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  1. @Sally_Bridge Hmm.. just noted now that the share link image thumbnail shows an ad. #WelcomeToTheFuture

  2. We had a a fitness celebrity Joe Wicks visit my local Nonsuch park this morning for a 5k jog/walk. The event attracted a huge turn out and was really successful. It was joyous to see so many join in 🙂 #joewicks #Nonsuchpark

  3. A walk down the river and I came across one of the new sculptures in Kingston. There are apparently 10 Chimp sculptures around the town centre all are by local artists Gillie and Marc.#chimps #sculptures #artforeveryone

  4. A walk down the river and I came across one of the new sculptures in Kingston. There are apparently 10 Chimp sculptures around the town centre all are by local artists Gillie and Marc.#chimps #sculptures #artforeveryone

  5. A walk down the river and I came across one of the new sculptures in Kingston. There are apparently 10 Chimp sculptures around the town centre all are by local artists Gillie and Marc.#chimps #sculptures #artforeveryone

  6. A lovely Sunday morning walk with friends in the park for coffee and lemon drizzle cake. Freddie had to go into the sink as he was filthy but nothing new there! 🐶😊 #Nonsuchpark #dogs

  7. South Bridge Public School; the thread about the ups, downs and uncertain future of an inner-city educational establishment

    It was in the news this weekend that there is the potential forced loss of accommodation for long-sitting community groups and public services from Edinburgh’s South Bridge Resource Centre to make way for a new multi-million pound home for the Edinburgh Festival Fringe Society means that it’s a good time for a thread on the history of what is the former South Bridge Public School itself. This gives us a useful case study of 150 years of inner city social and economic change in the city’s Old Town.

    Scotsman, 9th December 2023.

    South Bridge Public School was opened by Edinburgh School Board on 2nd November 1886, with the Right Hon. Arthur J. Balfour, then the Secretary of State for Scotland, formally cutting the ribbon. It was designed by the Board’s architect, Robert Wilson, in the Collegiate Gothic style then favoured and cost £7,942 to build, with the total cost of the project including land purchase, staffing etc. being £14,500, which was borrowed from the Scotch Education Department. It had an opening roll of 1,170 children (although not all attended at once); at this time the ESB was falling over itself at this time to build schools to meet the demands of the 1872 act which made Education in Scotland compulsory (but not free!) and a booming inner-city population. It was the first Board school to consist solely of classrooms; prior to this a mixture of school rooms and class rooms had been employed, with various innovative systems of partitions to subdivide spaces as required into smaller teaching spaces. Three infant rooms on the ground floor which could be opened together with partitions, with older children on the first floor.

    South Bridge Public School, very much in the collegiate gothic style of the 1870s, but with a modern arrangement of rooms (for 1885) inside

    The Head master was Mr Paterson, who transferred from North Canongate School, the head mistress being Miss Brander (also of that establishment), the first assistant Mr Johnston (Canongate too) and the singing-master, Mr Sneddon. The Board also provided evening classes here under Mr Robert Williamson MA, for those seeking personal advancement but also children who could not attend during the day as they were working. As well as a core curriculum, subjects such as shorthand, drawing, bookkeeping etc. were offered to “young men and lads“. Education at this time was segregated (with separate boys and girls classes, playgrounds and school entrances. If you’ve ever been in one of these old Board schools, you’ll know that there’s a curious double arrangement of internal stairs – this was to keep boys and girls separated when moving around the school). Women and girls were offered similar evening classes at this time at Bruntsfield and Torphicen Street schools, and could also take dressmaking, fancy and plain needlework and cookery.

    As well as keeping boys and girls apart, the architect struggled to accommodate such a large school on a confined site. This had been bought by the ESB off of the Town Council from the site of the town’s Fever Hospital, which was the original Royal Infirmary building and as well as being constrained by space it was north facing (poor for natural lighting) and hemmed in on all sides which was poor for ventilation.

    Comparison (drag the slider) of the 1876 and 1893 OS Town Plans of Edinburgh showing the location of South Bridge School and Infirmaty Street Baths.Reproduced with the permission of the National Library of Scotland

    The school was co-located with the Infirmary Street Public Baths, built at the same time, which were the first such public facility in the city (and the only Victorian public bath in Edinburgh not to survive – its empty shell was later re-purposed as the Dovecot Studios). When the school opened, it was ESB‘s first organised purely on the classroom basis. Prior to this, they had used the schoolroom layout, with a small number of large teaching rooms and classes (more like lecture theatres) overseen by a single teacher with help from assistant teachers and “pupil assistants” drawn from the most able of the older students, with smaller rooms off this large space for separated tuition. But just to be sure, the partitions between the classrooms at South Bridge were sliding to allow the spaces to be combined together for this more traditional style of education.

    The school was built to relieve overcrowding at the new Bristo (Marshall Street), St. Leonards (Forbes Street) and Causewayside public schools. Milton House and Castlehill schools would also be built in the Old Town in the next decade, allowing most of the older, smaller Heriot Trust schools that the Board had inherited to be closed and sold off. An exception was Davie Street which served the Pleasance district that was retained and expanded as a Board school.

    Former Davie Street School, in the distinctive Jacobean style favoured by the Heriot Trust.

    The first Headmaster at South Bridge was Mr Paterson, who transferred from North Canongate school, the headmistress Miss Brander (also of that establishment), the first assistant Mr Johnston (Canongate too) and the singing-master, Mr Sneddon (not from Canongate). The school could not keep up with demand and was enlarged in 1892. In 1905-6 an entirely new school was built next door on Drummond Street. for the infant department, with junior schooling staying at South Bridge. The Board’s architect, John Carfrae, used a Renaissance style as favoured in London and exploited the difference in height between Drummond Street and Infirmary Street to make ita full 3 storeys, for reasons of economy.

    The close proximity of South Bridge (left) and Drummond Street (right) schools and Infirmary Street Baths between them (now the Dovecot Studios).

    In 1907, James Buchanan Tait – aged 13 – received a medal and award for 8 years of perfect attendance at the shool. His older brother William had made it to 9½ years previously and had also received a medal. His sister Marion (11), Robert (9), Christian (7) and Sophia (6) also had perfect attendance at this time. In 1913, his mother recoeved a gold brooch from Dr Shoolbread of the School Board in honour of her eight children’s 60 years total perfect attendance (regarded by the Edinburgh Evening News as a world record). They had also set perfect attendance record at Sunday School and the Good Templar Juvenile lodge. For this, educational publisher George Newnes & Sons of London had presented the family with a crystal clock.

    James Buchanan Tait.

    The need for education continued to grow in the Old Town and Southside, peaking around 1911 when there were 13 primary schools in the district with a total roll of around 10,000 children (for context, now there are 2 – Royal Mile and Preston Street with a combined roll of 430).

    The children of South Bridge came from poor households but were generous. In 1915, they gave concerts raising £27 to sponsor 2 hospital beds in Rouen in France. In 1930 they contributed £20 to the construction of the Simpson Memorial Maternity Pavilion at the Royal Infirmary. In 1943 they contributed £410 for a Wings for Victory wartime savings drive (for reference, a production Spitfire aircraft cost between £9-9,500 at this time). When headmaster Robert H. Tait (no relation to the children with perfect attendance) retired in 1932 after 10 years in charge (and 43 in total teaching), his pupils bought him a walnut writing bureau!. (The teachers presented him with an armchair and the cleaners a smoker’s cabinet).

    The retiral of Robert H. Tait in the school playground, 1932

    At this time, the combined South Bridge / Drummond Street school was the largest primary school in the city, with 1,271 children on the roll and an annual budget of £12,850. The infant head mistress Catherine M. Watson retired in 1936 after 40 years service, 35 at South Bridge / Drummond Street; Miss Margaret Bliss from Leith Links school replaced her. Tait was replaced by William J. S. Little, vice president of the EIS education union in Scotland. He oversaw the institution of a “Continuation School” at South Bridge, where children leaving Primary education but not destined for Secondary or Higher education could take up classes to prepare them for whatever their futures held.

    School leavers at South Bridge School, 1933.

    The school celebrated its 50 year jubilee in 1938, the school installed a wireless set to mark the occasion and collected £20 towards the cost of buying a cinema projector. Headmaster Little was very aware of the socio-economic circumstances faced by the pupils at his school and how they impacted their education and life outcomes. He raised this the Justice of the Peace Court in 1938 when it was discussing the approaches to dealing with delinquency. During WW2, the socio-economic conditions faced by pupils became very apparent. In response a welfare committee – the South Bridge School Care Committee – was established in 1941 by Miss Handasyde of the Edinburgh University Settlement. This was modeled on successful schemes in London to look after problems faced by children in the district such as absenteeism, delinquency and nutrition. It is what we might now call a multi-agency partnership, with education, medical and public health professionals working together in an attempt to take the place of the dreaded Attendance Officers.

    August 1939, issuing and fitting gas masks to children at South Bridge Primary School.

    After the war, despite not having a pitch (or any grass at all!) of their own, the South Bridge School team won the 1949-50 School Board Trophy. Tommy Millar, front right, would go on to played 209 caps at fullback for Dundee United. His brother Jimmy (not shown) scored 91 goals in 197 games for Rangers. Another famous former pupil is the ballet dancer Roddie Patrizio (b. 1969).

    1949-50 South Bridge School football team. Back row L-R, Ian Irvine, Davie Williamson, Jimmy Higgins, Alan Mcleod, Bill Robertson, Billy Budge, Ian Christie. Middle row L-R Franny Ferguson, George Brett, Alan Gay, Ernie Lee, Billy Thomson. Front Row L-R Willie Gleming, Tommy Millar (later Dundee United fullback). Teachers L-R are Mr Alexander, Mr Munro, Mr Ross, Mr Stewart.

    But the world was changing fast in the Old Town at this time (indeed, it had been since the first big wave of 1920s slum clearances, which had seen five Board primary schools close as they were no longer neccessary, see the table at the bottom of the page for details). In 1951 it was the turn of Castle Hill Primary School to close, becoming a central school of catering and bakery. Most of its pupils displaced to South Bridge, where depopulation already meant that there was surplus capacity there to completely accommodate the roll of the closing school.

    Castle Hill Public School, also by Robert Wilson.

