Archive for September, 2008

Proscenium

Tuesday, September 30th, 2008

The interior of the Auditorium Building in <a href=Chicago built in 1887. The arch around the stage is a proscenium.” src=”http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/4/4b/Auditorium_building_Chicago_interior.jpg/300px-Auditorium_building_Chicago_interior.jpg” width=”300″ height=”262″ border=”0″ class=”thumbimage” />


The interior of the Auditorium Building in Chicago built in 1887. The arch around the stage is a proscenium.

A Proscenium theatre is a theatre space whose primary feature is a large archway (the proscenium arch) at or near the front of the stage, through which the audience views the play. The audience directly faces the stage, which is typically raised several feet above front row audience level. The main stage is the space behind the proscenium arch, often marked by a curtain which can be lowered or drawn closed. The space in front of the curtain is called the “apron”. The areas obscured by the proscenium arch and any curtains serving the same purpose (often called legs or tormentors) are called the wings. Any space not viewable to the audiences is collectively referred to as offstage. Proscenium stages range in size from small enclosures to several stories tall. In general practice, a theatre space is referred to as a “proscenium” any time the audience directly faces the stage, with no audience on any other side, even if there is not a formal proscenium arch over the stage. Because of the somewhat incongruous nature of a theatre called a proscenium theater without a proscenium arch, these theatres are often referred to as “end-on” theater spaces.

Contents

  • 1 Origin
  • 2 Function
  • 3 Other forms of theater staging
  • 4 See also
  • 5 External links

Origin

A Greek proscenium portraying a three-doored temple facade, posited in the early 20th century as a possible origin for the design of the templon.


A Greek proscenium portraying a three-doored temple facade, posited in the early 20th century as a possible origin for the design of the templon.

The term has a complex origin and originally meant something very different. It derives from the Greek proskenion, meaning “in front of the scene”. The scene was a building with doors that served as the backdrop in Ancient Greek theater. The proskenion was a raised stage in front of the scene which appeared in the Hellenistic era and in Roman theater; it served simply to make the actors higher to aid visibility, and to separate them from the chorus. Ancient theaters thus lacked the modern proscenium arch. It was also absent from Renaissance theaters.

The proscenium arch developed in seventeenth century theaters, alongside the development of illusionist scenery. This design has been the most common for theater spaces in the 18th, 19th, and 20th centuries in Western theater.

Function

Proscenium of the Teatro Olimpico by Andrea Palladio, Vicenza, Italy


Proscenium of the Teatro Olimpico by Andrea Palladio, Vicenza, Italy

The proscenium arch creates a “window” around the scenery and actors. The advantages are that it gives everyone in the audience a good view because the actors need only focus on one direction rather than continually moving around the stage to give a good view from all sides. A proscenium theater layout also simplifies the hiding and obscuring of objects from the audience’s view (sets, actors not currently performing, and theater technology). Anything that is not meant to be seen is simply placed outside the “window” created by the proscenium arch.

The side of the stage that faces the audience is referred to as the “fourth wall”. The phrase “breaking the proscenium” refers to when the actor addresses the audience directly as part of the dramatic production (is also known as breaking the fourth wall). The phrase can also refer to when a member of the cast or crew walks onto the stage or into the house when there is an audience inside, also breaking the fourth wall.

Proscenium theatres have fallen out of favor in some theater circles because they perpetuate the fourth wall concept. The staging in proscenium theatres often implies that the characters performing on stage are doing so in a four-walled environment, with the “wall” facing the audience being invisible. Many modern theatres attempt to do away with the fourth wall concept and so are instead designed with a thrust stage that projects out of the proscenium arch and “reaches” into the audience (technically, this can still be referred to as a proscenium theater because it still contains a proscenium arch, however the term thrust stage is more specific and more widely used).

Other forms of theater staging

  • Alley Theater: The stage is surrounded on two sides by the audience.
  • Thrust: The stage is surrounded on three sides (or 270?) by audience. Can be modification of proscenium staging. Sometimes known as “Three Quarter Round”.
  • Theater in the round: The stage is surrounded by audience on all sides.
  • Environmental theater: The stage and audience either blend together, or are in numerous or oddly shaped sections. Includes any form of staging that is not easily classifiable under the above categories.
  • Black box theatre: The black box theater is a relatively recent innovation consisting of a large square room with black walls and a flat floor. The seating is typically composed of loose chairs on platforms, which can be easily moved or removed to allow the entire space to be adapted to the artistic elements of a production.
  • Studio Theatre Layout: Not technically a form of staging, rather a theater that can be reconfigured to accommodate many forms of staging.

