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"whirligig" Definitions
  1. something that is very active and always changing
  2. (old-fashioned) a merry-go-round at a fairground for children to ride on
"whirligig" Antonyms

202 Sentences With "whirligig"

How to use whirligig in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "whirligig" and check conjugation/comparative form for "whirligig". Mastering all the usages of "whirligig" from sentence examples published by news publications.

In "Breath," La Cava unfurls a whirligig profusion of clever twists and tricks.
Knives and flamethrowers shoot out from tiny hands, and whirligig helmets slice unwary throats.
Audiences may share his exasperation, as "The Whirligig" spins its characters into confrontational proximity.
Regardless, cook a proper meal tonight, against the frenetic whirligig of the coming days.
Consider whirligig beetles, which Dr. Eisner and Dr. Meinwald studied in the early 1970s.
DAILY CROSSWORD COLUMN Ryan McCarty hypnotizes us with an elegant whirligig of a puzzle.
The design of the paperfuge was also based on an ancient spinning toy, the whirligig.
A postdoctoral student, Saad Bhamla, analyzed a whirligig in motion with a high-speed video.
The whirligig of time has returned a reimagining of Shakespeare's comedy to Shakespeare in the Park.
Hamish Linklater, the author of the new play "The Whirligig," is best known as an actor.
Some of the season's best early scenes come when Susie presses this point with her whirligig client.
The analysis revealed that the whirligig could spin faster than any other toy they had used in experiments.
Prakash says he tried devices modeled after egg beaters and salad spinners but the whirligig creates the fastest, easiest acceleration.
This sparked a "six-month marathon" of studying the physics of the whirligig and building a mathematical model to understand it.
Fourth-dimensional fiction is littered with TARDISes and flux capacitors and all manner of time machines, going back to H.G. Wells' original whirligig.
The Paperfuge, developed by Stanford assistant professor of bioengineering Manu Prakash, is a hand-powered centrifuge that was inspired by a whirligig toy.
He was followed by Vollis Simpson, a Virginia farmer who'd made a giant whirligig that is at the heart of our permanent collection.
It's a whirligig, and it's a simple construction: a small disc, probably a button, through which you thread a piece of string through twice.
The team then put together a custom whirligig with a disc of paper into which can be slotted a vial with blood or other fluids.
They found inspiration in an ancient toy called the whirligig, or buzzer, which is made of a central disk and strings that wind and unwind.
For those who prefer to start the day with something sweet, try overnight French toast, Jordan Marsh's blueberry muffins or Nigella Lawson's pistachio whirligig buns.
While "The Whirligig" offers treats for fans of in-the-moment acting, its moments fail to cohere, to become a bigger picture that resembles real life.
Taking the money and then giving it back, in an endless game of bureaucratic whirligig, does not seem to grab them the way it grabs wonks.
After analyzing how exactly the whirligig works and how fast it spins, Prakash created a similar device that could hold blood sample and works as a centrifuge.
Tom Stoppard's historical whirligig, a semi-invented tale of a Zurich rendezvous between James Joyce, Vladimir Lenin and the Dadaist poet Tristan Tzara, ends its Broadway spin.
Versions of this children's whirligig have been found in archaeological digs across the world, from the Indus Valley to the Americas, with the oldest dating back to 1353,300BC.
The team then spent some time intensely studying the motion of the whirligig, which turns out to be a fascinatingly efficient way to turn linear motion into rotational motion.
Its second season struck me as a near-perfect whirligig of a TV season, constantly yanking the rug out from underneath itself and hoping its fall wasn't too brutal.
It seemed like the most carefully designed entry in the program's purely electronic portion — her whirligig 3-D designs rarely seeming to be in motion merely because the technology permits it.
The design is based on a whirligig, or buzzer toy, that dates back to 3,300 BC. Variations of the device existed in ancient China, medieval Europe, the colonial US, and among indigenous North Americans.
This triumphant pose seemed incongruous with the preceding mood, but what followed was the funniest set I have seen all year: a whirligig of characters and jokes, leaving the sleepy audience exhausted from laughter.
If he has made himself a permanent target of formal protest by women, and men who agree with them, it may take a whirligig of spinning in the no-spin zone to put that down.
He seemed so sure-footed then, so certain in his vision of this country, that his lacerating words were like balm to the black students who were on a whirligig in search of their identities. . . .
"Given the heightened complexity of Anderson's cinematic environments, with their whirligig detailing and multitude of moving parts, animation was always a logical sidestep for America's most artisanal auteur," wrote Guy Lodge, a film critic at Variety.
That doesn't make "Soft Power" any easier to parse than it is to praise; I'm not sure even its authors and hard-working director, Leigh Silverman, have mastered all the whirligig tricks of perspective they've set in motion.
Plus, this isn't something just anyone can access: It's reserved for Platinum and Diamond members of Uber's Rewards program, which means you'll have to already be dropping a lot of cash on rides to even qualify for whirligig service.
Cowritten by Ms. Caffey and Ms. Valentine, the most famous track from the band's third album, "Talk Show" (1984), peaked at No. 11 and features a whirligig of a piano break, followed by a catchy bass-and-drum bridge.
" Nominees for the theater award include Evan Ruggiero and Elena Wang, the two stars of the Off Broadway musical "Bastard Jones," and Grace Van Patten, whom Ben Brantley of The Times called "uncannily graceful" in Hamish Linklater's play "The Whirligig.
Featuring a creative team that includes the book writer Danny Rubin (who wrote the "Groundhog Day" screenplay with Harold Ramis) and the songwriter Tim Minchin (the fabulous "Matilda the Musical"), this bright whirligig of a show is a shrewd juggler of contradictions.
"When I first heard digital," Douglas Rushkoff said at a book event in May, launching into a thought stream, a gyroscopic, physical whirligig of economic theories, history, and emphatic hand gestures, "this is what I thought of as the digits," and he flitted his fingers.
After all, it's scarcely news to be both amused and amazed by the authorial gymnastics of Tom Stoppard, who turns 80 next year and whose whirligig of a 1974 play went on to win Tony awards for best play and best actor (John Wood).
The Stanford tool, developed by a team lead by assistant professor of bioengineering Manu Prakash, is made of mostly paper and takes the basic form of a spinning button whirligig, an ancient and simple toy made of thread looped through two holes in a button.
Throughout the film, Klayman has almost unbelievable access to Bannon, and what emerges is a picture of a clever, charming man who is a whirligig of activity but sometimes seems to be blowing a lot of hot air — and dangerous views with lasting repercussions.
A similar translation occurred in "Box in a Box," which played with the Native American myth of a raven that unleashes daylight from within a stack of nesting boxes; the composition suggested a slanted whirligig, with each musician tracing a slightly different orbit around a pivot.
The classics include "Salesman" (2212), a portrait of traveling Bible salesmen that will have you alternately rooting for and against its desperate subjects, and "Gimme Shelter" (2660), the brothers' whirligig, almost Boschian chronicle of the buildup toward — and violence during — the Rolling Stones' free concert at California's Altamont Speedway in 20312.
A genuine find not long out of drama school, a long-tressed Emily Barber lends an enchanting core to a whirligig of activity that finds Innogen confronting a wicked stepmother (Pauline McLynn, doubling later as the gravity-defying Jupiter) and a husband, Posthumus (the ever-appealing Jonjo O'Neill) who — a Shakespearean constant here — is sent into exile.
In one bravura tone cloud, James Herbert's 1984 video for the Athens, Georgia band R.E.M.'s Reckoning, which was filmed in R.A. Miller's whirligig park, suffuses a room that also includes Burk Uzzle's photo of whirligigs by North Carolina folk artist Vollis Simpson, "Acid Park" (2009), and a painting by Howard Finster, "Visions of the Angels — Honey Without Bees" (1978).
My music cannot be muted or dimmed, it cannot be labelled, disciplined, contained by manicured hedges, my music is the untamed wilderness of the soul, the rebar that holds up the skyscrapers of your city is my music, watch out, your city will crumble to rubble without it, but don't worry, it wasn't much to begin with, that place you called home with its measling river, its rusty bridges, there's a carnival in the meadow of the old floodplain, cotton candy and whirligig lights and the racket rising up from the carrousel is my music, old guys fishing along the breakwater, coffee can half full of fat, wriggling night crawlers— that worm-thrum, that earth-mouth-echo is my music.
