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This 1970 Boss Mustang was brought in for a light exterior restoration. This one was not in too bad a condition, it was an older restoration that was starting to show its age. We performed some light body work and refinished the car in the original Acapulco Blue and reinstalled the Boss Stripes. We also installed a new flue tank and flue lines.
This one turned out great and will make a great addition to any collection.
For all of you custom and restoration needs give us a call or click at 314-968-8377 or www.cleancutcreations.com
Follow us on Face Book at www.facebook.com/CCCSTL/
Boss GT-10. Boss is a manufacturer of effects pedals for electric guitar and bass guitar. It is a division of the Roland Corporation, a Japanese manufacturer that specializes in musical equipment and accessories. For many years Boss manufactured a range of products related to effects processing for guitars, including "compact" and "twin" effects pedals, multi-effect pedals, electronic tuners, and pedal boards. In more recent times they have expanded their line to include Digital Studios, rhythm machines and other electronic equipment.
This 1970 Boss Mustang was brought in for a light exterior restoration. This one was not in too bad a condition, it was an older restoration that was starting to show its age. We performed some light body work and refinished the car in the original Acapulco Blue and reinstalled the Boss Stripes. We also installed a new flue tank and flue lines.
This one turned out great and will make a great addition to any collection.
For all of you custom and restoration needs give us a call or click at 314-968-8377 or www.cleancutcreations.com
Follow us on Face Book at www.facebook.com/CCCSTL/
Phil Stendek is the Grand Prize Winner! He wins $3,000 in BOSS Gear and a trip to the International Finals at Winter NAMM in Anaheim, California.
Fragments unearthed in the recent excavations of the lost cathedral site and currently displayed in the Priory Visitor Centre in Coventry. The visitor centre is due to close in the coming weeks and these important items will sadly be put into storage for the foreseeable future, thus I urge anyone who hasn't been to visit now while you still can!
Coventry is known for losing its cathedral to wartime bombing; what is less well known is the fact that this is the second time this city has lost a cathedral in 400 years. The original St Mary's Cathedral was supressed at the Dissolution, a monastic and Diocesan church in the then Diocese of Coventry & Lichfield; the latter alone remained as the medieval Coventry Cathedral was erased by history.
The cathedral complex was sold to a wealthy businessman who rapidly sold off the materials, leaving the site so heavily plundered that by the 1600s barely even ruins remained.
There were formerly three towers, probably with spires like the sister cathedral at Lichfield. The base of the north west tower was still fairly complete up to at least the 1800s, though much was lost when it was incorporated into the newly built Bluecoat School buildings in 1856. The lancet window and arcading were lost at this time, and the rest remodelled for secular use, leaving only the bottom 3 metres and parts of the two octagonal turrets on the north side (capped by spirelets as a reminder of their former glory).
Much of the nave and monastic buildings to the north were revealed at the start of the century, many of the latter being surprisingly complete, but of the cathedral itself little more than foundations are visible.
Thus the view we see here is the nearest we can get to experiencing the scale of Coventry's lost Cathedral.
Immediately adjacent to the old cathedral were the large cruciform church of Holy Trinity and the even larger St Michael's (which must have formed a remarkably impressive group prior to the 1540s). The latter was elevated to cathedral status in 1916 as one of the 'parish church cathedrals' when the Coventry Diocese was restored, but of course perished in the air raid of 1940, and replaced by Basil Spence's world famous new building now physically joined to it, which itself almost touches what would have been the eastern extremity of St Mary's, therefore three cathedrals (past and present) stand in a single plot in the heart of the city, surely a unique occurence!
Better Opportunities for Singe (and unaccompanied) Soldiers' representatives from throughouth South Korea met the Casey Garrison Community Activity Center Nov. 17 to network and share ideas about how to improve their programs. - U.S. Army photo by Pfc. Mardicio Barrot
Espetáculo Bossa Nossa, da Cia. Nós da Dança (RJ). Direção Regina Sauer. Teatro da Caixa. Curitiba. 10 de junho de 2011.
