Thursday, May 15, 2008

Photos

clipped from www.imagevuex.com

Imagevue is an online flash image gallery for your web site. It is easy to set up, and to update your photo gallery with new images,
all you need to do is upload the photos to your web server - Everything else is automatic! Imagevue consists of the photo album,
the slideshow, and the admin. Together they are the Imagevue software package!

 blog it

Monday, November 19, 2007

Tracing Slang To Ireland

clipped from www.nytimes.com

Growing up Irish in Queens and on Long Island, Daniel Cassidy was nicknamed Glom.

Some years back, leafing through a pocket Gaelic dictionary, he began looking for phonetic equivalents of the terms, which English dictionaries described as having “unknown origin.”
Glom” seemed to come from the Irish word “glam,” meaning to grab or to snatch

He began finding one word after another that seemed to derive from the strain of Gaelic spoken in Ireland, known as Irish. The word “gimmick” seemed to come from “camag,” meaning trick or deceit, or a hook or crooked stick.

Mr. Cassidy, 63, began compiling a lexicon of hundreds of Irish-inspired slang words and recently published them in a book called “How the Irish Invented Slang,” which last month won the 2007 American Book Award for nonfiction, and which he is in New York this week promoting.

 blog it

Sunday, September 23, 2007

Nobel Peace Prize winner shot by Israeli army

Mairead Corrigan McGuire received the Nobel Peace Prize in 1976 for her heroic work in Northern Ireland, where peace after terror became a reality. She recently spoke in the West Bank. Here’s an excerpt from her speech (read it all here.):

She’s participating in a non-violent protest after speaking when soldiers of the Israeli army open fire. McGuire is felled by a rubber-coated steel bullet. Undeterred, she presses the case for human rights under a tree while waiting for the ambulance to arrive. (More of the story here.)
May we be so brave!

Saturday, September 1, 2007

Vive Gothic

clipped from judytha.blog.cz

Gothické obrázky 5

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This site contains some wonderful images and photos, of Gothic Culture,also contains other cultures which I have not seen yet,hope they wont offend.

Tuesday, August 28, 2007

Timeless Myths - Classical, Norse, Celtic, Arthurian

Timeless Myths

Welcome to the temple of Timeless Myths.

Here you will find tales and information on ancient and medieval mythology and legend. Timeless Myths centred around four mythology in Europe.

Classical Mythology
Norse Mythology
Celtic Mythology
Arthurian Legends

I've relied mostly on translations of ancient and medieval literature as my sources. So what you read in Timeless Myths are summaries of the mythology based on those sources.

There's a little extra in section called Book of Heroes, formerly the World of the Storyteller.

What's New at Timeless Myths?
Can get lost here.

Friday, August 3, 2007

'Bard of Armagh' Tommy Makem Dies in US. Clancy Bros fame

clipped from www.ireland.com Musician Tommy Makem dies aged 74

Celebrated traditional musician Tommy Makem (74) has died of lung cancer in New Hampshire.


Makem, who played banjo and tin whistle and sang in a deep baritone, came to international prominence as a member of The Clancy Brothers and Tommy Makem.

Makem was born in Keady, Co Armagh, in 1932. During the 1960s, he gained international fame with the Clancy Brothers, performing sellout concerts in Carnegie Hall and being feted at the Newport Folk Festival.

His best-known songs include Four Green Fields, Red Is The Rose and The Bard of Armagh .
"Tommy was a man of high integrity and honesty and his courage really showed through towards the end," he told RTÉ's Morning Ireland today. "Our paths diverged many times, but our friendship never waned. I suppose he was my brother in every way.
Makem visited Belfast last month to receive an honorary degree from the University of Ulster despite his illness and also took time to return to Armagh.
External Links
President Mary McAleese offered her condolences to Mr Makem's family.
"In life, Tommy brought happiness and joy to hundreds of thousands of fans the world over," she said. "Always the consummate musician, he was also a superb ambassador for the country, and one of whom we will always be proud."
Minister for Arts, Sport and Tourism Seamus Brennan said he had learned of Mr Makem's death "with great regret".

"He was a multi-talented artist whose abilities went beyond music, with other skills as a storyteller, actor, songwriter and poet. I wish to pass on my condolences to Tommy's family, relatives and friends at this sad time and hope that they can take comfort from the fact that his music is a wonderful legacy that will live on for generations to come," he said.

"Tommy was truly a music legend in his own lifetime. Now, with his passing, he has left behind a rich and enduring legacy of music, song and story to be enjoyed and appreciated by this generation and generations to co

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Tommy Makem (November 4, 1932 – August 1, 2007) was an internationally celebrated folk musician, artist, poet and storyteller from Ireland, most known as a member of The Clancy Brothers and Tommy Makem. He played the banjo and tin whistle and sang in a baritone. He was sometimes known as
"The Bard of Armagh" (taken from a traditional song of the same name) and "The Godfather of Irish Music".

After moving to the
United States in 1955, he teamed up with the Clancy Brothers, who were signed to Columbia Records in 1961. The same year, at the Newport Folk Festival, Makem and Joan Baez were named the most promising newcomers on the American folk scene.

During the 1960s, the
Clancy Brothers with Tommy Makem performed sellout concerts at such venues as Carnegie Hall and made television appearances on shows like The Ed Sullivan Show and The Tonight Show.

Makem's best-known songs include "Four Green Fields", "Gentle Annie",
"Red is the Rose", "The Rambles of Spring", "The Winds Are Singing
Freedom", and "
Farewell to Carlingford", and "The Bard of Armagh".

Thursday, July 26, 2007

Flying Boats: Foynes role in Aviation - Lindbergh 1933

clipped from en.wikipedia.org
Foynes (Faing in Irish) is a small town and major port in County Limerick in the midwest of Ireland, located at the edge of hilly land on the southern bank of the Shannon Estuary.
It is noteworthy for having been, in the early years of aviation, the last port of call on the eastern shore of the Atlantic for flying boats. Surveying flights for flying boat operations were made by Charles Lindbergh in 1933 and a terminal begun in 1935. The first transatlantic proving flights were operated on July 5, 1937 with a Pan Am Sikorsky S-42 service from Botwood, Newfoundland and Labrador on the Bay of Exploits and a BOAC Short Empire service from Foynes with successful transits of twelve and fifteen-and-a-quarter hours respectively.
One of Foynes' main claims to fame is the invention there of Irish Coffee. This came about, it is said, in order to alleviate the suffering of cold and wet passengers during its aviation days in the 1930s and early 40s.
Foynes as a port has a longer history
Back in 1933, Foynes was not even a village.