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Opened in 1966 with just 680 rooms, Caesars Palace has since expanded to include five hotel towers with 3,348 rooms and a huge high scale shopping area called the Forum Shops. Caesars has been the host to numerous events, including two Formula One races, countless boxing matches, an outdoor hockey game, a Wrestlemania event, and many attempts to jump over the fountain in a motorcycle!
For more information about Caesars Palace, please click on the following link:
Romaine, fresh grated Grana Padano parmesan and
pan bread croutons, Earl’s signature caesar dressing
Caesar reviews his crack troop of Legionaries, all primed and ready for the campaign. But first, a brief pep talk to get them primed for action.
Jar Sarno, the owner, struggled to decide on a name for the hotel. He finally decided to call it Caesars Palace because he thought that the name Caesar would evoke thoughts of royalty because of Roman general Julius Caesar. Sarno felt that guests should feel they were at a king's home while at his hotel. It is called "Caesars" and not "Caesar's" because every guest is a Caesar.
Many top performers, such as Liberace, George Burns, Cher, Julio Iglesias, Judy Garland, David Copperfield, Gloria Estefan, and most notably Frank Sinatra have performed at the hotel.
- from Wikipedia
Nero. As Caesar, AD 50-54. Æ Sestertius (26.21 g, 7h). Uncertain Thracian mint. Struck under Claudius, AD 51. Bare-headed and draped bust right / Inscribed shield; vertical spear behind. RIC I 108; von Kaenel, Thrakien, Type A, N4.
Latin coins (sestertii and dupondii) in the name of Britannicus, Agrippina Jr., and the young Nero have been found localized in the Balkan region, and were most likely struck at a local mint servicing the legions guarding the border. Only four sestertii of Nero as Caesar were known to von Kaenel: one in the Berlin Museum, one in the British Museum, one in the Bibliothèque National and a fourth that appeared in Sternberg 12 (18-19 November 1982, lot 543). The missing S C is consistent with a provincial coinage not issued under the nominal authority of the Roman Senate. RPC I suggested Perinthus as a possible mint.
If you are interested in Julio Claudian Iconography and portrait study you may enjoy these two links:
Julio Claudian Iconographic Association- Joe Geranio- Administrator at groups.yahoo.com/group/julioclaudian/
The Portraiture of Caligula- Joe Geranio- Administrator- at
Both are non-profit sites and for educational use only.
This is my first attempt at such a code wheel in a long time. I printed one on a 3D printer four years ago or so, but paper is in many ways far more convenient. The seventh grade is learning programming, and I'm using the work of Al Sweigart to teach Caesar Cipher — which is simple letter substitution. This came out of that work.
Late afternoon light made this autumn shot SO yummy!
Taken at Caesar Creek State Park in Warren County, Ohio.
One of the Corp of Engineer's flood control lakes. Beautiful, brisk hiking on these cold mornings. The beech trees loose their leaves last.
BPLDC no.: 08_04_000091
Page Title: Caesar's Tower
Collection: William Vaughn Tupper Scrapbook Collection
Album: Volume 13: Chester. Stratford on Avon. Warwick. York. : Kenilworth. Blenheim. Fountains Abbey.
Call no.: 4098B.104 v13 (p. 36)
Creator: Tupper, William Vaughn
Genre: Scrapbooks; Albumen prints
Extent: 1 photographic print mounted on page : albumen ; page 33 x 39 cm.
Description: Scrapbook page contains one photograph of Caesar's Tower at Warwick Castle, with annotated information about the history of the structure.
Transcription: Built soon after the Norman Conquest, 150 ft. high.
Notes: Page description supplied by cataloger, derived from captions and/or annotated information.
BPL Department: Print Department
Rights: No known restrictions.
This was exceptionally delicious... the caesar dressing tasted strongly of garlic and the fried cheese was a nice deviation from shaved parmesan!