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Der Theodor-Lessing-Preis für aufklärerisches Handeln wird seit 2004 von der Deutsch-Israelischen Gesellschaft, Hannover, verliehen. In diesem Jahr 2015 wurde der Preis Frau Honorargeneralkonsulin Regine Sixt für ihr überdurchschnittliches soziales, gesellschaftliches und unternehmerisches Engagement verliehen. Die Veranstaltung fand am 7. Oktober 2015 in Hannover statt.Laudatorin Charlotte Knobloch (82): „Sie ist eine der besten Freundinnen des Staates Israels, die man sich vorstellen kann.“

  

Another shot of the Berlin Rock Coaches VDL Bova Futura sleeper coach, reg. no. B RC 9125, at the Students Union, Cardiff for the Less Than Jake/Reel Big Fish Tour 2014 (supported by Zebrahead). Not sure which of the bands was using this vehicle.

The picture was taken on 1 February 2014.

Oh, my talking bird

Though you know so few words

They're on infinite repeat

Like your brain can't keep up with your beat.

 

And you're kept in an open cage

So you're free to leave or stay.

Sometimes you get confused

Like there's a hint I am trying to give you.

 

The longer you think, the less you know what to do.

Ex-Megabus Gold sleeper coach 50307, now operating with Rennies after the end of the sleeper operation. It carries the cherished plate PSU376, previously carried by Strathtay's ex-Fife Olympian coach SO25.

Forus

One Minute Less

 

Espaço Magma - São Paulo

 

Se quiser usar alguma imagem, por favor, dê os devidos créditos.

 

www.facebook.com/live.pixsp

The Mossman River in Nth QLD was named by explorer Dalrymple in 1873 after Hugh Mosman. Note the spelling change! He was a white cattle station man whose Aboriginal servant Jupiter Mosman discovered gold at Charters Towers in late 1871. Jupiter Mosman, Hugh Mosman (his father started Mosman farm in Sydney), James Fraser and George Clarke registered the first find. Jupiter Mosman discovered a nugget of gold on Towers Hill. The mining site and town was named after the QLD Gold Commissioner Mr W. Charters. Jupiter Mosman died in 1945. His employer Hugh Mosman fared well from gold and left a big legacy to his descendants. The main street of Charters Towers is called Mosman Street. Jupiter was born in 1861. In the late 1860s he was taken to Hugh Mosman’s station in the west. He took on Hugh Mosman’s surname and worked as his servant. Jupiter was sent to school and christened a Catholic with the of name Jupiter. Hugh Mosman and his white companions made a fortune from gold mining in Charters Towers. Hugh’s company was the North Australian Mine and later he added the Victoria Gold Mining Company. He also owned the Rise and Shine ore crushing mill. When Hugh Mosman left Charters Towers in 1891 Jupiter went too and worked for Hugh’s brother Archie droving cattle. A large boomerang shaped monument was erected in 1997 to the memory of Jupiter Mosman in Lissner Park with its picturesque rotunda. Before his death locals petitioned the Queensland government to allow Jupiter Mosman to be cared for in a local nursing home because Aboriginals were not allowed to be cared for with white Queenslanders at that time. Archie Mosman, the brother of Hugh Mosman inherited much of the fortune that Hugh had amassed from gold at Charters Towers. Hugh never married. Archie had children with an Aboriginal woman. In Hugh Mosman’s will valued at £70,000 in 1909, Archie was left a life time’s right to a sixth of Hugh’s estate. It was not until 1977 that Archie’s Aboriginal descendants were granted their entitlement to their white father’s estate by a Queensland Court! Unfairly Jupiter received nothing from Hugh Mosman’s will.