McClure carried the first "behind the news" column from Washington, along with columns on fashions, interior decorating and international affairs, as well as a column by Calvin Coolidge. In the 1930s, the syndicate distributed a number of "Whirligig" columns: Louis M. Schneider's Financial Whirligig, Frederic Sondern's European Whirligig, Ray Tucker's Washington Whirligig, and National Whirligig (1934–1936).
Wooden cardinal whirligig Wind-driven whirligig at a lake in Nova Scotia, Canada A wind-driven whirligig transfers the energy of the wind into either a simple release of kinetic energy through rotation or a more complicated transfer of rotational energy to power a simple or complicated mechanism that produces repetitive motions and/or creates sounds. The wind simply pushes on the whirligig turning one part of it and it then uses inertia. The simplest and most common example of a wind-driven whirligig is the pinwheel. The pinwheel demonstrates the most important aspect of a whirligig, blade surface.
Dineutus discolor, the large whirligig beetle, is a species of whirligig beetle in the family Gyrinidae. It is found in Central America and North America.
William Shakespeare, in Twelfth Night, uses the whirligig as a metaphor for "what goes around, comes around". In his play Cupid's Whirligig, Edward Sharpham has the deity of love cast a spell over a group of Londoners so that one falls for another, who falls for another, and so on until the final person falls for the first: a cupid's whirligig. O. Henry wrote a short story called "The Whirligig of Life", about a mountain couple who decide to divorce and the events that lead to their remarriage told from the perspective of the judge. Lloyd Biggle, Jr. wrote a novel titled The Whirligig of Time as part of his science fiction series featuring Jan Darzek, a former private detective.
Whirligig store A whirligig is an object that spins or whirls, or has at least one part that spins or whirls. A whirligig can also be a pinwheel, buzzer, comic weather-vane, gee-haw, spinner, whirlygig, whirlijig, whirlyjig, whirlybird, or simply a whirly. Whirligigs are most commonly powered by the wind but can be hand, friction, or motor powered. They can be used as a kinetic garden ornament.
Pinwheels have a large cupped surface area which allows the pinwheel to reach its terminal speed fairly quickly at low wind speed. Increasing the blade area of the whirligig increases the surface area so more air particles collide with the whirligig. This causes the drag force to reach its maximum value and the whirligig to reach its terminal speed in less time. Conversely the terminal speed is smaller when thin or short blades with a smaller surface area are utilized, resulting in the need for a higher wind speed to start and operate the whirligig."It’s About Time".
It is therefore likely the 1440 version of whirligig referred to a spinning toy or toys.
The first known visual representation of a European whirligig is contained in a medieval tapestry that depicts children playing with a whirligig consisting of a hobby horse on one end of a stick and a four-blade propeller at the other end.Williams, Lindsay; "Whirligig Pleasure" Charlotte Sun Herald; August 17, 2000. For reasons that are unclear, whirligigs in the shape of the cross became a fashionable allegory in paintings of the fifteenth and sixteenth century. An oil by Hieronymus Bosch, probably completed between 1480 and 1500 and known as the Christ Child with a Walking Frame, contains a clear illustration of a string-powered whirligig.
Wilson is the home of the Vollis Simpson Whirligig Park, an Outsider Art installation. Simpson specialized in large kinetic sculptures called "whirligigs", which Simpson made from salvaged metal. Simpson became nationally known after he was commissioned to create a whirligig for the American Visionary Art Museum in Baltimore. The 55-foot (17 m) high, 45-foot (14 m) wide whirligig called "Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness" was installed for the museum's opening in November, 1995.
The Mk. IVA used the larger whirligig scanner. None were available by the time the war ended.
Dineutus angustus is a species of whirligig beetles in the family Gyrinidae. It is found in North America.
Dineutus ciliatus is a species of whirligig beetle in the family Gyrinidae. It is found in North America.
Gyrinus sayi is a species of whirligig beetle in the family Gyrinidae. It is found in North America.
Dineutus hornii is a species of whirligig beetle in the family Gyrinidae. It is found in North America.
Gyrinus dichrous is a species of whirligig beetle in the family Gyrinidae. It is found in North America.
Dineutus assimilis is a species of whirligig beetle in the family Gyrinidae. It is found in North America.
Gyrinus pugionis is a species of whirligig beetle in the family Gyrinidae. It is found in North America.
Gyrinus marginellus is a species of whirligig beetle in the family Gyrinidae. It is found in North America.
Gyrinus affinis is a species of whirligig beetle in the family Gyrinidae. It is found in North America.
Gyrinus pachysomus is a species of whirligig beetle in the family Gyrinidae. It is found in North America.
Dineutus nigrior is a species of whirligig beetle in the family Gyrinidae. It is found in North America.
Gyrinus lecontei is a species of whirligig beetle in the family Gyrinidae. It is found in North America.
Gyrinus cavatus is a species of whirligig beetle in the family Gyrinidae. It is found in North America.
Dineutus emarginatus is a species of whirligig beetle in the family Gyrinidae. It is found in North America.
Gyrinus picipes is a species of whirligig beetle in the family Gyrinidae. It is found in North America.
Gyrinus wallisi is a species of whirligig beetle in the family Gyrinidae. It is found in North America.
Gyretes iricolor is a species of whirligig beetle in the family Gyrinidae. It is found in North America.
Gyrinus analis is a species of whirligig beetle in the family Gyrinidae. It is found in North America.
Gyrinus dubius is a species of whirligig beetle in the family Gyrinidae. It is found in North America.
Gyrinus pleuralis is a species of whirligig beetle in the family Gyrinidae. It is found in North America.
Gyrinus gibber is a species of whirligig beetle in the family Gyrinidae. It is found in North America.
Gyrinus elevatus is a species of whirligig beetle in the family Gyrinidae. It is found in North America.
Gyrinus gehringi is a species of whirligig beetle in the family Gyrinidae. It is found in North America.
Gyrinus bifarius is a species of whirligig beetle in the family Gyrinidae. It is found in North America.
Gyrinus pectoralis is a species of whirligig beetle in the family Gyrinidae. It is found in North America.
Gyrinus woodruffi is a species of whirligig beetle in the family Gyrinidae. It is found in North America.
Gyrinus plicifer is a species of whirligig beetle in the family Gyrinidae. It is found in North America.
Dineutus productus is a species of whirligig beetle in the family Gyrinidae. It is found in North America.
Whirligig Theatre is a British theatre company based in London. It presents full-length musicals and plays in London and on tour. Whirligig was founded in 1979 by David Wood and John Gould. Its first production was the musical, The Plotters of Cabbage Patch Corner at Sadler's Wells Theatre, London.
Was it possible that in the whirligig of time a future could lie before one so uncouth and rustical?
Gyrinus aeratus is a species of whirligig beetle in the family Gyrinidae. It is found in North America and Europe.
Gyrinus minutus is a species of whirligig beetle in the family Gyrinidae. It is found in North America and Europe.
The Canon: A Whirligig Tour of the Beautiful Basics of Science is a book written by American science author Natalie Angier.
The device used for a whirligig is a six foot high cylindrical cage connected to pivots from to top to bottom.
Butterworth also presented successful programmes aimed at children in the 1950s including Whirligig and Butterworth Time."Whirligig", Whirligig TV. com, accessed September 2011 He continued to take minor parts in films and went on to appear alongside actors including Sean Connery,The First Great Train Robbery, The British Film Institute, accessed September 2011 David NivenPrudence and the Pill, The British Film Institute, accessed September 2011 and Douglas Fairbanks Jr during his career. Around the time his work in the Carry On films began, he guest appeared in two First Doctor Doctor Who stories, starring William Hartnell, in 1965/66, (The Time Meddler and The Daleks' Master Plan), playing The Monk. He starred in the children's TV show Saturday Special (with the puppet Porterhouse the Parrot), broadcast on Saturdays at 5:00 pm, alternating with Whirligig.
Gyrinus parcus is a species of whirligig beetle in the family Gyrinidae. It is found in Central America, North America, and South America.
