The Roman sunrise was slated for 6:15 and the sunset for 20:03. On a weather website, these are listed as 06:18 and 20:00. I supposed that means for the price location of the site, considering elevation etc. That said, in Roman Curia terms the Civil Twilight today would be 05:45 and 20:27, Nautical 05:09 and 21:03, Astronomical 4:31 and 21:41 PM
Tomorrow will be 2 minutes 34 seconds longer. The Moon is at fullest full, tomorrow and tonight it is 99% illuminated.
We celebrate the feast of St. George on this 114th day of the year. I send my best to my dear nonagenarian friend Fr. GW on his name day.
Thank you, Lord, for this day.
This cappuccino was fully illuminated through it resembles more a gibbous Moon than Full.

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Barriers have been set up around the fountains in the Piazza Farnese. Later I saw a truck from the office for restoration of ancient fountains. Hmmm…. I wonder what they are going to do?

No chess news today.
I know, I know.
You are sad.
However, The Great Roman™, who misses nothing, passed on something from the newspaper of the CEI, Avvenire. Get this!
The Herculaneum papyri reveal Plato’s burial site
In over a thousand words, corresponding to 30% of the text, read thanks to the cross between modern technologies and philological science, of the carbonized Herculaneum papyrus containing the History of the Academy of Philodemus of Gadara (110-after 40 BC), the Plato’s burial place.
New technologies are progressively making it possible to read the library found charred in the so-called Villa dei Papiri in Herculaneum. If the Vesuvius Challenge project is the one best known in the news, also because it is a sort of competition with prizes for those who decipher portions of text through artificial intelligence, it is not the only one working on the precious finds. Today in Naples, at the Vittorio Emanuele III National Library, the state of progress of the research of the “GreekSchools” project was presented.
[…]
Among the news that has emerged there is also the information that Plato was buried in the garden reserved for him (a private area intended for the Platonic school) of the Academia in Athens, near the so-called Museion or sacellum sacred to the Muses. Until now it was only known that he was buried generically in the Academia.
[…]
Very cool.
In honor of that coolness, coolly solve this.
Black to move. Hey! Can you find mate in 4?

NB: I’ll hold comments with solutions ’till the next day so there won’t be “spoilers” for others.
Interested in learning? Try THIS.





















