Posts Tagged ‘Travel and Leisure’

Aussie Adventure Movie Has Just Been Released To The Public

Friday, September 3rd, 2010

A completely new adventure film has been released in Australia. The book, Tomorrow When The War Began by popular Australian author John Marsden, has been turned into a blockbuster movie The book has a substantial following of teenage readers and has sold over 2 million copies in Australia and new Zealand, with many parents of those teens have also enjoyed reading this book.

The book was then adapted for the big screen by script writer Stuart Beattie, who has also written the screenplays for the “Pirates of The Caribbean; the curse of The Black Pearl” and “Australia” films among others. Beattie is furthermore directing the Tomorrow When The War Began picture, which will be his first experience as the director of a film.

Well recognized young Australian actors, known for their various roles in Australian television and film, make up the majority of the cast; their fame stemming from roles in popular soaps like Home and Away and Neighbours.

The story starts with a group of teenagers who live in a country town called Wirawee, and decide to go on a camping trip to a remote area of bush called “Hell” in the last week of the school holidays. The town happens to be celebrating their annual Commemorative Day activities while the group are away, so they don’t think it odd to observe airplanes flying overhead while they’re away camping. They think it’s just an aspect of the festivities.

When they arrive back home from their camping trip, they are distraught to find their homes have been abandoned by their loved ones and their animals have been left to die from starvation. Then they discover they can’t get any phone coverage for their phones and that there’s no electricity.

Not knowing what to make of the circumstance they find themselves in, they wait until nightfall to go into town to try and uncover what has taken place in their town and to their families. Risking their own safety, they recognise soon enough what has occurred; the town has been invaded by an unidentified army who are holding all their families and towns people captive at the local showground

The story then continues on to show the teenagers doing whatever they can to wreck havoc on the enemy force using guerrilla tactics to try to free their families and towns people. There’s lots of action and adventure in this picture; and a bit of romance, as we watch the group struggle against enormous odds to try and thwart the enemy forces and survive the surreal predicament they find themselves in.

If you enjoyed this article then be sure to head over to the Tomorrow When The War Began movie site to find out all the goss about the Tomorrow movie

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Doheny Ranch Development, Beverly Hills, California, 1923

Thursday, September 2nd, 2010

Doheny Ranch, Beverly Hills

Attempting to reestablish practice in Los Angeles in 1922, Wright found himself challenged to propose new, more positive approaches than those being adopted by developers. He focused on one of the most enticing sectors of the large, undeveloped plots that skirted the city: the 411-acre Doheny Ranch, located in what is now Beverly Hills and later developed as the Trousdale Estates. The land was owned by Edward Laurence Doheny (1856-1935), then one of America’s wealthiest citizens.

How understandable for Wright to have sought Doheny as a client, and to have proposed a residential development of unparalleled scale. No records have been discovered to document any contact between Wright and Doheny, who quite possibly never met. It therefore seems that Wright prepared his design in the hope of interesting Doheny rather than in response to any actual commission.

Frank Loyd Wright – Doheny Ranch Development, California

Few drawings survive, and they are largely pictorial; evidence suggests that all were completed during the early months of 1923. The proposal, unencumbered by the realities of an actual programme, suggests a prototype for a new type of Southern California suburb.

Ample precedents for Doheny exist in Wright’s own work-for instance his design for the Sherman M. Booth house (unbuilt; Glencoe, Illinois, 1911). The new elements of massiveness, textured masonry, and walled gardens seem partly inspired by Italian vernacular buildings, which Wright came to admire following a prolonged visit to Italy in 1910. During his stays in Japan, he discovered landscapes that joined buildings and plantings into one composition.

Frank Wright’s Doheny Ranch Development

From his fascination with pre-Columbian architecture-arguably a natural source for the indigenous expression he sought in California-came a renewed awareness of large-scale composition. Yet ultimately the conception of the Doheny Ranch was his. Fixity and mobility were to be joined in a single composition that anticipated, in both scale and function, more recent, adventurous approaches to the problems of the suburb.