Dineutus carolinus is a species of whirligig beetle in the family Gyrinidae. It is found in the Caribbean Sea, Central America, and North America.
Gilroy, p. 112; Affron, p. 92; McGuire, pp. 176–177. McGuire adds: "This gender whirligig serves to inform the dynamics of the entire narrative ...".
The characters in Cupid's Whirligig often allude to classical Roman Mythology. Along with Cupid, the god of desire, Venus, the goddess of love, is mentioned multiple times. Nan talks about her love in terms of these gods, saying, "Venus be my good speede, and Cupid send me good lucke, for my heart is very light.Cupids Whirligig, Act 3, Scene 1, Page 20" Peg also brings up another Roman allusion, her Ulysses, using his story to prove her character.
In 1967, he was awarded the Canadian Centennial Medal and in 1974, he was made an Officer of the Order of Canada. In 1978, he was awarded the Leacock Medal for Whirligig.
A group of Gyrinus sp. Gyrinus is a genus of small aquatic whirligig beetles in the family Gyrinidae native to the Palearctic (including Europe), the Near East, the Nearctic and North Africa.
Peter Ling (1926–2006), eagle- times.blogspot.com, 24 September 2008. This led to work on television, including the BBC's children's show Whirligig (1950), where he met actress Sheilah Ward, whom he married in 1954.
The motion needed to power a friction whirligig is very similar to rubbing sticks together to create fire. Friction whirligigs are another staple of craft shops and souvenir stores in the Appalachian Mountains.
"Revolution Earth" is one of many songs with lyrics co-written with Robert Waldrop, a friend of the band. The song was also covered on the Whirligig album "Spin" and featured Terre Roche.
The Whirligig of Time In Whirligig, a novel by Paul Fleischman, a boy makes a mistake that takes the life of a young girl and is sent on a cross-country journey building whirligigs. In the Newbery Award-Winning young adult novel Missing May by Cynthia Rylant, Ob, the main character's uncle, makes whirligigs as a hobby. After his wife who loved the whirligigs dies, the whirligigs continue to move and symbolize the fact that life must go on for Ob.
Folk art whirligig Detail of farmer pulling bull Detail of music mechanism – farmer pulling bull When whirligigs became recognized as American folk art is unclear, but today they are a well established sub-category. With recognition, folk art whirligigs have increased in value. The photo on the right is of a traditional whirligig commonly found in Bali, Indonesia. They are still available, and are often used in the rice paddies as the sound they make when the wind blows scares birds away.
A whirligig is a punitive or torture contraption comprising a suspended cage- like device.Websters Dictionary (1913 edition) The victim would be placed in the cage, which was spun violently in order to cause severe nausea.
He later joined the Bell Syndicate as a copy editor, and occasionally wrote articles.E.g., guest writing Ray Tucker's syndicated column "The National Whirligig" on Dec. 2, 1955. He died in New York City at age 94.
Other of Simpson's whirligigs have been exhibited at the American Folk Art Museum in New York City and at the Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Folk Art Museum in Williamsburg, Virginia. Whirligig Park opened in Wilson in late 2017.
This song, and others from the album, is part of a short film called "Left of Reckoning", directed by James Herbert. The four-minute clip has the band wandering around folk artist R.A. Miller's Whirligig Farm in Rabbittown, Georgia.
She says. "I will prove as true unto his bed, as ere did she that did Ulysses wed,Cupids Whirligig, Act 3, Scene 1, Page 21" saying that she will be as faithful as Penelope, Ulysses' wife, who kept all of her suitors at bay during his loong absence. Biblical allusions are also present; at one instance, Sir Troublesome mutters, "the plague of Egypt upon you all,Cupids Whirligig, Act 2, Scene 1, Page 14" referring to the ten plagues God sent on Egypt in order for Pharaoh to let Moses take the Israelites away to the promised land.
A book published in Stuttgart in 1500 shows the Christ child in the margin with a string-powered whirligig.Paris, Lateinisches Stundenbuch (Livre d'heures), um 1500, Handschrift, Stuttgart, Württembergische Landesbibliothek, Cod. brev. 5. Buchausstattung. Christusknabe mit dem Windrad, Miniatur (in der Bordüre) The Jan Provoost attributed late sixteenth-century painting Virgin and Child in a Landscape clearly shows the Christ child holding a whirligig as well.National Gallery Picture Library, London UK. The American version of the wind-driven whirligig probably did not originate with the immigrant population of the United Kingdom as whirligigs are mentioned in early American colonial times.
How the wind-driven whirligig evolved in America is not fully known, though there are some markers. George Washington brought whilagigs home from the Revolutionary War.The woodworker's guide to pricing your work; Dan Ramsey; Popular Woodworking Books, 2005; pg 46. What type is unknown.
It was otherwise an upgrade to the existing Mk. VIII with a 200 kW magnetron and numerous other upgrades. A contract was awarded to EMI in 1946 as the Mark IX, but during development it was amended to equip the much larger B14/46 bomber designs, the V-force. These were essentially identical to the original concept, but used the larger "whirligig" reflector and became the Mk. IXA. Using the larger "whirligig" reflector and a slotted waveguide allowed the angular beamwidth to hit 1.5 degrees, a great improvement over the WWII models. The Mk. IX allowed the scanning rate to be set at 8, 16 or 32 RPM.
Recorded at Rockfield Studios in Monmouth, Wales, Cordon Bleu saw the main quartet of Willem Ennes, Tom Barlage, Guus Willemse and Hans Waterman complemented by Chiel Pos. Pos contributed acoustic guitar to "Last Detail" and tenor sax to "Third Line" and "Whirligig", while Frankie Fish co-wrote some lyrics and also, together with Pos, added backing vocals. Like its predecessor Divergence (1972), Cordon Bleu mixed long instrumental pieces ("Chappaqua" and "Whirligig") with shorter vocal songs which also featured instrumental passages ("Third Line", "Last Detail" and "Black Pearl"). "A Song for You" is the shortest song on the album, and is a more conventional pop song.
H. (Anon.), 16 February 1727 (O.S.) p.1 However, another diarist of the siege indicated that the Gibraltarian Jews earned their salt as much as anyone else: Punishments for non-combatants could also be harsh. Female transgressors of the correct codes were forced to endure the 'whirligig'.
The plan calls for the construction of a 260,000 square- foot, eight-story patient tower in the center of the hospital's current Valley Street campus. In March 2016, Dayton Children's announced a change to their 42 year old brand and logo. The new logo is called the Whirligig.
This example was found near Clarkrange, Tennessee, on the Highway 127 Corridor Sale. It represents an interesting example of a combination mechanical and sound producing whirligig. The propeller, the Balinese farmer and the bull are of tin. The farmer and bull are painted but the propeller blades are not.
Gyrinal is an organic chemical compound \- an unsaturated ketoaldehyde - with the formula C14H18O3, obtained from the whirligig beetle (the water boatman, Gyrinus natator). It is a powerful antiseptic and fish and mammal toxin, and thus used as a defensive compound. Typically the beetles contain approx. 80 microgram of the compound.
Hydrophilidae have hairs on their under surface that retain a layer of air against their bodies. Adult crawling water beetles use both their elytra and their hind coxae (the basal segment of the back legs) in air retention, while whirligig beetles simply carry an air bubble down with them whenever they dive.
According to mammalogist Donald Pattie, they can "scull on the surface like whirligig beetles". The air trapped in its fur gives it a silvery sheen. On land, its foreleg and opposite hind leg move at the same time. C. Hart Merriam's original 1884 description It is active throughout the year, primarily at night.
His hospital request radio programme As Prescribed started in June 1948 as a weekly broadcast from ABC's Royal Cinema in Plymouth.BBC Music Programmes, whirligig-tv.co.uk. 26 Accessed November 2008. Savage not only presented the hour-long show, but played requests on the organ from listeners who were sick in hospital or housebound.
The Caulfields were an American alternative rock band from Newark, Delaware which recorded two albums for A&M; Records in the late 1990s. The group was led by singer-songwriter John Faye, the frontman for the Philadelphia-based groups IKE. The group is best known for their song "Devil's Diary." Their first album was 1995's Whirligig.
