Henry Eftoski

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Henry Eftoski

Henry Eftoski

@_Revolver66

Born in Jersey City, N.J. in the year of who knows when It was positively a Tuesday

Princeton, NJ Entrou em Ocak 2012
996 Seguindo548 Seguidores
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burt berman
burt berman@bbu·
Elger Esser Capbreton 2025 .
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Hopewell Chin’ono
Hopewell Chin’ono@daddyhope·
Zelensky was prophetic🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
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Joyce Carol Oates
Joyce Carol Oates@JoyceCarolOates·
“the press must start…”. that train left the station years ago.
Critical Thinker@CritclThnker

@JoyceWhiteVance That's trump's pipe dream. Worse, he feels the need to monetize everything (what would be his cut?). Int'l bodies of water are not taxed. Iran hasn't agreed. With trump, the press must start to follow the money. He is profiting off the presidency with no accountability.

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ArtButMakeItNow
ArtButMakeItNow@artbutnow·
New York Movie, by Edward Hopper, 1939, 📸 by Carlos Fyfe
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Joyce Carol Oates
Joyce Carol Oates@JoyceCarolOates·
maybe what's left of military leaders could refuse to take orders from a mentally ill president? or are those who haven't been fired all lackeys? do some believe in the Rapture? most (of us) feel like helpless hostages. our representatives in Congress seem to have vanished. not much to boast about in the US any longer. in school history books the T***p years will have to be redacted.
Jonathan Lemire@JonLemire

President Donald Trump is threatening that a “whole civilization will die tonight”

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Alastair Hilton
Alastair Hilton@London_W4·
Sunlight, shadows and The Battleship Building. Originally an office for British Rail when it was built in 1969 (an exceptionally good year as it happens). Empty now I believe. I really love this building. Don’t know why, but I do.
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Sunny
Sunny@Ginger_ajm·
“Power can’t see” StreetArt by Alice Pasquini In Crotone #Italy
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Anish Moonka
Anish Moonka@anishmoonka·
NASA has 32 cameras on the Artemis II spacecraft. The top science priority during the Moon flyby was the four astronauts looking out the window and talking about what they saw. NASA's lunar science lead confirmed it. What the crew says out loud about the Moon's surface matters more to the science team than anything the cameras capture. NASA trained this crew in Iceland's volcanic highlands and at an impact crater in Labrador, Canada, teaching them to read rock textures and spot geological details at 25,000 mph. There's a reason NASA trusts human eyes over cameras. In 1972, Apollo 17 astronaut Harrison Schmitt was walking near a small crater called Shorty when he scuffed the dirt with his boot. The soil underneath was orange. Schmitt was the only trained geologist to ever walk on the Moon, and he got so excited he blurred most of his own photos. That orange soil turned out to be tiny glass beads from a volcanic eruption 3.64 billion years ago, one of the biggest finds of the entire Apollo program. A boot and a pair of trained eyes caught what no camera did. For this flyby, NASA sent the crew a final list of 30 surface targets. They killed all the cabin lights to cut window reflections. They worked in pairs, rotating every 55 to 85 minutes, calling out craters and lava flows while scientists at Johnson Space Center analyzed everything in real time. Pilot Victor Glover reported that the Moon's south pole, where NASA wants to land astronauts by 2028, looked "more jagged" than the north with much steeper terrain. One observation from a human eye at 4,070 miles could shape where the next crew touches down. At 6:44 PM Eastern, Orion slipped behind the far side and went radio silent for 40 minutes. Four people, completely cut off from every other human alive, the Moon blocking every signal back to Earth. The last time humans experienced that was December 1972. They broke the all-time distance record on the way. Apollo 13 held it for 56 years at 248,655 miles from Earth. Artemis II passed that mark and kept going to 252,760. Jim Lovell, who commanded Apollo 13 and held that record his whole life, died last August at 97, eight months before these four beat it. Before he died, Lovell recorded a message for the crew. "Welcome to my old neighborhood," he told them. "Don't forget to enjoy the view." The crew named two craters during the flyby. One for their spacecraft, Integrity. The other, Carroll, for Commander Reid Wiseman's late wife, a nurse who cared for newborns and died of cancer in 2020 at 46. Wiseman has raised their two daughters alone since. When Jeremy Hansen read the name to Mission Control, his voice broke. The crew hugged. Wiseman and Koch wiped tears. Then they got back to work, because they still had hours of Moon left to map with their eyes.
NASA@NASA

LIVE: Watch with us as the Artemis II astronauts make their closest approach to the Moon, traveling farther from Earth than ever before. twitter.com/i/broadcasts/1…

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CSPAN
CSPAN@cspan·
President Trump touts progress on inflation, at White House Easter Egg Roll: "They didn't want me to order eggs for the Easter Egg Roll…They wanted me to use plastic…Within a short period of time, eggs came down. They came down 40%, 50%."
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Chris Williams
Chris Williams@Astro_ChrisW·
As the @NASAArtemis II crew approaches the Moon, they will get a firsthand view of the Moon's surface. One of the most striking (pun intended) features they will see is the craters which mark its surface, and are especially numerous on the far side, which the crew will be able to directly see. These craters are formed by impacts that have happened over the history of our Solar System and act as a sort of historical record of the conditions around the Earth and Moon. The Earth has had many impacts over its history that have had big consequences on our planet (just ask the dinosaurs...), but plate tectonics, weathering, and volcanism have erased many craters on the Earth, and with them, the record of this history. The Moon helps us fill in the picture and tells us a unique story about our planet's past! Even so, there are still many craters on Earth, but many are often not as easily visible as those on the Moon. Some, like Manicouagan Crater in Quebec, Canada, are very readily seen from the @Space_Station. This crater was created over 200 million years ago, when a 5 km asteroid crashed into the Earth, and is over 70 km wide. I saw this view through the Cupola window as I was exercising and had to pause to take a picture!
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NASA
NASA@NASA·
We're going farther than ever before 🚀 Today, the Artemis II crew will break the record for how far humans have traveled from Earth as they fly around the far side of the Moon. Coverage begins at 1 p.m. EDT (1700 UTC). Watch Artemis II make history: nasa.gov/ways-to-watch/
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The Green Dragon Tavern
The Green Dragon Tavern@greendragonhq·
Multiple members of Congress have begun calling for the 25th Amendment to be enacted to remove Trump from office.
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G M Thomas FRSA FRAS
G M Thomas FRSA FRAS@japanauthor·
Emperor Hirohito along with his wife, Empress Kōjun, and five of their six surviving children - a photograph taken during the 1940s. The scene reflects the Westernization of Imperial Japanese life, evidenced by everyone wearing western-style clothing (including shoes) and the presence of an upright piano. On top of the piano is a painting of Mount Fuji, a symbolic Japanese icon of course and in a typical colour scheme. Akihito is sitting next to his father. Masahito, Prince Hitachi 常陸宮正仁親王 is also in the group. 島津 貴子, Shimazu Takako is sitting next to the Empress 香淳皇后 on the piano stool. #EmperorShōwa #昭和天皇 #ShōwaTennō
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