Looking for more on architecture, visit Mark A Cella at www.Mark-Cella.com and learn more about Mark A Cella art, music and automobiles.

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Pennsylvania The Beautiful

Thursday, September 2nd, 2010

Pennsylvania means “Penn’s Woodland,” and if the suggestion of over nighting in a quiet Pennsylvania cabin rental in wooded hill country seems interesting to you, then a trip in the Keystone State is designed for you. But there is a good deal more to this historic and picturesque vicinity than the rich rural countryside.

In fact, the best destination to start your tour of Pennsylvania will definitely be to go to see Philadelphia, long known as the gateway of the state. At the Independence Visitor Center, you can get started scheduling your exploration of the city and by going to their web site. Here, helpful individuals can advise you about Philadelphia’s many historical sites, cultural institutions, tours and activities during the year. You can additionally get free or low-cost passes to ride many of the city’s mass transportation facilities.

One of Pennsylvania’s terrific attractions is the Pennsylvania Dutch Country, which you witness practically as soon as you start traveling west out of Philadelphia. By the way, “Dutch” does not mean these individuals are from the Netherlands. The word is a corruption of deutsche, denoting “German.” They are Old Order Amish and Mennonites whose ancestors came from Southern Germany and Switzerland over 300 years ago and they have been very successful at sustaining their traditional way of life.

From the bed breakfasts in Lancaster, you can tour their villages as well as purchase their wares and produce for sale and witness first hand how farms operated prior to the 20th Century. While you are visiting Lancaster, you might check out the Mennonite Information Center to get familiarized. By the way, if a person says “You look plain, English,” smile and answer “Thank You,” as it is a compliment.

Moving west, you will come to Gettysburg, where the only battle of the American Civil War to be fought north of the Mason-Dixon was fought. Historic inns and recreations, including ghost tours, are popular activities here. The official comprehensive guide to tours of Gettysburg, including cabin rentals and other lodging facilities, is an Internet site known as “Gettysburg Address”.

One of the more interesting developments in travel these days is agritourism, where guests stay, gain knowledge of and even participate on an actual working farm. Butler County is not only one of the state’s most peaceful places, it is also the breadbasket of the state and home to sizeable fairs and even wineries. Nestled in the scenic Alleghenies, Butler County may be the high point of your Pennsylvania vacation.

James Harden is part of the travel team at FindVacationRentals.com and FindBedandBreakfast.com. These directories provide detailed information on cabin rentals and things to do.

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Everything Egypt

Thursday, September 2nd, 2010

(5,500 – 3,100 BC) – Predynastic Egypt

Beginning just before the Predynastic period, Egyptian culture was already beginning to resemble greatly the Paranoiac ages that would soon come after, and rapidly at that. In a transition period of a thousand years (about which little is still known), nearly all the archetypal characteristics appeared, and beginning in 5500 BC we find evidence of organized, permanent settlements focused around agriculture. Hunting was no longer a major support for existence now that the Egyptian diet was made up of domesticated cattle, sheep, pigs and goats, as well as cereal grains such as wheat and barley. Artifacts of stone were supplemented by those of metal, and the crafts of basketry, pottery, weaving, and the tanning of animal hides became part of the daily life. The transition from primitive nomadic tribes to traditional civilization was nearly complete.

Bastet Protectress of Cats

Today: Bastet – Proctectress of Cats,
cat or head of a cat Bastet was sometimes called Bast. She was the goddess of cats. She is a cat, or has the head of a cat, but originally she had the head of a lion.

Every day the sun god Ra would travel in his ship across the sky. Every night the snake Apep tried to stop the sun god’s ship on his journey through the underworld. Ra was usually won these battles. However, on stormy days, or during an eclipse, the Egyptians believed that Apep had been victorious and swallowed the sun. Bastet defended her father Ra against the snake.

Why – Concentrate On The Pyramids

I know, I know. You’re probably saying to yourself, “Where’s my silver platter!” Please make it easier on yourself-CONCENTRATE on ways to get around the obstacles. One piece of advice I can give you is never stop looking for the answers you need. Ask. Look. Research and ye shall find!