1998: Indigo Girls, Iris DeMent, Moxy Früvous, Livingston Taylor, Grey Eye Glances, Vance Gilbert, Karen Savoca, Joseph Parsons, Big Bill Morganfield, Whirligig, and Michelle Nagy. Emcee: Gene Shay. 1997: John Prine, Madeleine Peyroux, Dar Williams, Richie Havens, Jeffrey Gaines, Martin Sexton, disappear fear, Richard Shindell, David Olney, June Rich & Nancy Falkow. Emcees: Gene Shay, Michaela Majoun and Keith Brand.
Gyrinus natator, the common whirligig beetle, is a species of beetle native to the Palearctic realm, including much of Europe. Its range extends northwards as far as Norway, Finland, and the Saint Petersburg area of Russia. It is an aquatic beetle and moves rapidly around on the surface or swims underwater in still or slow-moving fresh water.
Dineutus shorti is a species of whirligig beetle in the family Gyrinidae. It is known only from a narrow section of the coastal plain in the Blackwater and Pensacola river watersheds of Santa Rosa and Okaloosa counties, Florida and Covington County, Alabama in the United States. The species is named for aquatic coleopterist for Andrew E. Z. Short.
Along with John Gould, he founded the Whirligig Theatre, a touring children's theatre company. His most famous story, The Gingerbread Man (1976), has been all across the world since its premiere at the Towngate Theatre in Basildon. Wood, FilmFair, and Central adapted the musical into an animated children's television series. The adaptation, also called The Gingerbread Man, aired on ITV in 1992.
At the second October meeting she beat Eleanor and Malta to win a race for one-third of a subscription of 25 guineas each. Eleanor had started the four-mile, one and a half furlong race as the 4/6 favourite, with Penelope at 7/4. At the end of October she beat Viscount Sackville's Whirligig in a 100 guineas match race.
"Timeline of Inventions and Patents". In early Chinese, Egyptian, Persian, Greek and Roman civilizations there are ample examples of weathervanes but as yet, no examples of a propeller-driven whirligig. A grinding corn doll of ancient Egyptian origin demonstrates that string-operated whirligigs were already in use by 100 BC.Whirligigs & Weathervanes; Schoonmaker, David and Woods, Bruce; Sterling; 1992; pg 12.
Vollis Simpson, April 19, 2011 Vollis Simpson (1919 – May 31, 2013) was an American "outsider" folk artist known for large kinetic sculptures called "whirligigs", which Simpson made from salvaged metal. He lived and worked in Lucama, North Carolina. Many of his larger pieces are on display at the Vollis Simpson Whirligig Park in Wilson, North Carolina, about 10 miles from Lucama.
All Your Own is a BBC children's television programme broadcast from 1952 until 1961. The show provided the first television appearances for Jimmy Page, John Williams and the King Brothers."All Your Own", Whirligig Commissioned by Freda Lingstrom and produced by Cliff Michelmore, the show featured children demonstrating their talents or showing off their collections. The programme was presented by Huw Wheldon until 1960.
Together with her second husband, Ronald Marriott, she wrote Stranger from Space (1952), an episodic serial for the Whirligig children's television series. With Jonquil Antony (later Peter Ling), she wrote scripts for the radio soap opera Mrs Dale's Diary, and with Antony co-created ITV's first soap, Sixpenny Corner, which ran for eight months during 1955 and 1956, five days a week in a 15-minute slot.
Cordon Bleu charted in the Netherlands on 20 December 1975, reaching #18 and spending 11 weeks on the chart. First released on vinyl and cassette, it was later reissued by CBS in 1980 and on Compact Disc in 1988. In 2006, "Chappaqua", "Whirligig" and "Third Line" were included on the compilation The Ultimate Collection, with versions of the other three tracks featured on the live disc.
The character of Fortycoats was given his own show, Fortycoats & Co., played by Fran Dempsey. In the show Fortycoats is accompanied by two companions; Sofar Sogood (played by Conal Kearney), a prim goody two shoes character, and Slightly Bonkers (played by Virginia Cole), a naive schoolgirl. They traveled in the Flying Tuck Shop doing good, and battling the evil Whilomena the Whirligig Witch and The Pickarooney.
John Coldwell Adams, "The Whirligig of Time," Confederation Voices, Canadian Poetry, UWO, Web, Apr. 30, 2011. "Supplied with a ringing introduction which echoes with patriotic sentiment and lyrical praise for Canada," says the Canadian Encyclopedia, "this is a collection of confident poetry truly representative of the national and literary self-respect of the emergent Dominion." In his introduction, Lighthall was lavish in his praise of Roberts.
The leisure farm is located about 250 meters above sea level with temperature conditions of four seasons. It overlooks valleys, rivers, plains, farms, islands and ocean. It has several natural ecology such as macaques, tree frogs, firebugs, butterflies and a variety of plants. The farm also regularly hosts several activities, such as lantern activity, whirligig activity, matzo ball activity and other do-it-yourself activity.
"Ernest L. Cuneo, 82; Owned Newspaper Service", The New York Times, March 5, 1988. Accessed April 23, 2010. For a number of years Cuneo wrote a syndicated column, "Take It or Leave It," which appeared three times a week. Earlier (in the early 1960s) he took over the "National Whirligig," the original "news behind the news" column which appeared five days a week; writing that column until his death.
At the Falls of Arcadia, a fictional planned community in San Diego County, California, disgruntled homeowner Dave Kline arrives at home to find a package from an unknown person. The package contains a tacky whirligig, which Kline puts on his roof to annoy the neighbors. While in bed that night, Kline hears an intruder in the house. He goes to investigate while his wife, Nancy, stays in bed.
Whirligig is a BBC television programme for children broadcast from 1950 until 1956. It was the first children's programme to be broadcast live from the BBC's Lime Grove Studios, at 5:00 pm on alternate Saturdays. Humphrey Lestocq was one of the presenters and the stooge of the obnoxious puppet Mr. Turnip, voiced by Peter Hawkins. Lestocq's catchphrase was "Goody, Goody Gumdrops" and Mr. Turnip's was "Lawky, Lawky, Lum".
Gurrufío is the Venezuelan term for a button whirligig or buzzer, a simply constructed traditional children’s toy.Acosta Saignes, Miguel (1951). “Historia antigua y moderna del gurrufío,” in Tópicos Shell (Maracaibo: Shell Caribbean Petroleum Company), 145, 22-24. It consists of a central disk of wood, plastic or metal (even occasionally a soft drink bottle cap that has been hammered flat), with holes drilled or nailed equidistant and close to the center.
Whirligig beetles are most conspicuous for their bewildering swimming. Their coloration is not showy and they can be quite hard to see if they are not moving or are under water. However, most species are handsomely coloured with a sombre lustre of steely grey or bronze. Their integument is finely sculpted with little pits; it is hard and elastic and produces a water repellent waxy outer layer, which is constantly supplemented.
This beetle is gregarious and groups of beetles are often to be seen gyrating rapidly on the surface of the water. It feeds on water fleas and other small invertebrates, and on insects that fall onto the surface of the water. If alarmed it will dive under water and remain submerged for some time. This whirligig beetle can fly, and can often be found in temporary water bodies.
Cupid's Whirligig was Sharpham's second and last play, produced early in 1607 and printed later the same year with a dedication to fellow Devonian and author Robert Hayman. Again, it satirises court life in a general way, though it has been speculated that the character Nucome, carefully described as 'Welsh', may actually be a veiled attack on the king's Scottish favourite Robert Carr. This play too was eventually reprinted three times.
Francis Coudrill and Hank the Cowboy Francis Coudrill (1913 in Warwick – 1989) was an English artist and ventriloquist, most notable for being the creator of Hank the Cowboy. He was also an artist and illustrator. Coudrill appeared on Lime Grove Studios' 1950s BBC children's television show Whirligig with Peter Hawkins, Peter Butterworth and writer Peter Ling (all of whom were later involved in Doctor Who). His son is the artist Jonathon Coudrille.
