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Governor Hogan Speaks at the Reagan Foundation by Joe Andrucyk at 1600 I St NW, Washington, DC 20006
Read Exodus 20:1-17 (NIV)
1. Here are all of the words God spoke. He said,
2. “I am the Lord your God. I brought you out of Egypt. That is the land where you were slaves.
3. “Do not put any other gods in place of me.
4. “Do not make statues of gods that look like anything in the sky or on the earth or in the waters.
5. Do not bow down to them or worship them. I, the Lord your God, am a jealous God. I punish the children for the sin of their parents. I punish the grandchildren and great-grandchildren of those who hate me.
6. But for all time to come I show love to all those who love me and keep my commandments.
7. “Do not misuse the name of the Lord your God. The Lord will find guilty anyone who misuses his name.
8. “Remember to keep the Sabbath day holy.
9. Do all of your work in six days.
10. But the seventh day is a Sabbath in honor of the Lord your God. Do not do any work on that day. The same command applies to your sons and daughters, your male and female servants, and your animals. It also applies to any outsiders who live in your cities.
11. In six days I made the heavens and the earth. I made the oceans and everything in them. But I rested on the seventh day. So I blessed the Sabbath day and made it holy.
12. “Honor your father and mother. Then you will live a long time in the land the Lord your God is giving you.
13. “Do not commit murder.
14. “Do not commit adultery.
15. “Do not steal.
16. “Do not give false witness against your neighbor.
17. “Do not long for anything that belongs to your neighbor. Do not long for your neighbor’s house, wife, male or female servant, ox or donkey.”
Wishing each of you a blessed beautiful Sunday!!!
Presume this was also a sales centre showroom for the condos here, back in the day; doesn't show up on GoogleMaps streetview, so pre-2007 (condos date to 2005). There is another structure still around, close by here, on the same lot.
Nepean; Ottawa, Ontario.
The Beyeler Foundation or Fondation Beyeler with its museum in Riehen, near Basel, owns and oversees the art collection of Hildy and Ernst Beyeler.
Art dealers Ernst Beyeler (*1921) and Hilda Kunz (*1922), known as Hildy, created the Beyeler Foundation in 1982 and commissioned Renzo Piano to design a museum, the Fondation Beyeler, to house their private collection. The collection was first publicly exhibited in its entirety at the Centro de Arte Reina Sofía in Madrid in 1989, and was subsequently shown at Neue Nationalgalerie, Berlin, (1993) and the Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sidney, (1997).
By building Renzo Piano's museum structure in 1997, the Beyeler Foundation made its collection permanently accessible to the public. In 2006, approximately 340,000 persons visited the museum. Hildy Beyeler died on July 18, 2008, and Ernst died on February 25, 2010.
(Wikipedia)
Tilt-shift effect.
When the foundation of a society is undermined and eroded away, collapse is inevitable.
This photo was taken by a Mamiya 645 Pro TL medium format film camera and Mamiya-Sekor C 45mm 1:2.8 N lens with a Kowa L39•3C(UV) ø67 filter using Kodak Portra 400 film, the negative scanned by an Epson Perfection V600 and was digitally rendered with Photoshop.
"After seeing various successes with the previous Battlefield Manipulation Unit, technicians of the Foundation were instructed by the board of the SF to change certain specifics of the suit. Such specifics were that of the arms: technicians made them more easily able to move, putting less strain on the pilots. The new BMUs were put into mass production after passing inspection from high ranking leaders of the Foundation."
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I tweaked it up a little bit. The arms can now do a full 90 degree lift up sideways and are much more pose able. It's a little hard to explain, but just trust me on that ;D
I'll note all the nifty stuff.
Built 1863, Van Wert Ohio by George and Hilinda Marsh. A two-story brick structure, it is a built in the plan of a cross. As the years passed, Marsh became very wealthy, and he became determined to use his wealth to help others. According to locals, Marsh and his family were returning home from Fort Wayne, Indiana on a winter night and saw two impoverished children, and consequently his wife Hilinda suggested dedicating their estate to children such as those two. A school and an associated children's home were founded to serve impoverished children throughout northwestern Ohio. In 1980, the Marsh homestead and school buildings were listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
Construction, Week 63 (Demolition, Week 3)
Looking to the left, here's the foundation of the old store, which, like the asphalt underneath it, will be removed and regraded in the coming weeks to better follow the elevation of the Marketplace's storefront. As a result, that area farthest off to the left (east) should soon be at about the same level or elevation as the area seen farthest to the right in the foreground, if not a little lower even. (cont.)
