Thursday, October 28, 2010
Maze art of the letter, E, F, H by Yonatan Frimer
Click for Maze Solution of capital F maze
Yonatan Frimer maze of a capital F, as part of the "Learn To A Maze" series to teach kids the alphabet by using psychedelic mazes. Maze entrance is in the upper left corner and maze exit is in the lower right corner.
Check out more Yonatan Frimer Mazes here
Maze of uppercase letter E:
Click for Maze Solution of upper-case letter E Maze
Maze of the letter E. To solve the maze, find the entrance in the upper left corner of the maze and the exit in the lower right corner of the maze. Created by Yonatan Frimer
Check out more alphabet maze art here
Maze of uppercase letter H:
Click for Maze Solution of upper-case letter H Maze
Maze of the letter H. To solve the maze, find the entrance in the upper left corner of the maze and the exit in the lower right corner of the maze. Created by Yonatan Frimer
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Monday, October 25, 2010
Maze of the letter C, by Yonatan Frimer
Maze of uppercase letter C:
Click for Maze Solution of upper-case letter C Maze
Maze of the letter C, the 3rd letter in the alphabet, as in Cat, Capture, Create or Carnival. Maze is very psychedelic with vanishing point in the middle of the C expanding outwards. Maze entrance is in the upper left corner and maze exit is in the lower right.
Created by Yonatan Frimer
Discover other psychedelic mazes
Maze blog of Yonatan Frimer mazes
Sunday, October 24, 2010
Justin Bieber Maze Portrait by Yonatan Frimer
Justin Bieber Maze Portrait
Click for Maze Solution of Justin Bieber Maze Portrait
Maze of Justin Bieber, the teenage pop-sensation that teenage girls go wild for. The maze starts in the upper left corner, and ends in the lower right. Should take you only a few minutes to solve this maze, which is also about how long it too Justin Bieber to become famous. Created by Yonatan Frimer
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Tuesday, October 19, 2010
I'd Like To Maze A Vowel By Yonatan Frimer
Maze of the letter A - Upper-Case
Very psychedelic maze of an uppercase letter A. To solve the maze, find the entrance and exit located in the upper left and lower right corners of the maze and the path that connects them.
Created by Yonatan Frimer
Click here to check out more Yonatan Frimer Maze Art
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Thursday, October 14, 2010
The Last Maze The Mouse Sees By Yonatan Frimer
Last Maze The Mouse Saw
Click here for the Maze Solution of Cat Attack MazePsychedelic maze of a cat pouncing to attack. Which is why it is called the last maze the mouse sees. To solve it, find the entrance at the upper left and the exit at the lower right and the path that connects them. Only one path connects the maze entrance and maze exit.
Wednesday, October 13, 2010
Thursday, October 7, 2010
Favorite Maze By Yonatan Frimer
Maze Kong
King Kong of Mazes
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Maze cartoons and Technical Illustration Mazes
Maze Art by Yonatan Frimer
Maze Blog by Yonatan Frimer
Friday, October 1, 2010
Maze cartoon by Yonatan Frimer on Peace in the Middle East as a movie rerun
Maze cartoon by Yonatan Frimer of an empty movie theatre playing "peace in the middle east" and the audience exlaims, "haven't we seen this movie alread!"
Click here for a printable, hi-res file of Peace in the Middle East movie
Click here for the solution to peace in the middle east
Visit Team Of Monkeys . com for more political Maze Cartoons
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More on this maze cartoon's topic:
Middle East Peace Talks: Déjà Vu all over again all over again
Middle East peace talks to resolve the so-called Israeli-Palestinian crisis have been coming and going most of my adult life and I’m no spring chicken — free range or otherwise. And now here they are again! But this time, as opposed to all those other times, the AP’s Robert Burns informs us, “the stakes are high.” Well, yes… but maybe not in the way Burns intended.
What’s really going on here? Let’s do a thought experiment.
The last time a hopeful world got transfixed by this roundelay (although this time it might not be paying much attention anyway) was back at the tail end of the Clinton presidency when Bill was trying to untie this Gordian knot and win himself a Nobel Peace Prize. Those discussions began at Camp David in 2000 and dribbled on to Taba in early 2001 when it all went south with the Second Intifada and an Israeli election.
Tons of books and articles have been written about this, I’ve even read and forgotten a few, but I recall enough to know that a lot of ink was spilled about just what percentage of the Palestinian demands were acceded to by the Israelis. Some said as much as 98%, while others said more like 90, or maybe even a paltry 88.
Now here’s the thought experiment part. I’m assuming most of the readers here — in this case I’d wager 99% of you — have been in negotiations themselves. When you got 98% or even 88% of what you wanted, did you walk away and start a war… okay, just walk away? And if you did, why did you do that … when you were so close to making a deal? You could obviously hang around in negotiations and get most, if not all, of what you wanted....
Click here to read the rest of this article on Pajamas Media