    In 1952, South Bridge school took part in the first ever Fulbright Scholarship teacher exchange. Elementary school teacher Retta W. Dillon from Noyes, Washington DC, swapped places with Miss Margaret Brownlee from South Bridge. An unusual evening class began to be offered in 1954, when the Edinburgh and District Referees Association opened a school of refereeing!

    The school was modernised in 1959 to keep it open – new regulations about toilets meant they now could no longer be outside and all had to be flushing and have hot water for hand washing. This saw some other city schools closed or rebuilt at the time, e.g. Fort Street in Leith. But not even new toilets could stop the forces of urban demographic change. as the inner city continued to be forcably cleared. When South Bridge’s headmaster retired in 1961 he lamented the loss of the “personal touch” of such schools, as communities were dispersed out to the new housing schemes at The Inch and Gracemount. South Bridge, he said, had a reputation as “the Friendly School“.

    Clearance at Dumbiedykes in 1959. Within a few years, everything in this photo would be gone. Photo by Adam H. Malcolm, © Edinburgh City Libraries

    By 1970 the Drummond Street building was surplus to requirements, so St. Patricks RC school was moved there from St. John’s Hill to allow that district to be cleared. It would close itself just 11 years later (see table at bottom of the page for details).

    Drummond Street Infant School, heavily London-influenced inside and out. Even the crowsteps on the gables don’t look Scottish.

    During the 1970s, South Bridge School found a new lease of life in the summers when it began to increasingly be used for staging productions at the Festival Fringe – pertinent to the current discussion around its future. When Head Teacher May Beattie left what was now called South Bridge Primary to move to Stockbridge Primary in December 1982, the writing was already on the wall. Not just for her former school, but all of the city’s three remaining Old Town and Southside schools – Lothian Regional Council wanted to shut the lot. Inner city depopulation had proceeded faster than council projections and each school by this point was down to just three composite classes, with fewer than 500 children in schools built with a capacity of over 3,000.

    The council’s favoured plan was to shut South Bridge, Milton House and Preston Street and open a “new” school in the old James Clark Technical School (“Jimmy’s“) at St. Leonard’s Hill, saving £80,000 a year. An alternatice scheme offering a lesser reduction of £64,000 could be achieved by merging South Bridge and Milton House and disposing of the James Clark building. This was favoured by the Council’s Labour group and a particularly vociferous campaign against the closure of Preston Street from the parents at that school. It had been intended to close Milton House and move pupils there to South Bridge, but it was recognised that the former school was better located to serve the main centre of population at Dumbiedykes and had a more favourable site in general, so the opposite happened. Statutory notices to this effect were published in November 1982.

    November 1982, Statutory Notice announcing Lothian Regional Council’s intent to merge South Bridge and Milton House Schools

    And so it was that South Bridge Primary School closed in 1983 and its pupils moved to Milton House on the Canongate. Also a school by Wilson, it was in a red sandstone Scottish Baronial Revival style. The combined new school was renamed to Royal Mile Primary School.

    Milton House Public School, now Royal Mile Primary, by Robert Wilson

    The last day at Infirmary Street came in May 1983. Pupil Murray Ramsay ceremonially rang the school’s hand bell for the last time. Six year old Sally Atta was overcome at the occasion and had to be comforted by Headteacher Mrs Sturgeon.

    Last day at South Bridge Primary School, resale samples from National World

    But while it closed as a school, that was not the end of education at South Bridge – Lothian Regional Council reopened it as the South Bridge Resource Centre to serve various outreach services, adult education, youth groups and more. The Old Town Oral History and Old Town Community Development projects moved in, as did the Canongate Youth Project, which has been there since 1984 and is the primary occupant of the building. Various other community and educational projects have come and gone, but the City of Edinburgh Council’s Adult education service are still run from here.

    Amendments were put forward by the council’s Green group (and I believe, approved) to make any such changes contingent on first securing the position of the sitting organisations, but news this last week suggests this has not happened (see first paragraph!) But one thing certainly has a precedent – once such buildings are lost from community and education use, they don’t go back to it. The table below shows the fate of all the Old Town and South Side schools since 1911. You can make up your own mind whether or not you think agreeing to such handovers behind closed doors before publicly consulting on the future of resident organisations and coming up with a plan or any money to facilitate that is the right way to do things.

    SchoolRoll (1911)Closure as Primary SchoolFate of building after closurePreston Street863––St Leonard’s (Forbes Street)10421932Became James Clark School annexe. Demolished after 1972 closure of latterDavie Street6451918Became James Clark School annexe then Theatre Arts Centre, then converted to flatsBristo (Marshall Street)7921934Became Technical School, then part of Heriot Watt College. Later demolishedCausewaysidec. 7201940Became St. Columba’s R.C. 1925, later School Meals Centre, demolished 1965Drummond Street7001981Became St. Patrick’s R.C. 1970. Converted to flats after 1981South Bridge9491983Education / community useSt. Patrick’s R.C. for boys² (St. John’s Hill)4551970DemolishedSt. Ann’s R.C. for girls² (Cowgate)9091956Education / community useCastlehill700*1951Became Central School Of Bakery and Catering, closed 1970. Later Scotch Whisky CentreMilton House (renamed Royal Mile, 1983)1100*––North Canongate (Infants, Cranston Street)700*1938DemolishedNew Street (Juniors, New Street)730*1938“Venchy” community use, now Brewdog HotelMoray House Demonstration School4791968Thomson’s Land, Part of Moray House School of Education* = these are capacities, rather than actual rolls.
    ² = note that at this time, Roman Catholic schools were not part of the School Board system

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  8. The Brook by #AlfredTennyson.

    I come from haunts of coot and hern,
    I make a sudden sally
    And sparkle out among the fern,
    To bicker down a valley.

    By thirty hills I hurry down,
    Or slip between the ridges,
    By twenty thorpes, a little town,
    And half a hundred bridges.

    Till last by Philip's farm I flow
    To join the brimming river,
    For men may come and men may go,
    But I go on for ever.

    I chatter over stony ways,
    In little sharps and trebles,
    I bubble into eddying bays,
    I babble on the pebbles.

    With many a curve my banks I fret
    By many a field and fallow,
    And many a fairy foreland set
    With willow-weed and mallow.

    I chatter, chatter, as I flow
    To join the brimming river,
    For men may come and men may go,
    But I go on for ever.

    I wind about, and in and out,
    With here a blossom sailing,
    And here and there a lusty trout,
    And here and there a grayling,

    And here and there a foamy flake
    Upon me, as I travel
    With many a silvery waterbreak
    Above the golden gravel,

    And draw them all along, and flow
    To join the brimming river
    For men may come and men may go,
    But I go on for ever.

    I steal by lawns and grassy plots,
    I slide by hazel covers;
    I move the sweet forget-me-nots
    That grow for happy lovers.

    I slip, I slide, I gloom, I glance,
    Among my skimming swallows;
    I make the netted sunbeam dance
    Against my sandy shallows.

    I murmur under moon and stars
    In brambly wildernesses;
    I linger by my shingly bars;
    I loiter round my cresses;

    And out again I curve and flow
    To join the brimming river,
    For men may come and men may go,
    But I go on for ever.

    #Poetry #Prose #Poem #FavePoems

  9. Updates: Recent Science Fiction Purchases No. CCCXLVII (Edgar Pangborn, Rudy Rucker, Sally Miller Gearhart, and a SF anthology)

    Which books/covers/authors intrigue you? Which have you read? Disliked? Enjoyed?

    The first purchases of 2026!

    1. A Mirror For Observers, Edgar Pangborn (1954)

    • Richard Powers’ cover for the 1985 edition

    From the back cover: “We would call them Martians, though they refer to themselves as Salvayans. Refugees from their dying planet, they arrived on our world almost 30,000 years ago to make new lives for themselves. From their vast underground cities, hidden from discovery, the Salvayans have ben observing us with care and concern, waiting for the day when humans will be ready to meet them. The Salvayans are not many, but they are long-lived and patient….

    …Most of them, that is. for some have already tired of waiting. They call themselves Abdicators, setting themselves apart from the more passive Observers; they’d like to rid the Earth once and for all of the greedy, petty race that populates its surface. And with a little help from the Abdicators, perhaps the humans will destroy themselves.

    In the small town of Latimer, Massachusetts, dwells a 12-year-old boy named Angelo Pontevicchio. Angelo is no ordinary human child, though he often wishes he would be. The handicap of his polioed leg and his unassuming gentleness are more than compensated for by his soaring mind. To Namir the Abdicator, Angelo is the human tool he needs. Angelo’s genius, his read-to-mold-personality, give him the potential of a Ghandi–or a Hitler. For Namir, it is but a matter of careful manipulation…

    Learning of Namir’s plans, the Observers send in their own agent, poet-historian Elmis. Alone in the field, disguised as a mild, middle-aged ex-school teacher, Elmis must reach Angelo and somehow counteract the influence of the renegade Namir, whose resources and determination will stop at nothing–including murder. Elmis’ weapons: only the power of love and truth… and an ancient bronze mirror from the last civilization of Crete, a mirror that can show what one really is–or could be.

    Following Elmis, Namir and Angelo over nine years–years in which the boy will be drawn into corruption, violence and, ultimately, a Nazi-like cult that threatens to fulfill Namir’s sinister wishes for human catastrophe–A Mirror for Observers showcases the captivating talents of of one of the SF’s most brilliant, most human and most innovative writers.”

    Initial Thoughts: I love Pangborn. This is actually a second copy as my 1st edition paperback crumbled as I attempted to read it.

    2. The 57th Franz Kafka, Rudy Rucker (1983)

    • Uncredited cover for the 1st edition

    From the back cover: “Mathematical philosopher, former unground cartoonist, aruthor of three wild sf novels and two works of mathematical non-fiction, great-great-great-grandson of G. W. F. Hegel and father of three, Rudolf von Bitter Rucker has a mind and a wit all of his own. Come enter his bizarre and delightful world in this collection of fact, fancy, and mangled history.”

    Contents: “The 57th Franz Kafka” (1982),  “Schrödinger’s Cat” (1981), “A New Golden Age” (1981), “Jumpin’ Jack Flash” (1983), “Sufferin’ Succotash” (1983), “Faraway Eyes” (1980), “Hyperspherical Space and Beyond” (1980), “The Indian Rope Trick Explained” (1983), “A New Experiment with Time” (1982), “The Man Who Age Himself” (1982), “The Facts of Life” (1983), “Tales of Houdini” (1981), “Buzz” (1981), “The Last Einstein-Rosen Bridge” (1983), “Pac-Man” (1982), “Pi in the Sky” (1983), “Inertia” (1983), “Message Found in a Copy of Flatland” (1983), “The Jack Kerouac Disembodied School of Poetics” (1982).

