(upbeat instrumental transition music) - [Narrator] A cube is defined as a solid bounded by six equal sides, and when those sides are tilted, cut to various sizes, and positioned at different intervals, they become the acoustical marvel that is Orchestra Hall.
The 114 cubes of various sizes are more than an architectural showpiece.
They significantly contribute to how audiences hear the music.
Unique to the Minnesota Orchestra's downtown Minneapolis home, the cubes were considered modernist design when the hall was built in 1974.
A long-haul truck driver recently walked into Tiny Tim’s Toy Foundation in West Jordan, Utah, and asked for a box of toys. Alton Thacker gave him five, each packed with 125 cars.
“He stopped at children's hospitals along his truck route and handed them out," said Thacker, 83, a retired barber who started the toy factory 16 years ago. "And I know he'll be back for more. Seeing all those little smiles is a great motivator.
Premiered October 4, 2023 AT 9PM on PBSToday, Earth is enveloped by a thin veil of gas, a narrow band of atmosphere that protects a world covered in lush green vegetation, deep blue oceans, and abundant life. But 4.5 billion years ago, Earth was a very different place: a hellscape of molten lava and barren rock, under relentless bombardment from meteors, and with no atmosphere whatsoever. So how did our familiar blue sky come to be?
Browning Nagle estimated Net Worth, Biography, Age, Height, Dating, Relationship Records, Salary, Income, Cars, Lifestyles & many more details have been updated below. Let’s check, How Rich is Browning Nagle in 2019-2020? Scroll below and check more detailed information about Current Net worth as well as Monthly/Year Salary, Expense, Income Reports!BiographyBrowning Nagle was born in Philadelphia, PA on April 29, 1968. The professional quarterback played for the Jets, Colts, and Falcons from 1991 to 1996.
Explore More Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene will make “no further use” of Dr. Dre’s “Still D.R.E.,” her attorneys promised, after the former N.W.A. rapper threatened to sue the Republican congresswoman for using his song in a video posted on her Twitter account last week.
Dre, born Andre Romelle Young, sent the Georgia lawmaker a cease-and-desist over her unlicensed use of his 1999 hit in a promotional video — featuring her strutting through the halls of Congress in slow motion while the song’s famous piano riff played on repeat.