Image by Harold Maxwell-Lefroy - Adephaga The Adephaga (from Greek ἀδηφάγος, adephagos, "gluttonous"), with more than 40,000 recorded species in 10 families, are a suborder of highly specialized beetles and the second-largest suborder of the order Coleoptera. Members of this suborder are adephagans, a term which notably include ground beetles, tiger beetles, predacious diving beetles, and whirligig beetles. The majority of the species belongs to the family of carabids, or ground beetles (Carabidae).
The diversity of jewel beetles increased rapidly, as they were the primary consumers of wood, while longhorn beetles (Cerambycidae) were rather rare: their diversity increased only towards the end of the Upper Cretaceous. The first coprophagous beetles are from the Upper Cretaceous and may have lived on the excrement of herbivorous dinosaurs. The first species where both larvae and adults are adapted to an aquatic lifestyle are found. Whirligig beetles (Gyrinidae) were moderately diverse, although other early beetles (e.g.
In 1938, at age 32, Dodd sought the Democratic nomination for Virginia's 8th congressional district, which was directly across the Potomac River from Washington.Ray Tucker, "The National Whirligig" (syndicated), Ironwood (MI) Daily Globe, 1938-07-21 at p. 1. The seat was held by four-term incumbent Howard W. Smith, a conservative Democrat on the United States House Committee on Rules who used his position to obstruct parts of the Roosevelt Administration's New Deal agenda."Political Notes: Six Primaries," Time, 1938-08-15.
Stock Exchange Practices. Report of the Committee on Banking and Finances. 1934.Paul Mallon, 'National Whirligig: The news behind the news', The Palm Beach Post, April 4, 1933, page 1Associated Press, 'Morgan Shows Assets of $424,708,095.56; Witness At Hearing', The Evening Independent, St. Petersburg FL, May 23, 1933, page 1 The last twenty years of Davis's practice included representing large corporations before the United States Supreme Court challenging the constitutionality and application of New Deal legislation. Davis lost many of these battles.
It may have been made in France, perhaps in the circle of Rustici, who entered Francis I's service in 1528. Vasari tells of the elaborate suppers given by Rustici and his comrades. Rustici's Mercury was commissioned by Cardinal Giuliano de' Medici in 1515 as a fountain figure for the courtyard of Palazzo Medici in Florence. The figure blew a jet of water that spun a whirligig with four vanes in the form of butterfly wings, according to Giorgio Vasari's description.
Her tempting body is being offered to the saint, who is portrayed at right, contemplating while looking at the observer at the same time. The dwarf next to him, who wears a red mantle and a whirligig, is a symbol of humanity's fecklessness. In the foreground, finally, are the last temptations: a table with bread and a jar of vine, supported by naked demons. One of the human pillars has his foot caught in a jar — an allusion to the sexual act.
25, 2011. The intentionally disparaging term "Maple Leaf School" was picked up from the progressive magazine Canadian Forum, which was waging a similar crusade for literary modernism. "Probably the most resounding salvo by the Canadian Modernists is F. R. Scott’s 'The Canadian Authors Meet,' the first draft of which appeared in The McGill Fortnightly in 1927. One of its six stanzas lampooned the attention given to the Confederation Poets":John Coldwell Adams, "The Whirligig of Time," Confederation Voices, Canadian Poetry, UWO.
Mission of Gravity is a science fiction novel by American writer Hal Clement. The novel was serialized in Astounding Science Fiction magazine in April–July 1953. Its first hardcover book publication was in 1954, and it was first published as a paperback book in 1958. Along with the novel, many editions (and most recent editions) of the book also include "Whirligig World", an essay by Clement on creating the planet Mesklin that was first published in the June 1953 Astounding.
This was released as a single in Europe, with an edited version of "Chappaqua" as the B-side. "Chappaqua" was issued as an A-side in its own right in some territories (backed by "Whirligig"), and was a B-side again to "Give Some More" in 1977/78. Produced by Elton John's producer Gus Dudgeon, the album had a crisper sound than Solution and Divergence. This trend was continued on the following album Fully Interlocking (1977), also produced by Dudgeon.
The body is of hand whittled bamboo, fastened with rusty nails and wire and a single piece of string. There are still pencil marks where various pieces were centered and/or aligned. The farmer is connected to the shaft of the whirligig by a bamboo stick with an offset where the stick connects to the shaft. The result is: as the shaft turns the farmer's arm lifts from the offset shaft which makes the farmer pull the string which lifts the bull's head.
Aurora trout are generally without spots, the colouration grading from a magenta hue on the back to a bright, nearly fluorescent orange along the belly, especially in mature males. The life history of the fish is essentially identical to that of the brook trout. Adults average about 0.5 to 1.5 kg, although individuals up to 4 kg are known. The aurora trout occupied a very restricted range, probably occurring in only two lakes, Whitepine and Whirligig, and their inflowing streams.
A Spanish translation by Cayetano Ramirez has been published in 2015 by Nagrela Editores of Madrid, with the title Las llaves de Gibraltar. Next came a detective mystery series of seven novels set in 18th and 19th century Gibraltar featuring the amateur detective Giovanni Bresciano, co- authored with Mary Chiappe.Gib based Murder Mystery... introduces Bresciano , Gibraltar Chronicle, 9 August 2010The Murder in Whirligig Lane, Sam Benady's blog. His latest project is 'A Pictorial History of Gibraltar' with Sarah Devincenzi (illustrator), published in 2019.
The high, wide whirligig called "Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness" was installed for the museum's opening in November, 1995. He was also commissioned to create whirligigs for the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta. Four of his works were installed at the Olympic's Folk Art Park and remained there on permanent display. Other of Simpson's whirligigs have been exhibited at the American Folk Art Museum in New York City and at the Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Folk Art Museum in Williamsburg, Virginia.
Alongside cuckoldry comes faithfulness. During discussions of what makes an ideal woman, faithfulness is a key factor; it is a proof the love they have for their husbands. At the end of the play, Nan's father, Alderman Venter, blesses her marriage to the Young Lord Nonsuch by saying that his blessing is to "make thee both fruitful, and a faithful wife.Cupids Whirligig, Act 5, Page 42" As mentioned in the section on allusions, Peg uses Penelope, Ulysses' wife, to prove how strong her love is for Nucome.
Wood explains that "his geny being well known to be poetical, (he) fell into acquaintance with" a literary circle which included Ben Jonson, Michael Drayton, John Donne, George Wither, John Owen and others. These encouraged his literary efforts with the result, according to Wood, that Hayman had "the general vogue of a poet". Perhaps because of these distractions Hayman seems not to have achieved any significant public office in England. Although Edward Sharpham dedicated a play to him in 1607'Cupid's Whirligig' - William Barker, ‘Hayman, Robert (bap.
The first coprophagous beetles have been recorded from the Upper Cretaceous, and are believed to have lived on the excrement of herbivorous dinosaurs, however there is still a discussion, whether the beetles were always tied to mammals during its development. Also, the first species with an adaption of both larvae and adults to the aquatic lifestyle are found. Whirligig beetles (Gyrinidae) were moderately diverse, although other early beetles (i.e., Dytiscidae) were less, with the most widespread being the species of Coptoclavidae, which preyed on aquatic fly larvae.
Damselfly species in the area include bluet, black-winged damselfly, eastern forktail (Massachusetts's most common damselfly), and violet dancer.McAdow 1990: pp. 190–197 Dragonfly species mating along the Assabet include cherry-faced meadowhawk and other species of the genus Sympetrum, common whitetail, the migratory green darner, and twelve-spotted skimmer. Aquatic insects plying the Assabet's waters include common water strider, giant water bugs of the genus Belostoma, grousewinged backswimmer and other species of backswimmers, various species of water boatmen, and whirligig beetles of genera Dineutus and Gyrinus.
During the nineteenth century in the United States, any wind-driven toy held aloft by a running child was characterized as a whirligig, including pinwheels. Pinwheels provided many children with numerous hours of enjoyment and amusement. An Armenian immigrant toy manufacturer, Tegran M. Samour, invented the modern version of the pinwheel, originally titled "wind wheel," in 1919 in Boston, Massachusetts. Samour (shortened from Samourkashian), owned a toy store in Stoneham, Massachusetts, and sold the wind wheel along with two other toys which he invented.
