Q1)1st December is the Day Without Art. The day raises awareness of which condition?
Q2)1st December, 1959, sawing the signing of the Antarctic Treaty: designed to preserve the continent of Antarctica. Name any one of the twelve original signatory nations.
Q3)1st December, 1955, saw who refuse to give up her bus seat … ?
Q4)1st December, 1945, saw the birth of actress, Bette Midler. What — in 1972 — was the name of her first hit album?
Q5)1st December, 1951, saw the birth of Jaco Pastorius. Which instrument was he famous for playing?
Q1)30th November is the feast of Saint Andrew. Who, in the Bible, is Saint Andrew’s brother?
A1)SaintPeter. (Also known as Simon Peter and Simon.)
Q2)According to Orthodox tradition, which Patriarch is the successor to Saint Andrew?
A2)The Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople. (If I’ve got it right … ? The Apostolic patriarchs are considered to be successors to the relevant follower of Christ. The Pope, for example, is a successor to Saint Peter.)
Q3)On the 30th, Scottish Government buildings fly what: the Scottish flag, the Union flag or the Royal Standard?
A3)The Scottish flag: also known as the Saltire, and Saint Andrew’s Cross.
Q4)In Western Europe’s occult tradition, Saint Andrew’s associated with which star sign?
* You’re right, Olga: one of the victims was a Cambridge graduate called Jack Merritt. Seemingly, he was one of the of the event the attacker was due to speak at. Apparently? The event was all about a group encouraging offends studying together. The course seems to have come a bit late, I think: especially when you consider the attacker was refused help inside. What CAN I tell you? As for reviewing … ? That sounds good, although I’d need to it in a format I can access: Word, .rtf, what have you. And I’ll need some idea of what’s need: proofreading, a generalised review, with suggestions … and a rough idea of what I’m doing … ! I’ll DM you my email address, shall I, Olga … ? (I heard about the stabbing at The Hague, Olga: obviously, the UK media have been concentrating on other things.)
† Yep, that sounds about right, Debbi! And yes, external drives — flash drives, external hard drives, what have you — need formatting. It’s easy enough to do, though: plug the thing in, open Disk Utility, and press the relevant buttons. (Rick or you would need to press Erase — at the top of the window — then press the Erase button button at the bottom. If the drive is staying attached to a Mac, he can use the Mac OS Extended (Journaled) option with GUID Partition scheme. If he’s formatting a flash drive so he can share files with a Windows computer, he’d need to format it to ExFAT, or FAT, and Master Boot Record. Ummm … I think the screen shot makes better sense … )
‡ Apparently? Bette Midler’s been known as Bathhouse Betty for years. Additionally? Her original pianist, back then, was Barry Manilow!
Q1) AIDS Q2) Argentina Q3) Rosa Parks Q4) The Divine Miss M Q5) The bass Oh, the cuts. I remember how annoying the conversations about the ceaseless cuts were when I was working for the NHS (mind you, we had similar conversations when I worked in the private sector as well). As I told my boss, if they insist on savings year on year, eventually we'll have to work with no budget at all. You can't save money when the essentials keep going up in price and truly important things are far more valuable than money. Regarding the review, what the author is after is not a beta reader (people who read books in the early stages and provide feedback to the authors, which might make them change it or modify it), or a proofreader (people charge for that service, although if you feel up to it, it might be a good option), but just a review, the same as you would provide for a book you bought online (Amazon being usually the main interest, although places like Goodreads and other readers sites also share them). Reviews are pretty personal, and they go from people just saying they like something or not (there is usually a requirement of at least a sentence in most outlets), to people going into a detailed description of what they liked or disliked and comparing the book to others similar. If you've listened to some of Debbi's reviews or read some of mine, you know what I mean, but, as I say, each person does it differently, and it also depends on what you are reviewing. As you know, you can read ebooks anywhere, you don't need an e-reader. It's just a matter of downloading the free software (Amazon provides its own, but most other books are on EPUB format, and although my reader is a Kindle, I have one EPUB reader installed on my computer just to check what the books look like when I submit them for publication. I am pretty sure this is available both for PCs and Apple, because, after all the Apple store also has books and they are EPUB in format), either onto the computer, the tablet, the phone... By the way, I'm sure you've heard of it, but perhaps you haven't used it. Calibre allows one to manage ebooks and to convert one format into another easily. https://calibre-ebook.com/ It is free although it has a page asking for donations. In any case, the author would probably be able to provide you any format you need, but I must admit that some authors, especially if they are new at publishing, sometimes don't know how to deal with the technical side of things, and if they work with a small publisher, it can get complicated. But I just wanted to know if you think you might be interested. I can always ask him to get in touch with you directly, and you can see if you're interested or not. The book might be terrible, and after all, it's just a kindness (and a free book, but there are many around) as there's no payment involved.
