am and by 12 noon they had to have scored 30,000 keystrokes. Then they took a lunch break and came back in the afternoon to rack up the next 15,000 or so. Naturally, some typists resented this degree of supervision. There was fear of the loss of a job involved: those who were consistently below standard faced the sack. Yet typing proficiency bonuses remained in place for at least another 30 years, as shown on my post about the Australian Government enticing young women to come to Canberra to work in the 1970s. Competition for places in typing pools had traditionally been fierce. One way of scoring a job was to win a typing contest. Here contestants get ready to start in the 1929 Bundy Typewriter Company’s typing contest in Philadelphia. The winner was the youngest entrant, Catherine E. Moran, 19, of German Town, Pennsylvania. The blindfolded Miss Millicent Woodward (in real life Mrs Barlow) was “said to be Europe's champion typist, with a record of 239 words a minute for memorised sentences and 173 words per minute for straight dictation”. She travelled to New York to take part in speed typewriting contests. Miss Woodward, the wife of a British army captain, George Barlow, received a letter from Scottish tea magnate Sir Thomas Lipton before her departure, wishing her luck in her attempt to lift the cup – something Sir Thomas never got to do, despite a record five attempts to win the America’s Cup. There often wasn’t much room to manoeuvre off Newport, Rhode Island, and some 1920s and 30s typing pools weren’t all that comfortable in terms of working conditions, either. More at ease is this lady typing letters dictated to her on a railway carriage across the Atlantic, in 1934. North Eastern Railways provided a specially designed office on board its express train service between Newcastle-on-Tyne and King’s Cross station in London. The office stayed open from 8.15am to 5.30pm. One attempt to achieve greater typing efficiency was made at Boston University in 1930, when experiments were carried out on the impact of typing to music. In 1937, a Mrs Hamilton copied the manuscript of Sir Hall Caine's The Life of Christ, which had been sold to an American publisher for a record sum. The writing is so small that Mrs Hamilton had to use a magnifying glass to read it. Quite why anyone would need to type an “SOS message” I do not know, but it happened on this big noiseless in 1939. Copytaking was an artform, the more so in the days before headphones incorporated microphones which allowed copytakers to talk and listen while typing a reporter’s copy. Here, also in 1939, a BBC copytaker struggles to take down the news while typing and talking. Still at the BBC, in 1959, Miss Christine Collins and Mrs Eraine Vidler process through manual typewriters the results of a British general election. The results were screened as they are received, by feeding the information into a studio's computer at Lime Grove, London. Here are “transcribers” at work in Shell Mex House in London in 1960. Note how the method of recording voice messages for transcription has changed since 1934. In 1902 had come "The Remington Girl - a typist ready to take dictation.” Much later, Underwood and Corona tried to use glamour to sell typewriters, too: Finally, the woman who started all this, Lillian Sholes, back in the 1870s.
The latest offering by The Speakeasy Group is straight out of an F. Scott Fitzgerald novel and you’re guaranteed to have a swell old time. Words by Caterina Hrysomallis.
Norah Batty......... Deep in the heart of yorkshire Within Minutes we have a winner,well done [img]
America’s students are entering high school without being able to comprehend text at a level necessary to complete their schoolwork.
12/24/1950 MERRY CHRISTMAS! 'Til next time! ALOHA!
Après le succès de Big Boss et La Fureur de Vaincre, les stars de la Golden Harvest, Bruce Lee, Nora Miao, et Maria Yi, inaugurent un bâteau à Hong Kong pour des photos promotionnelles, posant au bar-restaurant et dans la salle de cinéma: Séance photos...
Explore Yu Jake’s 183 photos on Flickr!
From 2006: For Nora Ephron, moving into the Apthorp—a famous “stone pile” on the West Side of Manhattan—was to enter a state of giddy, rent-stabilized delirium.
Magyar Királyi Postatakarékpénztár Former Royal Hungarian Postal Saving Bank Built in 1899-1901. Architects: Lechner Ödön & Baumgarten Sándor Ceramics by Zsolnay My Art Nouveau set: www.flickr.com/photos/37578663@N02/sets/72157626716617371/ My Lechner set: www.flickr.com/photos/37578663@N02/sets/72157639729182265 My Zsolnay set: www.flickr.com/photos/37578663@N02/sets/72157636928215363
One of the first trees to break bud in winter, usually in February around here, pussy willows are iconic harbingers of spring. At the market, buckets of branches appear and…
PLEASE NOTE - THE ICONIC IS UNABLE TO SHIP THIS PRODUCT TO NEW ZEALANDFrom Hush Puppies: You are now entering sandal comfort heaven with Nora! Once you put them on there is no taking them off. With a plush footbed made up of 3mm memory foam, 3mm latex foam and an additional 3mm memory foam in the heel.- super soft butter leather uppers with selffastening strap- soft sustainable linings- Deep Comfort footbed- Recycled heel grip material- Bounce� pods built into the outsole provide shock absorption and energy returnHeel Height: 30mmUpper: LeatherLining: sustainableSock: PigskinSole: Rubber