Holy Family Exile in Egypt

The Flight into Egypt

 

Matthew 2: 12- 15

13 Now when they had departed, behold, an angel of the Lord appeared to Joseph in a dream, saying, “Arise, take the young Child and His mother, flee to Egypt, and stay there until I bring you word; for Herod will seek the young Child to destroy Him.”

14 When he arose, he took the young Child and His mother by night and departed for Egypt,

15 and was there until the death of Herod, that it might be fulfilled which was spoken by the Lord through the prophet, saying, “Out of Egypt I called My Son.”

Hosea 11:1 —”When Israel was a child, I loved him, and out of Egypt I called my son.

Exodus 4.21 — God’s declaration to Pharaoh that Israel is His son

Below are some pictures from the site where the Holy Family stayed in Egypt

 

Fully Functional Wooden Cars

This is just cute and well finished


I love this car …I have another post on my blog – showing the pictures of how this car is made.


Now that’s a classic

I hope these are weather resistant


This is aero dynamic …wonder how fast this car will go!!!!!


cool …cool…cool…

This looks like Venice .Amphibian car …awesome and cool

Lamborghini – Built @ home


This is completely amazing!
Ken Imhoff have manage to build an incredible Lamborghini Countach replica from scratch in the basement of his house.
It really looks like the original Countach.
It took him 10 years to complete this replica.
Wow, I salute the determination. This is such a hard feat to pull.

A little history on the car:
100% hand crafted Countach out of aluminum and a space tube frame.
All aluminum body formed on a wooden buck using an English wheel. My own design space frame with Corvette hubs and custom A-arms. Mated to a ZF-25 5 speed. S.S. 180 degree headers GT40 design “bundle of snakes” Boss 351 bored stroked to 377 515hp 48 IDA Webbers. One off TransAm BBS rim shells to my own center section wheels. Custom brake package to fit 16? wheels. Fuel cell, twin aluminum sprint car (Howe) radiators. All aluminum interior with leather dash, Momo seats and 5 point harness, on board halon fire bottle. quick release steering wheel. Low to the ground at 2700 lbs. 100% body correct by using a real Countach to measure from. Over 10 years in the making.

MYSORE PALACE


The original palace in Mysore was of wooden construction and was burnt down by a disastrous fire in February 1897, said to have started at the closing function of the marriage of Princess Jayalakshmammanniyavaru

The Maharani, then Regent, decided to build a new palace on the model and on the foundations of the old one. This should reflect the grandeur of the old Mysore Palace.Henry Irwin, who had at that point in time recently retired as Consulting Architect of the Government of Madras received the contract and his plans were approved.

The speed with which he drew them up can be appreciated by the fact that construction was inaugurated in October 1897 by Her Highness, the Maharani – only eight months after the fire [9].The journal Indian Engineering in its issue of October, 1898 speaks of the Government’s directive regarding reconstruction of the palace: “…in the reconstruction, stone, brick and iron should be the chief materials used, and that the use of wood and other combustible materials should be avoided wherever possible”. The estimated expenditure at the planning stage was Rs. 25 lakhs (Rs. 2 500 000).

The report goes on to record: “Mr. Irwin, of Madras, was given the work of preparing a suitable design, which, it should be said in fairness to him, he did most creditably. The design was adopted, Mr. Irwin paid a fee of Rs. 12 000 and the work was put in hand in August 1897. But in an evil hour the Durbar determined that the work should be carried on departmentally…”. A mistake was made, comments the editorial, in ordering manufacture of the bricks locally instead of getting them from Madras, as there was nothing wrong with bricks used for the new High Court building at Madras [also a Henry Irwin building]. As it turned out, the experiment proved a failure – according to the journal – both regards the quality of the bricks produced and the expenditure involved

Irwin’s fee amounted to just under 0,5% of the estimated total expenditure, modest also by modern standards. The construction of the palace was completed in 1912 at an aggregate outlay of Rs. 4 147 913, a cost overrun of about 66% compared with the original estimates. Considering the length of time of the construction period, also not bad.

