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"In days of yore, love dwelled in our hearts,Tenderness shone bright in every part.No sorrow or pain did we know,Just jo...
05/09/2024

"In days of yore, love dwelled in our hearts,
Tenderness shone bright in every part.
No sorrow or pain did we know,
Just joy and peace, as love did grow.

But now, a stark reality we face,
The US army and politicians' harsh embrace,
Supporting Israel, with no remorse or shame,
Leaving peace and love to bear the blame.

Yet still, the people of the US hold dear,
The values of peace, and banish fear.
May their struggle for peace forever reign,
And love and kindness prevail, once again."

Please note that translations can vary depending on context and nuances, so feel free to adjust if needed!

05/06/2022
05/02/2022

You never know when disaster is going to strike . . .This video is shared just for information

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Jamestown's founders first encountered the region's Indigenous people at Kecoughtan, Virginia, where members of the Kiko...
11/26/2021

Jamestown's founders first encountered the region's Indigenous people at Kecoughtan, Virginia, where members of the Kikotan People lived. Although that first contact in 1607 was largely peaceful, relations had soured within a few years, and by 1610, the Indigenous communities had been driven from the town and murdered by colonists. In 1690, the town was incorporated into part of the larger town of Hampton. Today, it remains a part of the larger municipality.

Hampton, Virginia, began as Point Comfort, an English outpost established by the same people who founded nearby Jamestow...
11/26/2021

Hampton, Virginia, began as Point Comfort, an English outpost established by the same people who founded nearby Jamestown. Located at the mouth of the James River and the entrance to the Chesapeake Bay, Hampton became major military outpost after American Independence. Although Virginia was the capital of the Confederacy during the Civil War, Fort Monroe in Hampton remained in Union hands throughout the conflict. Today, the city is the home of Joint Base Langley–Eustis and just across the river from the Norfolk Naval Station.

Santa Fe holds the distinction of being the oldest state capital in the U.S. as well as New Mexico's oldest city. Long b...
11/26/2021

Santa Fe holds the distinction of being the oldest state capital in the U.S. as well as New Mexico's oldest city. Long before Spanish colonists arrived in 1607, the area had been occupied by Indigenous peoples. One Pueblo village, founded around 900 A.D., was located in what is today downtown Santa Fe. Indigenous groups expelled the Spanish from the region from 1680 to 1692, but the rebellion was eventually put down.

Santa Fe remained in Spanish hands until Mexico declared its independence in 1810, and then became part of the Texas Republic when it pulled away from Mexico in 1836. Santa Fe (and present-day New Mexico) didn't become a part of the United States until 1848 after the Mexican-American War ended in Mexico's defeat. Today, Santa Fe is a thriving capital city known for its Spanish Territorial style of architecture.

The city of Jamestown is the second-oldest city in the U.S. and the site of the first permanent English colony in North ...
11/26/2021

The city of Jamestown is the second-oldest city in the U.S. and the site of the first permanent English colony in North America. It was founded on April 26, 1607, and briefly called James Fort after the English king. The settlement foundered in its first years and was briefly abandoned in 1610. By 1624, when Virginia became a British royal colony, Jamestown had become a small town, and it served as the colonial capital until 1698.

By the end of the Civil War in 1865, most of the original settlement (called Old Jamestowne) had fallen into ruin. Preservation efforts began at the turn of the 1900s while the land was in private hands. In 1936, it was designated a national park and renamed Colonial National Park. In 2007, Queen Elizabeth II of Great Britain was a guest for the 400th-anniversary celebration of Jamestown's founding.

The United States was "born" on July 4, 1776, but the oldest cities in the U.S. were established long before the nation ...
11/26/2021

The United States was "born" on July 4, 1776, but the oldest cities in the U.S. were established long before the nation was. All were founded by European explorers—Spanish, French, and English—although most occupied lands had been settled long before by Indigenous peoples. Learn more about America's roots with this list of the 10 oldest cities in the United States.
St. Augustine was founded on Sept. 8, 1565, 11 days after the Spanish explorer Pedro Menéndez de Avilés came ashore on the feast day of St. Augustine. For more than 200 years, it was the capital of Spanish Florida. From 1763 to 1783, control of the region fell into British hands. During that period, St. Augustine was the capital of British East Florida. Control reverted to the Spanish in 1783 until 1822, when it was ceded by treaty to the United States.

St. Augustine remained the territorial capital until 1824 when it was moved to Tallahassee. In the 1880s, developer Henry Flagler began buying up local rail lines and building hotels, ushering in what would become Florida's winter tourist trade, still an important part of the city and state economy.