It’s also a good time to listen to your inner voice. In order to do this, take some time out for yourself and spend it in a quiet place. Once you’re calm, listen to that voice. The advice it can give you is surprisingly right on target.

Take some time to look after your health. Retreats and vacations can be a big boost to your physical and emotional outlook, especially if you’re near water. Travel with care. If you can’t take a full-blown vacation, even a quiet afternoon would be great.

Physically, a vacation allows you to rest. Emotionally, a rest will allow you to hear the advice that your inner voice can offer.

Hall of the Dead

The Ancient Egyptians believed that when you died, you travelled to the Hall of the Dead. There Anubis weighed your heart against the feather of Ma’at, the goddess of justice sits on top of the scales to make sure that the weighing is carried out properly. You can see Anubis steadying the scales to make the weighing fair. If your heart was lighter than the feather, you lived forever. We still talk of “a heart as light as a feather” to mean carefree, and “heavy-hearted” to mean sad. If your heart was heavier than the feather then it was eaten by the demon Ammit, the Destroyer. Ammit had the head of a crocodile, the shoulders of a lion and the rump of a hippopotamus. These were all frightening animals for the Egyptians. Thoth, god of wisdom and writing, stands by to record what happens.

Equal Opportunity

Kings were not only males, and unlike in modern monarchies, the ruler of ancient Egypt, whether male or female, was always called a king. In fact, Egypt had some very noteworthy female rulers such as Hatshepsut and others.

In ancient (Paranoiac) Egypt, the pinnacle of Egyptian society, and indeed of religion, was the king. Below him were the layers of the educated bureaucracy, which consisted of nobles, priests and civil servants, and under them were the great mass of common people, usually living very poor, agricultural based lives.

“Pharaoh” – Origin Of The Word Pharaoh

Today: “Pharaoh.” The term “per-aa” means “great house” and developed via the Greek, into the word we now use today. “Per-aa” was originally used to describe the royal court or the state itself, in the sense that the “great house” was the entity responsible for the taxation of the lesser houses (“perw”), which were the temple lands and private estates. From the late 18th Dynasty and onwards, “per-aa” had begun to be used to refer to the actual king himself.

The True OG – Djer

Djer, whose name may have meant “Horus who Succors,” is said to have reigned for 57 years. Nine years from his reign are recorded on the main Cairo fragment of the royal annals, describing the royal progress, or the “following of Horus,” the fashioning and dedication of cult statues, and an expedition to Western Asia. These were the first records of military expeditions outside of the Two Lands. Forces were sent east into Sinai and perhaps beyond. The annals refer to one regal year being called “The Year of Smiting the Land of the Stjt, a word later referring perhaps to Syria-Palestine.

The sciences may have flourished at this time, because Djer was remembered later on as a great physician. Manetho claims that Djer wrote on anatomy and treatment of diseases in circulation 3,000 years after his death. One of his prescriptions was for hair strengthening.

Pharaoh Amenhotep IV – The Misunderstood Akhenaton


In the 14th century BC the Egyptian pharaoh Amenhotep IV undertook a religious reform by displacing all the traditional deities with the sun god Aton. In the god’s honor, the pharaoh changed his name to Akhenaton, which means “It is well with Aton.” Akhenaton (also Ikhnaton) ruled from 1379 to 1362 BC. His queen, Nefertiti (also Nofretete), was one of the most famous women in Egyptian history. On his death, he was succeeded by the boy-king Tutankhamen, the discovery of whose tomb in 1922 was an archaeological sensation. Akhenaton’s reform was one of the earliest attempts to enforce monotheism, the belief in one god. Images and inscriptions of other gods were all removed. To further enforce his views, Akhenaton moved the country’s capital from Thebes to a site 200 miles (300 kilometers) north, which he called Akhenaton (now called Tell el Amarna). Akhenaton’s reforms, and the artistic and literary revival that accompanied them, did not survive for long. So much of his time was devoted to religion that the powerful Egyptian Empire began to disintegrate. This, combined with the opposition of the priests of the displaced gods, worked to undermine the new religion. After Akhenaton’s death the capital was moved back to Thebes and the former gods restored

Egyptian Museum in Cairo – King Tut

The most famous Egyptian pharaoh today is, without doubt, Tutankhamen. The boy king died in his late teens and remained at rest in Egypt’s Valley of the Kings for over 3,300 years.