See also

Wikimedia Commons has media related to:
Proscenium

  • Safety curtain
  • Templon

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Cyclazocine

Tuesday, September 30th, 2008

Cyclazocine
Systematic (IUPAC) name
 ?
Identifiers
CAS number  ?
ATC code  ?
PubChem 19143
Chemical data
Formula C18H25NO 
Mol. mass 271.397 g/mol
Pharmacokinetic data
Bioavailability  ?
Metabolism  ?
Half life  ?
Excretion  ?
Therapeutic considerations
Pregnancy cat.

?

Legal status
Routes  ?

Cyclazocine is a mixed opiate agonist-antagonist related to dezocine, pentazocine and phenazocine. This family of opioid drugs is called the benzomorphans or benzazocines.

Use

Research into the use of cyclazocine for the treatment of Bipolar patients with depression was undertaken by Fink and colleagues (1970). It showed that 8 out of 10 patients experienced moderate improvement.

Research during the 1960s and 1970s into the possible use of cyclazocine for management of pain, and later for assisting treatment of narcotic addiction was severely hampered by the drug’s psychotomimetic, dysphoric, and hallucinatory effects.

Dosage

Dosages of 1-3mg were administered in the tests

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Margaret Catley-Carlson

Tuesday, September 30th, 2008

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Pentre Ifan

Tuesday, September 30th, 2008

Pentre Ifan Dolmen - side view


Pentre Ifan Dolmen - side view

View of Portal


View of Portal

A possible reconstruction


A possible reconstruction

Pentre Ifan is the name of an ancient manor in the civil parish of Nevern, in North Pembrokeshire, West Wales. It contains the largest and best preserved neolithic dolmen in Wales.

History

The dolmen dates from approximately 3500 B.C. and was used as a communal burial. The existing stones form the portal and main chamber of the tomb, which would originally have been covered with a large stone mound about 36 m long. Some of the stones have been scattered, but at least seven are in their original position. The capstone is 5.1 m in length, and is estimated to weigh 16 tonnes. It is delicately supported by the narrow tips of three uprights. The facade surrounding the portal was built with carefully constructed dry-stone walling.

The dolmen is owned and maintained by Cadw, the Welsh Historic Monuments Agency. The site is well-kept and entrance is free. It is located about 6 km by road from Newport and 17 km from Cardigan.

Notes

  1. ^ Cadw website

Coordinates: and other data for 51°59?55?N 4°46?10?W”>51°59?55?N 4°46?10?W? / ?51.99861, -4.76944

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The Perfect Storm (film)

Monday, September 29th, 2008

The Perfect Storm

The Perfect Storm Theatrical poster
Directed by Wolfgang Petersen
Produced by Gail Katz
Written by Sebastian Junger (book)
William D. Wittliff
Starring George Clooney
Mark Wahlberg
Diane Lane
John C. Reilly
William Fichtner
Music by James Horner
Distributed by Warner Bros.
Release date(s) June 30, 2000 (USA)
Running time 130 minutes
Language English
Budget $120,000,000 (est.)
IMDb profile

The Perfect Storm is a 2000 film adapted from the book of the same title by Sebastian Junger. The film was directed by Wolfgang Petersen and features George Clooney, Mark Wahlberg, William Fichtner, John C. Reilly, Allen Payne, John Hawkes, Diane Lane, Karen Allen and Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio.. The film was released on June 30, 2000 by Warner Bros. Pictures

Contents

  • 1 Plot
  • 2 Cast
  • 3 Reaction
  • 4 See also
  • 5 References
  • 6 External links

Plot

In September 1991, the swordfishing boat Andrea Gail returns to home port in Gloucester, Massachusetts with a poor catch. Desperate for money, the captain convinces his reluctant crew to join him for one more fishing expedition. They head out past their usual fishing grounds, leaving a developing thunderstorm behind them. They find great success at the Flemish Cap, but when their ice machine breaks, the only way to preserve their catch is to hurry back home. However, between the Andrea Gail and Gloucester is a confluence of two powerful weather fronts and a hurricane. The crew struggles to sail through pounding waves and shrieking winds, while friends and family worry and wait for a ship that never comes home.

