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The parts!
Note that the Ashford brass label is facing you, which means you are looking at the front of the wheel, the side you sit at to spin.
U.S. Air Force Academy -- Basic Cadet trainees participate in small arms training 24 Jul. here (U.S.Air Force photo/Bill Evans)
Blogged aobut here: thekidneybean.wordpress.com/2007/09/23/glorified-spit-cat...
Free pattern available here: members.aol.com/cillcrochets/bib.html
Puesta en funcionamiento de la Intellibox Basic, y digitalización de la maqueta de trenes mediante los decoder 76420 de Uhlenbrock.
This I put together from the "ten basic formations" from Janice Kim's "Learn to Play Go -- Volume IV: Battle Strategies" pp. 73-74. Actually she demonstrates 11 even though she says there are only 10. On top, from left to right are "bent four" (alive), "rectangular six" (alive), and "straight four" (alive). The topmost group on the left side is "square four" (dead). The two groups in the upper middle are the "Maltese five" (life depends on the center point), and the "Z bent four" (alive). The "Maltese five" is the 11th group. The next group on the left side is the "radial five" (life depends on center point). On the right side is the "bent three" (life depends on who plays the vital point in the middle). The lower left corner is the "straight three" (life depends on center point). In the lower middle is the "T bent four" (life depends on the center point). In the lower right corner is the "flower six" (life depends on the center point).
A formative assessment we did for our Broadcast class with only using basic shapes. Animated in After Effects.
Basic Instinct 2 (2006)
Directed by Michael Caton-Jones
Poster design by Intralink Film Graphic Design