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Appearing in the Journal of the Polynesian Society 1940 > Volume 49, No. 195 > The function of latte in the Marianas, by Laura Thompson
It appears that rescuing is very challenging mission!
The amazingly beautiful (and poor) lizard enjoyed his meal of fresh cockroach (leftover on the board as there was no much flesh on the legs I guess), but paid the price of being caught too by the glue, same as his food...
Just in case it's confusing, the word of "lung" in the video is actually "langue", which means tongue in French. I guess my tongue was not functioning well under stress:)
The Moorhen appears mostly black, but a closer look reveals blackish-brown upperparts and grey-black below. Underneath the tail (undertail coverts) are white and there is a white line along the flank. The bill and frontal shield (forehead) is red, the bill having a yellow tip. The legs and feet are a striking yellow-green, and if you are lucky you may catch a glimpse of the red "garter" at the top of the legs. The toes are lobed, not webbed. The eye is red.
Thanks goes to Drew for Identifying it for me
originally appeared in phirebrush issue 41 (phirebrush.com)
a schoolhouse in my town that's been having some restoration work down for preservation purposes. at this time, the foundation was being worked on (you can't see that in this photo).
Shooting for Rushmore clothing
strobe info: hvl-f42am flash, 1/1, wide, (x2) flash was placed on the ground to the back left and hand held high to the left of the frame with wireless sync.
Location: Fremantle Harbour, Australia.
Model: Andrew Throop
Photo: Bert Khongsawat
Appearing at the 2014 Victoria Fringe Festival.
Photo Credit:
j. aaron mercer, Anthropocalarchivist
Johnny MacRae (left) & shayne avec i grec (right)
12 women (Tamil + Sinhala+ Muslim) were felicitated by the Youngmen’s Welfare Association of
Colombo to celebrate the International Women's Day 2012.
The felicitation ceremony was orgainsed by the Youngmen’s Welfare Association of Colombo. 12 women were felicitated on 11th March 2012 at Vivekananda Society Hall in Colombo.
Epic Games has released a short grenade trailer, which is already available in Fortnite . It seemed to dedicate a video to a grenade? However, this is not a simple grenade - instead of an explosion, it will erect buildings and surprise other players. In general, taking this opportunity to say
gameplaying.info/grenade-with-a-big-surprise-appeared-in-...
These photos taken by and appear courtesy of the photographer George Fischer.
On Saturday, 9/10/16 despite a very hot and humid day over 80 dedicated volunteers arrived at Bread and Cheese Creek and completely filled a 40 yard dumpster with trash and debris they removed from this historic stream and its bank totally over 4 tons!!! This included 214 bags of trash, a truck full of metal to be recycled, 12 smashed tomatoes cages, 4 tires, 3 bicycles, 3 shopping carts, a box spring with mattress, a hand truck, a couch, a powerweels car and much more! Thank you everyone so very much for all your incredible hard work under such tough conditions! Our volunteer dedication to working toward a cleaner, greener, healthier community and environment cannot be topped! Thank you so much!!!
We would also like to thank the Ocean Conservancy, American Rivers, Day to Serve, National Public Lands Day and Trash Free Maryland for all their assistance and support on this cleanup and to thank Chick-fila Eastpoint for their generous donations of food to feed all our hungry and hardworking volunteers!!! We also wish to thank Tradepoint Atlantic for your generous donations allowing is to purchase much needed supplies! We would also like to thank CCBC, Towson University, the U. S Navy and the community for all the incredible volunteers they supplied! Thank you also to Baltimore County Highways for supplying us with a dumpster!
We want to send a special Thank you out to Angel Ball and her Concerts in the Park Volunteers for stopping by our cleanup to present us with a very generous donation to help us park for our upcoming cleanups!! Thank you so much Angel! As an all-volunteer organization with no funding we rely on fundraisers t continue to clean up our community and environment. Thank you so very much again!!