Covid Pandemic Highlights Value of Transportation TechsThe Covid-19 pandemic has driven education for children of all ag...
10/29/2021

Covid Pandemic Highlights Value of Transportation Techs
The Covid-19 pandemic has driven education for children of all ages from school to home, and often a hybrid of both. As remote learning stretches into the new school year in many areas, parents are worried, with parents of young children especially concerned about writing. More than half of parents of young children (54 percent) say that "writing is the area of greatest concern," in terms of remote learning, according to a survey conducted by Learning Without Tears (LWT), a company that has been providing writing and other educational materials to parents and teachers for more than 40 years. Parents faced with remote learning want to know how to develop and improve their children’s handwriting without the guidance of a teacher in a classroom setting."Whether you are employed outside the home, or a stay-at-home parent, remote learning is challenging. Some subjects, like handwriting, are particularly difficult without a teacher’s direct instruction, which creates a lot of angst at home," says Lana Dugdale, from Southborough, MA, mother of three young kids, including a rising first-grader.LWT is meeting the home-based learning challenges with improved and innovative updates to its classic and proven products." It’s clear now that too many students were left behind as the country moved to distance learning," says Terry Nealon, CEO of Learning Without Tears."During a child’s elementary years, any gap in learning can result in setbacks that impact that student for the rest of his/her life. Learning Without Tears has always focused on improving learning outcomes; we don’t have to accept those gaps."To enhance remote learning, families can choose from a range of both digital and print resources: activity books geared towards various elementary school grades, including books on letters and numbers, printing, and cursive, as well as keyboarding programs. In addition, with sharing materials out and hand sanitizer in, individual manipulative packs for hands-on learning are the ideal solution for single student use in the classroom, or for parents opting for homeschooling in small groups or pods. Need more handwriting resources? There’s an app for that. Designed to help young children learn the correct way to form letters and numbers and to show parents how to support that learning, LWT has launched "Wet, Dry, Try," for use on an iPad. With over four hours of instruction and technology that identifies individual student needs, the app provides a multisensory approach, with customized audio instructions that give teachers a way to monitor student progress remotely, when they can’t be in school. Learning loss during school shutdown has parents, teachers, and kids worried, stressed, and looking for solutions, and LWT resources are improving this unsettled situation. So teachers can be as effective remotely as they are in the classroom, LWT’s +Live Insights – its platform that brings all of its solutions together for in-school, at-home, and hybrid teaching – facilitates crucial data-driven individualized student instruction, as well as "whole class" gallery approach that was typical of a remote teaching in the spring. The only thing certain about back-to-school this year is its uncertainty. Visit LWTears.com for more information about early education products and resources for families and teachers to weather the new world of remote learning and beyond.

(NewsUSA) – Most people understand the importance of protecting their skin from the sun, and how ultraviolet (UV) radiat...
10/29/2021

(NewsUSA) – Most people understand the importance of protecting their skin from the sun, and how ultraviolet (UV) radiation can damage skin and eyes over years of exposure. However, many people don’t consider themselves exposed to the sun while driving. In fact, driving is a significant source of exposure to UV rays, according to the International Window Film Association (IWFA), a nonprofit organization. Automotive window films can provide an important layer of protection against harmful UVA rays, which do pass through unprotected window glass. Medical research has shown that drivers in the United States have an increased risk of developing skin cancer on the left side of their faces and on their left arms as a result of exposure to UVA rays through car windows. All quality window films block 99 percent of UVA rays and can help to reduce the risk of being exposed to the sun’s harmful UVA rays. But the dark glass that is popular in many vehicles today may not provide sufficient UVA protection unless it has also been treated with a window film, according to the IWFA.Some key benefits of automotive window films:

Monday’s outage of Facebook, Facebook Messenger, Instagram, and WhatsApp, one of the longest in Facebook’s history, maro...
10/05/2021

Monday’s outage of Facebook, Facebook Messenger, Instagram, and WhatsApp, one of the longest in Facebook’s history, marooned billions of users who rely on the social media giant and its apps for everything from connecting with friends to running their businesses and logging into websites.

The social network and the Facebook-owned platforms stopped working around 11:30 a.m. EDT Monday, according to the site Downdetector.com. At around 5:40 p.m., some users were able to access the platforms, but not all functions were back.

Facebook said no user data was compromised across its platforms.

In a statement emailed to USA TODAY, Facebook didn't specifically say what caused the outage: "To everyone who was affected by the outages on our platforms today: we’re sorry. We know billions of people and businesses around the world depend on our products and services to stay connected. We appreciate your patience as we come back online."

Facebook Chief Technology Officer Mike Schroepfer issued another apology to users on Twitter: "Facebook services coming back online now – may take some time to get to 100%. To every small and large business, family, and individual who depends on us, I'm sorry."

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