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A group of independent filmmakers have put together a snazzy homemade film based on Ben Templesmith 30 Days Of Night supernatural IDW Publishing comic miniseries, Welcome To Hoxford. It pretty atmospheric for a not-for-profit production, and the film stars Jason Flemyng Primeval, X-Men: First Class as the disturbed protagonist. Be sure to check out the making-of website for some snazzy shots of the production. Here the synopsis of the film: Raymond Delgado is no ordinary prisoner 8230; On a good day he ;ll take the time to tell you he the son of Zeus before he tears out your jugular. On a bad day, you won ;t even have a moment to call out for help. Af
stanley cup uk ter a yet another incident Raymond has been transferred to Hoxford, a correctional facility and mental institution known for its radical methods. At Hoxford, Raymond not the only predator 8230; Come nightfall, under a full moon, bloodcurdling screams pierce through the darkness of the prison courtyard. It hunting hour! As the other Hoxford prisoners huddle in the obscurity of their prison cells trembling in
stanley cup fright, Ray cracks a smile. He thrives on confrontation. Lock a human b
stanley cups east in a cage with a legendary monster and, in your opinion 8230; Who will devour And who will be devoured [Welcome to Hoxford via Nerdcore] Comicsidw comics Pgqu How the Bottle of Hydrogen Peroxide in Your Bathroom Could Have Been Submarine Fuel
We didn ;t always have radar to detect incoming aircraft. During the First and Second World Wars, there were multiple attempts, and multiple apparatuses, used to detect incoming planes based on the sounds they made. Check out how people spotted enemy planes, using tubas 鈥?and modern art. Radar seems like a natural way to locate airplanes nowadays, when it in full swing getting commuter flights lined up on the runway and spotting nuclear submarines. But the idea of finding an aircraft using a radio wasn ;t always obvious. And this was especially true during the First and Second World Wars, when resources were strain
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stanley mug anes had a fairly obvious way of announcing themselves anyway. Back when pilots and engineers were too busy trying to keep planes in the air to get them to go high, or to quiet their engines, pretty much anyone could hear them coming. That all-encompassing sound was the plane best camouflage. Th
stanley cup e sound of a plane engine is so far away, and reverberates off the ground so well, that it sounds like it coming from everywhere. There plenty of volume but no specific locality. That where the innovation comes in. The most famous radar-less plane-spotter of the Second World War was the war tuba 鈥?which has to win the prize for the least-intimidating instrument heh of war ever designed. Used primarily by the Japanese, the tuba also showed up on the southern shores of England. The war tuba looks like t