    Initial Thoughts: Rudy Rucker remains a complete unknown to me. I’ve read a few reviews here and there and picked up a copy of Software (1982) (which remains unread). I’ve heard good things about White Light (1980) in particular.

    3. Wanderground: Stories of the Hill Women, Sally Miller Gearhart (1978)

    • Jim Hanlon’s cover for the 1984 edition

    From the back cover: No summary provided. See my quote from SF Encyclopedia below.

    Initial Thoughts: According to SF Encyclopedia, Gearhart’s first sf book, one of the most extreme of those that envisage men and women as effectively different races, is The Wanderground: Stories of the Hill Women (coll of linked stories 1978). It is set in the outlaw, all-women, Utopian hill communities of a future when men are restricted to the Cities and dependent on Technology, while women (in a somewhat New Age manner) have developed Psi Powers through harmony with Nature. Even the Gentles, men no longer driven by violence, know that “maleness touched women only with the accumulated hatred of centuries.” She’s an author I’ve frequently encounter in scholarship of feminist SF but hadn’t picked up a copy, until now.

    4. Science-Fiction Carnival, ed. Fredric Brown and Mack Reynolds (1953)

    • Uncredited cover for the 1957 edition

    From the back cover: “….in science fiction carnival you’ll find out how a screenwriter traded personalities with Ivan the Terrible in THE EGO MACHINE.

    What happens when thinking machines can give the answers to any question in A LOGIC NAMED JOE.

    When a hillbilly finds a Martian is easier to handle than a “revenoer” in THE MARTIANS AND THE COYS.

    How a glorified slot machine solved the problem of interplanetary travel in THE COSMIC JACKPOT.

    What Jeremiah Jupiter, “mad scientist” deluxe, thought in THE WHEEL OF TIME.

    And six other yarns of the fabulous future collected for your enjoyment.”

    Contents: Robert Arthur’s “The Wheel of Time” (1950), Murray Leinster’s “A Logic Named Joe” (1946), Larry T. Shaw’s “Simworthy’s Circus” (1950), H. B. Fyfe’s “The Well-Oiled Machine” (1950), Clive Jackson’s “The Swordsmen of Varnis” (1950), Fredric Brown’s “Paradox Lost” (1943), Eric Frank Russell’s “Muten” (1948), Mack Reynolds’ “The Martians and the Coys” (1951), Henry Kuttner and C. L. Moore’s “The Ego Machine” (1952), George O. Smith’s “The Cosmic Jackpot” (1948), Nelson S. Bond’s “The Abduction of Abner Greer” (1941).

    Initial Thoughts: Sometimes I cast my eyes on anthologies as a way to finally read SF authors that have escaped my focus. In this instance, I haven’t read anything by Robert Arthur, H. B. Fyfe, Larry T. Shaw, George O. Smith, or Nelson S. Bond.

    For book reviews consult the INDEX

    For cover art posts consult the INDEX

    For TV and film reviews consult the INDEX

    #1950s #1970s #1980s #CLMoore #EdgarPangborn #FredricBrown #HenryKuttner #MackReynold #MurrayLeinster #paperbacks #RudyRucker #SallyMillerGearhart #sciFi #scienceFiction #technology

  10. Updates: Recent Science Fiction Purchases No. CCCXLVII (Edgar Pangborn, Rudy Rucker, Sally Miller Gearhart, and a SF anthology)

    Which books/covers/authors intrigue you? Which have you read? Disliked? Enjoyed?

    The first purchases of 2026!

    1. A Mirror For Observers, Edgar Pangborn (1954)

    • Richard Powers’ cover for the 1985 edition

    From the back cover: “We would call them Martians, though they refer to themselves as Salvayans. Refugees from their dying planet, they arrived on our world almost 30,000 years ago to make new lives for themselves. From their vast underground cities, hidden from discovery, the Salvayans have ben observing us with care and concern, waiting for the day when humans will be ready to meet them. The Salvayans are not many, but they are long-lived and patient….

    …Most of them, that is. for some have already tired of waiting. They call themselves Abdicators, setting themselves apart from the more passive Observers; they’d like to rid the Earth once and for all of the greedy, petty race that populates its surface. And with a little help from the Abdicators, perhaps the humans will destroy themselves.

    In the small town of Latimer, Massachusetts, dwells a 12-year-old boy named Angelo Pontevicchio. Angelo is no ordinary human child, though he often wishes he would be. The handicap of his polioed leg and his unassuming gentleness are more than compensated for by his soaring mind. To Namir the Abdicator, Angelo is the human tool he needs. Angelo’s genius, his read-to-mold-personality, give him the potential of a Ghandi–or a Hitler. For Namir, it is but a matter of careful manipulation…

    Learning of Namir’s plans, the Observers send in their own agent, poet-historian Elmis. Alone in the field, disguised as a mild, middle-aged ex-school teacher, Elmis must reach Angelo and somehow counteract the influence of the renegade Namir, whose resources and determination will stop at nothing–including murder. Elmis’ weapons: only the power of love and truth… and an ancient bronze mirror from the last civilization of Crete, a mirror that can show what one really is–or could be.

    Following Elmis, Namir and Angelo over nine years–years in which the boy will be drawn into corruption, violence and, ultimately, a Nazi-like cult that threatens to fulfill Namir’s sinister wishes for human catastrophe–A Mirror for Observers showcases the captivating talents of of one of the SF’s most brilliant, most human and most innovative writers.”

    Initial Thoughts: I love Pangborn. This is actually a second copy as my 1st edition paperback crumbled as I attempted to read it.

    2. The 57th Franz Kafka, Rudy Rucker (1983)

    • Uncredited cover for the 1st edition

    From the back cover: “Mathematical philosopher, former unground cartoonist, aruthor of three wild sf novels and two works of mathematical non-fiction, great-great-great-grandson of G. W. F. Hegel and father of three, Rudolf von Bitter Rucker has a mind and a wit all of his own. Come enter his bizarre and delightful world in this collection of fact, fancy, and mangled history.”

    Contents: “The 57th Franz Kafka” (1982),  “Schrödinger’s Cat” (1981), “A New Golden Age” (1981), “Jumpin’ Jack Flash” (1983), “Sufferin’ Succotash” (1983), “Faraway Eyes” (1980), “Hyperspherical Space and Beyond” (1980), “The Indian Rope Trick Explained” (1983), “A New Experiment with Time” (1982), “The Man Who Age Himself” (1982), “The Facts of Life” (1983), “Tales of Houdini” (1981), “Buzz” (1981), “The Last Einstein-Rosen Bridge” (1983), “Pac-Man” (1982), “Pi in the Sky” (1983), “Inertia” (1983), “Message Found in a Copy of Flatland” (1983), “The Jack Kerouac Disembodied School of Poetics” (1982).

    Initial Thoughts: Rudy Rucker remains a complete unknown to me. I’ve read a few reviews here and there and picked up a copy of Software (1982) (which remains unread). I’ve heard good things about White Light (1980) in particular.

    3. Wanderground: Stories of the Hill Women, Sally Miller Gearhart (1978)

    • Jim Hanlon’s cover for the 1984 edition

    From the back cover: No summary provided. See my quote from SF Encyclopedia below.

    Initial Thoughts: According to SF Encyclopedia, Gearhart’s first sf book, one of the most extreme of those that envisage men and women as effectively different races, is The Wanderground: Stories of the Hill Women (coll of linked stories 1978). It is set in the outlaw, all-women, Utopian hill communities of a future when men are restricted to the Cities and dependent on Technology, while women (in a somewhat New Age manner) have developed Psi Powers through harmony with Nature. Even the Gentles, men no longer driven by violence, know that “maleness touched women only with the accumulated hatred of centuries.” She’s an author I’ve frequently encounter in scholarship of feminist SF but hadn’t picked up a copy, until now.

    4. Science-Fiction Carnival, ed. Fredric Brown and Mack Reynolds (1953)

    • Uncredited cover for the 1957 edition

    From the back cover: “….in science fiction carnival you’ll find out how a screenwriter traded personalities with Ivan the Terrible in THE EGO MACHINE.

    What happens when thinking machines can give the answers to any question in A LOGIC NAMED JOE.

    When a hillbilly finds a Martian is easier to handle than a “revenoer” in THE MARTIANS AND THE COYS.

    How a glorified slot machine solved the problem of interplanetary travel in THE COSMIC JACKPOT.

    What Jeremiah Jupiter, “mad scientist” deluxe, thought in THE WHEEL OF TIME.

    And six other yarns of the fabulous future collected for your enjoyment.”

    Contents: Robert Arthur’s “The Wheel of Time” (1950), Murray Leinster’s “A Logic Named Joe” (1946), Larry T. Shaw’s “Simworthy’s Circus” (1950), H. B. Fyfe’s “The Well-Oiled Machine” (1950), Clive Jackson’s “The Swordsmen of Varnis” (1950), Fredric Brown’s “Paradox Lost” (1943), Eric Frank Russell’s “Muten” (1948), Mack Reynolds’ “The Martians and the Coys” (1951), Henry Kuttner and C. L. Moore’s “The Ego Machine” (1952), George O. Smith’s “The Cosmic Jackpot” (1948), Nelson S. Bond’s “The Abduction of Abner Greer” (1941).

    Initial Thoughts: Sometimes I cast my eyes on anthologies as a way to finally read SF authors that have escaped my focus. In this instance, I haven’t read anything by Robert Arthur, H. B. Fyfe, Larry T. Shaw, George O. Smith, or Nelson S. Bond.

    For book reviews consult the INDEX

    For cover art posts consult the INDEX

    For TV and film reviews consult the INDEX

    #1950s #1970s #1980s #CLMoore #EdgarPangborn #FredricBrown #HenryKuttner #MackReynold #MurrayLeinster #paperbacks #RudyRucker #SallyMillerGearhart #sciFi #scienceFiction #technology

  11. Charlie Kirk, Redeemed by Ezra Klein, Gavin Newsom, and the Political Class | Vanity Fair

    Protestors clash during an anti and pro-immigration rally in Toronto, Canada, September 13, 2025. Arindam Shivaani /NurPhoto / Getty Images.

