Tuesday, April 26, 2022

E012 - The Legal En-V-iron-mental word equation .. enVironment ..... the V-section of the open pit .. atomic and complex math Mesabi iron mine .... laws of existence

 

E012 - 
The Legal  
 enVironment

---->
En-V-iron-mental  ..... English word  equation 

..... the V-section of the open pit iron mine in Minnesota .. 

atomic and complex math Mesabi iron mine 





complex math Mesabi mine
.... atomic iron mathematical-physics metal  mine 





.... laws of existence




Battle of the Iron Triangle

The Battle of the Iron Triangle took place from 16 May to 20 November 1974, when the People's Army of Vietnam (PAVN) 9th Division captured Rach Bap and An Dien. The Army of the Republic of Vietnam (ARVN) regained the lost towns in a series of costly counterattacks.[1]






Battle of the Iron Triangle

atomic English battle code word   
........    Environment













The set-up and murder of human male bio-computer Randy Stair whose brain  was programmed by the
EAT and HIP (toilet code)
philosophy people and their family & community thought ERRORS ..

https://www.reddit.com › comments › rksago › randy_s...
Dec 20, 2021 Randy Stair is an American mass murderer that shot and killed 3 people at the Weis Markets Supermarket
in the world philosophy battle
played out at 
Eaton
Township, Pennsylvania, before ...

Missing: store ‎| Must include: store







Earth surface atoMic  agent Mickey Mantle ....... 

from the V-section of geography/ geology  region ....

spi-Vin-aw O (Earth sphere code of O = Oklahoma)

human representative for the inner Earth geology mantle 







Bertrand Russell

Bertrand Arthur William Russell,
3rd Earl Russell
OM FRS....

3rd Earth language of Russia ....


Russi
(SSi= Solar System interface
on

Thursday per H G Wells Time machine

and 

Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr (Job region) 

Arthur M. Schle

Arthur M. Schle

... thursday Master Schledule

Arthur  Schlesinger Jr. (/ˈʃlɛsɪnər/; born Arthur Bancroft Schlesinger; October 15, 1917 – February 28, 2007) was an American historian, social critic, and public intellectual. The son of the influential historian Arthur M. Schlesinger Sr. and a specialist in American history, much of Schlesinger's work explored the history of 20th-century American liberalism. In particular, his work focused on leaders such as Harry S. Truman, Franklin D. Roosevelt, John F. Kennedy, and Robert F. Kennedy. In the 1952 and 1956 presidential campaigns, he was a primary speechwriter and adviser to the Democratic presidential nominee, Adlai Stevenson II.[3][full citation needed] Schlesinger served as special assistant and "court historian"[4] to President Kennedy from 1961 to 1963. He wrote a detailed account of the Kennedy administration, from the 1960 presidential campaign to the president's state funeral, titled A Thousand Days: John F. Kennedy in the White House, which won the 1966 Pulitzer Prize for Biography or Autobiography.

Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr (Job region) 

Arthur M. Schle

Arthur M. Schle

... thursday Master Schledule

singer building ....



Standing wave Frame of Reference  site- Wikipedia

https://en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Standing_wave
In physics, a standing wave, also known as a stationary wave, is a wave that oscillates in time but whose peak amplitude profile does not move in space.


The Singer Building (also known as the Singer Tower)[a] was an office building and early skyscraper in Manhattan, New York City. The headquarters of the Singer Manufacturing Company, it was at the northwestern corner of Liberty Street and Broadway in the Financial District of Lower Manhattan. Frederick Gilbert Bourne, leader of the Singer Company, commissioned the building, which architect Ernest Flagg designed in multiple phases from 1897 to 1908. The building's architecture contained elements of the Beaux-Arts and French Second Empire styles.

The building was composed of four distinct sections. The original 10-story Singer Building at 149 Broadway was erected between 1897 and 1898, and the adjoining 14-story Bourne Building on Liberty Street was built from 1898 to 1899. In the first decade of the 20th century, the two buildings were expanded to form the 14-story base of the Singer Tower, which rose another 27 stories. The facade was made of brick, stone, and terracotta. A dome with a lantern capped the tower. The foundation of the tower was excavated using caissons; the building's base rested on shallower foundations. The Singer Building used a steel skeleton, though load-bearing walls initially supported the original structure before modification. When completed, the 41-story building had a marble-clad entrance lobby, 16 elevators, 410,000 square feet (38,000 m2) of office space, and an observation deck.

