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Kitchen Interior (looking up)




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Franklin Street & Twiggs Street, looking east, decorated for Christmas




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Franklin Street & Twiggs Street, looking south, decorated for Christmas




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Looking South Over Pinels Sound West Coast Florida 12 Feb 77




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General View Of Parade Ground From Terreplein Fort Jefferson Dry Tortugas Oct 1956 Looking Northeast




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General View Of Parade Ground From Terreplein Looking South Fort Jefferson Dry Tortugas Oct 1956




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Looking Left From Moat Bridge Fort Jefferson Dry Tortugas Oct 1956




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Looking out Sally port Fort Jefferson Dry Tortugas Oct 1956




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Top of Level 1 Looking for South Wall




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Science confirms it: Websites really do all look the same

We studied 10,000 websites and found that their design has become more uniform over time.




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Looking Forward to 2012

We're two weeks into the New Year, so if you haven't quite got round to joining the gym or learning a language yet, why not make it your resolution to read one of these great new books from Aurum:

The Austerity Olympics by Janie Hampton

It can't possibly have escaped anyone's notice that London's Olympic year has finally arrived. But while we're getting caught up in this summer's excitement, 2012 will also be a time to look back to when Britain last hosted the Games.

The London Olympics of 1948 were a vastly different occasion to this year's extravaganza. With the Blitz fresh in the city's memory and rationing still in force, the Games were organised for less than one hundredth of a per cent of 2012's massive budget. Janie Hampton's The Austerity Olympics is a vivid account of the Olympic Games of the past. With tales of athletes being ferried to events on double-decker buses and sewing their own kit in makeshift accommodation, the book depicts a world that is far removed from the Games of 2012. It will be a fascinating read for Olympic fanatics and sceptics alike.

Interviews with some of the athletes who competed in 1948 can be read in Kate Youde's fascinating article for the Independent here.

"[Hampton] has an illuminating sense of detail, and her book tells a story that goes beyond that of a sporting event - a story of innocence, hope and pride." The Daily Telegraph

"Hampton's excellent book should be compulsory reading for everyone involved in the 2012 London Olympics." Daily Mail Critics' Choice

Re-issued: April 2012
Format: Paperback, 368 pages
Price: £8.99

The previous edition of The Austerity Olympics is available to buy here.


Banksy: The Man Behind the Wall by Will Ellsworth-Jones

From his home city of Bristol to Los Angeles, New York and London, Banksy's exhibitions have attracted huge audiences. New works of graffiti go viral almost instantly, and such is the commercial value of his work that people have hacked whole walls from buildings because they bear his trademark stencilled designs.

But how much do we really know about this notoriously secretive artist? How has he become the phenomenal success that he is today, and how does he protect his anonymity under the glare of worldwide fame? In Banksy: The Man Behind the Wall, Will Ellsworth-Jones pieces together his subject's life and builds a picture of the world in which he operates. Incorporating interviews with friends and enemies, those who knew him in his early, unnoticed days and those who have watched him come to terms with his new-found fame, this is a book that gets to the very heart of who Banksy is and what his life's work adds up to.

Banksy: The Man Behind the Wall is released in March. In the meantime, you can see a few of his best works at his official website.

Coming: March 2012
Format: Hardback, 320pp
Price: £20


Just Boris: The Irresistible Rise of a Political Celebrity by Sonia Purnell

In May, Londoners will go to the polls to choose their next mayor. The question on the minds of many will be whether the capital keeps Boris Johnson or ends his four-year spell at City Hall. Speculation that he has one eye on Downing Street continues to bubble to the surface, but one thing remains certain: Johnson is Britain's most recognisable and comically self-deprecating politician. He has become notorious for his gaffes and attracted controversy with his candid manner, but has climbed to one of Britain's highest political offices nonetheless.