People’s car– THE NANO


Tata Sons Chairman Ratan Tata stands alongside the Nano at its launch in Mumbai, Monday.Tata Motors launched its snub-nosed, US$2,000 Nano today in Mumbai, a vehicle meant to put car ownership within reach of millions of the world’s poor. The Nano, starting at about 100,000 rupees ($1,980), is 10.2 feet (3.1 meters) long, has one windshield wiper, a 623cc rear engine, and a diminutive trunk, according to the company’s Web site. Excited about the launch of the people’s car, the Nano, Tata Group Chairman Ratan Tata today said the project was not conceived to satisfy his ego, nor was the Rs 1-lakh pricing a “gimmick”.”I am very satisfied and excited about this launch today and Nano is not for my ego-trip…Certainly, not an ego-trip at all,” Tata said at an editors meeting here

Tata Sons Chairman Ratan Tata, right, speaks at the launch of the Tata Nano in Mumbai.The following is the price list of Tata Nano variants in Delhi and Mumbai: Nano Standard – Non-AC (BS-III): Ex-showroom Delhi: Rs.123,360, Ex-showroom Mumbai: Rs.134,250; Nano CX – Solid Paint/AC (BS-III): Ex-showroom Delhi: Rs.148,360, Ex-showroom Mumbai: Rs.160,320; Nano CX – Metallic Paint/AC (BS-III): Ex-showroom Delhi: Rs.151,360, Ex-showroom Mumbai: Rs.163,320; Nano LX – Metallic Paint/AC (BS-III): Ex-showroom Delhi: Rs.172,360, Ex-showroom Mumbai: Rs.185,375.


Tata Sons Chairman, Ratan Tata poses alongside the Tata Nano. Tata said the endeavour was never to build the cheapest car but to provide an affordable form of transportation to the average Indian family. He, however, hastened to add that “we made a promise (of a Rs 1,00,000 car) and that we’ve kept the promise.”

People look at the world’s cheapest car, Tata Nano, displayed at a showroom in Kolkata. Since the Nano was first shown, the main production plant had to be moved from Singur in West Bengal following protests over acquisition of agricultural lands by the State Government for the setting up of Nano factory

The Nano booking forms would be available at all World of Titan showrooms across the country between April 4 and April 25, Titan Industries said in a statement. World of Titan network is the wristwatch retail chain of Titan Industries.

Peel – World’s smallest car

Peel is officially the world’s smallest car

Nano might be the world’s cheapest car, but the world’s smallest car – Peel 50 hit the headlines this week. Designed as a “city car” for Ripley’s by the London-based Peel Engineering Company, the one-seater Peel Trident weighs about 68 kilograms, is battery-operated, and travels about 64 kilometers per hour. It costs about 25,000 U.S. dollars to produce. The Peel P50 is recognized by the Guinness Book of World Records as the smallest road legal car ever produced. In the picture, the Peel is turned around by two men in front of Ripley’s Believe it or Not on the 42nd Street sidewalk near Times Square in New York early last month. The two-seat, battery-powered mini car is said to offer a cure for New York City’s congestion and parking woes.


The world’s smallest production car was built by PEC-The Peel Engineering Company, on The Isle Of Man between 1962 and 1965. The Peel Engineering Company were originally the makers of fibre-glass fairings and small boats when they turned their skills into car production. It was called the Peel P50 and first retailed for £150


Jeff Lane demonstrates how he can easily lift the “World’s Smallest Car”, the Peel P50 in Nashville. Lane and his wife Susan, owners of the Lane Motor Museum, sponsored a micro and mini car drive around Percy Priest Lake in Nashville.


Jeff Lane leads a procession of micro and mini cars around Percy Priest in Nashville, Tenn., with his 1963 Peel Trident vehicle. The Trident gets 60-miles per gallon. The tour started at the Lane Moto Museum in Nashville, which is owned by Jeff and his wife Susan.

Bandra-Worli Sea Link



India opens the gates of its first sea bridge

Nearly five decades after it was conceived, India’s first sea bridge opens its toll gates in the country’s commercial and entertainment capital later Tuesday, promising to cut travel time by 80 percent to just eight minutes, bypassing 23 traffic signals that commuters have to presently endure.


