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Little Caesars
3448 Holland Road, Holland Lakes Shopping Center, Virginia Beach, VA
Opened in the late 1980s
JULIUS CAESAR. 45 BC. AV Aureus (20mm, 8.08 g, 11h). Rome mint. L. Munatius Plancus, urban prefect. C CAES DICT TER, draped bust of Victory right, wearing taenia / L PLANC up left, PRAEF VRB (VR ligate) down right, ewer right. Crawford 475/1a; CRI 60; Sydenham 1019a; Calicó 45. L. Munatius Plancus was a friend of Caesar and served under him in the Gallic and Civil Wars. He was consul in 42 BC according to the arrangement made by Caesar and then followed Antony to Asia, but deserted him in 32 shortly before the outbreak of civil war with Octavian. He resided at Rome for the rest of his life, and it was on his proposal that Octavian received the title Augustus in 27 BC.
Little Caesars
1101 West Little Creek Road, Norfolk, VA
Opened in winter 2017; originally part of 1973-built Burger King, later China Express (1993-2016)
Exercise ARRCADE CAESAR 2015 (AC15), is a study of the Allied Campaign in Sicily (Operation HUSKY) in 1943. With Headquarters Allied Rapid Reaction Corps (HQ ARRC) permanently comitted as a High Readiness Force (LAND) HQ and fulfilling the NATO Joint Task Force HQ commitment since 01 July 2015, the Commander is keen to exploit the opportunity provided by AC15 to bring the ARRC team together in order to enhance their understanding and demands across the land, sea and air domains.
The exercise provides an invaluable opportunity to develop mutual understanding, to enhance component synergy and, using the past as a handrail, to provoke challenging discussion and debate on how to tackle the operational level challenges they may face in the future.
(NATO photo/WO2 Dan Harmer GBR Army)
The Caesar is a Canadian cocktail, normally not found outside Canada; i.e. few places anywhere else on the planet, have heard of it / know how to make it.
But Ogdensburg is a border town, with lots of Canadians popping over for a cheap evening.
So they know Caesars, there.
This one wasn't mine, but I have tried them there before, and they do a surprisingly good job, at making them.
Vinn's Tavern; Ogdensburg, New York.
Not the greatest photo, but not bad either since it was taken hand held on the fly while walking through Caesars Palace.
Exercise ARRCADE CAESAR 2015 (AC15), is a study of the Allied Campaign in Sicily (Operation HUSKY) in 1943. With Headquarters Allied Rapid Reaction Corps (HQ ARRC) permanently comitted as a High Readiness Force (LAND) HQ and fulfilling the NATO Joint Task Force HQ commitment since 01 July 2015, the Commander is keen to exploit the opportunity provided by AC15 to bring the ARRC team together in order to enhance their understanding and demands across the land, sea and air domains.
The exercise provides an invaluable opportunity to develop mutual understanding, to enhance component synergy and, using the past as a handrail, to provoke challenging discussion and debate on how to tackle the operational level challenges they may face in the future.
(NATO photo/WO2 Dan Harmer GBR Army)
Exercise ARRCADE CAESAR 2015 (AC15), is a study of the Allied Campaign in Sicily (Operation HUSKY) in 1943. With Headquarters Allied Rapid Reaction Corps (HQ ARRC) permanently comitted as a High Readiness Force (LAND) HQ and fulfilling the NATO Joint Task Force HQ commitment since 01 July 2015, the Commander is keen to exploit the opportunity provided by AC15 to bring the ARRC team together in order to enhance their understanding and demands across the land, sea and air domains.
The exercise provides an invaluable opportunity to develop mutual understanding, to enhance component synergy and, using the past as a handrail, to provoke challenging discussion and debate on how to tackle the operational level challenges they may face in the future.
(NATO photo/WO2 Dan Harmer GBR Army)
There's no salad I love better than this... even to extremes sometimes because I often judge a restaurant by how good their caesar salad is!
Statua romana di Pompeo Magno a Villa Arconati. Donata della Santa Sede a Galeazzo Arconati, fu portata da Roma nel 1627, su un carro trainato da buoi. Si crede che sia questa la statua ai cui piedi morì, trafitto dalle pugnalate dei congiurati, Gaio Giulio Cesare nel 44 a.C.
Roman statue of Pompey. It is now in Villa Arconati a Castellazzo di Bollate (Milan, Italy). It was brought there from Rome in 1627 by Galeazzo Arconati. The left hand and the metal parts are not original, but later additions and repairs. It is handed down that Julius Caesar was killed at the feet of this statue.
When Caesar heard about my wildlife adventure last week he thought he had missed a lively bacchanalia. So I had to explain to my dipsomaniacal friend that I had not gone to a party, but instead had an encounter with a wild beaver. In the true spirit of one-upmanship he immediately went out to stage his own wildlife encounter by bravely facing down a terribly dangerous ceramic raccoon.
Under Thomas de Beauchamp, 11th Earl of Warwick, the castles defences were significantly enhanced in 1330–60 on the north eastern side by the addition of a gatehouse, a barbican (a form of fortified gateway), and a tower on either side of the reconstructed wall, named Caesar's Tower and Guy's Tower.
Caesar's and Guy's Towers are residential and may have been inspired by French models (for example Bricquebec). Both towers are machicolated and Caesar's Tower features a unique double parapet. The two towers are also vaulted in stone on every storey. Caesar's Tower contained a grim basement dungeon; according to local legend dating back to at least 1644 it is also known as Poitiers Tower, either because prisoners from the Battle of Poitiers in 1356 may have been imprisoned there, or because the ransoms raised from the battle helped to pay for its construction.