We must apologize for the lack of photos of volunteers this time, but since we had no photographers volunteer for this even we were all too busy to take as many photos of our hardworking volunteers as we would have liked. If you are a volunteer photographer and would like to take pictures at one of our future events, please contact us – we could use your talent and we would love to have you!!! If any volunteers took photos during the day please send them to us – Thank you!!
via
**ORIGINALLY APPEARED IN USA TODAY**
By Roger Stone
Next Tuesday, I will testify before the House Intelligence Committee in its ongoing investigation into whether Donald Trump, his family, campaign or associates colluded with the Russian government to influence the outcome of the 2016 election.
I am testifying voluntarily and have not requested or received a grant of immunity. I have been eager to do so since several members of the committee made allegations in public session that I had advance notice of either the hacking of Hillary Clinton campaign Chairman John Podesta’s emails or of the content of material published by WikiLeaks that proved embarrassing to the Clinton campaign. FactCheck.org, a non-partisan news organization, reported that those allegations are not established by the record.
The torrent of leaks and allegations from our intelligence agencies on the question of Russian collusion demonstrates the extent to which these agencies have been politicized. Repetition of the mantra that “the Russians colluded with the Trump campaign” does not make it true.
The New York Times reported in January that intelligence agencies are examining emails, records of financial transactions and intercepted communications as part of an investigation into possible links between Russian officials and former Trump associates, including me.The Times, the Senate and House intelligence committees and our intelligence services have yet to make public any incriminating materials for a simple reason: They do not exist.
In addition, the reported meeting between Donald Trump Jr. and a Russian attorney who claimed to have documentation of malfeasance by Hillary Clinton was neither improper nor illegal.
I believe that the entire allegation of Russian collusion with the Trump campaign is the brainchild of Clinton operative John Podesta, most likely to distract from the lucrative business contracts that he and his brother enjoyed with the oligarchs around Vladimir Putin. In short, the claim of Russian collusion with Trump is a politically motivated fairy tale.
from Roger Stone – Stone Cold Truth stonecoldtruth.com/usa-today-stone-calls-russian-collusio...
rogerstone1.wordpress.com/2017/09/19/usa-today-stone-call...
This photo appeared in the following ideotrope albums:
Petit Grepon June 2006 - Petit Grepon is the most popular alpine climb in RMNP. It's crowded on weekends. Tom and I climbed this route on a weekend in late summer about 3 years ago. We were lucky to have the route to ourselves that day, but we had to put up with cold, wet weather instead. Other groups turned back that day. Tom still refers to my P6 lead as "the rain pitch". I remember Tom leading the runout 5.7 pitch (P7) next while thinking "I'm so glad I'm not leading this pitch."
This year we took Monday off work to climb on Tom's birthday. The weather was absolutely stellar, and we had the whole place to ourselves. We didn't even see any hikers make their way to Sky Pond or Glass Lake. Even on a weekday it can get crowded. On Thursday 4 days earlier, 4 parties climbed the route.
We swapped leads intending to more or less lead opposite pitches from last time. It didn't quite work since last time I had led the first 4 pitches. Tom ended up with the crux 5.8 pitch both times. This year Tom insisted on leading P6 right after leading P5. When I asked why, he said he sure didn't want to lead P7 again. We must be getting better because I led that pitch and loved it. Sure, it's runout, but the rock, the setting, the exposure are all superb.
The major bummer of this climb is the descent. Last time we walked down the Gash, a grim proposition because you must carry all your gear up the climb (and at this time of year you'd need ice axes for the Gash descent). This time we did 6 double-rope rappels which took over 2.5 hours. The 5th rappel requires 60m ropes. The others can be done with 50m ropes. I wonder, however, if you couldn't find (or place) slings to break up that rappel and do the whole descent with a pair of 50m ropes (which I actually own).
Appearing Rooms water sculpture by Danish artist Jeppe Hein
at the Royal Festival Hall, London. The jumping man reminds me of a figure sculpture by Antony Gormley, who co-incidentally has an exhibition at the South Bank now too.
Appears on Returns as follows:
Oct. 1864, Absent on detached service at Female Military Prison, Louisville, Ky. since Oct 21/64
It appears the end of a chapter drew to a close at 6:04:35 PM PDT tonight. Shadow departed their nest at Big Bear Lake, California, 03/13/2020. Apparently, Jackie left at 12:13 PM after being spooked by a blob of melting snow [see Paul Amirault’s post]. Neither eagle has returned to the nest—now over 3 hours. We shall see what tomorrow brings...
