"Woman. Get onto a steam locomotive!"
Soviet poster from 1939
Peaked Cap: for people who don't dare to wear a beret
Louis Espinassous (1951) is an educator, biologist,
ethnologist, novelist, storyteller and shepherd, working more particularly in
nature education.
Louis Espinassous lives in Béarn, in the Ossau Valley (hence
the brown beret, typical for the Ossau Valley).
For twenty years he worked as a technical and educational
advisor in Nature Education within the Pyrenees National Park, as well as at
the Departmental Directorate of Youth and Sports of the Pyrénées-Atlantiques.
A storyteller from his adolescence, he continued, over the
years, to tell stories for children and adults, producing a number of
naturalist, ethnographic and educational books and documents.
Yakov Khalip (1908-1980) was born in 1908 in St. Petersburg, in a family of musicians. His first publication in the magazine “Ogonyok” – a photograph of the embankment of the Moscow River at night – took place in 1926. Two years later, Khalip became a participant in the exhibition “10 years of Soviet photography” and received a diploma for a portrait series of actors. Soon his photographs began to be published by the magazines “Cinema and Life” and “Soviet Photo”.
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| Clock factory, 1936 |
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| Water drinker, 1950 |
The Arktika is a Russian nuclear-powered icebreaker built by
Baltic Shipyard in Saint Petersburg. It is the lead ship of Project 22220
icebreakers and superseded the preceding class of nuclear-powered icebreakers
as the largest and most powerful icebreaker ever constructed.

Solidarity is the Weapon of Victory!
Nina Alexeyevna Lobkovskaya (1924) was a sniper in the Red Army during World War II.
She attained the rank of lieutenant and commanded a separate women's sniper company of the 3rd Shock Army during World War II. She was wounded twice and killed 89 people during the war.
After graduating in history from Moscow State University, she worked as a lecturer that the Central Museum of V. I. Lenin, and in 1974 she was awarded the title Honored Culture Worker of the RSFSR.
The "Cambrai beret" refers to the black beret worn by the Royal Tank Regiment (RTR). It's a distinctive part of their uniform, along with black coveralls and boots, and is closely associated with the Battle of Cambrai in 1917. The black beret was first adopted by the RTR, then known as the Tank Corps, around the time of the Battle of Cambrai.
The Battle of Cambrai in 1917 was a significant event in the history of tank warfare, marking the first large-scale use of tanks in battle.
The Cultural Association of the Heritage of Old Hand Tools of Cambrai aims to preserve the heritage of old hand tools and machines of our ancestors (from the 18th to the 20th century), to transmit the memory of the living conditions of past generations, to school students and the general public through exhibitions and activities. To date, the association has 22 active members and more than 145 benefactor members.
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| Founder and president Gilbert de Sainte-Marisville |
The Ecomuseum houses 2,300 original pieces. More than 40 themes are covered: rural France in the past, artisans, street trades, schools between the two wars, our grandmothers' recipes, the working conditions of men and women, etc.
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| Gilbert de Sainte-Marisville showing a late 20th century dog cart |
A strange thought for previous generations, how perfectly ordinary jobs would go extinct over time.