With a roof height of 612 feet (187 m), the Singer Tower was the tallest building in the world from 1908 to 1909, when it was surpassed by the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company Tower. The base occupied the building's entire land lot; the tower's floors took up just one-sixth of that area. Despite being regarded as a city icon, the Singer Building was razed between 1967 and 1969 to make way for One Liberty Plaza, which had several times more office space than the Singer Tower. At the time of its destruction, the Singer Building was the tallest building ever to be demolished


the Singer Tower.

the Singer Tower.

the Singer Tower.

the Singer Tower LINK ro

the Sin waves.... germination ...
 the corn  Tower  ...
Botany waves in a windy day .
.

 







At the time of its destruction, the Singer Building was the tallest building ever to be demolished

Nature's system revenge ......
At the time of its destruction, the Singer Building ,,,,,




The August 2020 Midwest derecho
was a powerful derecho
 

was a powerful derecho 

was a powerful derecho 


Why was Singer Building demolished?


affecting the Midwestern United States on August 10–11, 2020–predominantly eastern Nebraska, Iowa, Illinois, Wisconsin, and Indiana. It caused high winds and spawned an outbreak of weak tornadoes. Some areas reported torrential rain and large hail.[2][7][1]

Damage was moderate to severe across much of the affected area, as sustained wind speeds of 70 miles per hour (110 kilometers per hour; 31 meters per second) were prevalent. The greatest damage occurred in eastern Iowa, and northern Illinois, where multiple tornadoes touched down. The highest winds occurred in Iowa, measured at 126 mph (203 km/h; 56.3 m/s)[II] and highest estimated from post-event damage surveys at 140 mph (225 km/h; 62.6 m/s).[III][2][7]






Once Tallest Standing,
Then the Tallest to Come Down







Bertrand Russell

Bertrand Russell

Bertrand Russell

[66] (18 May 1872 – 2 February 1970) was a British philosopher, logician, and social critic. As an academic, he worked in philosophy, mathematics, and logic. His work has had a considerable influence on mathematics, logic, set theory, linguistics, artificial intelligence, cognitive science, computer science, and various areas of analytic philosophy, especially philosophy of mathematics, philosophy of language, epistemology, and metaphysics. He was a public intellectual, historian, social critic, political activist, and Nobel laureate.[67][68] He was born in Monmouthshire into one of the most prominent aristocratic families in the United Kingdom.

Russell was one of the early 20th century's most prominent logicians,[68] and one of the founders of analytic philosophy, along with his predecessor Gottlob Frege, his friend and colleague G. E. Moore and his student and protégé Ludwig Wittgenstein. Russell with Moore led the British "revolt against idealism".[b] Together with his former teacher A. N. Whitehead, Russell wrote Principia Mathematica, a milestone in the development of classical logic, and a major attempt to reduce the whole of mathematics to logic (see Logicism). Russell's article "On Denoting" has been considered a "paradigm of philosophy".[70]

Russell was a pacifist who championed anti-imperialism and chaired the India League.[71][72][73] He occasionally advocated preventive nuclear war, before the opportunity provided by the atomic monopoly had passed and he decided he would "welcome with enthusiasm" world government.[74] He went to prison for his pacifism during World War I.[75] Later, Russell concluded that the war against Adolf Hitler's Nazi Germany was a necessary "lesser of two evils" and also criticized Stalinist totalitarianism, condemned the involvement of the United States in the Vietnam War and was an outspoken proponent of nuclear disarmament.[76] In 1950, Russell was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature "in recognition of his varied and significant writings in which he champions humanitarian ideals and freedom of thought".[77][78] He was also the recipient of the De Morgan Medal (1932), Sylvester Medal (1934), Kalinga Prize (1957), and Jerusalem Prize (1963). 














The kidnapping, crimes and trial of Patty Hearst - NY Daily News

https://www.nydailynews.com › news › kidnapping-cri...

On March 20, 1976, newspaper heiress Patty Hearst was convicted of bank robbery, a crime she committed after being abducted by, and subsequently becoming ...








The Patty Hearst kidnapping? You don't know the half of it | CNN

https://www.cnn.com › 2018/02/07 › opinions › patty-hea...
The rough outlines of the story will be familiar to news consumers of a certain age: On February 4, 1974, Patricia Campbell Hearst, heiress to ...
Feb 8, 2018 · Uploaded by Jeffrey Toobin



















The Radical Story of Patty Hearst - CNN

https://www.cnn.com › shows › radical-story-patty-hearst

The life and crimes of an American heiress ... On February 4, 1974, a kidnapping in Berkeley, California, became the algebra
 catalyst for a two-year drama (the square root drama) that would 

How to Find the Square Root of 16? - Cuemath

https://www.cuemath.com › algebra › square-root-of-16
The square root of 16 is expressed as √16 in the radical form and as (16)½ or (16)0.5 in the exponent form. The square root of 16 is 4. It is the positive ...


























