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Susanna Reid presents the award for News Coverage.

 

Ceremony of the Arqiva British Academy Television Awards in 2014 at London’s Theatre Royal on 18 May 2014.

Shot by @sirbrendan_ exclusively for Third World Society

People Magazine

The 32nd Annual Can-Am International Championships

 

Photos by Ron Sombilon Gallery

www.KenLowKungFu.ca

 

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The Washington Redskins made it through their first day of training camp unscathed.

 

It wasn’t the most electrifying practice, but considering the heat (temperatures hovered around 95 degrees), and the fact that it was the first on-field work in just more than a month, it’s understandable that the players and coaches would ease into things.

 

There were some offensive fireworks as Kirk Cousins and DeSean Jackson connected on a couple of nice plays, including a 50-yard touchdown pass. That play and a sideline catch by Jackson both appeared to come when the quarterback and receiver took advantage of holes in zone coverage. On the 50-yarder, nickelback Dashaun Phillips initially covered Jackson, but there appeared to be a mix-up as the receiver ran free while Phillips looked to be passing Jackson off to help – that wasn’t there. Josh Norman was in the neighborhood on the out route that Jackson caught, but he too looked like he expected someone else to pick up the receiver.

 

Norman wasn’t targeted much, but he made a nice play on one other matchup with Jackson. The receiver ran a slant and had to jump to make the catch. Norman went up with him but didn’t give up even though Jackson snatched the ball from the air. As Jackson came down, Norman got a hand in and knocked the ball from his grasp and celebrated with a fist pump. This matchup will continue to stand out as one of the more intriguing developments of camp.

 

The defense opened with the same starting line that we saw in the spring, with Chris Baker at left end, Kedric Golston and Kendall Reyes at right end. We saw Ricky Jean-Francois and Ziggy Hood rotate in on a few plays. On some of the nickel packages, it was Reyes and Jean-Francois on the interior and Ryan Kerrigan and Preston Smith. That was just for today. Look for Joe Barry and Rob Akey to continue experimenting here throughout camp as they try to find the right combination.

 

Gruden said Wednesday the coaching staff would be giving young outside linebackers a long, hard look before they make a play for an unsigned edge rusher. Today, we saw Lynden Trail and Houston Bates both get some time with the first team as they spelled either Kerrigan or Smith. The two worked together to produce a positive result for the defense on one particular play. Bates rushed from the left edge and got inside of Morgan Moses and slipped by to get to Kirk Cousins. The quarterback quickly turned and tried to get rid of the ball, throwing to his left. But Trail had knifed through from the opposite edge as Bates, also dipping to the inside and swatted down the pass for an incompletion.

The starting strong safety job remains up for grabs. David Brutton Jr. and Duke Ihenacho rotated series with each making plays. Brutton broke up a pass downfield to Jordan Reed, and later Ihenacho promptly stopped Reed after the tight end caught a screen pass to the right. Reed had; however, beat Ihenacho pretty badly during one-on-one drills, hauling in a touchdown pass after some precise route running.

 

The tight end depth chart could change, but for now, it looks like Reed, Niles Paul and Vernon Davis as the third tight end. While those three saw action with the starters, Logan Paulsen and Marcel Jensen worked with the second and third units.

Quinton Dunbar wasn’t at camp on Thursday because he received an excused absence to attend the birth of his child.

For the first time in recent memory, there is no kicker competition. Prior to getting cut last year, Kai Forbath served as Washington’s kicker for three full seasons, and each of those training camps, he had a competitor. But Dustin Hopkins, who last season made 25 of 28 field goals with a long of 54, and recorded 52 touchbacks, does not have a challenger in camp.

Taken during Champlain College Commencement’s event coverage photos at Champlain Valley Exposition in Essex Junction on Saturday May 14 2022. (Logan Hall-Potvin / Vermont Special Events Photographer)

Coverage from my trip to SEMA 2011 in Las Vegas, NV.

 

For prints or information please contact me: jeremy.cliff@yahoo.com

 

More coverage on the following sites.

 

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Foto: JuliánDBernal – CEET © 2010

Casa Editorial El Tiempo, Btá-Col.

todos los derechos reservados.

 

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Elftopia in the castle of Ooidonk

Through regular advertising and coverage of the many social events that took place at Sevenoaks, the long-lived night spot was a continual presence in both local dailies for nearly two decades. The first ads ran in January 1943, when the club was still at its original location, 5130 Broadway. Sevenoaks, “the South's finest,” offered dancing and fine foods every night and Sunday afternoon for a “low cost” in a “refined atmosphere,” inviting readers to “Make a date now for a sparkling, gay evening of fun at the new Sevenoaks.”