(c) 2016 Retail Retell
These places are public so these photos are too, but just as I tell where they came from, I'd appreciate if you'd say who :)
A daily working shift of around 10 hours for 100 RMB a day(15$).
China has seen huge urban developments and a huge force of such people are behind that.
And yes,he was kind enough to let me get that close with the 35mm:)
Zhongshan,China
Press L for best experience
The new home of the Poetry Foundation is a modernist building designed by John Ronan Architects and completed in 2011. It was very quiet when I was there on a Sunday during the OpenHouse Chicago 2014. I teased the security guard who admitted that watching over the library of a poetry building on a Sunday was fairly dull duty.
Day 3... Foundation
To me a strong foundation is the bringing of the comforts of life under your own roof in the forms of knowledge, art, history, spiritual nourishment, a good diet, and love. Tonight I want to just stay indoors and not around the outside fire pit that my neighbors are gathered around while they enjoy the large pot of posole that Carlos made today. Sometimes I just want the comfort of being within my own home where I may just want to read a good book under some warm blankets...
I plan on reading Richard Henry Dana's TWO YEARS BEFORE THE MAST once again pictured in this photo composition. The foundation of early California history I value very much...
Catching up on some back shots from the beginning of the year.
Little Akaloa....Out and about with my Flickr and blip friend on Banks Peninsula. February 20, 2016, New Zealand.
It was warm and wonderful so we packed up a lunch and headed for the hills and bays around the banks peninsula. It reached will over 30c today.. a bit too hot at times and there was no wind at all.
The historic gem of Little Akaloa is a church hidden away among old trees, commanding a fine view down the bay. The present St Luke's replaced an earlier wooden church and was completed in November 1906. It has an "old world" English-looking exterior, with walls of pebble dash on concrete, a slate roof and a small well-proportioned bell tower.
The surprise is the interior, which is embellished with carvings of predominantly Maori motifs, many delicately executed on white stone. The rafters are decorated with Maori patterns and support an imitation raupo rush ceiling. The windows have stylised Maori designs in coloured glass.
The church was built (and partly paid for) by a local resident, J.H. Menzies, who was "an amateur carver of the very highest order". It is one of the country's early examples of the incorporation of Maori decorative motifs in a European building.
For More Info: dayout.co.nz/attractions/attraction.aspx?attractionId=2216
Foundation Beyeler by Renzo Piano, Riehen - chamonix 045n-2 / schneider symmar 210mm / kodak ektachrome e100vs / tetenal e6 kit
This picture really touched me when I saw it for the first time the other day. I am working on saving some old slides, taken by my step-grandfather, Lucien Toucas. The only ones I have are from 1948 and 1964-65, and surprisingly the older ones seem to be in better shape. I was really happy about that, since they show my grandmother and mother when they were young.
This was when my parents met. My grandfather, who was the executive chef of The Hotel Astor in New York City, and my grandmother, decided to build a bungalow out on Long Island, which was to be for weekends and holidays. My father was the builder they contracted to do the job, and this is the foundation of that original building, as well as the foundation of our family since this is how my parents got together and my brother and I came to be.
Known in our family as "the Branch House", the bungalow became their permanent home eventually, and Pop commuted into NYC to work until his retirement. The name came from the fact that the bungalow grew as they needed the space and added rooms. It was always a place where Pop entertained company, and every Sunday afternoon we would go there, eat a late lunch that turned into dinner, as we all chatted around the table on the patio.
In this pic, my mother, Betty, is on the left and my grandmother, Julie is on the right. Mom was 24 in this shot and Ga-Ga was about 40-41. My grandmother died when she was 50. Mom lived to be 84 years old. Pop died the day after his 89th birthday, and my father, Charley, lived the longest, passing away in 1999 at the age of 92, just one month shy of turning 93 years old. He died the day before my mother's birthday. Ga-Ga died the eve of Mother's Day, thereby "ruining" it for my mom from then on. Pop died on Valentine's Day, and Mom topped them all by passing away at 4 AM, Christmas morning 2008, making sure she nailed both Christmas Eve AND Christmas Day! My family seems to go out with a bang, and fortunately, they also seem to do a lot of living in the time they have!
Just for the record, Ga-Ga loved attention and seemed very at ease in front of a camera, but no matter how good Mom looked, she always was self conscious. We have no portraits of her as a result. I imagine sitting on a thin board wasn't particularly comfortable, especially with Ga-Ga steadying herself on her shoulder! Though there's nothing to give you a size comparison, My mom was 5'1 1/2" at her peak, and Ga-Ga was only about 4'11" tall!