Hone Peneamine Anatipa Te Pona Tuwhare (1922 –2008) was a noted Māori New Zealand poet. He is closely associated with The Catlins in the Southland region of New Zealand, where he lived for the latter part of his life.
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| Tuwhare during his service with J-Force in Japan, post WW2 |
Starting in 1939, Tuwhare, encouraged by fellow poet R.A.K.
Mason, began to write while working as an apprentice at the Otahuhu Railway
Workshops.
In 1956, Tuwhare started writing seriously after resigning
from a local branch of the Communist party. His first, and arguably best-known
work, No Ordinary Sun, was published in 1964 to widespread acclaim and
subsequently reprinted ten times over the next 30 years, becoming one of the
most widely read individual collections of poetry in New Zealand history.
When Tuwhare's poems first began to appear in the late 1950s
and early 1960s they were recognised as a new departure in New Zealand poetry,
cutting across the debates and divisions between the 1930s and post-war
generations. Much of the works' originality was the result of their distinctly
Māori perspective.
Mick Woods, who was sentenced to two years for his part in
the Rotherham riots, is no stranger to protests and pickets.
Mick Woods was sentenced to two years in prison. “My conscience is very clear. Very clear. The people what don’t go down there [to protest], they are proper criminals”, says Wood.
Though Woods appeared to be anti-immigration generally, his
protest had been against “atrocious terrorist acts” in Southport. He had
sympathy for the asylum seekers, he said, and had not wanted them to be hurt.
“I don’t blame people coming here. We’re sticking us nose in people’s business,
all over the planet,” he said.
More berets, on males and females, in more fascinating (restored) footage from 1945.
Some good berets in this incredible restored footage from May 1945.
Marshal Georgi Konstantinovich Zhukov - commander-in-chief
of the Red Army - inspects the city on May 3, 1945 after the surrender of
Berlin. He is accompanied by Arthur Pieck - the later general director of the
East-German airline Interflug and son of the first president of the GDR,
Wilhelm Pieck. In addition, celebrations of the Red Army in front of the
Brandenburg Gate, the Victory Column and the Lustgarten are shown with rare
original sound.
Locations chronologically:
0:00 Reichtsag - 0:26 Brandenburg Gate - 1:34 Reich
Chancellery (dead Hitler lookalike and dead Goebbels family) - 3:15 Victory
Column - 4:06 Georgen Church (blown up in 1949) - 4:40 City Palace - Kaiser
Wilhelm National Monument (demolished 1949/1950) - 4:55 Lustgarten and Altes
Museum.
Rosanna Arquette selects feminist landmarks by Lizzie Borden and Barbara Loden, reflects on working with Hal Ashby, and praises Jane Fonda’s performance in KLUTE.
The Museum of Old and New Art (MONA) is the enfant terrible of Australia’s art museum scene.
A visit to this unique site – a twenty-minute ferry ride on the Mona Roma from Hobart – is known around town as a trip down the rabbit hole, due to the capacity of this dark, cavernous, underground gallery to “transport” you and leave you feeling pleasantly disorientated.
MONA Roma 1 sports a controversial military camouflage exterior, and inside is divided into five public spaces over two levels, with a two-tier admission. General admission is for the main, aft and upper decks, serviced by two bars and an array of fixed and loose seating. VIP admission includes drinks and canapés in the restricted Posh Pit at the bow of the boat. Large windows with low sills and higher-than-standard ceilings give the interior an open feel and offer all passengers clear views to the passing vistas and a close connection to the river.The Dog Line is one of the most terrifying parts of Tasmania’s complex convict history.
The 30 meter wide neck that leads to the Tasman Peninsula from mainland Tasmania was once guarded by a line of up to nine ferocious dogs. Three more were later positioned on watery platforms extending toward Norfolk Bay.
A life-size bronze replica of this infamous scene can be
found along a winding path near the local Community Hall.
The dogs were housed in old barrels and stationed within touching distance of one another but not close enough to fight. Along the ‘dog line’, oil lamps were fixed on posts at chest height and cockle shells were scattered on the ground to reflect the light.
Rumours were spread that the local waters were shark infested so ‘The Neck’ was the only exit from the peninsula.
15 April 2025: the image of the Jalur Gemilang, or the Malaysian national flag, on the first page of the Sin Chew Daily, had omitted the crescent moon symbol which the king said is unacceptable.

The Sin Chew Daily has issued an apology to the king and is taking disciplinary action against the staff responsible for publishing an illustration of the flag without the crescent moon.
In this video, Johnny (a park chess player) discovers that a chess grandmaster. He gets very excited, and they end up playing a game where he tries to play his absolute best.
This video was recorded in Washington Square Park, in NYC.
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