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Built by Waite Phillips, the Beacon Building (1923) SW corner 4th and Boulder, is remembered by many Tulsans for a beacon light tower (removed in 1976) that symbolized its long-time tenant, the Beacon Life Insurance Company and served as a aircraft navigational aid in the 1930's.
In an attempt to move into a digital age when we had the films processed instead of printing the photos we had them digitised onto CDs. What I didn’t realise was what a very low resolution images we would get. We never did this again as in early 2004 I bought a Canon EOS 300D DSLR.
TempleSerial: Internal Columns with passing train, showing works by »GUR«, »GVS«, »TWK« and others, spotted in the Temple at night.
May 2011. – First published on Streetfiles.org 2010–2013
we stopped at the astoria column the other day on our way to seaside ..I have been to seaside two times in the last week ...in the last three months I have been to the beach twice, the portland zoo twice, jet skiing on the columbia river , went to led zeplen lazer light show the other night and walked through omsi, been to the movies a couple times ...I have had a very eventful past couple months and in a couple days I will be cruisin in the new sion ..the fun is just about to take a hault though $100,000.00 goes fast .!!! I have enough left to go on a few more trips ..one to bend and the trip to AZ... is coming up soon ...soooo excited .
....© Yvonne Wallin All Rights Reserved. No usage allowed including copying or sharing without written permission
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I tried to capture the shadows of statues that the sun cast from the opposite side of St Peter's Square, Rome
July 11 - These sandstone columns from the portico are all that remain of the Mason Mansion when it was demolished to make way for Haddaway Hall (see June 27 photo of the day). They are now displayed at the Proctor Library.
The thirty six room Mason Mansion was built in 1892 using local wood and stone. Allen C. Mason lost his fortune in the panic of 1893 and sold the mansion to Whitworth College, which used it as its main building from 1899 to 1914, when the college moved to Spokane.