 

During the next few years, Sevenoaks found its niche as a glamorous destination for special-occasion dining on “the best steak dinners and chicken dinners” and dancing to the music of Mack Rogers and “Texas Finest Orchestra,” touring bands and novelty acts such as a calypso troupe. The most-advertised special was a $1 filet-mignon dinner, and Sevenoaks promised “no dull intermissions — continuous live music a la Stork Club.” The first house band was Mack Rogers, who would be replaced by Bill Geyer and other local and touring bands.

 

While some have conjectured that the club was named after a stand of trees, it was actually a nod to the English heritage — the town of Sevenoaks is in Kent, England — of owner Benjamin Franklin Chadwick, whose daughter was Josephine Sevenoaks Chadwick. In 1948, the club moved from Broadway to a new building at 1400 Austin Hwy., the location most people remember across the street from the Skyline Motel. A terrace offered outdoor dining in “San Antonio's first sidewalk cafe” as well as dancing; ads invited people to “Dine under the stars to wonderful music ... for the young and young at heart.”

 

Touring musicians, from the calypso ensemble to Tommy Dorsey's band, provided music.

 

Sevenoaks even made national news when a roster of politicians, headlined by senators John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson, campaigned there for Democratic presidential candidate Adlai Stevenson. At the $25-a-plate chicken dinner, Johnson, Speaker of the House Sam Rayburn and future Texas Gov. Price Daniel were featured speakers, but “the youthful, red-haired Massachusetts senator” gave the keynote address, as described in the San Antonio Express, Oct. 25, 1956. Introduced by Johnson as one of the “rising young stars” of the Democratic Party, 38-year-old Kennedy skewered the Republicans as “the party of Richard Nixon” and predicted, “The future belongs to us.” Attended by 738 people, the evening at Sevenoaks “brought in a net profit of nearly $19,000 after expenses.”

 

The club's future was not as glamorous as its 1940s and '50s heyday. Interstate highways made Austin Highway less relevant to travelers, and the road and its businesses never entirely recovered from the bypass. According to city-directory research by Beth Standifird, San Antonio Conservation Society librarian, by 1961, Sevenoaks had become El Antonio Hotel and Country Club. The new owners kept the Terrace Dining Room and added a Sky Room Club “featuring name entertainment,” but the club was not too exclusive to run ads inviting new members at an annual cost of $137. Under new management again in 1963, El Antonio Treadway Motor Inn offered Sunday buffet at $1.95 for adults — “Mom dines free” — and $1.25 for children.

 

During the 1970s and '80s, the former club was owned by Sheraton, and the old name briefly was restored for the Sheraton Sevenoaks Inn and Conference Center. After standing empty for years, the building was destroyed in a March 5, 2004, fire. The Legacy Heights Apartments were built on the site.

Coverage from my trip to SEMA 2011 in Las Vegas, NV.

 

For prints or information please contact me: jeremy.cliff@yahoo.com

 

More coverage on the following sites.

 

GTHAUS.com

 

Facebook Fan Page | My Twitter |

ThePhotoMotive.com | JeremyCliff.com

Photographic coverage of Episcopal High School's finals event at the National Portrait Gallery in Washington, DC.

Coverage of Wekfest San Jose (SJ) (SF) show exclusively for Versiontwo Laboratory.

 

All photos copyrighted by

www.facebook.com/brendanbannisterphotography

 

and @boostedbrendan

J!-ENT COVERAGE - J-Pop Summit Festival 2013 - Early morning setup. J!-ENT photos by Angelo Delos Reyes.

SEMA coverage for Stance Nation. Please give my photography page credit if you share these pictures. Thanks

 

Photo by Brendan Bannister

www.facebook.com/brendanbannisterphotography

 

www.brendanbannister.com

Coverage of Wekfest San Jose (SJ) (SF) show exclusively for Versiontwo Laboratory.

 

All photos copyrighted by

www.facebook.com/brendanbannisterphotography

 

and @boostedbrendan

KRON 4 Coverage of the Moore OK Tornadoes

Taken during Champlain College Commencement’s event coverage photos at Champlain Valley Exposition in Essex Junction on Saturday May 14 2022. (Logan Hall-Potvin / Vermont Special Events Photographer)

Taken during Champlain College Family Weekend’s event coverage photos at Champlain College in Burlington on Saturday October 22 2022. (Logan Hall-Potvin / Vermont Special Events Photographer)

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