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Sender:A Y R T O N
Date/Time:2004-Aug-12 23:49:00
Subject:Re: the next theme

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wwp@yahoogroups.com: Re: the next theme A Y R T O N 2004-Aug-12 23:49:00
I'm on it.
Rio de Janeiro has some nice bridges
Sep 22 here we go
Ayrton
from Brazil


On 12/08/2004, at 15:56, G. Donald Bain wrote:

> As you may have noticed I have been in and out of contact a lot in
>  recent weeks, participating in discussions some days, then
>  disappearing. Landis is on the road continuously for a while now, so 
> we
>  hear from him also only intermittently.
>
>  But it is time to move on - the Equinox is only six weeks away.? A
>  theme needs to be determined so we can organize our lives around this
>  event!
>
>  There have been many good suggestions, and we have at least a couple 
> of
>  years of excellent themes to work on.
>
>  My concern right now is to be as inclusive as possible - we need to
>  keep building the base of participants. We don't want a theme that 
> will
>  be a problem for anyone, or too difficult. This is certainly a
>  challenge, considering the range of cultures, climates, and
>  personalities we have to work with.
>
>  Here's my proposal:
>
>  BRIDGES -- A World Wide Panorama -- September 18-22, 2004
>
>  Every place on earth has bridges, from heroic suspension spans to
>  graceful arches over the canals of Venice. There are scary swinging
>  bridges, busy bridges over urban rivers, high arched bridges in
>  Japanese gardens, picturesque covered bridges in the countryside,
>  bridges that open for shipping, floating bridges, Roman bridges still
>  in use, ancient bridges in China.
>
>  Bridges are interesting, in their engineering, their materials, their
>  setting, their history. They are important, providing vital access
>  across rivers and to islands. Some carry huge volumes of traffic,
>  others cross international boundaries. Bridges can be short but
>  complicated, the soaring loops of a freeway interchange, or immensely
>  long like the causeway connecting the Florida Keys. Some cross deep
>  narrow gorges in the mountains, others span turbulent tidal channels.
>  They can be symbolic, like a Chinese nine-turn bridge, or strictly
>  utilitarian, like the ubiquitous Bailey bridges.
>
>  Bridges can be beautiful, in and of themselves. From the classic spans
>  of ancient times, to the bravado of the industrial revolution, to
>  dramatic new shapes by Santiago Calatrava. Bridges sometimes provide
>  the grace-note to a dramatic scene, the focal point of a landscape.
>  Bridges over lakes and streams in gardens and parks are often works of
>  art, carefully designed for visual effect as well as utility.
>
>  Many bridges are famous: the Golden Gate Bridge, Brooklyn Bridge,
>  London Bridge (in Arizona) and Tower Bridge (still in London), the
>  Bridge of Sighs in Venice, Sydney Harbor Bridge, the Eads Bridge over
>  the Mississippi, the new bridges over the Inland Sea in Japan, the
>  Tagus River Bridge in Lisbon, the Firth of Forth bridges in Scotland.
>
>  Taken metaphorically, bridges can be anything that helps us to 
> progress
>  from one place to another, spanning barriers and obstacles. There are
>  social and cultural bridges, economic and business bridges, emotional
>  and psychological bridges.
>
>  So, I think we can all find something exciting to contribute on the
>  theme of BRIDGES.
>
>  More information later.
>
>  ? Don
>  ----------
>  G. Donald Bain
>  Director, Geography Computing Facility
>  University of California, Berkeley
>
>
>
> ------
>  The World-Wide Panorama
>
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>  -Visit the web site at http://GeoImages.Berkeley.edu/wwp.html
>
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