This one has the Mona Lisa jogging.Crazy when considering RDR2’s main story took place in 1899, and the game itself was released just a year after that lady died. She could’ve watched the first trailer for it and been like, “Yup, lived it.”
This one has the Mona Lisa jogging.Crazy when considering RDR2’s main story took place in 1899, and the game itself was released just a year after that lady died. She could’ve watched the first trailer for it and been like, “Yup, lived it.”
It's kind of funny that we went from "these things could set the entire atmosphere on fire" to "how feasible is an atomic artillery shell?".In the 50s and 60s, there were serious investigations into large scale engineering projects using nuclear devices, with dozens of nuclear tests in the US and USSR. They were going to make a sea level canal to link the Atlantic and Pacific, nuke paths through mountains to put in highways and all sorts of cool stuff which had to be abandoned due to the radiation issue.
Ah, the optimism or yesteryear.
It used to be well known that's where the DAs got part of their background, yeah, though not heard of it again in many years, so maybe it's been forgotten again.One for the 40K fans. There was once a very gay but also very Catholic British poet called Lionel Johnson who wrote a very anguished, angsty and a bit homoerotic poem called Dark Angel.
Well, I sure didn't know. I do like it tho. It's refreshingly low concept compared to a lot of Imperial factions that wear their inspirations on their sleeves (i.e. space Vikings, space Romans, space Teutonic knights, space Mongols, space Bedouins, space Rambos, space colonial marines, and so on)It used to be well known that's where the DAs got part of their background, yeah, though not heard of it again in many years, so maybe it's been forgotten again.
Isn't the Dark Angel's home-base 'The Rock' based on a gay bar near Games Workshop as well?One for the 40K fans. There was once a very gay but also very Catholic British poet called Lionel Johnson who wrote a very anguished, angsty and a bit homoerotic poem called Dark Angel.
Yeah, ran across that too, but I think that one is apocryphal. Outside of mentions referencing that Dark Angels link in 40k focused places, I've not found any real proof there was ever a gay bar under that name in Nottingham. I've found articles about Nottingham's historical LGBTQ nightlife, like this one, but none ever mention The Rock. People who were active in that scene in the 80s never heard of it either. Closest is a place called Rock City, but that's a general event venue that afaik never specifically catered to LGVTQsIsn't the Dark Angel's home-base 'The Rock' based on a gay bar near Games Workshop as well?
I've never heard that one before.Isn't the Dark Angel's home-base 'The Rock' based on a gay bar near Games Workshop as well?
That length is not especially big tho. Longswords can be that long and by the 1500s they were common in Scandinavia. The claymore and zweihänder were contemporary, and both bigger on average.Tall people with big swords really existed 500+ years ago -
Over 4 feet long sword found in a medieval grave in Sweden - Arkeonews
A medieval grave containing the remains of a man who was over 6 feet tall and wielded a sword over 1.3 meters long!arkeonews.net
That length is not especially big tho. Longswords can be that long and by the 1500s they were common in Scandinavia. The claymore and zweihänder were contemporary, and both bigger on average.
I wonder if that is something that has ever afflicted someone, or if they just made it up for the funny factor.If you have an irrational fear of palindrome, you have aibophobia
Yes, made up for the funnies. Unfortunate, because it really should be a thing.I wonder if that is something that has ever afflicted someone, or if they just made it up for the funny factor.
EDIT: a simple search suggest it was a case of the latter.
I prefer if people do not have phobias.Yes, made up for the funnies. Unfortunate, because it really should be a thing.
Is a paywalled premium episode, but the toll has been paid and hopefully uploaded full version here;The root concept of “learning styles” is based on a simple and intuitive idea: different people most successfully learn through different means. Or maybe they best learn through different sensory or emotional inputs. Possibly because people with differing brains make them more receptive to certain ways of knowing and absorbing information. Some people managed to take this intuitive idea and build massively successful careers for decades. Students were labeled “Visual,” “Aural,” or “Kinesthetic” learners.
The problem, as researchers discovered in the ‘00s, is that there’s no good evidence to suggest that any of the “learning styles” models popular with teachers actually improved educational outcomes. But that did little to slow the popularity of learning styles — or the mini industry built up around them.
References
McLaughlin, Dorene Casey EdD, "An Evaluation Case Study of the Effects of a Learning Style Awareness Program for Ninth Graders at an Independent School" (1996). Dissertations. 617. digital.sandiego.edu/dissertations/617
Furey, William, “The Stubborn Myth of Learning Styles” (2023)
www.educationnext.org/stubborn-myth-…bunked-theory/
Pashler, H., McDaniel, M., Rohrer, D., & Bjork, R. (2008). Learning Styles: Concepts and Evidence. Psychological Science in the Public Interest, 9(3), 105-119. doi.org/10.1111/j.1539-6053.2009.01038.x
Sun X, Norton O, Nancekivell SE. Beware the myth: learning styles affect parents', children's, and teachers' thinking about children's academic potential. NPJ Sci Learn.
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pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37848467/
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doi.org/10.1080/0144341042000228834
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Nancekivell, Shaylene E., et al. “Maybe They’Re Born with It, or Maybe It’s Experience: Toward a Deeper Understanding of the Learning Style Myth.” Journal of Educational Psychology, vol. 112, no. 2, 2020, pp. 221–235., doi:10.1037/edu0000366.
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Learning Styles Network Resources Brochure
web.archive.org/web/2005052716580…urce_brochure.pdf