RRP £90
Some wear.
£35 - ianthirkill@gmail.com
OverDrive specifically designed for bass. Onboard two-band equaliser. Balance knob controls dry/overdriven sound.
The ODB-3 Bass OverDrive delivers the chest-resonating distortion that "techno" and "industrial" bassists have been waiting for. This hot new pedal has been designed specifically for bass applications. AC adaptor or 9V battery operation.
The Postcard
A postally unused postcard produced by Brooke of Gloucester showing four exquisitely-carved bosses in Gloucester Cathedral.
A boss in this context refers to an ornamental carving covering the point where the ribs in a vault or ceiling cross.
The card has a divided back. The publishers are not overly-specific in terms of where the card was printed; they simply state on the back:
'Printed Abroad'.
Gloucester Cathedral
Gloucester Cathedral, formally the Cathedral Church of St. Peter and the Holy and Indivisible Trinity, in Gloucester, stands in the north of the city near the River Severn.
It originated with the establishment of a minster, Gloucester Abbey, dedicated to Saint Peter and founded by Osric, King of the Hwicce, in around 679.
Osric's foundation came under the control of the Benedictine Order at the beginning of the 11th. century, and in around 1058, Ealdred, Bishop of Worcester, established a new abbey "a little further from the place where it had stood".
The abbey appears not to have been an initial success, because by 1072, the number of attendant monks had reduced to two. The present building was begun by Abbott Serlo in about 1089, following a major fire the previous year.
Serlo's efforts transformed the abbey's fortunes; rising revenues and royal patronage enabled the construction of a major church. William the Conqueror held his Christmas Court at the chapter house in 1085, at which he ordered the compilation of Domesday Book.
In October 1216, Henry III was crowned at the abbey. Following another disastrous fire in 1222, an ambitious rebuilding programme was begun. In the 14th. century, the Great and Little Cloisters were constructed, displaying the earliest, and perhaps the finest, examples of fan vaulting anywhere.
The cathedral contains the shrine of Edward II, who was murdered at Berkeley Castle nearby.
Following the Dissolution of the monasteries by Henry VIII in 1536, the abbey was re-founded as a cathedral. The cathedral underwent much restoration in the 18th. century, and again in the 19th. In 1989, it celebrated its 900th anniversary.
In 2015, the installation of Rachel Treweek saw the Church of England appoint its first woman as a diocesan bishop. The cathedral has frequently been used as a filming location, including as a stand-in for Hogwarts in the Harry Potter movies.
One of the cathedral's windows is said to depict the earliest images of the game of golf. This dates from 1350, over 300 years earlier than the earliest image of golf from Scotland. Another image, carved on a misericord, shows people playing a ball game, which has been suggested as one of the earliest images of medieval football.
The cathedral's clock, bells and chimes are referred to in a repair agreement of 1525. The present clock, installed in 1898, is by Dent and Co, who built the clock for Big Ben. There is no external dial, but there is a fine Art Nouveau clock face in the north transept, dating from 1903, designed by Henry Wilson.
The bells were rehung and augmented in 1978 to give a ring of twelve. The two oldest bells date from before 1420, so they are older than the present tower. The bells are rung 'full circle' by the cathedral's band of ringers for the weekly practice session.
In addition there is Great Peter, the largest medieval bell in Great Britain, weighing a fraction under three tons. Great Peter is the hour bell, and it can also be heard ringing before the main services.
The cathedral is a Grade I listed building. There are a large number of other listed buildings within the cathedral complex, many also listed at Grade I, the highest grade. These include the Treasury, the Chapter House, the Cloisters, the precinct wall and a number of the medieval gates into the cathedral enclosure. Others are listed at Grade II* and Grade II.