Act Five starts with Slacke telling Sir Troublesome that it was a lie, Lady Troublesome is indeed sleeping with the Captain. He convinces Sir Troublesome to get a divorce, saying he should marry Peg instead. At this point in the play, Lady Troublesome loves Sir Troublesome who loves Peg who loves Nucome who loves Nan who loves Slacke who loves Lady Troublesome: Cupid’s Whirligig. Wages comes up with a plan to have 3 simultaneous weddings where everyone is masked, having the girls swap tokens to deceive their lovers and end up with the "right" partner.
The platypus (Ornithorhynchus anatinus) once resided in the creek pond near Cleveland-Redland Bay Road, but increased turbidity and lessening water quality has meant the animal has not been sighted for some years. For migratory birds, the property is also within the East Asian–Australasian Flyway, and the Moreton Bay Ramsar wetlands. Within east of Eprapah is an egret colony wetlands at Victoria Point. The standing pond, supplied and flushed with rains, contains a variety of aquatic life include Gambusia fish and other species, whirligig beetles, backswimmers, dragonfly nymphs, and mayfly nymphs.
Mountain blanket bog is found in areas above in altitude and where there are more than 175 days rainfall a year. The most important builders of peat are the Sphagnum bog mosses. Carnivorous plants such as sundews and butterworts are specific to boglands and bog asphodel and bog cotton are also common. Bog water is important for the reproduction of dragonflies and damselflies and the Wicklow mountain bogs also support insects such as pond skaters, whirligig beetles, water boatmen and midges as well as the common frog and the viviparous lizard.
Other works included building the Snuggle Bear puppet for the popular Snuggle fabric softener commercials. Love also appeared as Santa Claus on the cover of New York magazine in December 1982, 1984 and 1985. Going into semi-retirement in the 1990s, Love remained active, building many full-body puppets for the Joffrey Ballet's The Nutcracker performances, such as designing the mice and the -tall Mother Ginger puppet, an association that continued as recently as 2004. In 1993, he directed the Whirligig pilot for PBS at The Studios at Los Colinas, Irving, Texas.
He analyzed these and anticipating many principles of aerodynamics. He understood that "An object offers as much resistance to the air as the air does to the object." Isaac Newton would not publish his third law of motion until 1687. From the last years of the 15th century until 1505, Leonardo wrote about and sketched many designs for flying machines and mechanisms, including ornithopters, fixed-wing gliders, rotorcraft (perhaps inspired by whirligig toys), parachutes (in the form of a wooden-framed pyramidal tent) and a wind speed gauge.
From this point until the end of the war, the Mk. III became the backbone of the Bomber Command fleet, and a large variety of versions were introduced. The first modification was the out-of-sequence Mk. IIIB, which added the range corrected Type 184 display unit from the IIC models, but lacked roll stabilization. Stabilization was added in the next version to see service, the Mk. IIIA. The new "whirligig" scanner was added to the Mk. IIIA to produce Mk. IIIC, while the original scanner with a higher power magnetron produced the Mk. IIID.
Later it was put on at Sadler's Wells Theatre, London by Whirligig Theatre, and went on tour in the autumn of 1981. The play continued to be performed throughout the 1980s. Wood changed the name to the more descriptive The Ideal Gnome Exhibition in 1981, although it reverted to its original title when it became a television series and a book. According to the author, the idea of changing the name to The Ideal Gnome Expedition came after he had read an article about the Ideal Home Exhibition.
A traditional button whirligig from Ukraine—called a фуркалка "furkalka" due to the sound made from spinning. Button whirligigs, also known as button spinners and buzzers, are the oldest known whirligigs. They require only a piece of clay or bone and a strip of hide. Native American cultures had their own version of this toy in 500 BC. Many a child of the Great Depression from the southern Appalachians and Ozarks remembers a button or token, or coin and a string as the primary spinning toy of their youth.
The knockers are nailed in pattern to the shaft. Whirligigs from folk artist Reuben Aaron Miller and others are considered highly collectable. However, whirligigs' value as folk art has been uneven. At a 1998 auction at Skinner Galleries, a 19th-century Uncle Sam with saw and flag in excellent condition sold for $12,650. At a 2000 auction at Skinner Galleries a 19th-century polychrome carved pine and copper band figure whirligig in excellent condition sold for $10,925 and an early 20th-century bike rider of painted wood and sheet metal sold for $3,450.
She authored three books, Forever the Wild Mare (Dodd Mead 1963), No Room, Save in the Heart (Flying Fox Press 1987) and Animals, Nature and Albert Schweitzer (Flying Fox Press, 2000). She received the Rachel Carson Legacy Award in 1988 and in 1996 was inducted into the Virginia Communications Hall of Fame. She was married to journalist James S. Free, and, for a time, they co-authored Whirligig, a syndicated column about Washington politics. Her oral histories are in the collections of Columbia University and the National Press Club.
Humphrey Lestocq (23 January 1919 – 29 January 1984) was a British actor, best known for his roles in Angels One Five (1952) and The Long Shadow (1961), and guest appearances in the television series The Avengers. Lestocq shot to fame as Flying Officer Kyte in the BBC radio wartime comedy Merry-Go-Round (1944–1948), which later evolved into Much-Binding-in-the-Marsh. Lestocq was one of the presenters on the TV series Whirligig, the first children's programme to be broadcast live from the BBC's Lime Grove Studios. It ran from 1950 to 1956.
In Europe, this whirligig beetle is found in Austria, Belarus, the Czech Republic, mainland Denmark, Estonia, Finland, mainland France, Germany, Great Britain including the Isle of Man, the Republic of Ireland, Latvia, Lithuania, mainland Norway, Poland, central and northern Russia, Sweden, Switzerland, the Netherlands, Romania and Ukraine. Its eastern range extends to Siberia and China, but it is relatively uncommon in Western Europe. It is often to be seen on the surface of still or slow-moving streams, ponds and marshes, especially sunny spots with a limited quantity of emergent vegetation.
The show featured the adventures of the title character Fortycoats (Fran Dempsey) - his catchphrase was "Be me forty coats and me fifty pockets" - and his companions Sofar Sogood (played by Conal Kearney), a prim goody two shoes character and Slightly Bonkers (played by Virginia Cole), a naive schoolgirl. They occupied the Flying Trick Shop (also known as the Flying Tuck Shop and the Flying Sweet Shop) and battled against the evil Whilomena, the Whirligig Witch (and her cat, Spooky) and the equally evil Pickarooney (who lived in a rubbish tip and kidnapped children).
One of Simpson's Whirligigs from the park in Wilson Simpson retired at the age of 60, and began to build wind-driven structures which he called "windmills", but came to be called whirligigs. He built a number of large whirligigs on his property in Lucama surrounding a pond across from his workshop. This was referred to by locals as "Acid Park" because of how the sculptures would reflect car headlights when people came out after dark. Simpson was commissioned to create a whirligig for the American Visionary Art Museum in Baltimore.
According to the survey between 1996 and 1998, three families and 738 species of Beetles were confirmed in the Palace including Prosopocoilus inclinatus, which is rarely seen in central Tokyo.Biology Study Group[2001:168-175] Oomidzusumashi or a kind of whirligig beetle which has become extinct in central Tokyo was also confirmed. Beetles in the Palace suggests close relationships with those in the Izu Peninsula and Miura Peninsula. The presence of chairochibigengoro, or a kind of Dytiscidae, which is seen near the sea, may suggest that the Palace was once near the seashore.
The latter novel features a land and sea expedition across the superjovian planet Mesklin to recover a stranded scientific probe. The natives of Mesklin are centipede-like intelligent beings about 50 centimeters long. Various episodes hinge on the fact that Mesklin's fast rotational speed causes it to be considerably deformed from the spherical, with effective surface gravity that varies from approximately 3 'g'n at the equator to approximately 700 gn at the poles. Clement's article "Whirligig World" describes his approach to writing a science fiction story: > Writing a science fiction story is fun, not work.