Saturday, and I was feeling a little better. Better enough to realise how shit I had felt the previous two days, and needing something to break the cabin fever, soo it would be churchcrawling.
Off to Tesco for supplies, and delight that "party food" has appeared, and although there would be no party at Chez Jelltex, there would be party food to munch on during the evening game.
Back home for breakfast, and Jools decided not to join in the church fun, instead stay home to do overdue chores.
And so the great round of revisits to record details of the stained glass that I previously missed continues.
Elmsted not Elmstead.
Off Stone Street and down past Yockletts Bank and along towards Hastingleigh, before taking a lane back up the down, which double hairpins to the village above, and by the village crossroads is St James.
A huge church for what is a farm and a handful of houses now. I parked beside the road, in a narrow strip between the tarmac and where the verge turned to swamp, got my bag out of the car and walked through the gate, noticing better the shapes of the grave markers repurposed for the path, some even dates being still visible.
The church is cool and still, I had done a pretty good job before, windows excepted, so got to work snapping and moving about. Sun poured in through the mostly clear glass windows, making it seem a place of divine light, even if the sun shone from the south, not the Orient.
Back to the car, and down the down, back to the main road a a quick climb up to Hastingleigh, where the church is a good mile outside the village, beside a farm. It does, at least, have a large car park, so no parking in people's drives or blocking the lane through the village.
A poor wren was trapped inside, but I made it even more desperate than it had been when I entered, and try as I might I couldn't get close to it. And the two fine windows, one of St Michael the Archangel, that I came out especially to photograph had boards up outside, so they could barely be seen.
The rest of the Victorian glass is of a very fine standard, so record all that.
Next church was a twenty minute drive away, Mersham, which can be seen from the train just before entering the outskirts of Ashford, its spire pointing into the morning skies as I zoom past en route to Denmark.
Here there is a most extraordinary west window. Cathedral sized, though it has lost of of the ancient glass that filled it, fragments remain, and I wanted to record those.
Outside a lady was clearing leaves, and inside another was refreshing the floral displays with poppies for services on Sunday.
The window is a wonder, and a burden, as it lets in so much light, that during the summer months the cinema nights they have cannot take place.
I very much like Mesham, and received a quite wonderfully warm and friendly greeting from the two ladies.
One last church to try would be Nackington, back near Canterbury, where the small church has some of the oldest glass in the country.
It was quite a hike across the county to get there only to find the church locked. This was a church that was always open before COVID, and was a major disappointment.
So, back home through Bridge and onto the A2 back to Dover, to get back at midday, just in time to cook lunch.
And settle down then for an afternoons groaning at the football on the wireless.
Norwich were away at Cardiff, and after four straight defeats, hopes were low. But City took the lead, only to concede twice before half time, which suggested the same old story.
But in the second, City played better, and in the closing ten minutes, scored twice to nick the three points.
Well.
The party food was aptly enjoyed as I watched the evening game.
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A pretty, many-gabled church with a fine short shingled spire. The church is a fourteenth-century rebuild of a Norman original that had been enlarged in the late 1200s. O slightly later date, and to be found on a tie-beam in the chancel is a carved head of Joan, Countess of Kent, who was married to the Black Prince, son of Edward III at Windsor in 1361. There is a fair amount of medieval glass, in the chancel and nave west windows whilst the screens which separate the south chapel from the chancel and south aisle are wonderful examples of seventeenth-century craftsmanship. The base comprises solid panels, the upper levels are of very closely set barley-twist balusters, and the top is of tall iron spikes. The south chapel contains many memorials to the local Knatchbull family whose ancestral home, Mersham-le-Hatch stands to the north of the village. Above the screen is a corbel of possibly thirteenth-century date which depicts a bishop, and which could be part of an earlier door or window. There is a fine Royal Arms of 1751 and a good holy water stoup by the south door with superb carving of Tudor roses.
www.kentchurches.info/church.asp?p=Mersham
“a hide of land for a Church at Mersham” was bequeathed by ‘John Siweard and his wife Edith’ in their will dated c. 1040 AD . A church has existed on this site by 1086 AD, as recorded in the Domesday Book.