 

A gold rush to Charters Towers began in 1872 and was extended by the discovery of the Day Dawn reef in 1879 and the Brilliant reef in 1889. The arrival of the railway from Townsville in 1882 helped bring investors and capital to the gold mining companies of Charters Towers. In the 1870s Charters Towers had a population of about 30,000 people and was the largest city outside of Brisbane. So much money flowed through the town that it was colloquially called “The World”. In 1886 miners took the city to the world - at the 1886 Colonial and Indian Exhibition in London. They set up a display of mining and ore crushing and they accepted £1 shares in various mining companies that operated in the town. It was a great success. One company is an example- Day Dawn Block and Wyndham- they received almost £500,000 in paid up shares to finance their future mining work! This exhibition put Charters Towers on the world map and was the first time London investors invested directly in Australian mines rather than through a London based share broking company or finance company. Some of the companies were duds but most were not. Charters Towers Stock Exchange gave British investors the chance to invest directly in the gold mines. The boom of the 1880s built offices, shops and the Stock Exchange. Between 1891 and 1896 the gold mines at Charters Towers were the most productive mine in the Australian colonies .But in 1896 many miners rode off to WA goldfields in search of more gold and the town stumbled in its growth. But a peak year for Charters Towers was 1899 when it got one third of all its gold from cyaniding the discarded dumps. Although mining by companies ceased in 1917 a few miners worked the old mines and overburden dumps during the Great Depression.

The first Post Office opened in 1871 and Charters Towers became a municipality in 1877 with its first mayor. The historic Venus Battery to crush and extract gold was established in 1872 and operated until 1971 when it became a museum which is now closed. Gold mining ceased in 1917 but the city survived and thrived. Its population dropped from 22,000 in 1901 to less than 6,000 in 1921. Between 1871 and 1917 over 200 tonnes of gold was extracted from Towers Hill. The gold ore was especially rich and produced 50% more gold from its ores than what the Victorians got from their ores and 75% more than what the Western Australian goldfields of the 19th century got from their ores. Charters Towers today has around 30 heritage listed buildings and it has a thriving tourism industry and beef industry and around 8,000 inhabitants. Since 2006 Citigold Company has recommenced gold mining outside of the town.

Lissner Park and nearby Thornburgh House 55 King Street. Lissner Park contains a small and a large band stand. It was proclaimed a reserve in 1883 named Lissner Park in 1888 after Isidor Lissner, a Charters Towers businessman and state politician. Lissner was also a supporter of the North Queensland Separation Movement. In 1889 a town architect William Smith junior designed an octagonal band stand with a 48ft diameter platform. Then during the Boer War of 1899 a public subscription fund had money donated to it to assist families in need whilst their men were at war. After the Boer war some funds remained and in 1910 they were used to create an elongated, unusual band stand which contained a memorial to the Boer War soldiers. The corrugated iron roof was supported by ornamental iron pillars and provision was made in the design for curtains to be let down to protect the band if heavy rain fell. It is still a popular town park. Also in the park is a more recent memorial erected in 1995 to the Aboriginal boy who first found gold at Charters Towers Jupiter Mosman. The memorial is topped with a large ornamental boomerang. Nearby is Thornburgh House a two storey brick villa built in 1890 for a successful gold miner Edmund Thornburgh Plant. It was known as the handsomest house in the North, not just in Charters Towers. In 1918 it was purchased by and Methodist minister and opened in 1919 as a Methodist boys boarding school. The first headmaster came from Prince Alfred College Adelaide. In 1920 Blackheath Girls College opened in another grand house of Charters Towers. In 1932 it became a Methodist and Presbyterian College and in 1978 the boys and girls colleges amalgamated.

Some historic buildings of Charters Towers. 36 Mosman Street. Former Bartlam’s Store now the Zara Clark Museum. The Zara Clark Museum is a National Trust property which opened in 1978 and a small admission fee is required - $5 concession. The first part of the building was built in 1891 by Burns Philp & Co. The second part was constructed by Wright Heaton & Co. in 1901. The two classical style shops merged into Bartlam’s store in 1944. Bartlem’s went into liquidation in 1976 with the Trust acquiring the property in 1978. The buildings were only purchased by the Trust because of a major bequest by Zara Clark the daughter of a former gold miner. The museum covers many aspects of Charters Tower’s history.

