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Glorified for centuries with characters such as Robin Hood and Butch Cassidy, bank robbers are often portrayed as a more refined class of criminal and often romanticized in movies and novels- perhaps a bit brainier – certainly more intriguing. Here are the top 10 bank robbers of the 21st century: 10. The Agricultural Bank of [...]
Posted by Natalie Jaro on Friday, February 17, 2012 at 12:01 am
Filed under Crime · Tagged Agricultural Bank of China, Agricultural Bank of China Robbery, Antwerp Diamond Center, Antwerp police, artist, Baghdad, bank, bank accounts, bank managers, bank notes, Bank of Ireland, Bank of Ireland Robbery, bank robberies, bank robbers, bank robbery, bank robbing bravado, bank vault, Belfast, Belgium, brazil, Britain, Butch Cassidy, cab driver, car saleswoman, Central Bank of Iraq, china, depot manager, Donoghue, Dublin, Fortaleza, Graff Diamonds robbery, Great Brinks Robbery, Harry Winston, high-tech gadgetry, Ireland, Kent, London, Lufthansa heist, manager, manager of the depot, Northern Bank, northern ireland, Paris, Person Communication and Meetings, Qusay, robbery, Saddam Hussein, Securitas, Securitas Depot, Securitas depot robbery, security chief, security systems, Sumitomo Bank, The Securitas Depot, United Kingdom, United States, West Indies
The image of the knight holds a particular fascination in the modern imagination as the embodiment of the independent warrior, privileged member of society, romantic adventurer, backbone of medieval armies, and a station notionally accessible by the lowest classes through dutiful service and hard work. He is at once the hero and the underdog, with [...]
Posted by Shell Harris on Wednesday, November 2, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under History · Tagged archbishop, author, Baldwin, Cambridge University, Canterbury, Castile, Chivalric order, Chivalry, Clement V, Cyprus, egypt, Essex Corp, Ethics, Fair Maid, field commander, France, Galahad, great leader, greatest knight, Henry II, Henry III, Hungary, Jacques de Molay, Jerusalem, Jew, Knights, Knights of the Round Table, Knox Robinson Publishing, Louis VII, Middle Ages, military leader, Palestine, Paris, Rodrigo Díaz, Virtue, wales, Warrior code
Isn’t it scary how many people don’t know if Europe is a country or a continent? Wow… What kind of expectations should we have from the poor, ignorant people if even the president called Europe a country?! Now, let’s give the man the benefit of the doubt. Maybe he wanted to say “countries like in [...]
Posted by Timeea on Tuesday, September 13, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under Travel · Tagged Aeolian Islands, Agenor, Alexandre Gustave Eiffel, Asia, brazil, British Columbia, canada, Central Intelligence Agency, china, Church of St. Tysilio, craftsman, Decade Volcanoes, Eiffel Tower, engineer, Etna, Europa, Europe, Europe's Capital, European Union, Finland, France, Frédéric Bartholdi, G20 nations, geography, Geology, Iceland, Ioan Stan Patras, Ireland, Istanbul, Italy, Kenneth J. Hsu, King, king of Tyre, Mary's Church, Mediterranean, Mediterranean Sea, Merry Cemetery, Mount Etna, Mount Vesuvius, Napoleon Bonaparte, New Zealand, Paris, Poland, president, Princess, REpublic of Ireland, Rob Butler, Romania, Russia, Sicily, Statue of Liberty, steel framework, Strait of Bosphorus, Stratovolcanoes, Turkey, United Kingdom, United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization, United States, United States of America, Vatican City, volcano, Volcanoes of Italy, Volcanology, wales
France is the home of fine wine, great cheese and Gallic humor where a restaurant chef is as likely to chase you out of a restaurant for asking for ketchup as he is to feed you cordon bleu cuisine. Notoriously fickle, with a language that has a sexy accent but sounds like someone is speaking [...]