These polyphagan beetle groups can be identified by the presence of cervical sclerites (hardened parts of the head used as points of attachment for muscles) absent in the other suborders. Adephaga contains about 10 families of largely predatory beetles, includes ground beetles (Carabidae), water beetles (Dytiscidae) and whirligig beetles (Gyrinidae). In these insects, the testes are tubular and the first abdominal sternum (a plate of the exoskeleton) is divided by the hind coxae (the basal joints of the beetle's legs). Archostemata contains four families of mainly wood-eating beetles, including reticulated beetles (Cupedidae) and the telephone-pole beetle.
In the comedy-drama film The Meyerowitz Stories (New and Selected), Van Patten portrayed Eliza, a Bard College film student and the daughter of Adam Sandler's character, Danny. In the film, directed by Noah Baumbach and screened at the 2017 Cannes Film Festival, Eliza makes sexually explicit shorts starring herself. In her theater debut, Van Patten performed in The New Group's Off-Broadway play The Whirligig by Hamish Linklater alongside Zosia Mamet at the Pershing Square Signature Center. Van Patten acted in the 2017 romantic comedy The Wilde Wedding with Glenn Close, John Malkovich, Patrick Stewart, and Minnie Driver.
Leigh, Spenser. 'Race, Stephen Russell' in The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (2013) Race joined the Royal Air Force in 1941, and formed a jazz/dance quintet. After the Second World War, he began a long and productive career with the BBC, where his ready wit, musicianship and broad musical knowledge made him much sought after as a musical accompanist for panel games and magazine shows, such as Whirligig and Many a Slip. In, 1949 The Steve Race Bop Group recorded some of the first British bebop records,Bop- In' Britain Volume 1 - The Learning Curve, Jasmine Records JASCD 637 (2003), Discogs.
A young adult, introduced in the "I Can Fly" story arc,Skin Horse Chapter 32477 at WebComics Nation video game obsessive Nick was unknowingly co-opted into "Project Whirligig". The black military program intended to weaponize him by secretly installing him in a virtual reality, then removing his brain and implanting it in a black V-22 Osprey–a military tiltrotor aircraft–and finally subconsciously training Nick to control the Osprey as if it were his own body. In spite of Nick's love of shooting virtual bad guys, he abhors the thought of killing real people, and so joined the Skin Horse team.
Wooden rooster whirligig The origin of whirligigs is unknown. Both farmers and sailors use weather vanes on an ongoing basis and the assumption is one or both groups are likely the originators. By 400 BC the bamboo-copter or dragon butterfly, a helicopter-like rotor launched by rolling a stick, had been invented in China. Wind-driven whirligigs were technically possible by 700 AD when the Sasanian Empire began using windmills to lift water for irrigation. The weather vane, which dates to the Sumerians in 1600–1800 BC, is the second component of wind-driven whirligigs.
They co- directed an unsuccessful sailing expedition in the Caribbean on the Doris Hamlin, which was to have included the production of a film and the collection of flora and fauna. Detailed accounts of this adventure are available in Free's personal biography and in an oral history taken by the National Press Club. Free served in the U.S. Navy in the Caribbean and Pacific during World War II and retired from the Naval Reserve as a captain in 1968. In 1950 he married journalist Ann Cottrell Free and for a time they co-authored Whirligig, a daily syndicated column about Washington politics.
She was actively involved in Yale's a cappella music community as a member of the group Redhot & Blue. She was a member of the British-style folk-rock band The New St. George from 1989 to 1994. She joined the New York-based Celtic-fusion band Whirligig in 1996, and performed with them through 2002, with appearances at the Philadelphia Folk Festival, the Newport Folk Festival, and Britain's Cropredy Festival. In 2005, she formed her own jazz-folk hybrid band called The Space Dots, and recorded an album of "acid cabaret" songs with them called Trouble from the Start.
Batman was unlike any other roller coaster at the time, as its trains rode below the track and took riders through five inversions. It was a tight fit for Yankee Harbor, but it proved so popular that lines stretched out of the ride area and across large parts of the park. The surrounding area of Yankee Harbor was re-themed after the Batman films, with The Lobster being renamed the East River Crawler and the park's nearby swing ride Whirligig briefly renamed the Gotham City Swinger, with the original name returning in 1993. In 2005, Batman was awarded landmark status by the American Coaster Enthusiasts (ACE) at their annual convention.
That same year, an accident involving a guest occurred on the Cajun Cliffhanger ride, which led to its eventual removal. Passengers aboard Superman: Ultimate Flight In 2001, two inverted shuttle coasters were added: an Intamin impulse coaster named Vertical Velocity, stylized as V2; and Déjà Vu, a Vekoma Giant Inverted Boomerang ride to replace Sky Whirl and Hay Baler. Vertical Velocity was added to Yankee Harbor, with the swing ride Whirligig moving closer to the lift hill of Batman: The Ride to make room. On V2, riders are launched at speeds over 70 mph (112 km/h) up a twisted vertical tower, then fall backward and climb up another straight tower.
The Mosquito was already widely used for pinpoint target indicator operations, and fitting them with H2S would further increase their abilities. On 22 February 1944, the development group proposed rapidly fitting Mark IV to all Lancasters, and for higher-accuracy needs, developing either an X-band Whirligig, or a K-band with a smaller antenna. Instead, they were ordered to do both. The K-band work was given the name "Lion Tamer". The first test of the basic equipment took place on a Vickers Wellington on 8 May 1944, and Lancaster ND823 was equipped with the prototype Mark VI and flew on 25 June.
Informational sign at Vollis Simpson Whirligig Park, Wilson, North Carolina Simpson served in the US Army Air Corps during World War II in the Pacific Theatre. He demonstrated his intuitive engineering skills while stationed on Saipan in the Northern Marianas Islands, where he constructed a windmill out of parts from a junk B-29 Superfortress bomber to power a washing machine for his company. After the war, Simpson founded a house-moving operation with his brothers to supplement the income from the family farm. He designed and built much of the heavy equipment they used to move houses, created a first of its kind crop sprayer.
Trained as an actress at RADA, Driscoll made her first television appearances in 1953 on Whirligig and then as a police sergeant in the series Scotland Yard in the episode "The Silent Witness". From 1955 to 1957, she introduced Picture Book, a BBC Television series that appeared on Mondays as part of the Watch with Mother cycle and encouraged children to make things. She had a catchphrase: "Do you think you could do this? – I am sure you could if you tried". Driscoll left Picture Book in 1957 to take over from Bernadette O'Farrell the part of Maid Marian opposite Richard Greene in the ITV series The Adventures of Robin Hood for 37 episodes in series 3 and 4.
In 1980, Mantle debuted on the screen with a small role as Ewen in Christian Marnham's short thriller feature The Orchard End Murder. In 1981, he appeared in the national tours of The Ideal Gnome Expedition for David Wood's Whirligig Theatre and Deborah Warner's play, Woyzeck, which showed at the University Theatre during the Edinburgh Festival. In 1982, he appeared in an episode of the TV series Minder, before taking on the voice of Private Smith in the animated military comedy series Jane. From 3 November 1982, Mantle portrayed Jurgen opposite Eamon Boland, C. J. Allen, Philip Donaghy and Ian McCurrach in David Hayman's award-winning stage production of Coming Clean at the Bush Theatre in London.
" Brad Birzer of Progarchy stated "I could review this as a distinctive piece of American culture and Americana; as a treasure hunt and quest; as a progressive rock album; as a philosophical examination of nostalgia; as a theological pondering on the nature of time; or as a fully- blown science fiction tale worthy of anything written by Robert Heinlein or Kevin J. Anderson. In some way, no review of this album can really be faithful to the material if it doesn’t take into account all of these things.", and called Chronomonaut "a majestic album that calls forth all that is best within us. No small feat, especially in our present cultural whirligig of insanity and horrors.
William Joseph Mayerl (31 May 1902 – 25 March 1959) was an English pianist and composer who built a career in music hall and musical theatre and became an acknowledged master of light music. Best known for his syncopated novelty piano solos, he wrote over 300 piano pieces, many of which were named after flowers and trees, including his best-known composition, Marigold (1927). He also ran the successful School of Syncopation for whose members he published hundreds of his own arrangements of popular songs. He also composed works for piano and orchestra, often in suites with evocative names such as the 'Aquarium Suite' (1937), comprising "Willow Moss", "Moorish Idol", "Fantail", and "Whirligig".