Called the Bandra-Worli Sea Link (BWSL), the 5.6-km bridge on the Arabian Sea has costed Rs.1634-crore ($325 million) and the authorities hope to see some 150,000 vehicles use it each day for a toll that ranges between Rs.50 and Rs.100 per trip depending on the size of the automobile.

United Progressive Alliance (UPA) chairperson Sonia Gandhi is slated to inaugurate the gleaming new sea link, which has been billed as an engineering marvel and the most prestigious project for the Maharashtra State Road Development Corp (MSRDC) in over a decade, after the Mumbai-Pune Expressway.And Mumbaikars are visibly excited, including a galaxy of actors, corporate honchos and the average commuter, as the sea link has surpassed all other projects of the state-run firm in terms of its sheer beauty, grandeur and the attention that it has grabbed from the whole country in the past few months.

Helen, well-known actor and dancing star of yester years, told IANS.”I have read a lot about how it will solve the traffic problems in Mumbai. I plan to go for a drive there soon,” added her husband and legendary scriptwriter Salim Khan, whose apartment facing the Arabian Sea is right opposite the sea link.In fact, several Bollywood personalities – Shah Rukh Khan, Rekha, Subhash Ghai, Farhan Akhtar, A. Krishnamurthi and others – live on the promenade facing the Bandra-Worli Sea Link and most get either a balcony view or a terrace view of the magnificent bridge.

“We have been seeing the bridge come up from the construction stage and are happy that it is finally completed. It will be a great boon to the city,” said Krishnamurthi, head of Tina Films International, who can view it from the comforts of his living room.Businessman Pratap S. Bohra, who lives in Juhu, said he had long abandoned his office in Nariman Point on account of the time wasted in the traffic.”We kept hearing about the sea link. Now that it is ready, I am seriously planning to attend my office in south Mumbai.

We hope the second phase from Worli to Nariman Point will be taken up soon,” said Bohra, who opened another office in Santacruz, a western suburb.Others like Priyanka Uke, an executive living in Dadar, plans to commute daily on public transport using the sea link to Andheri. “I am dying to go as soon as the bus routes that will go via the sealing are announced,” she said.Some, like jeweller V.S. Shrikrishna, are disappointed that two-wheelers shall not be permitted on the sea link. “To save time, I may go by car. But then again, I have to shell out a toll,” he said, a tad confused about his commuting plans.

A commuter by car, for instance, would have to pay toll of Rs.50 for a single trip, Rs.75 for a round trip, Rs.125 for a daily multiple-entry-exit pass and Rs. 2,500 for a similar pass for a month. The toll may be hiked in the future.


Well-known advocate J.P. Mishra is another who plans to make full use of the BWSL.”It’s simple. Until now I used to go by train for hearings in the Bombay High Court. Now I can take my car and go by the bridge. It’s more convenient as I don’t have to wait for taxis after getting off the train,” Mishra said.For the past three nights, the state-run company had built up the tempo for the bridge’s inauguration with spectacular multi-colour laser shows and fire works that was visible from long distances from the northern, western and southern parts of the city.

The evenings presented a breath-taking view when the bridge was lit up. And at dusk when the lights went on, a viewer from the existing Mahim Causeway of the colonial era was able to see a huge pyramid-like structure above the dark waters of the Arabian Sea.The two cable bridges, one 500 metres long on the northern side and another 350 metres long on the southern side, allow the passage of fishing boats.

The bridge rests on two towers, each 126 metres tall or as high as a 43-storey building, that appear hazily in the monsoon mist.People were seen craning their necks to get a glimpse of the towering bridge even when the suburban trains sped past the Mahim Creek Bridge between Mahim and Bandra.The bridge – which was conceived in 1963 but contracted to the private sector Hindustan Construction Corp only in 2000 – encompasses some of the most modern security systems, including electronic eyes on the top and underneath, the authorities said.

They said the project involved some 3,000 professionals from 11 countries, including China, Egypt, Singapore, Thailand, and even Serbia and Switzerland. The bridge, that used 40,000 tonnes of steel and 90,000 tonnes of concrete, weighs 270,000 tonnes.