72 Mosman Street. Former Queensland National Bank now the City Hall. Opposite it is Gill Street. This grand classical masterpiece was built in 1891 for the Queensland National Bank. It closed as a bank in 1949 and is now the City Hall. Note the roof line balustrade, repeated on the upper veranda and ground floor veranda. Double Corinthian columns support the roof line and the symmetry of the façade is broken up by the central entrance and small triangular pediment above the entrance to the veranda. Note the cast iron gate which gives access to the ground floor.

76 Mosman Street. Stock Exchange Arcade. This structure was built in 1888 and the arched awning over the foot path and classical pilasters against the façade are almost identical to a similar building in Ballarat – another gold town. It began as a gold assay house only becoming a Stock Exchange in 1890. Inside is a tessellated floor and a glass ceiling and a variety of shops and displays. With open ends the breezes can flow through the arcade. It is controlled by the National Trust now and closes at 2 pm each day. The Stock Exchange closed in 1916 as most mines were about to close down. Entry is free. At the rear is an art gallery space in the old gold assay rooms.

86 Mosman St. The former Australian Bank of Commerce. This classical building in the Greek style with Doric and Corinthian columns and a large triangular pediment on the projecting central portico is a dominant feature of the street. It was built in 1891 as the Australian Joint Stock Bank. The tender for its construction was £4,693. The architect was Francis Stanley. By 1892 the Australian Joint Stock Bank had 19 branches in QLD. The Australian Bank of Commerce took it over in 1910 which later became the Bank of NSW in 1931. It is now the World Theatre cinema complex. It should be open between 10 am and 1 pm on Fridays. Check out the foyer.

90 Mosman Street. Former jewellery store. This quaint little jewellery shop was built in 1897 and is typical of stores built around Australia at that time with their small parapet. It is heritage listed mainly because it is attached to the Stock Exchange Arcade. Most recently it was a barbers shop.

152 Mosman Street. St Pauls Playhouse. Formerly St Pauls Church. This well-proportioned and attractive Carpenter Gothic Anglican Church has a long history. It was designed by Townsville architect William Smith junior in 1883 when he won a public design competition. The church opened late in 1883 by the Anglican Bishop of North Queensland. A modern Anglican Church opened elsewhere in Charters Towers in 1965 and this wooden church became a theatre in 1969.

16 Gill Street. D. S & Co Building now Kmart. This red brick two storey commercial building was built in 1909 for Daking Smith and Company. The building ends have open column cupolas and the façade is dominated by the large half rounded window with some coloured glass in it. The unusual veranda to the footpath is still used for eye catching advertising. It later became a Fosseys Store and most recently it was a Target Store.

17 Gill Street. Charters Towers Post Office. A postal service began in 1871 and the first Post Office built in 1879. The current impressive Victorian neo-classical style Post Office was completed in 1892. The five storey clock tower was added in 1898 and some additions were made early in the 20th century. The ground floor was the post and telegraph offices and upstairs was accommodation for the Post Master. It has a double storey veranda with arches and a colonnade on the ground floor. Verandas were need for protection from the sun. The upper floor has cast iron lacework and a balustrade, the building is adorned with numerous small triangular pediments.

34 Gill Street. Former Bank of New South Wales. Wherry House. This beautiful two storey Bank of New South Wales with arched veranda, balustrade, central triangular pediment above the entrance was built in 1889. It is similar in style to the former Queensland National Bank in Mosman Street which is now the City Hall. The expansion of the Bank of NSW into QLD was spearheaded by one of its directors Robert Towns of Townsville in 1864. The architects were William Monroe from Townsville and Walter Eyre of Charters Towers. The bank cost over £6,000 to build. The Bank of NSW left the building in 1970 and the City Council took it over in 1984. It was renamed Wherry House in 2006 to honour a previous mayor of Charters Towers.