As a former colleague of Johnson's at the Daily Telegraph, Sonia Purnell holds a unique vantage point over the Mayor of London's remarkable career. In Just Boris, she examines how the archetypal old Etonian came to be a Man of the People capable of charming London; how a shy young boy from a broken home became one of our most distinctive political figures; and how the Johnson family has built a media and political dynasty.

The first comprehensive account of his life and career, Just Boris unravels a political enigma and asks whether the man who has made his mark on London has what it takes to be Prime Minister.

You can read Carole Cadwalladr's review of Just Boris for the Guardian here.

"Sonia Purnell must have had huge fun writing this wonderful book. The only person who won't be amused is Boris himself." Michael Crick

"Future biographers will always be in her debt. Purnell has accumulated a wealth of previously unknown detail." Andrew Grimson, The Spectator

Coming: March 2012
Format: Paperback, 464 pages
Price: £8.99

Just Boris is available to buy in hardback here.






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Does Arvind Swamy look like MGR? VOTE!

The makers of the film Thalaivi introduced one of its stellar characters, Tamil Nadu's former chief minister MGR, on his 103rd birth anniversary on January 17.




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Does Kajal Aggarwal's wax statue look like her? VOTE!

Kajal Aggarwal is the first South Indian actress to get her own wax statue at Madame Tussauds, Singapore.





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Does Ananya look good with Vijay Deverakonda? VOTE!

Ananya Pandey has bagged a role opposite the Arjun Reddy hero in his next film, directed by Puri Jagannadh.




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Health disparities in allergic diseases: an evidence-based look at causes, conditions, and outcomes / Mahboobeh Mahdavinia, editor

Online Resource




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Here's looking at you, grid

It is in the modern era that this book loses its lapidary elegance




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[ASAP] An Outlook on Low-Volume-Change Lithium Metal Anodes for Long-Life Batteries

ACS Central Science
DOI: 10.1021/acscentsci.0c00351




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Daimler India looks to replicate trucks business success in buses

Daimler's bus plant located in Oragadam, near Chennai is coming up at an investment of Rs 424 crore.




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Taking a wider look at tau modifications

Semisynthesis aids study of posttranslational modifications to key Alzheimer’s protein




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Mini mass specs are still looking for an audience

Decades in the making, miniature mass spectrometers still face technical hurdles to wider commercial adoption




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Looking to nature for new sunscreens

A growing group of researchers believes photoprotective compounds from algae and other organisms could soothe consumers’ concerns




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Index Outlook | Sensex, Nifty 50 reverse from key resistance levels

Sensex, Nifty 50 have fallen sharply and hover above respective key support; stay alert




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Hyundai Venue looks to conquer the urban jungle

'Will the Hyundai Venue be the next urban SUV to take the Indian market by storm? Possibly.'The only chink in the armour -- a minor one though -- is that the Venue, while spruced up for its weight class, doesn't look breathtakingly different from the other players in this crowded category,' says Pavan Lall.




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Green Buildings and Sustainable Engineering: Proceedings of GBSE 2019 / edited by Harald Drück, Jyotirmay Mathur, Varghese Panthalookaran, V. M. Sreekumar

Online Resource




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Don’t Look Away: Why Ahmaud Arbery’s Tragedy Must Be Addressed Head On

The unfortunate truth is that even in our ability to retreat into ignorance, we betray the disparity in our experiences and the systemic injustice in our culture.

For many in America, responding to the seemingly-endless shootings of African Americans has become a horrific form of muscle memory. After yet another tragedy like the shooting of Ahmaud Arbery occurs, we see similar patterns: an initial burst of reporting, followed quickly by social media commentary, followed by think-pieces across various platforms, followed by social media commentary on the think-pieces.

Within a week, however, the entire matter is tied up nicely and everyone is able to move on. Most of us forget as we return to being engrossed in our lives, only to be thrust back into this cycle when another new shooting is jarring enough to penetrate the blaring noise of our daily news-cycle.

