Hay que ponerse a prueba, ver cuanto somos capaces de dar. Hay que exponerse y enamorarse y arriesgarse, eso es el rock.
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Hay que ponerse a prueba, ver cuanto somos capaces de dar. Hay que exponerse y enamorarse y arriesgarse, eso es el rock.
Federico Moura. (via mourafederico-blog)
Pubis Angelical
Federico Moura 🤍
Prints en serigrafía @muelte
Foto de Eduardo Martí y estilismo de Renata Schussheim
Juan Manuel Fangio Maserati 250 F
Maurice Bonnel. Paris, 1950
Tokyo Metropolitan Festival Hall, Japan, 1961
(Kunio Maekawa)
Tokyo Metropolitan Festival Hall, Japan, 1961
(Kunio Maekawa)
Rail Archive Stephenson. London Midland & Scottish Railway. Chester, United Kingdom
Hulton-Deutsch Collection. Couple Wearing Masks. London. 1954
My grandmother
この髪は地毛で結っています。
Photo taken about 1930’s, Japan
Foto by Ekaterina Elizarova
more
Erich Hartmann. Grand Central Station. New York City. 1976
The 1918 influenza pandemic was the most severe pandemic in recent history. It was caused by an H1N1 virus with genes of avian origin. Although there is not universal consensus regarding where the virus originated, it spread worldwide during 1918-1919. In the United States, it was first identified in military personnel in spring 1918.
It is estimated that about 500 million people or one-third of the world’s population became infected with this virus. The number of deaths was estimated to be at least 50 million worldwide with about 675,000 occurring in the United States. Mortality was high in people younger than 5 years old, 20-40 years old, and 65 years and older. The high mortality in healthy people, including those in the 20-40 year age group, was a unique feature of this pandemic.
While the 1918 H1N1 virus has been synthesized and evaluated, the properties that made it so devastating are not well understood. With no vaccine to protect against influenza infection and no antibiotics to treat secondary bacterial infections that can be associated with influenza infections, control efforts worldwide were limited to non-pharmaceutical interventions such as isolation, quarantine, good personal hygiene, use of disinfectants, and limitations of public gatherings, which were applied unevenly.
Pic 1: Precautions taken in Seattle, Wash., during the Spanish Influenza Epidemic would not permit anyone to ride on the street cars without wearing a mask. 260,000 of these were made by the Seattle Chapter of the Red Cross which consisted of 120 workers, in three days.
Pic 2: Members, St. Louis Red Cross Motor Corps on duty on 5 ambulances.
Pic 3: Interior of Red Cross House at U.S. General Hospital #16, New Haven, Conn. during the influenza epidemic. The beds are isolated by curtains.
Pic 4: The Back Yard Workshop, while School was closed for Influenza. Mountain Division, Denver, Colorado.
Pic 5: Demonstration at the Red Cross Emergency Ambulance Station in Washington, D.C., during the influenza pandemic of 1918.
Student protests in Berlin, 1930
Prague, Národní třída, 1958 by Erich Einhorn