41 Gill St. Former Bank. 1886. This single storey former bank in the classical style was one of five banks in Gill Street in the late 19th century. The Gill Street frontage is modernised but the 19th century façade is still there on the side street with its three pairs of rounded windows, balustrade along the roof line and the shell shaped Greek acroterions on the corners of the building and on top of the pilasters (flat pillars). 51 Gill Street. The Police Station. It was also known as the Police Barracks. This is a fine Edwardian style building erected in 1910 with lots of wood work and wooden pillars. The veranda balustrade complements the picket fence etc. It exemplifies many Arts and Crafts features with a red brick ground floor and a stucco upper floor. The wide eaves and window shades are a concession to the hot dry tropics climate of Charters Towers. 75 Gill Street. The Northern Miner Newspaper Offices. James Reid established the northern Miner newspaper just 8 months after the gold rush began. The property in Gill Street was purchased in 1878 and the fine offices were built not long after that. Of the five original newspapers in Charters Towers the Northern Miner was the only one to survive after the gold mine closures. The Northern Miner stopped publication in 2019.Twelve decorated pilasters line the façade and three pediments adorn the roof.

130 Gill Street. The Excelsior Library. This building is a reconstruction of one of the early hotels of Charters Towers the Excelsior. It was erected in the late19th century. It burnt down in 1995 and it was rebuilt as the Charters Towers Library.

Detour. Continue to 157 Gill Street and return. Former Ambulance Station. This building was erected in 1903 with a few classical features primarily the triangular pediment above the central doorway but it was very much a building of its day. It is now a museum about the ambulance service but only opens on Sundays.

Turn right at Excelsior Library and then right again into Hodgkinson Street.

24 Hodgkinson Street. The former School of Mines. The School of Mines was established in 1899 starting highly technical education in Charters Towers. The wooden building was erected at that time. A public subscription raising £1,500 funded the building but few students attended the fee paying institute. The government took it over in 1900 refunding the £1,500 to the community for a town Institute building. After most mining ceased in 1917 the government eventually closed the School of Mines in 1925 and the building was used by the education department. It was restored in 1993. 28 Hodgkinson Street. The Charters Towers Courthouse. The impressive Courthouse was built between 1886 and 1890 in the Greek classical style. But the shades over the side windows gives it a tropical touch. The central section has perfect symmetry with three arched entrances below a triangular Greek pediment. It was designed by the government architect James Clark. Return to Gill St.

Towers Hill. The town lookout is a granite peak 1,343 metres above sea level. Although shafts and mines were scattered around the town some were on Towers Hill but there was also processing plants on Towers Hill. This state heritage area contained Chlorination Works, the Rainbow Battery and the Pyrites Works. The area was used from 1872 to the 1940s. There were six pyrites works here at its peak recovering gold from crushed ore. Gold ore obtained from below the water table level had to be treated with roasting in a furnace to expel the sulphur from the pyrites and to oxidise base metals. Salt was then added to release some other minerals. Finally chlorine was introduced so that a solution of gold chlorine was precipitated. There were other furnaces on the field. There were also two gold batteries – Rainbow Battery and Clarke’s Battery which extracted the gold from ores primarily by crushing and chemical processes including mercury extraction, cyanide extraction, leaching etc.

 

Felipe "Less" Basso (L) and Cauan "cauanzin" Pereira of LOUD hug onstage after victory during Week 3 of 2023 VCT Americas at the Riot Games Arena on April 17, 2023. (Photo by Robert Paul/Riot Games)

They say less is more, but in some cases, less is less.

Less than 12 hours after landing at Narita International Airport, Olivia Carkeet begins her journey of the Land of the Rising Sun with a three-day tour of Kyoto Sept. 5-7,2015. Hosted by the Camp Zama Outdoor Recreation department, the Labor Day weekend excursion marked Olivia's reunification with her husband, John, who bade Florida farewell four months earlier to report to his temporary duty assignment with U.S. Army Japan.

 

Olivia fought jet lag with finesse until sleep deprivation forced her to bow out from the first evening's activities. Her exhaustion did not prevent her husband from exploring Kyoto's historic Gion corner by night.

 

Photos by John L. Carkeet IV, Executive Producer, LimpingFrog Productions

I would probably have been less surprised to find a unicorn in the car park than this 1959 Ford Edsel Villager station wagon. The Edsel was Ford's famous flop that was manufactured between 1958 and 1960, but discontinued after a reputed loss of $250m. This example was made in January 1959 and unusually has the 3652cc (223 cu in) Mileage Maker 16 straight six engine, rather than the more usual V8. The car looked in excellent external condition and seemed to be roadworthy.

