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Blog: drawboy's cigar box (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: illustration friday, sick, blue, Ice, temperature, Patrick Girouard, Drawboy, chills, Add a tag
Blog: OUPblog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: winter, snow, weather, science, snowflakes, ice, climate, Infographics, snowfall, Oxford Reference, OR, winter weather, infographic, *Featured, meteorology, Science & Medicine, Online products, Earth & Life Sciences, oxford online, snow formation, Add a tag
Every winter the child inside us hopes for snow. It brings with it the potential for days off work and school, the chance to make snowmen, create snow angels, and have snowball fights with anyone that might happen to walk past. But as the snow falls have you ever wondered how it is formed? What goes on in the clouds high above our heads to make these snowflakes come to life?
The post How is snow formed? [infographic] appeared first on OUPblog.
Blog: GregLSBlog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: history, nonfiction, middle grade, ice, Laurence Pringle, Add a tag
ICE!: THE AMAZING HISTORY OF THE ICE BUSINESS, by Laurence Pringle (Calkins Creek/Boyds Mills 2012)(ages 8+). Before mechanical refrigeration, there was ice, which had to be harvested during the winter, stored, transported, and then delivered to customers. ICE! offers a fascinating glimpse into a lost industry and illuminates a portion of day-to-day life a century ago. Photos and sidebars offer additional information and insights.
Blog: the dust of everyday life (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: snow, Watercolor, ICE, crow, fox, Amy Huntington, Add a tag
Blog: the dust of everyday life (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: DINOSAUR, ICE, Digital artwork, Sylvan Dell Publishing, Cathy Morrison, Add a tag
Here's a spread from DinoTracks, my fourth illustrated book with Sylvan Dell Publishing. These are polar dinosaurs, Timimus Hermani who lived at the icy south pole. OK, the santa hat was added later - that's my artistic license showing.
I've been telling folks that DinoTracks comes out next year, but now have to remember to say this fall. Happy 2013!
By Cathy Morrison
Blog: the dust of everyday life (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Mixed Media, ICE, Digital Collage, Charlesbridge Publishing, Susan Swan, Add a tag
From soon to be published: VOLCANO RISING by Elizabeth Rusch, illus by Susan Swan
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Blog: the dust of everyday life (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: DINOSAUR, Ice, THEMED ART, Peggy Collins, Add a tag
What would happen if you took dinosaurs skating on your local pond?
This is from Don't Invite Dinosaurs to Dinner, Red robin books, 2012
Blog: Elizabeth Varadan's Fourth Wish (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: memoir, Christmas, snow, Minnesota, miracle, ice, Rosi Hollinbeck, Jennifer Basye Sander, Add a tag
Blog: Blogstradamus (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Breaking Ice, Cute, Dog, Ice, Breaking Bad, Puppicasso Predictions, 2012 Predictions, Add a tag
Puppi and the very Icey Day
Puppi was put on a really strict diet. One can of food a day – half in the morning with pills, repeat at night.
No treats.
The combination of diet and steroids has made for one very cranky Puppi.
As I tried to figure out what I had to do to satiate Puppi’s well-being, I was off to the cast and crew screening of a short film I made, Breaking Ice. Appropriately enough, I had crew gifts made that were mood cups that changed color when cold…
Coming back from the rink where the screening was held, I literally stumbled on the cure to his chewiness… Ice Cubes. (I fell carrying the ice chest that contained them, and ending up using the cubes to ice my shins.)
He used them to teeth as a puppy-Pupp, and now they cooled his anger towards the diet.
Ice is usually thought of as cold and unforgiving, but using it in tiny chunks made Puppi’s life right now more warm and inviting.
Yay Ice!
Filed under: Puppicasso Predictions Tagged: 2012 Predictions, Breaking Bad, Breaking Ice, Cute, Dog, Ice
Blog: Emily Smith Pearce (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Germany, ice, Hannover, Machsee, winter, Add a tag
The big news in Hannover this week is that the Machsee, the man-made rectangle lake in the center of the city (which is way cooler than my description), is officially frozen over enough to play on. For days the buzz everywhere was “How many centimeters? How many centimeters?” because the city officials have to measure it to decide when it’s safe for all that weight. It makes me think of Thoreau going on about testing the ice on Walden Pond.
When the Machsee ice isn’t yet thick enough, they actually have police going around to make sure people aren’t on the ice. If you are, you can be fined, and if you fall in, you’ll be charged for your rescue.
Wednesday was the first day it was thick enough—16 cm, I think–and the word on the street was “Der Machsee ist frei!” (The Machsee is free). The sun was out, it wasn’t too terribly cold, and it felt like a big party on the ice. People brought out their ice skates, their hockey sticks, you name it.
