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3. Foundation. Eagles always strengthen their foundation. They build their nest a little higher and bigger each year. A strong foundation gives them the confidence that they will weather whatever storm comes up.


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Focus, confidence, and a strong foundation allow eagles--and also people--to be patient, poised, and elegant while they are waiting. If you are or know someone who is waiting like a chicken for a new job, college admission acceptance, loan approval, a big sale, etc., you know what you need to do to turn them into an eagle.

James Dallas is the author of Mastering the Challenges of Leading Change: Inspire the People and Succeed Where Others Fail and an accomplished senior executive. As president of James Dallas & Associates, he consults with and speaks to companies and organizations about managing change. He has been named one of the most powerful black men in corporate America several times in his career by Black Enterprise and Savoy magazines.

The hardest part for us was the feathers, of course, and simulating the feathers into Eagly. That was a real challenge. We spent a lot of time breaking down, what was an eagle feather, and what were they made up of? In fact, bald eagles have around 7,000 feathers or so. In Eagly, we ended up with about 9,162 to be exact. It was also about the way the light reacts to them and what happens when they fly and what happens when they land. They get all this turbulence under their wings, and you see feathers moving as they come in for landing and those sort of things.

Jason Galeon, who was our CG supervisor, spearheaded the whole thing here and worked with the pre-pro departments, like Creatures and Lookdev. Those three months, we just spent every single day looking at reference, building, building feathers, building the model, and trying to get closer and closer and closer to Eagly.

b&a: With Eagly, he has to do things that are bird-like, but also he has to interact with the characters. What were the tricky things that were sort of the invisible side of that work that you wanted to mention?

You could also tell by the animators, as they were animating him, they would give him his own persona. Even though he looked like a real eagle in his movements, it was just really subtle things that set him apart and gave those emotions that James was after.

Mark Gee: The big challenge was John Cena never worked with a target. So, eyelines were always an issue, but we made it work. Again, animation did a really great job doing that. And in fact, James sort of warned the actors that Eagly was going to be the most popular characters. He was a comic relief and he showed empathy. He was a mad eagle and attacked people. So he did all sorts of things, including the famous dog in the car scene, when Eagly had his head out the window. That was a really fun scene.

This "ravenous bird" is a symbol of those nations whom God employs and sends forth to do a work of destruction, sweeping away whatever is decaying and putrescent (Matthew 24:28; Isaiah 46:11; Ezekiel 39:4; Deuteronomy 28:49; Jeremiah 4:13; 48:40). It is said that the eagle sheds his feathers in the beginning of spring, and with fresh plumage assumes the appearance of youth. To this, allusion is made in Psalms 103:5 and Isaiah 40:31. God's care over his people is likened to that of the eagle in training its young to fly (Exodus 19:4; Deuteronomy 32:11, 12). An interesting illustration is thus recorded by Sir Humphry Davy;, "I once saw a very interesting sight above the crags of Ben Nevis. Two parent eagles were teaching their offspring, two young birds, the maneuvers of flight. They began by rising from the top of the mountain in the eye of the sun. It was about mid-day, and bright for the climate. They at first made small circles, and the young birds imitated them. They paused on their wings, waiting till they had made their flight, and then took a second and larger gyration, always rising toward the sun, and enlarging their circle of flight so as to make a gradually ascending spiral. The young ones still and slowly followed, apparently flying better as they mounted; and they continued this sublime exercise, always rising till they became mere points in the air, and the young ones were lost, and afterwards their parents, to our aching sight." (See Isaiah 40:31.)

1. A rapacious fowl of the genus Falco. The beak is crooked and furnished with a cere at the base, and the tongue is cloven or bifid. There are several species, as, the bald or white-headed eagle the sea eagle or ossifrage, the golden eagle etc.

The eagle is one of the largest species of fowls, has a keen sight, and preys on small animals, fish, etc. He lives to a great age; and it is said that one died at Vienna, after a confinement of a hundred and four years. On account of the elevation and rapidity of his flight, and of his great strength, he is called the king of birds. Hence the figure of an eagle was made the standard of the Romans, and a spread eagle is a principal figure in the arms of the United States of America. Hence also in heraldry, it is one of the most noble bearings in armory.