Posted by Shell Harris on Thursday, June 16, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under Travel · Tagged Alps, Bayeux, Bayeux Tapestry, Besançon, California, Cannes, Cathedral of Our Lady, Easter, Eiffel Tower, Europe, Fortress Europe, France, French Riviera, geography, Hall of Mirrors, Hitler, hospitality_Recreation, Karl Hindle, Louvre, Lyon, Monaco, Normandy Beaches, Normandy coast, Palace of Versailles, Paris, Pyrenees, restaurant chef, River Dordogne, Rocamadour, Seine, Spain, the Cannes Film Festival, The Hunchback of Notre Dame, The Louvre, United Kingdom, United States, Versailles, Victor Hugo, Vinci, VINCI S.A.
Sometimes words can be more powerful than actions and when spoken by great orators, they inspire us to greatness and connect us to the world around us. These are the greatest speeches ever spoken; a collection of messages from some of the greatest and most notable orators in history. 10. Socrates “Apology” The Day: 399 [...]
Posted by Loni Perry on Tuesday, April 5, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under History, People · Tagged abraham lincoln, African National Congress, after the Battle, alabama, America, Athens, Battle of Britain, Bombay, Britain, Commonwealth Day, Congress, D.C., Declaration of Independence, Edward Everett, Energy, Essex, Europe, France, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, General, Gettysburg, Gettysburg Address, Governor, great teacher, Greater London, greatest speeches, greatest speeches of all time, greece, Gregory Peck, Hitler, House of Commons, Human Interest, Humanities, I Have a Dream, India, Indian Congress, Japan, Jesus Christ, john f kennedy, judge, King, lawyer, lieutenant general, Lincoln Memorial, London, Loni Perry, Maharashtra, Mahatma Gandhi, Maria W. Stewart, Martin Luther King, Mary Queen, Mumbai, nelson mandela, North and South, Paris, PEARL HARBOR, Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania in the American Civil War, Pollsmoor Prison, president, President of the United States, Pretoria Supreme Court, prince, Public speaking, queen, Rhetoric, Robben Island, Shall and will, Soldiers’ National Cemetery, South Africa, Spain, Speeches, Ten Commandments, the Brits, United Kingdom, United States, United States of America, Washington, winston churchill
It is a fact that literally thousands of people disappear or go missing every year in this country alone; some of these are likely well-covered up homicides, but most are voluntary—either teenage runaways or people who just want to start over again—with a few as yet undiscovered suicides thrown in for good measure. However, there [...]
Posted by Jeff Danelek on Thursday, March 24, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under Bizarre, Crime, People · Tagged active head, amelia earhart, America, archaeologist, Asia, Australia, author, biplane, Boeing, Boeing 727, brazil, Budapest, cement overcoat, Charles Lindbergh, Charles Nungesser, Christmas, Coast Guard, Colorado, Columbia river, Crater, Cultural anthropology, D.B. Cooper, Denver, Detroit, diplomat, Disappeared people, Electra, English Channel, Europe, France, François Coli, Fred Noonan, Giant’s Stadium, Glenn Miller, good judge, GPS, Guinea, Harold Holt, head of state, Howland Island, jazz musician, Jeff Danelek, jimmy hoffa, John Cabot, joseph force crater, judge, Judge Crater, Knowledge, Machus Red Fox Restaurant, Maine, Marshal, Marshal Islands, mysterious disappearances, New, New Jersey, New York, New York Atlantic, Newfoundland, North America, Oskar Schindler, Paris, percy fawcett, president, Prime Minister, Raleigh Rimmell, Raoul Wallenberg, Rio de Janeiro, Sally Lou Ritz, Supreme Court, Sweden, Swedish people, The Boeing Company, Tony Jack, Tony Pro, Unexplained disappearances, union leader, United Kingdom, United States, USD
Mardi Gras in New Orleans isn’t just a reason for locals and tourists alike to party in the streets. The carnival season is surrounded by mystery, secrets and traditions that go back hundreds of years. From the colors of the costumes, to the riders on the floats to King Cake, everything that takes place during [...]