The Church was rebuilt by the Normans c.1100 AD and further rebuilding was accomplished in the second half of the fourteenth century (1350-1400 AD). The Church is substantially the same today, although over the years it has been altered and changed internally over the years to reflect the current fashions of the day.
The present church contains significant monuments to the local members of the Brabourne and Knatchbull families
www.a20churches.org.uk/mersham.htm
his is a beautiful Church although I have to admit that from the North side it did rather remind me of a Mennonite farmhouse. (For those of you who have not lived in Southern Ontario as I have, Mennonites do tend to expand their farmhouses as the family grows, usually resulting in lots of additional "bits" added onto the original building. St. John the Baptist Church at Mersham gives the same appearance). Although not actually architecturally visible, the oldest part of this Church is Norman. The South wall at the East end of the building has a thicker wall than the Western end as this once formed part of that original small Norman Church which measured only 36 feet by 25 feet. There was a Saxon Church here and the earliest documentation to confirm this was written in 1040 A.D. The Church was rebuilt in the latter half of the fourteenth century and much of the building we see today dates from that time. Even the main roof trusses and king posts in the Nave (picture top left) date from the fouteenth century.
The Church is well known for the various monuments and memorials to the Knatchbull family. The Chapel in the South East corner of the Church is know knonw as the Knatchbull Chapel although it was original The Lady Chapel. Under the floor at the East end of the Chapel is the Knatchbull family vault and there is also an area on the South side of the churchyard where there also additional Knatchbull family graves. More than one member of the family presided as a magistrate at the local Quarter Sessions and are already mentioned briefly on my smuggling pages. Certain of these memorials to this family are rather interesting for genealogists and you will find additional detail on the next page (see below).
In the Chancel there is some fine oak paneling said to date in one reference from the 14th Century but carrying a date carved into one section in the early 17th Century and some unusual altar rails which do date from the 17th Century. The Church also has some unusual and attractive ancient glass and the tracery in the West window is most unusual containing parts from two different styles of architecture.
When I was in the Church, there were works of art by local children proudly adorning the screen to the Knatchbull Chapel which at least shows that this delightful building is still playing a regular part in the daily lives of this country community. It was also nice to think that two centuries ago, members of my own direct family were being baptised in this Church.
www.kentresources.co.uk/mersham-sjb1.htm
MERSHAM is within the ECCLESIASTICAL JURISDICTION of the diocese of Canterbury, and deanry of Limne.
¶The church, which is dedicated to St. John Baptist, consists of two isles and two chancels, having a handsome square tower at the west end, in which are five bells. In the north window of the high chancel is the figure of a bishop, with his mitre and crosier, praying, and the figure of a saint, with the dragon under his feet. On the rector's pew is carved in wood, a coat of arms, being A fess, in chief, three balls. In this chancel is a memorial for Elizabeth, widow of William Legg, of New Sarum, and mother of dame Grace, wife of Sir Edward Knatchbull, bart. obt. 1771; and several monuments and memorials for the Knatchbull family. The south chancel belongs to them, in which are several monuments and memorials of them, particularly a most superb one for Sir Norton Knatchbull, who died in 1636, having his figure in full proportion lying on it, and above that of his lady kneeling in a praying posture, under a canopy supported by two figures; above are the arms of Knatchbull impaling Ashley; underneath this chancel is a large vault, in which this family lie buried. A monument for Margaret Collyns, daughter of Thomas Tourney, gent. and wife of William Collyns, gent. obt. 1595; arms, Vert, a griffin, or, gerged with a ducal coronet, argent, impaling Tourney. In the north isle are several memorials for the Boys's, of this parish; for Richard Knatchbull, esq. and for Mary Franklyn, obt. 1763. In the west window, which is very large, nearly the whole breadth of the isle, and consists of many compartments, are eight figures of men, pretty entire, and much remains of other painted glass in the other parts of it. The arms of Septvans and Fogge were formerly in one of the windows of the high chancel.
The church of Mersham was formerly appendant to the manor, and belonged with it to the convent of Christ-church; but when the survey of Domesday was taken in the year 1080, it appears to have been in the possession of the archbishop, with whom the manor did not continue long before it was again vested in the convent; but the advowson of the rectory remained with the archbishop, and has continued parcel of the possessions of the see of Canterbury to this time, his grace the archbishop being the present patron of it.
