Eesti traditsioonide järgi on kudumine olnud ikka naiste töö. 12 Absract Knitting is a corner stone of Estonia folk culture. Many items of the traditional folk costumes are knitted: including gloves, mittens, jackets, caps, socks, and stockings. Some of the oldest European knitted textiles have been found on Estonian soil. Among these many artifacts, most of which are actually needle-looped, for exsample the cuff of a knitted wool mitten found in 1950 in a woman's burial site in Jõuga. Prior to the introduction of knitting hands and feet were hidden from cold in rags which were made of linen. Needled mittens were created with a special needle. Already in the bronze age people in Estonia knew how to make them, but needle looped tehnique vanished. One reason needle looping technique disappeared was when knitting became popular, another difference
A curly-tailed tabby and white male cat was reported in Perthshire, Scotland in 1986. The degree of curl ranges from loose through to a tight corkscrew. In one case, the tail curled at the base and for the rest of its length lay flat along the spine. In the 1980's, Katrina Lee of Washington, DC, vacationed on the island of Guadeloupe . In a small restaurant on the lower island she saw about half a dozen various colored cats with corkscrew tails. The tails were not looped over, but stuck out from the body like a normal cat's tail while looking like they'd been wrapped around something to make them spiral! In Britain, one curly-tailed cat has achieved fame with South Ribble Pet Cat Club. Raffles is a white semi-longhair born in June 1998 and homed via a cat shelter in Oldham. When sitting, his tail forms a curl behind him. Another British curly tail is Sprocket found at Spaghetti Junction (Gravelly Hill motorway interchange in the Midlands)
The engineers, who were rapidly learning about cryptology, probably from a 1916 manual, soon spotted the flaw in this. The Vernam system is a polyalphabetic. A 32 X 32 tableau may be set up with the 32 characters of the Baudot alphabet across the top as plaintext and down the side as keys. Because the Baudot alphabet is public information, the composition of the 32 cipher alphabets filling the body of the tableau would be known. Secrecy in the Vernam system thus resides entirely in its keys. Looped keytapes would pass through the Vernam mechanism at regular intervals, permitting a simple Kasiski solution, even though the key recovered would be incoherent. The engineers made the keytapes extremely long to increase the difficulty of such a solution. But then the keytapes became too hard to handle. Engineer Morehouse surmounted these difficulties by combining two short keytapes of different lengths in a Vernam device as if one were