Posted by Shell Harris on Thursday, March 3, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under Holidays, Travel · Tagged Alvin Sharpe, America, Angela Colley, Cake, Captain, Carnivals, Doubloon, France, Human Interest, King, King and Queen, King cake, Krewe, local painter, Louisiana, Mardi Gras, Mardi Gras Day, Mardi Gras in the United States, Mardi gras throws, New Orleans, New Orleans Mardi Gras, Parades, Paris, queen and a king, Rex, spy, Street culture, Zulu (Golden Nuggets)
World War I will be remembered as one of the bloodiest wars in human history. Millions of soldiers died on both sides, and whole generations of young men were wiped out. Armies were bogged down in impenetrable trenches, resulting in thousands dying in futile assaults against fortified enemies. The war also introduced new and terrible [...]
Posted by Shell Harris on Friday, January 28, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under History · Tagged Allied, Arras, Australia, Austria, Battle of Amiens, Battle of Arras, Battle of Passchendaele, Battle of the Somme, Battle of Verdun, Belgium, Belgrade, Belgrade,Serbia, Britain, British Army, Canadian Corps, commander, David Lloyd George, Douglas Haig, Erich Ludendorff, Europe, Ferdinand Foch, France, Gavrilo Princep, General, German Eight Army, German Second Army, Germans, Germany, Hundred Days Offensive, Hungary, Justin Jurek, Kosovo, Marnes river, Marshal, massive trench networks, miles, New Zealand, New Zealand Army Corps, Ottoman army, Paris, Paris,France, Passchendaele, Politics, Prime Minister, Russia, Russian army, Second Battle of the Marne, Serbia, Serbian army, Somme, Spring Offensive, supreme commander, Turkey, United Kingdom, United States, Verdun, War_Conflict, Western Front, winston churchill, world war i
During the late 1940s and throughout the 1950s, Albert Camus was one of the leading figures in French literature and philosophy, garnering the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1957 ”for his important literary production, which with clear-sighted earnestness illuminates the problems of the human conscience in our times”. In recent years, Camus’s novels The Stranger and The Plague have become the [...]
Posted by Shell Harris on Friday, January 21, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under Literature, People · Tagged Absurdism, albert camus, Algeria, Algiers, Algiers,Algiers Dairas,Algeria, Amsterdam, Amsterdam,North Holland,Netherlands, artist, At Combat, bartender, Bernard Rieux, Camus, car crash, co-founder and writer, Combat Writings, dim-witted black-market dealer, essayist and a novelist, Europe, Existentialism, existentialism and veteran film critic, Existentialists, France, franz kafka, french, French Communist Party, Fyodor Dostoevsky, great works by Albert Camus, great works by Camus, Hiroshima, Hiroshima,Hiroshima Prefecture,Japan, Jean Tarrou, Jean-Paul Sartre, Jonas or the Artist at Work, Joseph Grand, journalist, Literature, Notebooks 1935-1959, novelist, overly-zealous government clerk, painter, Paris, Paris,France, Philosophical novels, Philosophy, Reflections on the Guillotine, RottenTomatoes, salesman, Sam Dot, teacher, The Adulterous Woman, The Battle of Algiers, The Fall, The Guest, The Myth of Sisyphus, The Plague, The Stranger, the Underground, University of Algiers
How does a dance craze happen? It always begins with the music, of course. The tune sticks with you long after the song is over; the sort of tune that makes it almost impossible to sit still. Pare a catchy tune with choreography so simple that a preschooler could follow it, and you’ve got a [...]
Posted by Natalie Jaro on Monday, November 22, 2010 at 12:01 am
Filed under History, Misc · Tagged accordion player, Argentina, Austria, Ballroom dance, Britain, Buenos Aires, Burger King, Burger King Gida Sanayi ve Ticaret Ltd. Sti., Caribbean, Charleston, Chubby Checker, cuba, dance, Dances, Energy, Entertainment, Europe, Flamenco dance teacher, France, Hokey Cokey, Hokey Pokey, Hustle, Idaho, Indies, island of Trinidad, James P. Johnson, Jimmy Kennedy, Larry LaPrise, Line dance, Montevideo, Montevideo Department, New York, New York City, Novelty and fad dances, Paris, Ram Trio, Saturday Night Fever, Social dance, songwriter, Soul City Symphony, South Carolina, Spain, Stanley Mills, Sun Valley, Tango, Trinidad, Twist, United Kingdom, United States, Uruguay, Van McCoy, Vienna, Werner Thomas, West Africa, West Indies