The fact that Arbery was killed in February and many didn’t know until May speaks to our dependence upon images to incite response—a dependency that, as many have pointed out, dehumanizes victims and establishes a bar of proof we don’t demand of others.

Moreover, the fact that only images push us to take seriously these stories underlines the frenetic nature of our media landscape. So few stories not drenched in the political and culture wars theming our day are able to rise above the chaos to capture our attention. That many are feeling oversaturated and digitally burned out during our current crisis has only exacerbated this problem of ignorance.

The unfortunate truth is that even in our ability to retreat into ignorance, we betray the disparity in our experiences and the systemic injustice in our culture. While this story (despite being so relevant and discussed currently) will fade for most of us, for others this story is their experience. They carry it with them when they wonder if it is safe to go for runs in ...

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For Good Mothering Advice, Skip the Mommy Blogs and Look to Christ

Parenting children requires a rich understanding of God’s nature.

Mothers today face an onslaught of mixed messages about how best to parent in the 21st century. Podcasts, blogs, and books on mommy-ing abound, but many of them indulge regularly in shallow parenting advice and fallacies about excessive self-care or “me-time.”

In the midst of the coronavirus quarantine, moms on social media often advise diametrically opposed strategies: Take regular mental health breaks while your children gorge on Netflix, or schedule out every minute of children’s at-home education so they don’t fall behind in productivity. The message seems to be either “love yourself first” or “pour all your energy into your children’s future.”

Neither side answers the more important question: How do we mother like Jesus Christ during this particular cultural moment? In the words of an overused adage, “What would Jesus do?”

In Motherhood: A Confession, Natalie Carnes, associate professor of theology at Baylor University, attempts to answer this question by sharing her personal experience of raising three daughters. She follows the structure and style of Augustine’s autobiography, Confessions, and elevates the conversation about motherhood from the self-centered to the spiritual without ever losing touch with the beauty of the ordinary. Part memoir and part theological study, Motherhood: A Confession explores “how motherhood, infancy, and children disclose what it means to be human in relation to the divine.”

Carnes’s core argument is that mothering imitates God. We birth forth disciples, hand down tradition, and grow our children into the church. By knowing the maternal attributes of God, we better mother our own children, and we also ...

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Haryana forms two-member panel to look into teachers’ issue



  • DO NOT USE Punjab and Haryana
  • India

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Police look for woman in Punjab shooter Sippy Sidhu’s murder



  • DO NOT USE Punjab and Haryana
  • India

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Australian Grand Prix: Mercedes look to burst Ferrari’s bubble in Melbourne




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Mercedes look more dominant than ever




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Formula 1: Valtteri Bottas looking to the man in the mirror after British Grand Prix




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Subramanian Swamy denies taking swipe at Arun Jaitley, says he looks ‘very smart’ in a coat




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WhatsApp Uncle is lost looking for citizenship papers




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Anoushka Shankar: ‘I look inwards a lot more than I used to’




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A young dancer takes a hard look at Bharatanatyam’s burden of caste




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Down in Jungleland: A look into Monarch butterflies’s survival tactics




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Why we must not look down on creatures that clear the mess around us




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How cooking for herself changed one home cook’s outlook on food




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After Tokyo move, swimming looks for new worlds dates




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Augusta National: Overlooked Brooks Koepka pops up on Green Jacket radar with 66




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Golf looks to a Tiger Boom 2.0




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Farm crisis: CM Devendra Fadnavis looks to Israel for help, invites team to Yavatmal, Osmanabad



  • DO NOT USE Maharashtra
  • India

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‘There is no plan to look for allies for a pre-poll tie-up’




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There’ll always be factors pulling you down but I look forward, not behind: Rohit Sharma




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Faridkot: Govt promises panel to look into demands, farmers call of dharna after 33 days





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Amartya Sen writes: Overcoming a pandemic may look like fighting a war, but the real need is far from that