    COMMENTARY

    Charlie Kirk, Redeemed: A Political Class Finds Its Lost Cause

    By ignoring the rhetoric and actions of the Turning Point USA founder, pundits and politicians are sanitizing his legacy.

    By Ta-Nehisi Coates, September 16, 2025

    Before he was killed last week, Charlie Kirk left a helpful compendium of words—ones that would greatly aid those who sought to understand his legacy and import. It is somewhat difficult to match these words with the manner in which Kirk is presently being memorialized in mainstream discourse.

    New York Times columnist Ezra Klein dubbed Kirk “one of the era’s most effective practitioners of persuasion” and a man who “was practicing politics in exactly the right way.” California governor Gavin Newsom hailed Kirk’s “passion and commitment to debate,” advising us to continue Kirk’s work by engaging “with each other, across ideology, through spirited discourse.” Atlantic writer Sally Jenkins saluted Kirk, claiming he “argued with civility” and asserting that his death was “a significant loss for those who believe engagement can help bridge disagreements.”

    The mentions of “debate” and “engagement” are references to Kirk’s campus tours, during which he visited various colleges to take on whoever come may. That this aspect of Kirk’s work would be so attractive to writers and politicians is understandable. There is, after all, a pervasive worry, among the political class, that college students, ensconced in their own bubbles, could use a bit of shock therapy from a man unconcerned with preferred pronouns, trigger warnings, and the humanity of Palestinians.

    But it also shows how the political class’s obsession with universities blinds it to everything else. And the everything-else of Kirk’s politics amounted to little more than a loathing of those whose mere existence provoked his ire.

    It is not just, for instance, that Kirk held disagreeable views—that he was pro-life, that he believed in public executions, or that he rejected the separation of church and state. It’s that Kirk reveled in open bigotry.

    Indeed, claims of Kirk’s “civility” are tough to square with his penchant for demeaning members of the LGBTQ+ community as “freaks” and referring to trans people with the slur “tranny.” Faced with the prospect of a Kamala Harris presidency, Kirk told his audience that the threat had to be averted because Harris wanted to “kidnap your child via the trans agenda.”

    Garden-variety transphobia is sadly unremarkable. But Kirk was a master of folding seemingly discordant bigotries into each other, as when he defined “the American way of life” as marriage, home ownership, and child-rearing free of “the lesbian, gay, transgender garbage in their school,” adding that he did not want kids to “have to hear the Muslim call to prayer five times a day.”

    The American way of life was “Christendom,” Kirk claimed, and Islam—“the sword the left is using to slit the throat of America”—was antithetical to that. Large “dedicated” Islamic areas were “a threat to America,” Kirk asserted, and New York mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani was a “Mohammedan,” with Kirk supposing that anyone trying to see “Mohammedism take over the West” would love to have New York—a “prior Anglo center”—“under Mohammedan rule.”

    Editor’s Note: Read the rest of the story, at the below link.

    Continue/Read Original Article Here: Charlie Kirk, Redeemed by Ezra Klein, Gavin Newsom, and the Political Class | Vanity Fair

    #2025 #America #CharlieKirk #DonaldTrump #Education #EzraKlein #GavinNewsom #Health #History #Libraries #LibraryOfCongress #Opinion #PoliticalClass #Politics #Resistance #Sanitize #Science #Television #Trump #TrumpAdministration #UnitedStates

  12. By David Tuller, DrPH

    Tuesday, September 17th, was World Patient Safety Day. (I didn’t know that either.) In the UK, more than 200 physicians, nurses and other health care providers and professionals marked the occasion by issuing an appeal—in the form of a letter to Wes Streeting, Secretary of State for Health and Social Care since–about the dire state of care for ME patients within the National Health Service. The letter highlighted in particular the plight of patients with severe ME.

    The inquest this summer into the death of Maeve Boothby O’Neill, who died in Exeter three years ago at the age of 27, drew widespread attention to the abysmal situation for such patients at NHS hospitals. The presiding coroner, Deborah Archer, ruled that no individuals were responsible for causing or contributing to Maeve’s death, although she acknowledged that some of the decisions made were concerning. On Friday, September 27th, she will hold a hearing to consider whether to issue a report with recommendations to prevent future deaths.

    As a Times article about this week’s letter to Secretary Streeting noted:

    “A lack of NHS specialist services was highlighted at the inquest of Maeve Boothby O’Neill, who died in 2021 aged 27. An inquest last month concluded that she died from malnutrition caused by severe ME, with the government acknowledging that Boothby O’Neill ‘fell through the cracks’ and was “repeatedly misunderstood and dismissed” by the NHS.”

    Dr Binita Kane, a respiratory physician in Manchester, co-organized the letter with #ThereForME, a campaign launched by carers for patients with severe ME associated with Long Covid. Dr Kane posted a thread about the letter on X (the former Twitter). The first listed demand is “acknowledgement from the very top of government…that gaps in NHS services for ME are resulting in serious patient safety concerns” and a commitment “to taking action.”

    I have posted the full letter below, along with all the signatories. (I haven’t counted them, but the article in The Times says there are 202.)

    **********

    Dear Secretary of State,

    We write to you on World Patient Safety Day to express our concerns about the safety of patients with Myalgic Encephalomyelitis (ME) within the NHS.

    In August over 2,600 patients and carers affected by ME and Long Covid wrote to you, sharing recommendations from the #ThereForME campaign. The Department of Health and Social Care has thus far declined to meet with the campaign. On World Patient Safety Day, we – as healthcare workers – call on you to listen to their voices and take immediate action.

    The theme for this year’s World Patient Safety Day is ‘Improving diagnosis for patient safety’, using the slogan ‘Get it right, make it safe’. Devastatingly, for patients with ME this simply is not true. There is little access to truly specialist ME care or treatment within the NHS and paradoxically, the sicker a patient is, the less care they receive. 

    The number of people affected by ME has grown vastly since the start of the pandemic. Although the data is difficult to disentangle, by some estimates as many as half of patients with Long Covid could meet the diagnostic criteria for ME and face the same gaps in NHS care. Even if doctors and healthcare professionals are knowledgeable and willing to treat patients, the infrastructure to provide safe and appropriate care does not exist.

    Like all patients, people with ME deserve safe care within the NHS. 

    Patients at the severe end of the disease spectrum are bedridden, sometimes tube-fed and confined to quiet, darkened rooms due to extreme light and sound sensitivity. Hospital appointments or admissions often become impossible or make the condition worse. In the most extreme cases, patients languish behind closed doors with little or no support. Some – including high-profile cases in the media – have even starved to death. 

    This is a state of affairs barely conceivable in the UK in 2024.

    The new cross-government delivery plan is a welcome opportunity to put patient safety at the heart of NHS care – but it will be months before the plan is published and perhaps years before it is implemented. Urgent action is needed today. 

    On World Patient Safety Day we call on you to:

    • Acknowledge, from the very top of government, that gaps in NHS services for ME are resulting in serious patient safety concerns, and commit to taking action.
    • Work with us to immediately convene an ME Clinical Taskforce to provide emergency specialist guidance in cases where patients are hospitalised, and drive forwards improvements in NHS treatment and care (including managing risks of malnutrition).
    • Commit that this government will hold NHS Trusts and Integrated Care Boards accountable for implementing guidance from NICE on diagnosing and managing ME (NG206), recognising that a failure to do so risks unsafe care.

    Doing nothing is not safe. We urge you to take action now. 

    Your sincerely,

    Dr Binita Kane – Consultant Respiratory Physician, special interest in ME/ Long COVID, Manchester

    Professor Carolyn Chew-Graham OBE – GP Principal and Professor of General Practice Research, Manchester

    Dr Anna Porter – NHS GP, North Central London

    Dr David Shakespeare – Consultant in Neurological Rehabilitation Medicine, Lancashire, Royal Preston Hospital

    Dr Deepak Ravindran – Consultant NHS Pain Medicine, specialist interest in Long COVID, Berkshire

    Dr Hollie Francis – GP Partner, Greater Manchester

    Professor Amitava Banerjee –  Consultant Cardiologist and Professor of Clinical Data Science, London

    Dr Michelle Moore – GP Partner, Greater Manchester

    Dr Cilla Rosen – GP with extended role in Long Covid, Hampshire

    Professor Melvin Lobo – Cardiovascular Physician, Specialist in hypertension and PoTs, London, London Bridge Hospital

    Dr Melissa Sargaison – Specialist Physician, Clinical Lead ME/CFS & Fibromyalgia Service, London, Royal London Hospital for Integrated Medicine

    Dr Sarah Mason-Whitfield- GP, special interest in Emergency Medicine, London

    Dr Helen Miles – GP, Oxfordshire

    Professor Sarah Tyson – Physiotherapist and Honorary Professor of Rehabilitation, Manchester

    Dr Asad Khan – Consultant Respiratory Physician, Manchester

    Dr Ben Marsh – Consultant Neurodisability Paediatrician (retired), Exeter

    Dr Abbas Khushnood – Consultant Paediatric Cardiologist, special interest in Long COVID, Newcastle

    Dr Rebecca Goody – Consultant Clinical Oncologist, Leeds

    Robin McNelis – Clinical Physiotherapist, special interest in Long COVID, Epping Forest

    Dr Ben Sinclair – GP and Long Covid Doctor, London

    Dr Clare Rayner – Consultant Physician in Occupational Medicine, Society of Occupational Medicine Long Term Illnesses Taskforce, Greater Manchester

    Dr William Weir – Consultant in Infectious Disease, special interest in ME, London

    Dr Claire Taylor – GP, special interest in Long Covid/ME, Perth, Scotland

    Dr Rebekah Holmes – GP, Manchester, Northenden Group Practice

    Dr Helen Salisbury – GP, Oxford

    Sheryl Randhawa – Registered Nurse. Community Mental Health Nurse, London, Mother/Carer of Hannah who died of severe ME in 2022

    Michael Lauchlan – Emergency Care Assistant, East Midlands

    Amy Urry – Family and Systemic Psychotherapist, Exeter

    Dr Rebecca Williams – GP Registrar with specialist interest in Paediatrics, training on hold due to ill health, West Yorkshire

    Dr Rebecca Hall – GP, special interest in ME/Long Covid, Somerset

    Dr Linn Järte – Specialist Registrar in anaesthetics, Wales

    Julie Taylor – Nurse, special interest in Long Covid, Hull

    Angela Tillen – Clinical Phlebotomist, supporting care of community patients with ME, Derby