My son (4) rode his bike on it and also dragged around a big stick making drawings in the thin layer of snow on top of the ice. It was pretty great. One of those days when winter is really cool.
Here’s an airplane he drew below. He’s at this fantastic stage where his drawings are getting more complex and he’s still completely fearless about tackling whatever he wants. No “I can’t draw.”
In other news, it’s been a slow writing week, though maybe it’s an ideas week. I’ve been reading and mulling things over and finding little openings to take my story into deeper territory. Thanks for all your comments on the Less Meat post. Have a great weekend!
Blog: Emily Smith Pearce (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: winter, Germany, Inspirations, ice, lake, expatriate, Hannover, Machsee, Add a tag
Sunny hours in winter are hard to come by here in northern Germany. One thing that helps is my almost daily walks by the Machsee (mach is pronounced MOSH as in mosh pit. See is pronounced SAY, approximately). It’s always good to get some fresh air and exercise, and it’s on these walks that I see how beautiful winter’s gray, stark landscape can be.
The first picture above is from a day when it was raining on top of the frozen lake, giving this great moodiness and wonderful reflections. One thing I’ve noticed about gray is that it allows the subtlest colors to show off. On this day the ice looked a soft turquoise and the sky a yellowy-pink next to purplish clouds.
This one was taken on a foggy day when it seemed some mystical being might travel across the ice our way.
Here below is the ice from that day, looking blue and brown and wounded:
Same landscape, slightly more light, and hey, what’s that patch of blue?
And here above, sunshine! The yellowish color of these bare branches just glows up against the ice.
Luckily we’re getting a little more sunshine in these parts this week, and the daylight hours are increasing.
2 Comments on German Winter Light, or Lack Thereof, last added: 2/23/2011
Blog: blog 30 x 30 - Chuck Dillon's blog. (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: winter, ice, Highlights for Children, what's wrong, Add a tag
Blog: La Bloga (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: ICE, immigrants, Cecile Pineda, ALAFFA, Janina's Letters, Passaic County Jail, detention centers, Jean Blum, Geo Group, New Jersey, Add a tag
© Cecile Pineda 11 22 09
Cecile Pineda traveled to the East Coast to interview Jean Blum. Blum is a Holocaust survivor whose memories of being hidden from the Nazis and living her early years as a traumatically displaced person motivated her to start ALAFFA, an organization devoted to helping immigrants incarcerated in the immigrant detention centers of Passaic and Monmouth Counties in New Jersey, who are held in “administrative detention” a provision of a 1996 law which deprives them of the right to legal representation. Below begins the first segment of her report to appear each Saturday.
Immigrant detention centers, now over 300, are located throughout the United States--federally run jails, county facilities, some run by private operator Corrections Corporation of America and Wackenhut, doing business under the sanitized name the Geo Group. They house more than 400,000 persons, almost all immigrants, and with few exceptions, people of color.
Her photograph, taken against a backdrop of the Monmouth County Correctional Institution in an article dated April 3, 2009, by Nina Bernstein of the New York Times, shows a forlorn looking woman, a woman identified as a Holocaust survivor, founder of an immigrant detainee advocacy organization American Liberty and Freedom for All, or ALAFFA.
On a first viewing, I wondered who she was. What drove her to engage for many months in such discouraging and thankless work? Was it her memories of her World War II experiences as a displaced person? Had those memories been put aside as she lived an early life described in the article as closely modeled on the American Dream? Did love have anything to do with it?
“When I was maybe six years old, my mother warned me, ‘you have to go away for a while, but you must never forget that you are a Jewish child. You must remember not to tell anyone, because if you do, terrible things will happen to you and to your parents.’” Jean Blum pauses to unravel the tangling red scarf before continuing with our interview.
“The next day my teacher—one of the unsung heroes of the French Resistance—spirited me away to a convent where I lived with other girls whom I discovered much later were also Jewish.” When Blum’s mother came to take her back, although Blum failed to recognize her--“I never thought I would ever see her again,” she explains--the gravity of her mother’s admonition never left her.
photo credit Janice Weber
Blog: Saipan Writer (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Saipan, ice, Governor Benigno R. Fitial, methamphetamine, David Tanaka Diaz, crystal meth, Add a tag
Enormous cumulous clouds in the sky; trees in perpetual motion swaying in the breeze. Another hot and beautiful day in paradise.
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An anonymous commenter mentioned on this blog and in the Marianas Variety comments that Governor Fitial has commuted the sentence of convicted ice dealer, David Tanaka Diaz.
I couldn't confirm that report.