I love it when someone comments. But, having had anonymous comments I feel may be libellous, actionable or just plain offensive, over the years?
I’d appreciate you* leaving your name — with a link to your website or social-media profile†, for preference — before you post a comment.
Should you choose to use a pseudonym/name, I’d appreciate it if that name were to be polite and inoffensive. I’d rather you kept it clean, and relatively grown up. Comments left with a pseudonym will be posted at my discretion: I really prefer a link.
Contentious, actionable or abusive posts left anonymously will not be posted. Nor will comments using offensive pseudonyms or language, or that are abusive of other commenters.
Thank you.
* I know many value their online privacy. I respect that. But hope you respect my wish to see who’s commenting on my blog: and my wish for you to introduce your self to me, and to your fellow commentors.
† Your Facebook, X/Twitter, Blogger, Instagram, TikTok or LinkedIn profile are acceptable. I also like seeing folks webpages.
Q1) AIDS
ReplyDeleteQ2) Argentina
Q3) Rosa Parks
Q4) The Divine Miss M
Q5) The bass
Oh, the cuts. I remember how annoying the conversations about the ceaseless cuts were when I was working for the NHS (mind you, we had similar conversations when I worked in the private sector as well). As I told my boss, if they insist on savings year on year, eventually we'll have to work with no budget at all. You can't save money when the essentials keep going up in price and truly important things are far more valuable than money.
Regarding the review, what the author is after is not a beta reader (people who read books in the early stages and provide feedback to the authors, which might make them change it or modify it), or a proofreader (people charge for that service, although if you feel up to it, it might be a good option), but just a review, the same as you would provide for a book you bought online (Amazon being usually the main interest, although places like Goodreads and other readers sites also share them). Reviews are pretty personal, and they go from people just saying they like something or not (there is usually a requirement of at least a sentence in most outlets), to people going into a detailed description of what they liked or disliked and comparing the book to others similar. If you've listened to some of Debbi's reviews or read some of mine, you know what I mean, but, as I say, each person does it differently, and it also depends on what you are reviewing.
As you know, you can read ebooks anywhere, you don't need an e-reader. It's just a matter of downloading the free software (Amazon provides its own, but most other books are on EPUB format, and although my reader is a Kindle, I have one EPUB reader installed on my computer just to check what the books look like when I submit them for publication. I am pretty sure this is available both for PCs and Apple, because, after all the Apple store also has books and they are EPUB in format), either onto the computer, the tablet, the phone... By the way, I'm sure you've heard of it, but perhaps you haven't used it. Calibre allows one to manage ebooks and to convert one format into another easily. https://calibre-ebook.com/
It is free although it has a page asking for donations.
In any case, the author would probably be able to provide you any format you need, but I must admit that some authors, especially if they are new at publishing, sometimes don't know how to deal with the technical side of things, and if they work with a small publisher, it can get complicated. But I just wanted to know if you think you might be interested. I can always ask him to get in touch with you directly, and you can see if you're interested or not. The book might be terrible, and after all, it's just a kindness (and a free book, but there are many around) as there's no payment involved.
With an album named "The Divine Miss M", I can believe that about Bathhouse Bette. :)
ReplyDeleteNot that there's anything wrong with that, as Jerry Seinfeld once said. :)
1. AIDS
2. the United States
3. Rosa Parks
4. The Divine Miss M
5. electric bass