    Edd Tillen – Clinical Phlebotomist, supporting care of community patients with ME, Derby

    Dr Clarke Gostelow – Junior Doctor

    Dr Nicola Clague-Baker – Physiotherapist and Lecturer with special interest in ME, Liverpool, University of Liverpool, Physios For ME

    Dr Michelle Bull – Physiotherapist, special interest in ME, Surrey, Physios For ME

    Karen Leslie – Physiotherapist, special interest in ME, Merseyside, Physios For ME

    Dr Charles Shepherd – Honorary Medical Advisor to ME Association

    Dr Yasmin Levene – Histopathologist, London

    Claire Appleton – Paramedic, Harrogate

    Dr Eleanor Balmer – Consultant Paediatrician, Manchester

    Carla Golding – Registered Nurse and Clinical Governance Advisor, Staffordshire

    Aileen Mulligan – Registered Nurse, Belfast

    Rachel Potter – Staff Nurse

    Mandy Jones – Midwife, East Cheshire

    Lorraine Horobin – Registered Nurse, Corporate Clinical Governance Facilitator, Staffordshire

    Dr Nigel Speight – Paediatrician, special interest in ME, Durham

    Dr Mark Fabrowski – NHS GP, Sussex, Medical Advisor to Long Covid Foundation

    Dr Robin Kerr – GP, Scotland, Action For ME

    Dr Katherine Wildon – GP, North West

    Dr Joanne Murray – Consultant Clinical Psychologist, Manchester

    Sarah Benjamins – Nutritionist, Manchester

    Claire Sehinson – Functional Medicine Practitioner, Surrey

    Amanda Dench – Paediatric Diabetes Nurse Specialist, East England, East of England Trust

    Dr Stephanie de Giorgio – GP, East Kent

    Mihai Mihai – Registered Nurse, Exetter

    Dr Rageshri Dhairyawan – Consultant in Sexual Health, London

    Dr Moira Phillips – Consultant Clinical Psychologist, Glasgow

    Matthew Strang – Orthopaedic Surgeon, Bristol

    Dr Kate Christie – GP, Surrey

    Dr Emma Rivers – GP, Wetherby

    Dr Azima Hussain – GP West Yorkshire

    Dr Sakander Mahmud – Functional Disability Assessor (DWP), former GP registrar, West Yorkshire

    Dr Alexis Gilber – Consultant in Health Protection, Leeds, UKHSA

    Dr Sherena Nair – Consultant Elderly Medicine, Leeds, Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust

    Dr Laura Graystone – GP Registrar, North Yorkshire

    Dr Pia-Sophie Wool – GP, special interest in Paediatrics, Worcestershire

    Dr Rachel Duncan – GP, special interest in Dementia, Sussex

    Dr Johanna Theron – Clinical Lead Long Covid, Kent, Kent and Medway ICB

    Kerry Davies – Registered Nurse, Cumbria

    Dr Susie Harris – Emergency Care Registrar, Wirral

    Dr Paul Smith – Consultant Physician, Lancaster

    Dr Fayyaz Chaudhri – Community Dermatologist, North Cumbria

    Dr Clare McNulty – Consultant Anaesthetist, Scotland

    Sharon Garton – Registered Nurse, Derby, University Hospitals of Derby and Burton NHS Foundation Trust

    Angela Marsden – Advanced Nurse Practitioner, East Sussex, Supporting Healthcare Heroes

    Dr Alison Twycross – Nursing Professor and Deputy Dean (retired), Honorary Associate, Professor, Aylesbury, Supporting Healthcare Heroes, University of Birmingham

    Dr Vikki McKeever – GP, special interest in ME/CFS, Leeds and York

    Dr Elke Hausmann – GP, Derby

    Amy Warbuton – Advanced Clinical Practitioner for Diabetes and Endocrinology, Lancaster, Royal Lancaster Infirmary

    Dr Badia Ahmed – Histopathology Speciality Trainee Doctor, London

    Dr Sheena Rakhra – GP, London

    Gill Armstrong – Nurse Manager (retired), London

    Professor Lesley Kavi – GP (retired), Visiting Professor, Warwickshire, Trustee and Chairperson of PoTs UK

    Dr Rachel Reaveley – Rehabilitation Consultant, North East

    Dr Anam Ahmed – GP and LTFT Obs and Gyne speciality training registrar, South Yorkshire

    Dr Clare Rollason – GP, Urgent Care, Lancaster

    Dr Andrew Blease – GP, East Kent

    Sophie Lewthwaite – Registered Nurse, Cumbria

    Deborah Singleton – Nurse specialist Long Covid, Cumbria

    Dr Yasmin Razak -NHS GP & Educator, London, Golborne Medical Centre

    Dr Hannah Georgious – GP, Cheshire

    Dr Paulette Ah-Chung – GP (Retired), Essex

    Dr Gemma Banham – Consultant Renal Medicine and General Internal Medicine, West Midlands

    Dr Nina Muirhead – Consultant Dermatologist, London

    Dr Sarah Glynne – GP and Menopause Specialist, London, The Portland Hospital

    Dr Paul Glynne – Consultant Physician, special interest in Long COVID, London, ULCH

    Dr Ian Barros D’Sa – Consultant Radiologist, Birmingham

    Dr Shaun Qureshi – Palliative Medicine Physician, Oxford

    Dr Helen Smith – GP, Bedfordshire

    Patricia Temple – Staff Nurse NHS

    Dr Gareth Price – GP Partner, West Yorkshire

    Dr Adelaide Lippold – GP, North Yorkshire

    Clare Westwood – Advanced Nurse Practitioner, West Yorkshire, Huddersfield Royal Infirmary

    Katie Wade – Advanced Clinical Practitioner, Paediatrics, West Yorkshire, Calderdale Royal Hospital

    Leanne Spender – Midwife, North Yorkshire, Harrogate Royal Hospital

    Dr Natalie Winfield – GP, Leeds

    Ellen Dedus – Children’s Community Nurse, West Suffolk, West Suffolk Foundation Trust

    Kate MacDougall – Physiotherapist, Bedford

    Sally Jennings – Palliative Care Physiotherapist (Retired), Leicester

    Dr Timothy Jennings – GP (Retired), Leicestershire

    Dr Julia Ward – GP, Dundee

    Dr Eleanor Drager – Consultant in Genitourinary Medicine, London

    Dr Cara Strachan – GP Locum, East Lothian

    Dr Salina Jain-Parmar – GP, North Leeds

    Dr Julie McDonald – Consultant Anaesthetist, Aberdeen, Aberdeen Royal Infirmary

    Dr Calum McDonald – Consultant Anaesthetist, Aberdeen, Aberdeen Royal Infirmary

    Dr Chia Liang – Consultant Geriatrician, London

    Dr Rachel Ali – GP, Plymouth

    Dr Sara Thompson – GP, Hertfordshire

    Dr Amy Small – GP, Sheffield

    Dr Catherine Steven – GP Partner, North London

    Dr Lakhveer Manku – Consultant Physician, Manchester, Northern Care Alliance

    Dr Mary-Ann Bentham – Consultant Paediatric Anaesthetist (Locum), Manchester, Manchester Children’s Hospital

    Dr Susannah Thompson – GP, North East

    Dr Kul Bushan – Consultant Psychiatrist, London

    Dr Anna Wylie – GP, Cambridgeshire

    Dr Avril Washington – Consultant Paediatrician, London

    Alice Martin – Midwife, Suffolk

    Dr Angela Stevens-King – GP Partner, Cambridgeshire

    Dr Aisha Sarwar – GP, Manchester

    Karen Donaldson – Respiratory ACP, Lancashire

    Anna Gregorowki – Consultant Nurse and BACME Chair, London, University College London Hospital

    Dr Richard Tozer – Consultant Paediatrician and Local lead for ME/CFS, Devon

    Dr Kelly Fearnley – Foundation Doctor, Bradford, Bradford Royal Infirmary

    Maria Esslinger-Raven – Midwife, Lancashire

    Dr Brian Holloway – Consultant Radiologist, London

    Dr Wolfgang Water – GP, Bristol

    Dr Sarah Jenkins – Consultant Neuroradiologist, Glasgow, NHS Greater Glasgow & Clyde

    Dr Mary Zadik – GP, Greater Manchester

    Dr Sarah Pocknell – GP (medically retired), London

    Jonathon Dunn – Family and Systemic Psychotherapist, West Devon

    Debora Tudge – Specialist Public Health Practitioner, Derbyshire

    Emma Brown – Specialist Nurse, Cumbria, Dismissed from NHS on grounds of ill health, due to Long Covid

    Professor Louise Cummings – Professor of Clinical Linguistics, York, St Johns University, UK

    Rachel Jessey – Long Covid Nutritionist, Hampshire

    Jessica Wainman-Lefley – Clinical Psychologist, Glasgow

    Marina Townend – Specialist Occupational Therapist, Team Lead on ME/CFS and Post-Covid Syndrome services, Malvern Community Hospital

    Dr Jonathan Fluxman –  GP (retired), London

    Dr Rachael Fear – SPT4 Obstetrics and Gynaecology

    Sue Luscombe – Registered Dietician, Bedfordshire, Honorary Dietary Adviser ME Association

    May Nisbet – Midwife (retired), Scotland, Aryshire and Arran NHS Trust

    Dr Sarah Gawthorpe – GP with Special Interest in Dermatology, Southampton

    David Martin – Clinical Psychologist, Suffolk

    Dr Helen Day – Consultant GP, Yeovil, Ryalls Park Medical Centre

    Dr Joanna Kirkcaldy – GP, Devon

    Dr Chantal Meystre – NHS Emeritus Palliative Medicine, West Midlands

    Dr Sophie Carpinteiro – GP and Genito-urinary Medicine Speciality Doctor, Brighton