In the background is what appears to be a 1969 Morris LD ambulance converted for hospitality use, although the LD ceased production in 1968; the DVLA lists the engine capacity as 0 cc, but the vehicle is taxed, so a little bit of a mystery, really.

Less Than Jake play FEST 13, Gainesville, FL, November 1, 2014.

 

Note: Please share, download and use these photos for non-commercial purposes but be sure to abide by the creative commons license by crediting the photos to Nicole Kibert / www.elawgrrl.com and if using online, add a link back to this page or to www.elawgrrl.com. This license does not permit commercial use. Thanks.

This brief video shows me driving through heavy rain due to passing thunderstorms over the area! It's been a while since I've seen a good drench in our area...

 

A slow-moving storm system was expected to dump a small amount of rain Thursday, with lightning and thunder, for the Bay Area, with most of the precipitation hitting Contra Costa and Santa Clara counties. Our area was to continue to see a peculiar spring weather pattern. Weak low pressure areas were still splitting off the jet stream and moving across California. This means that scattered showers and thunderstorms were possible for the state, including both the foothills and mountains and some activity in urban areas including here in the Bay Area!

 

One of the stronger upper level lows had arrived this day of Thursday, May 14, 2015. This day, all of NorCal had seen showers and thunderstorms. The activity would decrease by Friday or so. The Bay Area also observed dozens of lightning strikes over a few hours. The lightning had began touching down in the ocean off the coast of Monterey before 9 a.m., but by noon, there were several strikes reported near Mountain View, Los Altos and Mount Hamilton in the South Bay. There were even reports of hail in both the North and South Bay. The showers, which arrived slightly later than forecast, had moved towards the east by mid evening. Rainfall totals are expected to be modest, less than a quarter of an inch for most of the Bay Area, except with areas getting drenched with slow-moving t-storm cells.

 

This storm system had came down from Alaska and had moved slowly Thursday on a southeast path across the state and eventually giving Southern California their fair share of rain and storms. Thursday's shower activity will leave the Bay Area with below-normal temperatures throughout the weekend, with temps forecasted to be 10-15 degrees cooler than the average for this time of year. As of the total accumulated rainfall, our area of San Jose, CA got a whopping 0.45 inches of rain from this system, thanks to the slow-moving, drenching t-storm cells! That amount was almost the monthly average rainfall for the month of May for our area! Also, at this point, they were predicting a strengthening El Nino (El Nino was already technically here), so having this much rain this late in the season hopefully is a sign that El Nino's effects were already in effect. We need a wet winter in order to at least alleviate and ease our exceptional drought here. No one storm can eliminate the drought all together...this storm was literally just a drop in the bucket...

 

(Footage taken Thursday, May 14, 2015 around San Jose, CA)

A heritage walk to Kashmiri Gate this Sunday morning was a different and a special experience for we got a chance to know and explore one of the busiest areas of the Delhi City. The area which is frequently visited yet less ‘known’, the area which hides various traces of Indian history but is only termed as congested and filthy.

 