E'AGLE-STONE, noun Etite, a variety of argillaceous oxyd of iron, occurring in masses varying from the size of a walnut to that of a man's head. Their form is spherical, oval or nearly reniform, or sometimes like a parallelopiped with rounded edges and angles. They have a rough surface, and are essentially composed of concentric layers. These nodules often embrace at the center a kernel or nucleus, sometimes movable, and always differing from the exterior in color, density and fracture. To these hollow nodules the ancients gave the name of eagle-stones, from an opinion that the eagle transported them to her nest to facilitate the laying of her eggs.

Anyone that's seen Alfred Hitchcock's "The Birds" or James Nguyen's "Birdemic," knows that our friendly feathered friends can sometimes turn fowl. James Paxton learned that up close and personal before a 4-2 loss against the Twins on April 5.

With a bald eagle out on the field for the Twins' home opener, it seemingly mistook the Big Maple for either a) an actual tree, b) his owner or c) was trained to give the Twins an edge before Paxton took the mound.

You have to give the lanky left-hander some serious props -- he barely moved as the eagle landed upon him. 

"It was coming right for me and I was like, 'Alright, the guy is over there. And I'm not the eagle guy,'" Paxton said after the game. But I guess this eagle was just confused -- apparently the first time ever. I was just standing there trying not to panic."

"I wasn't going to run," Paxton added. "I figured I'm not going to outrun an eagle, so we might as well just see what happens."

While almost any other person would have turned tail and fled, Paxton explained why he was able to stay so calm. "I was just kind of like, alright, we'll see what happens. When it first started flying toward my face, I ducked it. But it was just trying to stand on my shoulder. I think it was just confused, thinking I was the [trainer.] It actually fell off my shoulder because I didn't have the perch thing on my shoulder to grab onto."

Twins starter Kyle Gibson, who pitched 4 1/3 innings in the victory, would not have held his ground the way his opponent did. "That was impressive," Gibson told MLB.com's Rhett Bollinger. "I don't know how he handled that. I would've been freaking out. How he stood there with the eagle on his shoulder was impressive. I don't know how cool he thought the moment was, but that was a pretty cool moment."

"That was a classic," Twins manager Paul Molitor added. "I tried to imagine being in his position. He was so calm. The eagle was ignoring the whistle. That's for sure. We could hear it by the mound. It made for a nice moment."

Naturally, Fernando Rodney's take was wholly unique. "Wow. That's the first time I've ever seen that," Rodney said. "When I saw that, I said, 'Wow. That's baseball. A lot of things happen.'"

As the story goes, a warrior had a prayer for his people that he wanted to deliver to the Great Spirit. He climbed a mountain as high as he could and came across Yona the Bear, who asked him what he was doing there. The warrior explained that he wanted to deliver the prayer to the Great Spirit, and Yona said he would help him. When Yona reached the top of the mountain, he saw Awohali the Eagle nested in a tree. Yona explained his mission, and Awohali offered to deliver the prayer, flying all the way to the sun. When Awohali explained why he was there, the sun said he could speak with the Great Spirit and deliver the prayer but that Awohali should first give the sun one of his tail feathers, which the sun took and kissed, leaving a black mark on the tip like on the tail feathers of a golden eagle. The sun then told Awohali to give the feather to the people so they would know they had a connection to the Great Spirit.

As it happens, the exoplanet named by the Prescott team has its own sort of distinctive tail feather, a trailing swoosh of cloudiness created by hydrogen being stripped from the planet because of the intense radiation and/or gravity of its partner star, to which the team also gave a new name, Noquisi, meaning star, in Cherokee.

Becca Spejcher, a senior majoring in Astronomy with a minor in Mathematics, introduced the audience at the planetarium event to the exoplanet to be named Awohali, pointing out that it is 33 lightyears from Earth and orbits a red dwarf star.

Seattle Mariners left-handed pitcher James Paxton and opposing Twins players had different instincts when a bald eagle landed on Paxton on Thursday in Minneapolis, instead of soaring to the mound to reach its handlers. 152ee80cbc

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