    Dr Sarah Jordan – Consultant in Acute Medicine and Gastroenterology, Darlington

    Dr Alice Poskett – Obstetrics and Gynaecology, West Midlands

    Mrs Amy Pearson – Consultant ENT Surgeon, Hull

    Dr Sarah Loveridge – Surgical registrar (retired), Essex

    Dr Jennifer Gibb – FY2 Doctor, Severn Deanery

    Dr Christopher Gibb – GP, North Devon

    Dr Rebecca Steed – GP, Nottingham

    Dr Francesca Farmer – GP, London

    Dr Sammy Syed – GP, Manchester

    Dr Sharon Taylor – Psychiatrist, London

    Dr Kerry Smith – GP, Chichester

    Dr Lindsay Wakeford – GP, Rugby

    Dr Angela Wilkinson – Consultant Geriatrician, Fife

    Dr Rachel Jones – NHS Consultant, London

    Dr Davina Darmamin – Community Paediatrician, Cardiff, Cardiff & Vale University Health Board

    Dr Julia Bodle – Consultant in Obstetrics and Gynaecology, Sheffield

    Louise Lumb – Healthcare Assistant, Huddersfield, Huddersfield Royal Infirmary

    Dr Clare Bolt – Former Consultant Psychiatrist, Hereford

    Dr Laura Hobbs – GP, Hampshire

    Dr Kaveri Jalundhwala – GP Registrar, Thames Valley

    Dr Nathalie MacDermott – Consultant Paediatric Infectious Diseases, Cambridgeshire

    Dr James Gill – GP, Assistant Professor Warwick Medical School, Warwickshire

    Dr Terry Segal – Consultant adolescent paediatrician, Adolescent Specialties Lead, University College London Hospitals, London

    Fiona Mckechnie – Occupational Therapist, ME/CFS Advanced Clinical Practitioner, Bristol

    Dr Ella Billson – ST4 anaesthetics, West Yorkshire Deanery, West Yorkshire

    Dr Esther Mitchell – GP, Shetland

    Dr Alice Leaney – GP, Somerset

    Dr Leanne Royle – Consultant Paediatric Radiologist, Sheffield Children’s Hospital, Sheffield, 

    Dr Angela Rowntree – GP and Occupational Health Practitioner, Oxfordshire

    Dr Sophia Williams – CAMHS Psychiatrist (ST6), London

    Dr Rosemary Shilling – Consultant Anaesthetist, Midlands

    Dr Ian M Frayling – Consultant in Genetic Pathology (retired), Honorary Senior Clinical Research Fellow, Cardiff University, Wales

    Lesley Pickering – Specialist Occupational Therapist, North West Fatigue Clinic and Yorkshire ME/CFS Service, Lancashire

    Dr Holly Vickers – Consultant Urogynaecologist, Mid Yorkshire Teaching Trust, Yorkshire 

    Dr Gregory Gibson – Resident Doctor, London

    Sue Mangan – Practice Nurse, Primary Care, Greater Manchester

    Dr Charlotte Morris – GP, Greater Manchester

    Rebecca Matthews – Delivery Suite Coordinator, Harrogate and District Foundation Trust, Harrogate

    Dr Leila Hummerstone – GP, Pickering Medical Practice, North Yorkshire

    Dr Heather Reid – Paediatric Registrar, Royal London Hospital, London

    Dr Tessa Dessain – Anaesthetic Registrar, Bristol

    Hannah Ashcroft – Advanced Clinical Lead Practitioner, Leeds Teaching Hospitals, Leeds

    Dr Alice Reid – Foundation Year 1 Doctor, Royal Devon and Exeter Hospital, Devon

    https://trialbyerror.org/2024/09/18/uk-health-care-professionals-appeal-to-health-secretary-for-quick-action-on-poor-me-care/

    #ThereForME

  13. "Juneteenth Deep Algo Rhythms"

    by Aunt B in Charlotte, NC, USA

    BPM 122

    Timbaland & Magoo feat. Missy Elliott - Up Jumps Tha Boogie
    Childish Gambino feat. Summer Walker - Sweet Thang
    Nina Simone - Sinnerman
    Stefano Cocco Cantini & Alexander Robotnik - Francocco
    Chewy Rubs - Be Alright
    Miguel Migs feat. Ursula Rucker - Connectivity (Migs Jazzy Touch Revision)
    Kerri Chandler & AbbieLee - Let It (Give Me Back My Love)
    Groove Armada feat. Kathy Brown - Free Jam
    Deee Lite - Build The Bridge (What Is Love?)
    DJ Sneak - I Need You
    Psycho Radio & Kick Douglas - Vertigo

    #DJset #Funk #HouseMusic #FunkyHouse #HipHop #RnB #music

    hearthis.at/4jzlwrht/juneteent

  14. La Salle Street Bridge in Chicago, IL. Taken from the river, during a sunset cruise. Chicago Architecture is beautiful and it's worth visiting just to see it! Take one of the architecture tours. #TravelPhotography #ChicagoPics #BridgesOfChicago #LaSalleStreet #AYearForArt #SpringIntoArt

  15. #Museum30 Day5 Today's topic is #Fire or #Ahi in Māori #NZTwits #Aotearoa #History #Murihiku #Southland #NZ
    #Waiau #Ōtautau #Archives
    #CentralWesternSouthland #GLAM #CommunityHistory #digipres

    A fire or ahi in the bush at #Monowai sadly destroyed this bridge in 1959. It had been built in 1921. This photo is part of our local Central & Western heritage collection, digitised by Central & Western Murihiku Southland Archive. Check out the history of this early bridge here: ehive.com/collections/202139/o

  16. Oh look. I wrote something silly on my personal #blog called fifty walks, walk three.

    One of these days I’ll be able to tell you it is actually spring and keep a straight face. Once...

    #Bridges #FiftyWalks #FreewayWoes

    wander.8r4d.com/2026/04/fifty-

  17. Back on the bridge - and on time arrival in Copenhagen. Sadly DB leaves on time as well, so almost two hours layover. #Interrail #almost70degreesnorth

  18. A silly game.

    Start the words to a #song and let #PredictiveText finish it off:

    Like a bridge over troubled and a few choice weirdos.

    See him lying on a bed of a bed and a bed.

    We all live in a yellow bin.

  19. "Brooklyn Bridge," Joseph Stella, 1919-20.

    Stella (1877-1946) was born in Italy but came to the US in 1869 to study medicine, but soon abandoned that and embraced art. He began as a figural, realist painter, doing a lot of illustration work, but later, while traveling in Europe, embraced Modernism and Futurism.

    Returning to the US in 1911, he plunged into the avant-garde modern art world, and became quite the mover and shaker. This canvas here is the first of a number of paintings he did of the Brooklyn Bridge, which he used as a symbol of progress. In the 30s he progressed with his style, going from Futurism to Precisionism to Abstract to Surrealist to the point that he belonged to no school in particular. In the late 30s and 40s, sadly, his career declined and he got little notice. But his earlier work still is praised as trailblazing classics.

    From the Yale University Art Gallery, New Haven, CT.

    #Art #AmericanArt #JosephStella #Futurism

  20. Morning fog over Conon Bridge

    A late photo today. It was taken on my dog walk this morning. It wasn't until I was looking at it before posting that I realised that some of the trees round this field and the lower field still have their leaves.

    This is one of the entrances to the stubble field I've been sharing in previous weeks. Sadly, it has now been poughed, so back to the woodland walks for us.

    #CononBridge
    #RossShire
    #Brahan

  21. “When Harry Met Sally” is Rob Reiner’s everlasting message of love – Salon.com

    Billy Crystal as Harry Burns and Meg Ryan as Sally Albright in “When Harry Met Sally” (Columbia Pictures)

    commentary

    “When Harry Met Sally” is Rob Reiner’s everlasting message of love

    A classic scene written to reflect Reiner’s love for his wife, Michele, embraces a brighter future

    By Coleman Spilde, Senior Writer, Published December 17, 2025 12:00PM (EST)

    Billy Crystal as Harry Burns and Meg Ryan as Sally Albright in “When Harry Met Sally” (Columbia Pictures)

    It’s almost time for the page to turn again. Whether we like it or not, time marches on, the year comes to a close and we reflect on everything that’s happened. It’s a time for old friends, new loves, and speaking to our feelings so that we don’t dare carry a single burden into another year.

    Needless to say, shaking off 2025 will require quite a bit of verbal blotting. The year has felt like a century, at best, and just when things were supposed to wind down and get quiet, a weekend of tumult and tragedy reminded the world just how much we’re suffering.

    An antisemitic massacre during a Hanukkah celebration at Australia’s Bondi Beach. A shooting at Brown University killed two students and injured nine others. And, late Sunday night, the horrific, violent deaths of Hollywood legend Rob Reiner and his wife, Michele Singer Reiner, purportedly at the hands of their son, Nick. The extent of the horror is indescribable, and it’s occurring on a global scale. And, yes, it often feels as though the weight of it is too much to bear. All we’re left with is confusion and the frustrating feeling of helplessness. We are at our wits’ end. There is no more avoiding, no more pretending. Something has got to change as soon as possible.

    There’s something to that. I don’t mean to sound trite or wilfully glib, but it’s merely the truth that every ending is followed by a beginning. Reiner’s seminal film “When Harry Met Sally” is full of them — beginnings and endings, false starts and full stops. It’s a movie for dreamers, realists and romantics alike, the kind of film that’s so fantastic and so painfully human that its brilliant existence is reason enough to believe in good things. Reiner’s filmography was full of these gems, with stunners like “Stand By Me” and “The Princess Bride” that defined not just their era but people’s entire lives.

    (Emma McIntyre/Getty Images for TCM) Rob Reiner, Meg Ryan and Billy Crystal attend The 30th Anniversary Screening of “When Harry Met Sally…” on April 11, 2019 in Hollywood, California.

    Loving openly and candidly shouldn’t feel like a radical act, but in a world proliferated with violence and hatred, it’s become one.

    “When Harry Met Sally,” however, is a special kind of classic. It’s no mere comfort watch, and certainly no chick flick. It’s a film for autumn, winter, spring and summer, just as much of a Christmas and New Year’s movie as it is a Valentine’s Day or anniversary movie. In its bones, there is a deep, true love that is the result of a close working relationship with screenwriter Nora Ephron, stars Billy Crystal and Meg Ryan, and Reiner’s wife, Michele, whom he met and fell in love with during production. Their passion incited a change of the film’s ending, and in turn, one of the all-time great professions of love ever captured on film — a change of fate, right at the stroke of midnight. Call it lightning in a bottle. Call it evidence of magic. Call it a kernel of hope to hold onto as we turn the page.