I did learn from a DOC official that David Tanaka Diaz has been released from jail.
David Tanaka Diaz was caught with 212.59 grams of ice (a/k/a methamphetamine) and 77.28 grams of marijuana. The ice haul was considered the biggest in CNMI history at the time, and it seems that record may still stand.
Although he tried to quash the search warrant against him that led to the discovery of the ice, he was unsuccessful. And then he was convicted of charges in April 2002 after a jury trial.
The Saipan Tribune reported on this as follows:
The prosecution, through Assistant Attorneys General Daniel Cohan and Janine Udui, convinced the court of Diaz' guilt on the seven-count charges by presenting corroborating witnesses' testimonies, as well as, physical evidence pertaining to the events that occurred on August 29, 2001.
Diaz was apprehended that day in the district of Garapan, where authorities were able to seize from him quantities of crystal methamphetamine or ice.
Aside from the drug charge, prosecutors were able to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Diaz had fought to elude police arrest and in the process, rammed into a police vehicle and injured several bystanders.
After disclosing both his and the jury's verdict, Lizama proceeded to impose the sentence on Diaz, which is as follows:
A $500-fine and restitution to the Department of Public Safety on the unsafe backing charge; six months incarceration with a $500-fine on the fleeing/attempting to elude a police officer charge; six months incarceration with a $500-fine for the hit-and-run charge; six months incarceration with a $1,000-fine for the reckless driving charge; and a $50 fine for illegal possession of a controlled substance.
The court has yet to impose a sentence on the two other charges---drug-trafficking and criminal mischief---pending the release of a pre-sentence report.
Illegal trafficking of a controlled substance, in itself, has a mandatory minimum sentence of 25 years, according to the court.
Diaz was represented by court-appointed counsel Antonio M. Atalig.
The Superior Court then imposed its sentence in August 2002: 30 years jail term, 25 in jail without the possibility of parole.
Again, from the Tribune:
The Superior Court yesterday sentenced a musician to 30 years in jail "the highest penalty imposed so far by a local court on a drug trafficking offense" for what authorities consider to be the biggest drug-seizure in the Commonwealth last year.
Superior Court Associate Judge Juan T. Lizama, however, ordered that the last five years of the sentence on defendant David Tanaka Diaz be suspended, meaning that he would be released on supervised probation later on. The first 25 years of the sentence is to be served without parole.
Given this report, it seems likely that the only way David Tanaka Diaz could be released from jail would be by the Governor's action.
I hope the Variety and Tribune will investigate the facts and circumstances surrounding the release of David Tanaka Diaz from the Department of Corrections.
One small detail--I wonder if he is still obligated to comply with the terms of release orginally set by the judge.
Upon his release from jail, Diaz is to pay a fin
Blog: wheelerwrite (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: rideau canal, government procurement, winterlude, Canada, snow, Ottawa, ice, lobbyists, CIA, strippers, Add a tag
Winterlude the setting on the Rideau Canal, Ottawa, Canada. TOURISTS the novel by Steve Wheeler on smashwords.com. Type tourists steve wheeler in the search box on smashwords.com.
TOURISTS is available in to upload at no cost in many formats.
Blog: Kate's Book Blog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: ice, lake champlain, mink, ice, lake champlain, mink, Add a tag
We had a lazy morning on Lake Champlain. When I woke up, the lake was frozen solid from our back deck to the island about a mile offshore. When the wind picked up, it churned up the open water to the south, and the ice started talking.
Sometimes, when the ice breaks up, it sounds like a timpani drum. Sometimes it sounds like thunder. Sometimes it sounds like a sea lion barking. And sometimes, it sounds like something from another planet -- something that doesn't sound like an earth noise at all.
So we shivered on the porch this morning and listened. We watched a mink that popped up from a crack in the ice and played for about an hour before she disappeared again. And we videotaped, so you could listen and watch, too.
Blog: Middle of Nowhere (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: frost, woodburner, ice, hearth, frosty day, mug of tea, Cotwolds in winter, frost, woodburner, ice, hearth, frosty day, mug of tea, Cotwolds in winter, Add a tag
deep bone gnawer, blood thinner, steal-my-whistle
white assasin, kill-my-lover
lace threader, seed trigger, hoar stick, brittle barked, glitter sprinkler,
tree ripper, Gardener's Mercy
earth cracking, wouldn't-kick-a-dog-out
colour leacher, ice weaver, boney dancer, Sharp Jack
steely creeper, puddle crazing, eye glazer, fur stiffener, Wreath-of-Tears
Very Nice Cathy - love the hat ; )
Thanks Peggy, The publisher used it for the holidays.