-- Gloucester Cathedral's Ecological Measures
In September 2016 Gloucester Cathedral joined the Church of England's 'Shrinking the Footprint' campaign, intended to reduce the Church of England's carbon emissions by 80% by 2050.
Gloucester Cathedral commissioned a solar array on the cathedral roof which is expected to reduce the cathedral's energy costs by 25%. The installation was completed by November 2016, making the 1,000-year-old cathedral the oldest one in the UK with a solar installation.
On April 24, 2012, the Oklahoma ESGR team took a group of Oklahoma employers on a Boss Lift to Fort Chaffee, Ark, to visit with their employees who are members of the Oklahoma Army National Guard. The employers also had an opportunity to watch the 45th Fires Brigade launch rockets from their M142 High Mobility Artillery Rocket System (HIMARS). The group flew to Chaffee in an Oklahoma Army National Guard CH-47 "Chinook" and got to visit with their citizen-soldier while on the ground.
Photo: Sgt. Daniel J. Nelson, Jr., 145th MPAD, Oklahoma Army National Guard
Better Opportunities for Singe (and unaccompanied) Soldiers' representatives from throughouth South Korea met the Casey Garrison Community Activity Center Nov. 17 to network and share ideas about how to improve their programs. - U.S. Army photo by Pfc. Mardicio Barrot
This 1970 Boss Mustang was brought in for a light exterior restoration. This one was not in too bad a condition, it was an older restoration that was starting to show its age. We performed some light body work and refinished the car in the original Acapulco Blue and reinstalled the Boss Stripes. We also installed a new flue tank and flue lines.
This one turned out great and will make a great addition to any collection.
For all of you custom and restoration needs give us a call or click at 314-968-8377 or www.cleancutcreations.com
Follow us on Face Book at www.facebook.com/CCCSTL/
Boss çocuk döğüşe zorlanmış ırkının gerektiği gibi bakılamamış ilgi görememiş ve yolu Mutlu Kuyruklar' ile kesişmiş, şu an Mutlu Kuyruklar sürüsüne dahil olarak özel olarak bakılıyor rehabilite oluyor ilk geldiğinden çok daha ilerleme kaydedilmiş olup doğru beslenme programıyla yumuşak deri problemleri ve tüy sorunlarıyla alakadar olmaktayız. Sonrasında döğüş dürtüsünden arındırlmaya çalışacağız.
This 1970 Boss Mustang was brought in for a light exterior restoration. This one was not in too bad a condition, it was an older restoration that was starting to show its age. We performed some light body work and refinished the car in the original Acapulco Blue and reinstalled the Boss Stripes. We also installed a new flue tank and flue lines.
This one turned out great and will make a great addition to any collection.
For all of you custom and restoration needs give us a call or click at 314-968-8377 or www.cleancutcreations.com
Follow us on Face Book at www.facebook.com/CCCSTL/
This 1970 Boss Mustang was brought in for a light exterior restoration. This one was not in too bad a condition, it was an older restoration that was starting to show its age. We performed some light body work and refinished the car in the original Acapulco Blue and reinstalled the Boss Stripes. We also installed a new flue tank and flue lines.
This one turned out great and will make a great addition to any collection.
For all of you custom and restoration needs give us a call or click at 314-968-8377 or www.cleancutcreations.com
Follow us on Face Book at www.facebook.com/CCCSTL/
On April 24, 2012, the Oklahoma ESGR team took a group of Oklahoma employers on a Boss Lift to Fort Chaffee, Ark, to visit with their employees who are members of the Oklahoma Army National Guard. The employers also had an opportunity to watch the 45th Fires Brigade launch rockets from their M142 High Mobility Artillery Rocket System (HIMARS). The group flew to Chaffee in an Oklahoma Army National Guard CH-47 "Chinook" and got to visit with their citizen-soldier while on the ground.
Photo: Sgt. Daniel J. Nelson, Jr., 145th MPAD, Oklahoma Army National Guard