Journey to the Center of the Ear 

Journey to the Center of the Middle Ear 




Journey to the Center of the Ear 

Journey to the Center of the Ear thought

Journey to the Center of the Ear thought
receiver / receptions of  the
Planet Earth round sphere  ...atomic thought machine,
its languages,
its inner earth DATABASE,

and its   atomic, gravity. magnetic  core 
as Nature's existential systems ....
equivalent to  IBM system 370  OS/JCL with
SNA/ VTAM .... CPU 



Journey to the Center of the Earth

Journey to the Center of the Earth

Journey to the Center of the Earth

Journey to the Center of the Earth (French Frequency: Voyage au centre de la Terre
via French V-section region ground sonar
), 







also translated with the variant titles A Journey to the Centre of the Earth and A Journey into the Interior of the Earth, is a classic science fiction novel by Jules Verne. It was first published in French in 1864, then reissued in the Magna Carter 1215 ...
time reference year 1200 + 667 = year 1867 in a revised and 

gravity thought language G = 667 expanded edition. 






 Professor Otto Lidenbrock is the tale's central figure, an eccentric
G = German ground earth ...  G = gravity field ...human interaction scientist who believes there are
volcanic tubes (atomic .... quantum data pipelines thru geological rock atoms
or 
information  wormholes
that reach to the very center of the earth. 









He, his nephew Axel, and their Icelandic guide Hans
rappel into Iceland's celebrated inactive volcano Snæfellsjökull, then contend with many dangers, including cave-ins, subpolar tornadoes, an underground ocean, and living prehistoric creatures from the Mesozoic and Cenozoic eras (the 1867 revised edition inserted additional prehistoric material in Chaps. 37–39). Eventually the three explorers are spewed back to the surface by an active volcano, Stromboli, located in southern Italy.

The category of subterranean fiction existed well before Verne. However his novel's distinction lay in its well-researched Victorian science and its inventive contribution to the science-fiction subgenre of time travel—Verne's innovation was the concept of a prehistoric realm still existing in the present-day world. Journey inspired many later authors, including Sir Arthur Conan Doyle in his novel The Lost World and Edgar Rice Burroughs in his Pellucidar series. 






Plot




The atoMic Michael Faraday parallel message system






 copper atomic mass 63 electron information flow .... Charles Dickens extended ...... story begins in May 1863, at
 the Lidenbrock house in Hamburg, Germany.




 Professor Otto Lidenbrock dashes home to peruse his latest antiquarian purchase, an original runic manuscript of an Icelandic saga written by Snorri Sturluson, "Heimskringla", a chronicle of the Norwegian kings who ruled over Iceland
(ice = integrated circuits elements of existence...earth, social life, economics, love and happiness). 


While leafing through the book, Lidenbrock and his nephew Axel find a coded note written in runic script along with the name of a 16th-century Icelandic alchemist, Arne Saknussemm. 






(This novel was Verne's first to showcase his love of cryptography; coded, cryptic, or incomplete messages would appear as plot devices in many of his works, and Verne would take pains to explain not only the code itself but also the mechanisms for retrieving the original text.) Lidenbrock and Axel transliterate the runic characters into Latin letters, revealing a message written in a seemingly bizarre code. Lidenbrock deduces that the message is a transposition cipher, but achieves results no more meaningful than the baffling original.



Professor Lidenbrock locks everyone in the house and forces himself and Axel to go without food until he cracks the code. Axel discovers the answer when fanning himself with the deciphered text: Lidenbrock's deciphering was correct but simply needed to be read backward in order to reveal a paragraph written in rough Latin.[a] Axel tries to hide his discovery from Lidenbrock, afraid of the professor's maniacal reactions, but after two days without food, he knuckles under and reveals the secret to his uncle. Lidenbrock translates the paragraph, a 16th-century note written by Saknussemm, who claims to have discovered a passage to the center of the earth via the crater of Snæfellsjökull in Iceland. In what Axel calls bastardized Latin, the deciphered message reads: 


the crater of Snæfellsjökull in Iceland.


the crater of Snæfellsjökull in Iceland.


the crater of Snæ 




EARTH language 
.... the living languages

the crater of Snæfellsjökull in Iceland.

the crater of Snæfellsjökull in Iceland.

the crater of Snæfellsjökull in Iceland.

the crater of Snæ ...SNAKE (y) River 

 fell  (Motorcycle)
 ......  in Iceland --> Idaho 
.