We all know how rapidly urban spaces change. It was seems incredible, but our first stop, Nicholson’s Cemetery, was located in the area which was a battleground for British and the Indian rebels during the 1857 revolt. The cemetery has both British & Indian burials. If Brigadier General John Nicholson was known for his excellent military skills then Master Yasudas Ramachandra was popular for his intellectual excellence. Our next stop was, the remains of one of the magnificent gates of old Delhi-the Kashmiri Gate. The road through it led to Kashmir and so gave it this name; likewise it also lent the name to the neighborhood around it. In close vicinity to the gate were the remains of the wall of the walled city of Shahjahanabad. It is important to note that not only was the city evolving but also its wall and the people nearby saw various ups and downs in their life time as the city transformed. Not to be ignored is the Bengali Club located at the Kashmiri Gate? Once it was a hub for promoting Bengali culture, customs, traditions and festivals but sadly it is in a forgotten state. We then proceeded to a place called Bada Bazaar which is known to have houses of various Mughal Nobles and British officials before the bazaar came up. None of us could miss the charm of Lal Masjid, also known as Fakhr-ul-Masajid, projecting itself amidst the old archaic surrounding architecture. Our heritage trail then proceeds towards the old buildings of two famous colleges of Delhi University, St. Stephens and the Hindu college. Former was started by the missionaries to spread the English western education while the latter by Indians in opposition to British ideas. Right in front of us was elegant building of the St. James Church, whose property was looted and stolen by the rebels during 1857. A canteen and a field hospital were established here by the rebels. The church was established by James Skinner & the churchyard has the Skinner family burial ground as well as the grave of his good friend, William Fraser. Next in our stop was the bungalow of William Fraser, a majestic colonial building which is known to be built on the basement Ali Mardan Khan’s (important Mughal noble) residence. Now, passing by the old buildings of the city we reached an Archaeological Museum which was once an important Mughal and British building. Called the Dara Shukoh Library, it was later made into the British Residency. This is where David Ochterlony lampooned as ‘Loony Akhtar’ lived. A few steps ahead is the Telegraph Memorial and remains of British Magazine, both memorials for the British; the loyal and faithful service of their officials, whose important deeds resulted in controlling the uprising. We finally reached the end of our walk at the Lothian Road Cemetery, the first British cemetery in Delhi. Our journey was an attempt to unravel the story of bravery and loyalty, tracing both sides of the story.

 

(posted by Niti Deoliya & Kanika Singh, team members, Delhi Heritage Walks)

 

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full sized 3 tiered version of my Cherry Blossom cake... this time with 3 sizes of flowers. i love this cake. the flowers are lightly airbrushed with pink.. i use to hand paint them... but airbrushing gives nearly the same effect and costs a lot less time!

 

Der Gesundheitstag 2017 der PLUS stand unter dem Motto "less-stress@work".

In der NaWi konnten sich die Besucherinnen und Besucher über ihre Gesundheit, interne Kraftquellen, Stressbewältigung und ihren persönlichen Fitnessstand informieren.

Daneben waren der Nordic Walking Aktiv Treff, das Schaukochen und die Vorträge gut besuchte Programmpunkte.

 

Bilder: Hans-Christian Gruber.

Less and More / The Design Ethos of Dieter Rams

Daelim Contemporary Art Museum

Seoul, Korea

Field Trip - Bramfield Park Woods - 01/08/19

 

Back to Bramfield on the 1st of August, and the other side of the road this time, the damper more grassy part with less mature trees.

The day had been very nice indeed and by the afternoon the conditions turned extremely muggy and perfect mothing weather.

There was a brief shower driving to the site, and as always thought I would be in for a wet session, so rain guards were adorned and cables wrapped in shopping bags!

Luckily that was the only rain all night and it stayed cloudy until packing up time at 2am if a little breezy.

Highlights were, 6 species of Ypsolopha, headed by the rare Ypsolopha vittella, 5x Gypsy Moths (a new macro for me). And two species that have be baffled, and that will be gen det soon.

 

With close to 180 species, this goes down in history as my highest ever August catch, probably owing to the muggy conditions and being just on the cusp of the new month.

 

Here is the total list.

 

Macro Moths : 105 species

Micro Moths : 73 species

 

Total : 178 species

 

Catch Report - 01/08/19 - Bramfield Park Woods - Hertfordshire - 1x 125w MV Robinson Trap, 1x 250w MV Clear Robinson Trap, 1x Twin 15w Actinic/Synergetic Combo & 1x 160w Mercury Blended Robinson Trap - 4 traps in total

 

Macro Moths

 