Cast

Actor Character Role
George Clooney Captain William “Billy” Tyne Captain of the swordfish boat, the Andrea Gail. Tyne is a divorced father of two daughters who is determined to make one last fishing trip before the end of the season to make up for a poor catch.
Mark Wahlberg Robert “Bobby” Shatford The youngest and most inexperienced of the crew of the Andrea Gail. Shatford is the son of Ethel Shatford, the owner of the Crow’s Nest, and boyfriend to Chris Cotter. He reluctantly signs on for one last trip.
Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio Linda Greenlaw A sassy female captain of the Hannah Boden, Linda has romantic ties to Billy Tyne. She is concerned about Billy and his crew going out in what she considers dangerous weather. Linda is the last to speak to the Andrea Gail.
Diane Lane Christina ‘Chris’ Cotter Girlfriend of Bobby Shatford. She spends her time during the last fishing trip decorating an apartment she has rented as a surprise for Bobby. She did not want Bobby to go because of a bad feeling she had about the trip.
John C. Reilly Dale Murphy Called Murph by those who know him. Murph is a veteran fisherman who is divorced with a son with whom he’s very involved. Murphy has an on-going antagonism with David Sullivan.
William Fichtner David Sullivan Called Sully, he signed on for the trip at the last minute when another fisherman declined the position. Sully and Murph do not get along.
Bob Gunton Alexander McAnally III Owner of the Mistral, a yacht caught in the storm.
Karen Allen Melissa Brown Crewmember on the Mistral.
Allen Payne Alfred Pierre One of the crew of the Andrea Gail.
John Hawkes Michael Moran Called Bugsy, he is a member of the Andrea Gail crew who had just met Irene Carell, a woman in whom he was interested.

Reaction

The families of certain crew members sued the producers in federal district court in Florida, claiming that their names were used without their permission, and that facts were changed. The district court held that the defendants’ First Amendment right to freedom of speech barred the suit. The plaintiffs appealed to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit, which could not decide how to interpret the Florida law at issue and certified the question to the Florida Supreme Court. On April 21, 2005, the Florida Supreme Court upheld the district court’s interpretation of Florida law and remanded the case to the 11th Circuit, which then affirmed the district court’s original decision to dismiss the case.

The film holds a 47% approval rating on critic site Rotten Tomatoes.

See also

  • 106th Rescue Wing
  • 129th Rescue Wing
  • Air Force Pararescue
  • 1991 Halloween Nor’easter
  • The Perfect Storm

References

  1. ^ a b Berardinelli, James, The Perfect Storm Film Review - reelviews.net, 2000 (Retrieved on 2007-01-25)
  2. ^ Unger, Howard M. (2002-05-31). “Judge sinks ‘Perfect Storm’ lawsuit”, Sarasota Herald Tribune. Retrieved on 2007-11-06. 

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Philip Henry Kuenen

Monday, September 29th, 2008

Philip Henry Kuenen (July 22, 1902 Dundee - December 17, 1976 Leiden) was a Dutch geologist.

Kuenen spent his earliest youth in Scotland, his father was professor in physics. He studied geology at Leiden University, where he was a pupil of K. Martin and B.G. Escher. He finished his studies in 1925 and then became assistant to Escher. He worked on paleontology and experimental geology.

In 1929-1930 Kuenen participated in the Snellius expedition to the seas surrounding the Sunda Islands of the Dutch East Indies. In 1934 he became lecturer at Groningen University. Because the Dutch government had decided that geology would not be a major subject at Groningen University Kuenen was able to dedicate most of his time to research. Only in 1946 he became a full professor, during the German occupation in World War II the nazis had prevented this because he had British ancestors.

Kuenen is known for his work on marine geology and he published a book on the subject. Some of his other contributions to geology were geochemical calculations about sediments and the water cycle and research on absolute and relative sea level changes, the rounding of sedimentparticles, normal faulting in the continental slope domain and especially turbidites. He studied the latter through experiments as well as in geological outcrops.

In 1970 the Doeglas commission advised the Dutch government to stop all geological research in Groningen, and to concentrate geological research at other universities. Kuenen was a big opponent of this plan but could not prevent it. After a neural attack in 1970, he retired in 1972.

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Kirk, Thomas

Monday, September 29th, 2008

People named Thomas Kirk include:

  • Thomas Kirk (artist), d. 1797
  • Thomas Kirk (botanist), 1828-1898
  • Thomas Kirk, manager of English rock band, Muse.
Disambiguation Notice This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the same personal name. If an article link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article.