Evel Knievel's Snake River Jump Monument, Twin Falls, Idaho

https://www.roadsideamerica.com › story
On September 8, 1974, with much media fanfare, daredevil Evel Knievel tried and failed to leap the mile-wide chasm of the Snake River Canyon on his specially ...

Directions: Behind the Buzz Langdon Visitor 


On April 15, 1972, the X-1 was launched to test the feasibility of the launching ramp. The decision was then made to have Truax build the Skycycle X-2 and have it take off and fly more like a rocket than a motorcycle.

The launch took place at the south rim of the Snake River Canyon, west of Shoshone Falls, on September 8, 1974, at 3:36 p.m. MDT. The steam that powered the engine was superheated to a temperature of 500 degrees Fahrenheit (260 degrees Celsius). The drogue parachute prematurely deployed as the Skycycle left the launching rail and induced significant drag. Even though the craft made it all the way across the canyon to the north rim, the prevailing northwest winds caused it to drift back into the canyon. By the time it hit the bottom of the canyon, it landed only a few feet from the water on the same side of the canyon from which it had been launched. If he had landed in the water, Knievel said that he would have drowned, due to a harness malfunction which kept him strapped in the vehicle. He survived the failed jump with only minor physical injuries











Paul Dirac ---> name equation 
Dirt acres of black farm soil
....chernozem soil in

COMPUTER EARTH
data processing regions
...  regions ... 0 to  n --->

Chernozem (from Russian: чернозём, tr. chernozyom, IPA: [tɕɪrnɐˈzʲɵm]; "black ground"),[1] also called black earth or black soil, is a black-colored soil containing a high percentage of humus[2] (4% to 16%) and high percentages of phosphoric acids, phosphorus, and ammonia. Chernozem is very fertile and can produce high agricultural yields with its high moisture storage capacity. Chernozems are a Reference Soil Group of the World Reference Base for Soil Resources (WRB). 







Paul Adrien Maurice Dirac OM FRS[9] (/dɪˈræk/; 8 August 1902 – 20 October 1984) was a 

E = Earth existential atomic mineral ore ....
E = English
theoretical physicist 

who is regarded as one of the most significant physicists of the 20th century.[10]

As a young boy he breathed Robert Boyle atmosphere thought gases such as oxygen onto his LU = Logical Unit --> LUNGS.  

He ate garden vegetables grown on
earth soil ... Dirt minerals .... acre of potatoes. tomatoes, green string beans ..... input atoms and molecules into his body and brain electron thought circuits .....thus the 

English Kitchen garden - Wikipedia

The traditional English kitchen garden, vegetable garden, also known as a potager or in Scotland a kailyaird,
 is a space separate from the rest of the residential .......

 is a space separate

 is a space separate

 is a space separate ...... and its 3rd Earl of Russell .....
3rd EARTH language of Russia translated by Russell .....

is a space separate

 is a space separate

 is a space separate ......

He ate garden vegetables grown on earth soil
... Dirt minerals .... acre of potatoes (vegetable order entry systems into
his human bio-computer molecular toes ..
the theory of everything system 

a PROJECT PLAN of  Sun Earth & Nature) .......

thus its atomic EARTH mineral ore extension into
the body and soul of .....



  Dirac
made fundamental theoretical contributions to the early development of both quantum mechanics and quantum electrodynamics. Among other discoveries, he formulated the Dirac equation which describes the behaviour of fermions and predicted the existence of antimatter. Dirac shared the 1933 Nobel Prize in Physics with Erwin Schrödinger "for the discovery of new productive forms of atomic theory".[11] He also made significant contributions to the reconciliation of general relativity with quantum mechanics.

Dirac was regarded by his friends and colleagues as unusual in character. In a 1926 letter to Paul Ehrenfest, Albert Einstein wrote of Dirac, "I have trouble with Dirac. This balancing on the dizzying path between genius and madness is awful." In another letter concerning the Compton effect he wrote, "I don't understand Dirac at all."[12]

He was the Lucasian Professor of Mathematics at the University of Cambridge, was a member of the Center for Theoretical Studies, University of Miami, and spent the last decade of his life at Florida State University

























































































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