    Related, The questions “When Harry Met Sally” make us consider today

    In Kristin Marguerite Doidge’s 2022 biography of Ephron, the author peers into the fascinating details behind Ephron and Reiner’s long-gestating film, which began as an idea tossed toward Ephron from Reiner after a few lunch meetings. It was over those meals where Ephron became intrigued with the way Reiner talked about his bachelorhood. His anecdotes would become the basis for Crystal’s character, Harry, while Ryan’s witty foil, Sally, was the embodiment of Ephron’s sharp and observant eye. “This is a talk piece,” Reiner said about the film in 1985. “There are no chase scenes, no food fights. This is walks, phones, restaurants, movies.”

    Editor’s Note: Movie information below, a new feature from DWD. –DrWeb

    When Harry Met Sally... Plot: Sex always gets in the way of friendships between men and women. At least, that's what Harry Burns believes. So when Harry meets Sally Albright and a deep friendship blossoms between them, Harry's determined not to let his attraction to Sally destroy it. But when a night of weakness ends in a morning of panic, can the pair avoid succumbing to Harry's fears by remaining friends and admitting they just might be the perfect match for each other? The Movie DB: 7.404/10 Information Runtime: 96 min Genre: Comedy, Romance, Drama Language: English Country: United States of America Budget: $16,000,000 Revenue: $92,823,546 Homepage: Release date: July 12 1989

    A talk piece, indeed. While it’s Ephron’s characteristically strong dialogue and flair for realism that so many viewers fall head over heels for, Reiner’s blissfully simplistic direction is what captures the spark of two people slowly falling in love. Across years, Reiner follows Harry and Sally from their first meeting during a long-haul drive after college through their reconnection and eventual friendship and flirtation. There are long walks and even longer talks, conversations in book stores, on the leaf-strewn concrete sidewalks of a bygone era of New York City and, of course, on the phone.

    Ephron based the late-night phone conversations between Sally and Harry on Reiner’s frequent talks with Crystal, when the two would watch something on television together and provide commentary throughout. From Sally’s overly particular restaurant orders to Harry’s shock that women fake orgasms, all of it came out in the development process between Ephron and Reiner, and made it into the script. “When Harry Met Sally” rings so true because there isn’t a single false note in its lovely sonata.

    Continue/Read Original Article Here: “When Harry Met Sally” is Rob Reiner’s everlasting message of love – Salon.com

    #1989 #BillyCrystal #Director #Everlasting #MegRyan #MessageOfLove #NoraEphron #RobReiner #Salon #SalonCom #WhenHarryMetSally
  22. TURNING IT UP UNDER THE BRIDGE WITH JESS NUNES

    The most recent Under the Bridge (UtB) event took place on Aug. 5, from 6 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. The community-driven event series is free, with suggested donations of $10 per person, and is open to attendees of all ages. Local DJ’s play energetic sets in a variety of genres, from house to trance to afrobeats.  

    UtB is organised by Jess Nunes, a DJ and musician. Nunes began putting on the events in May 2023, inviting her Instagram followers to the free event.   

    “There were only nine attendees that showed up,” Nunes said. “And then it just grew and grew. Even the following dance, we had twenty or so.”   

    By August of that year, they had almost two hundred attendees.  

    Nunes is an avid cyclist, first discovering the bridge while cycling a popular trail. The natural beauty of the surroundings—and a striking piece of graffiti, reading “Live Unlike Another”, inspired Nunes.  

    “I just sort of felt that, you know, we are living unlike another. We’re going to do something outside of the mould of this Southern Ontario grind that we all feel stuck in,” she said.  

    Nunes credits the space with giving UtB its unique energy and spirit.   

    “If it’s raining, we’re still protected by the bridge. The bridge itself is symbolic, it’s protection of the community,” she said.  

    The renegade, inclusive component of putting on donation-based dance events under a public bridge undoubtedly informs UtB’s communal atmosphere.   

    Nunes draws comparison with the original notion of raves in the 80s and 90s, grassroots events held in abandoned factories and open fields that encouraged free expression. This exciting, alternative use of public space has been central for UtB’s appeal.  

    Initially Nunes did not apply for a permit for UtB, believing that Kitchener council would not allow the events to go forward.   

    “They don’t want us to express ourselves in these ways. This is me sticking it to the man and saying: look what I can do,” she said.  

    Nunes has a deep appreciation of the transformative effect of music—she originally moved to Kitchener in 2014 to study Music Therapy at Wilfrid Laurier University. Coming from Thunder Bay, Nunes was initially surprised by the cultural conformity of the music scene in KW.  

    Gradually however—especially since the pandemic—she has seen community-driven events, with alternative forms of music, become more active and popular.  

    Nunes has been overwhelmed by the impact of the UtB and believes the positive energy the event series has brought to the community has been brought back.  

    “I just want to inspire people, even though you feel down and out—our culture here is just so fast paced, and we’re not really taking time to break out of moods, think for ourselves. I use Under the Bridge as propulsion towards this, getting through the adversity—we’re reaching for the stars,” Nunes said.  

    “Some amazing things have happened since I created Under the Bridge…I found my father after 35 years of not knowing who he was…He came to his first Under the Bridge last August,” she continued.   

    The Aug. 5 event landed on Nune’s son birthday—attendees are invited to dress up in animal costumes for the event.   

    “It’s just an opportunity to get silly,” Nunes said. “I usually like circus acts and stuff like that for the kids. And like, I would like to celebrate my son’s birthday, and he likes to be an astronaut every year…I love to see people get dressed up.”  

    Beginning with a Magic Show, the DJ lineup includes Nunes, Jonny Rocha, Robin Green, Jacobilly, Uncle Doobie and Arsh. A sound installation from local artist Important Hair, titled Used Classical Records, will be played in full, while vendors showcase and sell their artwork.   

    For more information, visit @Underthebridge_dance on Instagram.  

    #arshA #astronaut #inspiration #jacobilly #jessNunes #jonnyRocha #JoshMiltonBell #liveUnlikeAnother #LocalArt #localDjs #localMusic #magicShow #robinGreen #SouthernOntario #uncleDoobie #underTheBridge #usedClassicalRecords #UtB

  23. TURNING IT UP UNDER THE BRIDGE WITH JESS NUNES

    The most recent Under the Bridge (UtB) event took place on Aug. 5, from 6 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. The community-driven event series is free, with suggested donations of $10 per person, and is open to attendees of all ages. Local DJ’s play energetic sets in a variety of genres, from house to trance to afrobeats.  

    UtB is organised by Jess Nunes, a DJ and musician. Nunes began putting on the events in May 2023, inviting her Instagram followers to the free event.   

    “There were only nine attendees that showed up,” Nunes said. “And then it just grew and grew. Even the following dance, we had twenty or so.”   

    By August of that year, they had almost two hundred attendees.  

    Nunes is an avid cyclist, first discovering the bridge while cycling a popular trail. The natural beauty of the surroundings—and a striking piece of graffiti, reading “Live Unlike Another”, inspired Nunes.  

    “I just sort of felt that, you know, we are living unlike another. We’re going to do something outside of the mould of this Southern Ontario grind that we all feel stuck in,” she said.  

    Nunes credits the space with giving UtB its unique energy and spirit.   

    “If it’s raining, we’re still protected by the bridge. The bridge itself is symbolic, it’s protection of the community,” she said.  

    The renegade, inclusive component of putting on donation-based dance events under a public bridge undoubtedly informs UtB’s communal atmosphere.   

    Nunes draws comparison with the original notion of raves in the 80s and 90s, grassroots events held in abandoned factories and open fields that encouraged free expression. This exciting, alternative use of public space has been central for UtB’s appeal.  

    Initially Nunes did not apply for a permit for UtB, believing that Kitchener council would not allow the events to go forward.   

    “They don’t want us to express ourselves in these ways. This is me sticking it to the man and saying: look what I can do,” she said.  

    Nunes has a deep appreciation of the transformative effect of music—she originally moved to Kitchener in 2014 to study Music Therapy at Wilfrid Laurier University. Coming from Thunder Bay, Nunes was initially surprised by the cultural conformity of the music scene in KW.  

    Gradually however—especially since the pandemic—she has seen community-driven events, with alternative forms of music, become more active and popular.  

    Nunes has been overwhelmed by the impact of the UtB and believes the positive energy the event series has brought to the community has been brought back.  

    “I just want to inspire people, even though you feel down and out—our culture here is just so fast paced, and we’re not really taking time to break out of moods, think for ourselves. I use Under the Bridge as propulsion towards this, getting through the adversity—we’re reaching for the stars,” Nunes said.  

    “Some amazing things have happened since I created Under the Bridge…I found my father after 35 years of not knowing who he was…He came to his first Under the Bridge last August,” she continued.   

    The Aug. 5 event landed on Nune’s son birthday—attendees are invited to dress up in animal costumes for the event.   

    “It’s just an opportunity to get silly,” Nunes said. “I usually like circus acts and stuff like that for the kids. And like, I would like to celebrate my son’s birthday, and he likes to be an astronaut every year…I love to see people get dressed up.”  

    Beginning with a Magic Show, the DJ lineup includes Nunes, Jonny Rocha, Robin Green, Jacobilly, Uncle Doobie and Arsh. A sound installation from local artist Important Hair, titled Used Classical Records, will be played in full, while vendors showcase and sell their artwork.   

    For more information, visit @Underthebridge_dance on Instagram.  

    #arshA #astronaut #inspiration #jacobilly #jessNunes #jonnyRocha #JoshMiltonBell #liveUnlikeAnother #LocalArt #localDjs #localMusic #magicShow #robinGreen #SouthernOntario #uncleDoobie #underTheBridge #usedClassicalRecords #UtB

  24. TURNING IT UP UNDER THE BRIDGE WITH JESS NUNES

    The most recent Under the Bridge (UtB) event took place on Aug. 5, from 6 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. The community-driven event series is free, with suggested donations of $10 per person, and is open to attendees of all ages. Local DJ’s play energetic sets in a variety of genres, from house to trance to afrobeats.  

    UtB is organised by Jess Nunes, a DJ and musician. Nunes began putting on the events in May 2023, inviting her Instagram followers to the free event.   

    “There were only nine attendees that showed up,” Nunes said. “And then it just grew and grew. Even the following dance, we had twenty or so.”   

    By August of that year, they had almost two hundred attendees.  

    Nunes is an avid cyclist, first discovering the bridge while cycling a popular trail. The natural beauty of the surroundings—and a striking piece of graffiti, reading “Live Unlike Another”, inspired Nunes.  