Harris moved to England in 1952 and became an art student at City and Guilds of London Art School in South London, at the age of 22. In 1953 he found work in television, at the BBC, performing a regular ten- minute cartoon drawing section in a one-hour children's show called Jigsaw, with a puppet called "Fuzz", made and operated on the show by magician Robert Harbin. He went on to illustrate Harbin's Paper Magic programme in 1956. In 1954, Harris was a regular on a BBC Television programme Whirligig, which featured a character called "Willoughby", who sprang to life on a drawing board, but was erased at the end of each episode.
The Type 216 display, using magnetic deflection, which was much easier to mass-produce, was added to the original IIIA to produce the Mk. IIIE, while the whirligig was added to the same unit to make the Mk. IIIF. By the middle of 1944, the war in Europe was clearly entering its final stages, and the RAF began making plans to begin attacks on Japan with the Tiger Force group. In order to equip these aircraft, which would need both targeting and long-range navigation, a conversion system for the earlier Mk. II units was introduced. Based on non-stabilized IIC units, the Mk. IIIG used a new magnetron and receiver for 3 cm operation like the other Mk. III systems.
Front view of the head of Lamia textor The head, having mouthparts projecting forward or sometimes downturned, is usually heavily sclerotized and is sometimes very large. The eyes are compound and may display remarkable adaptability, as in the case of the aquatic whirligig beetles (Gyrinidae), where they are split to allow a view both above and below the waterline. A few Longhorn beetles (Cerambycidae) and weevils as well as some fireflies (Rhagophthalmidae) have divided eyes, while many have eyes that are notched, and a few have ocelli, small, simple eyes usually farther back on the head (on the vertex); these are more common in larvae than in adults. The anatomical organization of the compound eyes may be modified and depends on whether a species is primarily crepuscular, or diurnally or nocturnally active.
He has also performed and toured with Riverdance, Natalie Merchant, Tim O'Brien & Mary Chapin-Carpenter in The Crossing, New York-based Whirligig, and the Celtic Jazz Collective with Lewis Nash and Peter Washington. In the past couple of years, he has worked on various collaborations between traditional and classical music, along with his brother Niall and the composer Micheal O’Suilleabhain. He has recorded on over 40 albums including Callan Bridge with his brother Niall, On Common Ground with Kevin Crawford and various guest spots with Natalie Merchant, Alan Simon’s Excalibur project with Fairport Convention and Moody Blues, GAIA with the Prague Philharmonic Orchestra, and singer Karan Casey. He has recently recorded on two movie soundtracks, Irish Jam and The Golden Boys and played uilleann pipes on the BBC’s Flight of the Earls soundtrack.
Cupid’s Whirligig, by Edward Sharpham (1576-1608), is a city comedy set in London about a husband that suspects his wife of having affairs with other men and is consumed with irrational jealousy. It was first published in quarto in 1607, entered in the Stationer’s Register with the name "A Comedie called Cupids Whirlegigge." It was performed that year by the Children of the King’s Revels in the Whitefriars Theatre (a private theatre) where Ben Jonson’s Epicene was also said to have been performed. It was again published in 1611, 1616 and 1630, each with an epistle to Robert Hayman before the play, however, the only other record of it being performed is an amateur performance by apprentices at Oxford on 26 December 1631. Its authorship was not known until 1812, when scholars connected it to Edward Sharpham’s other play, The Fleire, written on 13 May 1606.
The Art of the Puppet by Bil Baird In Australia, a program called Mr. Squiggle, using a marionette central character of the same name, ran for just over 40 years (1959–1999). Another program for children using puppetry was the Magic Circle Club featuring puppets Cassius Cuckoo and Leonardo de Funbird. From the 1940s onwards, the BBC in the United Kingdom, produced a wide series of marionette programmes for children and then created The BBC Television Puppet Theatre based in Lime Grove Studios from 1955–1964, Usually under the title Watch With Mother The various programmes included Whirligig, The Woodentops, Bill and Ben, Muffin The Mule, Rubovia a series created by Gordon Murray and Andy Pandy. Later in the 1960s, Gerry Anderson with his wife, Sylvia Anderson and colleagues made a number of hit series, Fireball XL5, Stingray and Thunderbirds, which pioneered a technique combining marionettes and electronics.
Anslow obtained a Ph.D. from Yale University in 1924 and upon graduation returned to Smith as an associate professor, attaining the role of full professor in 1930. In 1940, Anslow became Director of Graduate Study, followed by Professor on the Gates Foundation in 1946, and Professor Emeritus in 1960. During her tenure at Smith, Anslow frequently contributed to scientific journals and was a member of both the American Academy of for the Advancement of Science and the American Physical Society, where she was the president of the New England Section. The first woman to work with the cyclotron ("atomic whirligig to smash the atom") at UC Berkeley, she collaborated with fellow Smith physicist Dorothy Wrinch on a "spectrochemical study of protein molecules for the eventual production of synthetic foods and drugs" under a grant from the Office of Naval Research, the first research grant of its kind at Smith College.
1950s British TV Milestones Whirligig 50s British TV Items from the United States produced by the NBC network there would often be used, as the BBC had a film exchange deal with the American broadcaster where they would swap film reports they had produced. From 1951, a weekly Newsreel Review of the Week was produced to open programming on Sunday evenings, compiling highlights from the previous week's newsreel features. These weekly editions would be presented by Edward Halliday, who sometimes appeared on-screen to link the various items. Due to the pre-prepared nature of the Newsreel, topicality and coverage of breaking news stories was impossible, and it was not a true news programme as we would understand it today; it was regarded more as entertainment, with more serious news bulletins being produced by BBC Radio and sometimes broadcast on TV in sound only.
Local tradition on Barbados has it that the delegation also sent a letter to the authorities on Barbados, inquiring if descendants of Ferdinand Paleologus still lived on the island. The letter supposedly requested that if that was the case, the head of the family should be provided with the means of returning to Greece, with the trip paid for by the Greek government. Ultimately, the delegation's search was in vain and they found no living embodiments of their lost empire. An article from 11 May 1913 in The San Francisco Call, titled Find in England, Traces of Dynasty, Once Ruled the World, identified the Paleologus family as "by descent rightful rulers of the empire of the east" and stated that there may yet be more research to be done in an attempt to track down potential descendants of the family "if fortune's whirligig should bring about circumstances requiring that the hereditary emperor of the east should be sought out to reign once more in Constantinople".
In 1949 the BBC bought Lime Grove Studios as a "temporary measure"—because they were to build Television Centre at nearby White City—and began converting them from film to television use, reopening them on 21 May 1950.1950s British TV Milestones Whirligig 50s British TV Lime Grove would be used for many BBC Television programmes over the next forty-two years, including: Nineteen Eighty-Four; Steptoe and Son; Doctor Who; Nationwide; Top of the Pops; and The Grove Family, which took its title family from the studios, where it was made. A children's magazine-style programme, Studio E, was broadcast live from the studio of the same name from 1955 until 1958; it was hosted by Vera McKechnie. Lime Grove's use for programmes outside current affairs declined over time, and later episodes of the continuing series were made at BBC Television Centre and BBC Elstree Centre. Indeed, in Lime Grove Studios' final years, its official name was Lime Grove Current Affairs Production Centre.
In addition to creating his own work, Logan is the Conservation Manager at Vollis Simpson Whirligig Project, where he actively restored 31 large-scale sculptures created by artist Vollis Simpson for the city of Wilson, North Carolina. He is a retired professor of studio art at the University of North Carolina Chapel Hill. Logan was selected as one of the designers for the original iteration of the North Carolina Freedom Monument Project,North Carolina Freedom Monument Project a public park in Raleigh. He has had solo exhibitions including in New Orleans at the Ogden Museum of Southern Art; in Miami at N'Namdi Contemporary; in Greensboro, North Carolina at the Weatherspoon Art Museum; in Charlotte, North Carolina at the Gantt Center; in Duluth, Minnesota at Tweed Museum of Art; in Colorado at the Boulder Museum of Contemporary Art; in Washington D.C. at The World Bank; and in New York at the June Kelly Gallery.

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