quarta-feira, 10 de dezembro de 2014
http://41.media.tumblr.com/7840237ab8b125faf706937fea744a5f/tumblr_mwr2on641s1swgymxo1_500.jpg
sábado, 15 de novembro de 2014
sexta-feira, 14 de novembro de 2014
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eBEU-OiEvII#t=457
quinta-feira, 6 de novembro de 2014
terça-feira, 4 de novembro de 2014
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segunda-feira, 3 de novembro de 2014
Airking (Rádios antigos)Inserido Monday 21 January 2008 21:41
Akent (Rádios antigos)Inserido Monday 21 January 2008 21:42
Akkord (Rádios antigos)Inserido Monday 21 January 2008 21:42
Andre 1 (Rádios antigos)Inserido Monday 21 January 2008 21:43
Andre 2 (Rádios antigos)Inserido Monday 21 January 2008 21:43
terça-feira, 9 de setembro de 2014
terça-feira, 26 de agosto de 2014
The Metro began operating in Moscow in 1935 with a single 11 km line connecting just thirteen stations, but it has since grown into the world’s fourth busiest transit system, spanning more than 300 kilometers and offering 188 stops along the way
The Moscow Metro was one of the USSR’s most extravagant architectural projects, with stations constructed as luxurious “palaces for the people”. Built under the command of Stalin, the iron-fisted leader ordered the metro’s artists and architects to design a structure that embodied svet (radiance or brilliance) and svetloe budushchee (a radiant future). He directed his architects to design structures which would encourage citizens to look up, admiring the station’s art, as if they were looking up to admire the sun and—by extension—him as a god. With their reflective marble walls, high ceilings and grandiose chandeliers, many Moscow Metro stations have been likened to an “artificial underground sun”.
The art includes bas-reliefs, friezes, marble and bronze statues, stained-glass windows and countless mosaics made with glass, marble and granite in good Byzantine fashion. You can find the images of the former revolutionary and historical characters, their victories, sports, industry, agriculture, and warfare, as well as of common Soviet people such as workers, soldiers, farmers, and students.
Since 1889 the gorge has been open to the public by a steel walkway built along the bottom of the cliff wall. At times the walkway goes through tunnels cut into the cliff. Before this walkway was built the only way was to go through the dangerous river torrent and many hardy souls actually made this journey. These travellers returned with fables of large snakes and monsters. Since then, the gorge is a popular tourist attraction. Nearby is the famous Reichenbach Falls, where the legendary Sherlock Holmes is supposed to have met his end at the hands of the evil Professor Moriarty.
Just a few meters off the British coast near Newquay in Cornwell, lies the tiny Towan island. Perched at the top of this 80 feet high rocky island is a charming cottage that is accessible via a 100 feet long suspension bridge, the only privately owned suspension bridge in Great Britain. Originally a Victorian tea room, the building was converted into a three-bedroom Edwardian house in the 1930s. Since then it has been home to various lords and aristocratic couples including the son of physicist Sir Oliver Joseph Lodge, inventor of the spark plug. When the last owner Lord Viscount Long sold the property in 2012, it was converted into a holiday home that is being offered for rent. The property is since called "The House in The Sea".
quinta-feira, 21 de agosto de 2014
quarta-feira, 20 de agosto de 2014
http://travel.amerikanki.com/most-peaceful-countries-in-the-world/10/
A Síria a ferro e fogo
Smoke rising after a shell fired by Syrian army soldiers exploded in Aleppo on Saturday.
Diplomats from around the world gathered in the Montreux Palace Hotel last week for the so-called Geneva II peace talks in an effort to get the violence to stop in Syria. It promises to be a challenging process.
Damaged buildings in Homs. Many of those apparently tortured to death by the Assad regime were taken into custody in and around the city during the course of the last two years.
Rebel fighters manning a barricade in the northwestern city of Deir Ezzor on Saturday. More than 130,000 have lost their lives in the fighting in Syria. A further 50,000 are considered missing. New photos depicting bodies of prisoners who had been tortured to death may indicate what happened to many of those who are missing
A man walks down a street in Homs on Sunday. A report written on the basis of thousands of photos of torture smuggled out of Syria by a defector says there is "clear evidence ... of systematic torture and killing of detained persons."
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