    “I just sort of felt that, you know, we are living unlike another. We’re going to do something outside of the mould of this Southern Ontario grind that we all feel stuck in,” she said.  

    Nunes credits the space with giving UtB its unique energy and spirit.   

    “If it’s raining, we’re still protected by the bridge. The bridge itself is symbolic, it’s protection of the community,” she said.  

    The renegade, inclusive component of putting on donation-based dance events under a public bridge undoubtedly informs UtB’s communal atmosphere.   

    Nunes draws comparison with the original notion of raves in the 80s and 90s, grassroots events held in abandoned factories and open fields that encouraged free expression. This exciting, alternative use of public space has been central for UtB’s appeal.  

    Initially Nunes did not apply for a permit for UtB, believing that Kitchener council would not allow the events to go forward.   

    “They don’t want us to express ourselves in these ways. This is me sticking it to the man and saying: look what I can do,” she said.  

    Nunes has a deep appreciation of the transformative effect of music—she originally moved to Kitchener in 2014 to study Music Therapy at Wilfrid Laurier University. Coming from Thunder Bay, Nunes was initially surprised by the cultural conformity of the music scene in KW.  

    Gradually however—especially since the pandemic—she has seen community-driven events, with alternative forms of music, become more active and popular.  

    Nunes has been overwhelmed by the impact of the UtB and believes the positive energy the event series has brought to the community has been brought back.  

    “I just want to inspire people, even though you feel down and out—our culture here is just so fast paced, and we’re not really taking time to break out of moods, think for ourselves. I use Under the Bridge as propulsion towards this, getting through the adversity—we’re reaching for the stars,” Nunes said.  

    “Some amazing things have happened since I created Under the Bridge…I found my father after 35 years of not knowing who he was…He came to his first Under the Bridge last August,” she continued.   

    The Aug. 5 event landed on Nune’s son birthday—attendees are invited to dress up in animal costumes for the event.   

    “It’s just an opportunity to get silly,” Nunes said. “I usually like circus acts and stuff like that for the kids. And like, I would like to celebrate my son’s birthday, and he likes to be an astronaut every year…I love to see people get dressed up.”  

    Beginning with a Magic Show, the DJ lineup includes Nunes, Jonny Rocha, Robin Green, Jacobilly, Uncle Doobie and Arsh. A sound installation from local artist Important Hair, titled Used Classical Records, will be played in full, while vendors showcase and sell their artwork.   

    For more information, visit @Underthebridge_dance on Instagram.  

    #arshA #astronaut #inspiration #jacobilly #jessNunes #jonnyRocha #JoshMiltonBell #liveUnlikeAnother #LocalArt #localDjs #localMusic #magicShow #robinGreen #SouthernOntario #uncleDoobie #underTheBridge #usedClassicalRecords #UtB

  25. TURNING IT UP UNDER THE BRIDGE WITH JESS NUNES

    The most recent Under the Bridge (UtB) event took place on Aug. 5, from 6 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. The community-driven event series is free, with suggested donations of $10 per person, and is open to attendees of all ages. Local DJ’s play energetic sets in a variety of genres, from house to trance to afrobeats.  

    UtB is organised by Jess Nunes, a DJ and musician. Nunes began putting on the events in May 2023, inviting her Instagram followers to the free event.   

    “There were only nine attendees that showed up,” Nunes said. “And then it just grew and grew. Even the following dance, we had twenty or so.”   

    By August of that year, they had almost two hundred attendees.  

    Nunes is an avid cyclist, first discovering the bridge while cycling a popular trail. The natural beauty of the surroundings—and a striking piece of graffiti, reading “Live Unlike Another”, inspired Nunes.  

    “I just sort of felt that, you know, we are living unlike another. We’re going to do something outside of the mould of this Southern Ontario grind that we all feel stuck in,” she said.  

    Nunes credits the space with giving UtB its unique energy and spirit.   

    “If it’s raining, we’re still protected by the bridge. The bridge itself is symbolic, it’s protection of the community,” she said.  

    The renegade, inclusive component of putting on donation-based dance events under a public bridge undoubtedly informs UtB’s communal atmosphere.   

    Nunes draws comparison with the original notion of raves in the 80s and 90s, grassroots events held in abandoned factories and open fields that encouraged free expression. This exciting, alternative use of public space has been central for UtB’s appeal.  

    Initially Nunes did not apply for a permit for UtB, believing that Kitchener council would not allow the events to go forward.   

    “They don’t want us to express ourselves in these ways. This is me sticking it to the man and saying: look what I can do,” she said.  

    Nunes has a deep appreciation of the transformative effect of music—she originally moved to Kitchener in 2014 to study Music Therapy at Wilfrid Laurier University. Coming from Thunder Bay, Nunes was initially surprised by the cultural conformity of the music scene in KW.  

    Gradually however—especially since the pandemic—she has seen community-driven events, with alternative forms of music, become more active and popular.  

    Nunes has been overwhelmed by the impact of the UtB and believes the positive energy the event series has brought to the community has been brought back.  

    “I just want to inspire people, even though you feel down and out—our culture here is just so fast paced, and we’re not really taking time to break out of moods, think for ourselves. I use Under the Bridge as propulsion towards this, getting through the adversity—we’re reaching for the stars,” Nunes said.  

    “Some amazing things have happened since I created Under the Bridge…I found my father after 35 years of not knowing who he was…He came to his first Under the Bridge last August,” she continued.   

    The Aug. 5 event landed on Nune’s son birthday—attendees are invited to dress up in animal costumes for the event.   

    “It’s just an opportunity to get silly,” Nunes said. “I usually like circus acts and stuff like that for the kids. And like, I would like to celebrate my son’s birthday, and he likes to be an astronaut every year…I love to see people get dressed up.”  

    Beginning with a Magic Show, the DJ lineup includes Nunes, Jonny Rocha, Robin Green, Jacobilly, Uncle Doobie and Arsh. A sound installation from local artist Important Hair, titled Used Classical Records, will be played in full, while vendors showcase and sell their artwork.   

    For more information, visit @Underthebridge_dance on Instagram.  

    #arshA #astronaut #inspiration #jacobilly #jessNunes #jonnyRocha #JoshMiltonBell #liveUnlikeAnother #LocalArt #localDjs #localMusic #magicShow #robinGreen #SouthernOntario #uncleDoobie #underTheBridge #usedClassicalRecords #UtB

  26. TURNING IT UP UNDER THE BRIDGE WITH JESS NUNES

    The most recent Under the Bridge (UtB) event took place on Aug. 5, from 6 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. The community-driven event series is free, with suggested donations of $10 per person, and is open to attendees of all ages. Local DJ’s play energetic sets in a variety of genres, from house to trance to afrobeats.  

    UtB is organised by Jess Nunes, a DJ and musician. Nunes began putting on the events in May 2023, inviting her Instagram followers to the free event.   

    “There were only nine attendees that showed up,” Nunes said. “And then it just grew and grew. Even the following dance, we had twenty or so.”   

    By August of that year, they had almost two hundred attendees.  

    Nunes is an avid cyclist, first discovering the bridge while cycling a popular trail. The natural beauty of the surroundings—and a striking piece of graffiti, reading “Live Unlike Another”, inspired Nunes.  

    “I just sort of felt that, you know, we are living unlike another. We’re going to do something outside of the mould of this Southern Ontario grind that we all feel stuck in,” she said.  

    Nunes credits the space with giving UtB its unique energy and spirit.   

    “If it’s raining, we’re still protected by the bridge. The bridge itself is symbolic, it’s protection of the community,” she said.  

    The renegade, inclusive component of putting on donation-based dance events under a public bridge undoubtedly informs UtB’s communal atmosphere.   

    Nunes draws comparison with the original notion of raves in the 80s and 90s, grassroots events held in abandoned factories and open fields that encouraged free expression. This exciting, alternative use of public space has been central for UtB’s appeal.  

    Initially Nunes did not apply for a permit for UtB, believing that Kitchener council would not allow the events to go forward.   

    “They don’t want us to express ourselves in these ways. This is me sticking it to the man and saying: look what I can do,” she said.  

    Nunes has a deep appreciation of the transformative effect of music—she originally moved to Kitchener in 2014 to study Music Therapy at Wilfrid Laurier University. Coming from Thunder Bay, Nunes was initially surprised by the cultural conformity of the music scene in KW.  

    Gradually however—especially since the pandemic—she has seen community-driven events, with alternative forms of music, become more active and popular.  

    Nunes has been overwhelmed by the impact of the UtB and believes the positive energy the event series has brought to the community has been brought back.  

    “I just want to inspire people, even though you feel down and out—our culture here is just so fast paced, and we’re not really taking time to break out of moods, think for ourselves. I use Under the Bridge as propulsion towards this, getting through the adversity—we’re reaching for the stars,” Nunes said.  

    “Some amazing things have happened since I created Under the Bridge…I found my father after 35 years of not knowing who he was…He came to his first Under the Bridge last August,” she continued.   

    The Aug. 5 event landed on Nune’s son birthday—attendees are invited to dress up in animal costumes for the event.   

    “It’s just an opportunity to get silly,” Nunes said. “I usually like circus acts and stuff like that for the kids. And like, I would like to celebrate my son’s birthday, and he likes to be an astronaut every year…I love to see people get dressed up.”  

    The Aug. 5 show began with a Magic Show and the DJ lineup included Nunes, Jonny Rocha, Robin Green, Jacobilly, Uncle Doobie and Arsh. A sound installation from local artist Important Hair, titled Used Classical Records, will be played in full, while vendors showcase and sell their artwork.   

    For more information, visit @Underthebridge_dance on Instagram.  

    #arshA #astronaut #inspiration #jacobilly #jessNunes #jonnyRocha #JoshMiltonBell #liveUnlikeAnother #LocalArt #localDjs #localMusic #magicShow #robinGreen #SouthernOntario #uncleDoobie #underTheBridge #usedClassicalRecords #UtB

  27. This chip does all the real RF things in a #60GHz #millimeterwave ethernet bridge.

    Sadly very goring to the homebrewer interested in #mmW bands like #76GHz or #47GHz.

  28. This chip does all the real RF things in a #60GHz #millimeterwave ethernet bridge.

    Sadly very goring to the homebrewer interested in #mmW bands like #76GHz or #47GHz.