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Jak Lauren

Monday, September 29th, 2008


















Jak Lauren

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Jak Lauren is a character in the Deathlands series of novels by James Axler. He is an albino, and is distinguished in the books by his unusual syntax when speaking. He is a young man, in his late teens, and is an extremely capable hunter and warrior. His signature weapon are his leaf bladed throwing knives, of which he has between 8 and 12 hidden on him at all times, and often uses them as thrown weapons or for melee when guns are inappropriate. He also carries a large .357 Magnum that can also fire .38 rounds. Of the main characters in the books he is the most pragmatic survivalist. He comes from the suburb of West Lowellton in Lafayette, Louisiana, where the group first meet him. At the time,he is leading a group of rebels against an extremely sadistic baron known as Tourment. When Ryan and the other’s first met him, and saw just how skillful of a fighter and leader he is, they are surprised to find he is only 14 years old. He is later married to Christian Ballinger, and temporarily leaves the group to settle down Latitude Zero, but tragedy strikes and his wife and daughter are savagely murdered, and he rejoins the group. Rider,Reaper

One of the many weapons in his arsenal is his coat, which has fragments of razor blades sewn into it. More than once in the series an opponent has grabbed Jak only to be cut by the coat.

Jak was not in the first book in the series, Pilgimage to Hell, and was introduced in the third book, Neutron Solstice

In the widely derided Deathlands: Homeward Bound movie from the Sci-Fi Channel, his personality was altered to that of a “savage”.

Retrieved from “http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jak_Lauren”
Categories: Deathlands characters | Fictional hunters | Fictional people with albinism

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Coen River

Monday, September 29th, 2008

The Coen River is situated in the Cape York Peninsula in Queensland (Australia) in 13°37?S, 142°08?E.

The present (1996) Pennefather River (renamed 1894) was originally called the Coen river by Jan Carstenszoon in honour of Jan Pieterszoon Coen, Governor-General of the Dutch East Indies. The present Archer River was probably confused by Matthew Flinders with Carstenszoon’s Coen River. The Coen River is a tributary of the Archer river and was for a time known as the South Coen River.

See also

  • List of rivers of Australia

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Pennock Huey

Monday, September 29th, 2008

Pennock Huey (March 1, 1828) – September 28, 1903) was an officer and cavalry brigade commander in the Union Army during the American Civil War.

Huey was the son of Jacob Huey, a farmer in Chester County, Pennsylvania known locally as “The Squire of Kennett Square”.. He pursued a career as a merchant before war broke out in 1861.

In September 1861, he became captain of Company D of the 8th Pennsylvania Cavalry (89th Pennsylvania Volunteers), serving under the regiment’s colonel, David McMurtrie Gregg. Huey was promoted to major in January 1862. When Gregg became a brigade commander, Huey took command of the regiment and subsequently led it at the Battle of Chancellorsville, serving in the brigade of Thomas Devin. The brigade, including the 8th Pennsylvania, remained with the main body of the army, missing the futile raid George Stoneman led into south central Virginia. Huey’s command became involved in a collision with Confederate infantry, from which it was only possible to extricate his troops by giving the order to; “Draw sabre and charge.” This encounter on a back road, which cost the regiment substantial losses, later was magnified into a full-scale charge for which Cavalry commander Alfred Pleasonton took credit, claiming he had explicitly ordered Major Peter Keenan to go head to head with Jackson’s troops. The charge, during which Keenan was killed, was completely inadvertent; the only way to extricate a column of cavalry from a narrow road thick with Confederate infantry.

Later on the evening of the charge, “Stonewall” Jackson, while out scouting the area for the presence of Union troops, was inadvertently shot by South Carolina troops having mistaken him and his party for Union soldiers.

After his failed raid, Stoneman was removed from command of the Cavalry Corps (ACW) in the Army of the Potomac, being succeeded by Pleasonton. When the corps was reorganized later that month, Gregg took command of the new second division, mostly composed of his old division, the third. This new organization included the 8th Pennsylvania. Huey, meanwhile, had been promoted to colonel of the regiment on June 25, 1863. Huey took command of a brigade under Gregg in time for the Gettysburg Campaign. He was on detached duty during the Battle of Gettysburg protecting supply trains in Maryland, but he participated in the pursuit of the Confederate army. The brigade served under Judson Kilpatrick, not Gregg, during the pursuit.

Huey returned to regimental command for most of the remainder of 1863. He led his regiment under Phillip Sheridan in the opening campaigns of 1864. Huey commanded Gregg’s rear guard during part of the retreat from Trevilian Station. He was captured at the Battle of St. Mary’s Church, June 24, 1864. Paroled on December 9, 1864 at Camp Asylum, Columbia, South Carolina, after imprisonment in that state, Huey resumed his command. He was made a brevet brigadier general in March 1865 and was mustered out with his regiment at Richmond, Virginia, on August 11, 1865.

After the war, Huey married Elizabeth Waln Wistar, daughter of Joseph Wistar of Philadelphia, worked as a merchant and in the canal industry. He wrote his account of the charge at Chancellorsville to reclaim the credit he thought his due, contradicting Pleasonton’s account of the action. Huey died on his farm at the age of 75 and was buried in Philadelphia.

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