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Posted on May 10, 2012 via amagicshow with 16,080 notes
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This is a major turning point in the history of American civil rights. No American president has ever supported a major expansion of civil rights that has not ultimately been adopted by the American people – and I have no doubt that this will be no exception. The march of freedom that has sustained our country since the Revolution of 1776 continues, and no matter what setbacks may occur in a given state, freedom will triumph over fear and equality will prevail over exclusion. Today’s announcement is a testament to the President’s convictions, and it builds on the courageous stands that so many Americans have taken over the years on behalf of equal rights for gay and lesbian Americans, stretching back to the Stonewall Inn in Greenwich Village.
Mayor Bloomberg on President Obama’s support for marriage equality. (via nycgov)Posted on May 10, 2012 via NYC GOV with 362 notes
Source: nycgov
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Posted on May 10, 2012 via Scouting NY with 66 notes
Source: scoutingny
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Posted on May 9, 2012 via I Love Charts with 2,353 notes
Source: ilovecharts
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SCIENCE.
via gemmacorrell (uhh, yeah, that’s me)Posted on May 7, 2012 via Gemma Correll's Drawings of Things. with 2,668 notes
Source: gemmacorrell
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(via ilovecharts)
Posted on May 6, 2012 via I Love Charts with 1,329 notes
Source: gemmacorrell
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A informational chart about how to make one of my favourite things… Coffee.
Posted on May 6, 2012 via I Love Charts with 2,117 notes
Source: graphs.net
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Posted on May 5, 2012 via Old Ads with 22 notes
Source: oldads
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What is a graph, at root? It’s a way of reducing the world, via simple graphic language, to a comprehensible place. But what if the world stubbornly resists this reduction?
Posted on May 5, 2012 via I Love Charts with 168 notes
Source: ilovecharts
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(via nycpast)
Posted on May 4, 2012 via nyc past with 120 notes
Source: a860-nycma.nyc.gov
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And there were political moments, too. In the heat of the first wave of the Occupy movement, I produced this chart, which addressed the inherent unfairness of the alphabet. I passed it out around New York City. Some people took it with a grain of salt; others, with an entire shaker.
Salt, of course, was the source of one of the pieces I created for ILoveCharts that wasn’t exactly a chart. It’s in the book, so I won’t reprint it here. I will only remind you to go out and buy the book, so that you can experience the glory of the chart form in all its rational, irrational, sensible, senseless glory.Posted on May 4, 2012 via I Love Charts with 271 notes
Source: ilovecharts
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A tentative schedule
Courses for next year:
- ITAL 2110 (Intermediate Italian)
- MUS 2510 (Marching Band)
- HIST 3461 (Contemporary Europe)
- SOC 3000 (Development of Sociological Theory)
- SOC 3630: (Juvenile Delinquency)
- SW 3213: (Child Abuse and Neglect)
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This is perhaps my favorite flowchart of all time. I wish I knew who made it. via
Posted on April 30, 2012 via I Love Charts with 15,622 notes
Source: ilovecharts
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The New York City skyline and the Empire State Building on a beautiful, hazy day.
On a hazy day, New York City stretches on indefinitely: infinity sprawling out like a somnolent feline. Clouds cast a bone-white hue on the tops of skyscrapers that jut out of the landscape: their axis-mundi-aspirations propelling them skyward. The day languidly yawns, its heavy eyelids blurring the horizon.
—-Despite growing up in New York City, I hadn’t been to the tops of any of the iconic skyscrapers with observation decks since I was very, very little. The Top of the Rock is an observation deck on the top of Rockefeller Center. It closed in 1986 for renovations and reopened in 2005. When I was younger, I went on a few school trips to Rockefeller Center to go on the NBC Studios tour which was a lot of fun but since it was the late 80s and early 90s, the top was closed to visitors. In recent years, I decided to finally visit the Top of the Rock.
The Top of the Rock is the top of what is also known as the GE Building. It’s an Art Deco skyscraper that is in the center of Rockefeller Center. The GE Building used to be known as the RCA Building until the mid 1980s when GE incorporated RCA and NBC. The building is 850 feet tall (70 stories) and since the address is 30 Rockefeller Center, it is usually referred to as “30 Rock”.
What I find really incredible about the observation decks at Top of the Rock aside from the views is that there is so much room. There are three observation decks in total and all three are designed to resemble the upper decks of a 1930s luxury ocean liner complete with deck chairs. Two of the decks on the the 67th and 69th floors include outdoor terraces which are enclosed in transparent, safety glass. The top deck which is on the 70th floor features a completely open air, unobstructed 360-degree view of New York City and beyond.
The day I went, there were barely any people up on the top deck with me since the weather wasn’t ideal. However, I think it’s often less crowded than the Empire State Building’s observation deck even in beautiful weather. At 850 feet above street level, the view is jaw-dropping and includes complete views of Central Park and the Empire State Building which you can’t really complain about.
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Posted as a request since several people messaged me to ask what my favorite photo of the New York City skyline with the Empire State Building is that I have taken. This would be one of them :).
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View this photo larger and on black on my Google Plus page
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Buy “The Infinite Sprawl - The Empire State Building and the New York City Skyline” Prints here, email me, or ask for help.
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Kiev, Ukraine (by S. Lo)
Posted on April 27, 2012 via All things Europe with 2,415 notes
Source: Flickr / sigfrid









