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Year 72 (LXXII) was a leap year starting on Wednesday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar. At the time, it was known as the Year of the Consulship of Augustus and Vespasianus (or, less frequently, year 825 Ab urbe condita). The denomination 72 for this year has been used since the early medieval period, when the Anno Domini calendar era became the prevalent method in Europe for naming years.
With this easy and fun tool for physical and emotional well being you can diffuse negative energy and stress, dispel anger, dump depression. Create self esteem, cultivate the power of prosperity, become fearless. Using the technology encoded in the bible anyone can transform their life, anytime and anywhere.
The 72 Names are not names in the ordinary sense, they are a power source that tap into the infinite spiritual current that flows through the world. Based on the book by best-selling author and co-director of The Kabbalah Centre, Yehuda Berg, this app resembles a deck of 72 meditation cards. On one side you'll find the 72 Name with illustration and on the other you'll find an explanation and meditation.
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Knowledge of Hebrew not required; All that's required is an open heart and a willing mind.
72 Pencils is a geometric construction of 72 pencils, assembled into a work of art. Restricted to a signed limited edition of twenty-five, each shares a common form, yet each is unique. The form is an arrangement of four intersecting hexagonal tubes that penetrate each other in a fascinating three-dimensional lattice. Each of the sculptures in the edition is constructed with a different type of pencil, so each is a one-of-a-kind object.
The one shown above is made with CMYK pencils. This idea is due to Jeff Rutzky, an NYC designer who often works with printers in the CMYK color space. He commissioned this special instance of the sculpture with those four colors. Although I had originally planned an edition of 25, and this was going to be #19/25, I liked Jeff's concept so much that I decided to end the edition early. So it is numbered 25/25. There is and will be no #19-24.
The above instance was commissioned by John Sullivan, with specially printed ISAMA pencils.
The view shows how it looks along a three-fold axis of symmetry.
For some viewers, part of the interest lies in the form of the interior. The four hexagonal tubes are hollow, so the sculpture as a whole is hollow. But, what shape is its cavity? What would someone on the inside see? To the mathematician, the answer is "the rhombic dodecahedron," a geometric solid bounded by twelve rhombuses.