This rectory is valued in the king's books at 26l. 16s. 10½d. and the yearly tenths, which are now payable to the crown-receiver, at 2l. 13s. 8¼d.
In 1578 here were communicants two hundred and forty-seven. In 1640, one hundred and eighty, and it was valued at eighty pounds.
this appears to be a "shelter" of some type. I didn't want to get too investigative...incase someone was actually there.. and this is IN town!! it is very weird anyways and not just random broken tree limbs..they are stacked like a mock-log house type of formation
This photo appeared in the following ideotrope albums:
White Rim October 2008 - There were 6 of us on this smaller than usual White Rim trip: Topher, Gertjan, Shari, Florence, Benjamin, and me.
Jan flew in from Vancouver on Friday and arrived at Topher's in the early afternoon. Shari, Topher, and I all took the day off, hoping for an early start, and we were almost ready by the time Jan arrived. We camped at the usual spot (Dubinky Well Road) and showed up about 90 minutes late for our 10am rendezvous with Flo and Ben. They were just starting to get worried.
Our late starts were a problem the whole trip. It felt like we didn't have so much time to stop and see the sights because we get such a late start every day. Birgit does a good job of organizing and motivating people. I didn't. Still the scenery's beautiful. We'll just have to get out there again so we have time for Turk's Head, Wilhite Canyon, Monument Basin, and whatever else we missed.
I-70 was closed at Vail on the Tuesday night return so we spent an unexpected night at a hotel in Eagle. Somehow this 4-day White Rim trip turned into a 6-day trip.
It appears Patrick Kane is going all MMA against former teammate, Troy Brouwer. But given the edge on skate blades, one would assume Kane's skate blade is NOT being thrust in Brouwer's abdomen. A Shaw suspension may be overcome; a Kane sitting could not.
Appears in a paper describing the BAM (blog aggregation management) project's initial use in the course COIS20025, Software Development Overview. The paper can be found here
davidtjones.wordpress.com/publications/blogs-reflective-j...
Buses that appeared at the Romney Hythe & Dymchurch Bus Rally on Sunday 2nd September 2018
Watch my film of this event here-
Common Bladder Moss or Goblet Moss - Physcomitrium pyriforme? My best guess. Acrocarp growth form, leaves ovate with midrib. Leaves appear to have a somewhat pebbly appearence under a hand lens. Some of the leaves had slightly rolled edges. Habitat fits; disturbed soil on grass near a stream bank.
The moon rises on the right side of the photo while an interesting cloud formation is visible on the left.
Appearing soon, the world is waiting. (well more like a few hundred thousand geeks...)
They're trying to compress and upload many different versions.
January 18, 2020 Chris Martin joked that he “forced” his children to appear on his new song. Chris Martin 42 years old Cold game The singer revealed that her children…
www.contentcatcher.co.uk/celebrity-news/chris-martin-joke...
These photo taken by and appear courtesy of photographer Beverly Funk
On 4/2/16 despite a very cold and rainy morning over 150 dedicated volunteers arrived at Bread and Cheese Creek and nearly filled a 40 yard dumpster with trash and debris they removed from this historic stream and its bank totally over 4 tons!!! This included 316 bags of trash, half a truck full of metal to be recycled, 22 gallons of paint, 14 tires, 6 televisions, 6 shopping carts, 3 box springs, a mattress, a couch, a role of barbed wire and a Betamax videotape player and much more!!! Thank you everyone so very much for all your incredible hard work under such tough conditions! Our volunteer dedication to working toward a cleaner, greener, healthier community and environment cannot be topped! Thank you so much!!!
PHOTOS NEEDED: If you were one of the photographer at out cleanup or just took a few photos during the day please contact us as we are desperate for photos of our hardworking volunteers at this event – THANK YOU!!
We would also like to thank the Alliance for the Chesapeake Bay, and American for all their assistance and support on this cleanup and to thank Pat's Pizzeria Dundalk MD, Pizza Hut, and Chesapeake Traders Food Warehouse, for their generous donations of food to feed all our hungry and hardworking volunteers!!!