He was only about 18 years old when he died, and as a pharaoh of Egypt he had no great claim to fame. Tutankhamen (originally Tutankhamen) owes his place in history mostly to the discovery of his tomb completely intact and not violated by grave robbers in 1922. The remarkable artifacts from the tomb, including the beautiful golden mask, are on display at the Egyptian Museum in Cairo. Tutankhamen was possibly the son of Amenhotep III, an earlier 18th-dynasty king, and his wife Tiy. Tutankhamen became king after the death of Akhenaton the religious reformer who died in 1362 BC. He married Akhenaton’s third daughter to solidify his claim to the throne. During most of his rule he resided at ancient Memphis, near present-day Cairo.

The Scepter or Staff

A scepter or staff is one of the most ancient symbols of authority. The hieroglyph for “nobleman” or “official” shows a man carrying a long staff of office in front of him. A grave found at the Predynastic site of el-Omari in Lower Egypt contained the skeleton of a man buried with a wooden staff, and a fragmentary wooden staff, carved to resemble a bundle of reeds, was found in an early First Dynasty mastaba at Saqqara.

An actual example of a royal scepter, purely ceremonial in purpose, was discovered by Flinders Petrie in one of the chambers of Khasekhemwy’s tomb at Abydos. The scepter was fashioned from polished sard and thick gold bands, all held together by a copper rod.

Find out all about Mark A Cella Egyptian archeology, then visit http://markacellasegypt.blog.com to learn more about Mark A Cella and his work.

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Five Great Ideas For A Stay At Home Vacation

Thursday, September 2nd, 2010

Many of us look forward to our vacations so we can relax and enjoy time with the family. In days past, many of us traveled to enjoy our time off, but with the state of the economy, it’s so costly that it may not be feasible anymore. Why not consider a staycation instead of going on vacation?

You’ll be amazed at how much fun you can have during a “renovation staycation.” Pick one room to make over completely and go to work with paint, polish up fixtures, and rearrange furniture. Try turning your bedroom into a romantic retreat by adding inexpensive touches like fuzzy pillows and cashmere throws. Updating lampshades and minor accessories can really make a world of difference in your decor.

Get out and explore a museum, library or local art gallery for a day of culture. Check out historic sites near your town and investigate what it is that makes your city or state special. New Jersey is the “Garden State,” and Missouri is the “Show me State,” so go to the bookstore and find out why this is so. Not only will you learn something about your state, you’ll have fun doing research as you do.

During your week off, at least one day should be considered total “you-time.” Get self-indulgent for once and hit a day spa, and while you’re there, get a manicure and pedicure. Since you’re off the clock, how about a nice deep-tissue massage to really relax you? Consider getting your hair done in a totally new style, perhaps even changing the color. A bold gesture, if you’re up for it, is to try out a henna tattoo.

Try a theme for each night of the week. On “picture day,” you can see a movie, take pictures of the sunset, and then rent a movie for later on that night. On “animal day,” you might consider visiting a zoo or local farm and then watching animal shows on television. Perhaps you could go root for a local baseball team on “sports day,” then watch “Field of Dreams” later on at home.

Try to get outside if the weather allows, perhaps hiking or camping. These are great ways to soak up the beauty of nature while also getting in some exercise time. If you can convince your friends to camp out with you without all of their usual electronic devices, such as cell phones, portable games, and PDAs, you can enjoy a night under the stars like they did in the old days.

So don’t let a lack of funds stop you from having a great time during your vacation. There’s always a way to find interesting and exciting places in your town without spending a fortune. With a little bit of ingenuity and a willing spirit, you can find fun wherever you go, and enjoy a staycation instead.  

Ellen Parsons has written dozens of articles on accredited online colleges and online universities for mid-career professionals.

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