Black Arches

Brimstone Moth

Broad-bordered Yellow Underwing

Buff Footman

Cabbage Moth

Canary-shouldered Thorn

Clay

Cloaked Minor

Clouded Border

Common Carpet

Common Footman

Common Rustic

Copper Underwing

Coxcomb Prominent

Dark Arches

Dingy Footman

Dun-bar

Dusky Thorn

Ear Moth

Elephant Hawk-moth

Flame Shoulder

Gypsy Moth 5

Jersey Tiger

July Highflyer

Knot Grass

Large Emerald

Large Twin-spot Carpet

Large Yellow Underwing

Latticed Heath

Least Carpet

Least Yellow Underwing

Lesser Broad-bordered Yellow Underwing

Lesser Swallow Prominent

Lesser Yellow Underwing

Maiden's Blush

Nut-tree Tussock

Oak Hook-tip

Oak Nycteoline

Olive

Pale Prominent

Pebble Hook-tip

Pebble Prominent

Peppered Moth

Pine Hawk-moth

Poplar Hawk-moth

Red Twin-spot Carpet

Riband Wave

Rosy Footman

Ruby Tiger

Rustic

Scalloped Hook-tip

Scalloped Oak

Scarce Footman

Scorched Carpet

Shaded Broad-bar

Shuttle-shaped Dart

Silver Y

Single-dotted Wave

Small Fan-footed Wave

Small Phoenix

Smoky Wainscot

Snout

Spectacle

Square-spotted Clay

Straw Underwing

Swallow Prominent

Tawny barred Angle

Tree-lichen Beauty

Uncertain

White-spotted Pug

Willow Beauty

Yellow Shell

Yellow-tail

 

Micro Moths

 

Acentria emphemerella

Acleris forsskaleana

Acleris laterana comariana

Acleris notana ferrugana

Acompsia cinerella

Acrobasis advenella

Acrobasis repandana

Aethes smeathmanniana

Agapeta hamana

Agonopterix alstromeriana

Agriphila straminella

Agriphila tristella

Anacampsis blatteriella

Anacampsis populella

Apotomis betuletana

Apotomis turbidana

Argyresthia albistria

Argyresthia bonnetella

Argyresthia goedartella

Argyresthia pruniella

Argyresthia trifasciella

Aspilapteryx tringipennella

Athrips mouffetella

Bactra lancealana

Blastobasis adustella

Blastobasis lacticolella

Brachmia blandella

Bucculatrix ulmella

Caloptila alchimiella robustella

Cameraria ohridella

Carcina quercana

Caryocolum sp

Catoptria falsella

Catoptria pinella

Celypha lacunana

Celypha striana

Chrysoteuchia culmella

Clavigesta purdeyi

Cnephasia sp

Crassa unitella

Cydalimna perspectalis

Cydia fagiglandana

Cydia splendana

Dioryctria abietella

Ditula angustiorana

Elachista sp TBC pos poae

Emmelina monodactlya

Emmetia marginea

Endotricha flammealis

Ephestia sp

Epinotia brunnichana

Epinotia immundana

Epinotia nisella

Epinotia ramella

Epinotia uddmanniana

Eucosma cana

Eucosma hohenwartiana

Eucosma obumbratana

Eudemis profundana

Eudonia mercurella

Eudonia pallida

Eulamprotes atrella

Euspilapteryx auroguttella

Euzophera pinguis

Exoteleia dodecella

Gypsonoma dealbana

Hedya salicella

Helycystogramma rufescens

Hypatimna rhomboidella

Hypsopygia costalis

Lathronympha strigana

Lyonetia clerkella

Metalampra italica

Mompha propinquella

Monochroa cytisella

Monopis weaverella

Oegoconia sp

Oncocera semirubella

Pandemis heparana

Paraswammerdamia albicapitella

Parornix sp

Phycita roborella

Phyllonorycter harisella

Phyllonorycter trifasciella

Piniphila bifasciana

Pleuroptyra ruralis

Plutella xylostella

Recurvaria leucatella

Rhopobota naevana

Roeslerstammia erxlebella

Scoparia ambigualis

Scrobipalpa costella

Spilonota ocellana

Stigmella sp

Udea prunalis

Yponomeuta cag sp

Yponomeuta evonymella

Yponomeuta rorrella

Ypsolopha dentella

Ypsolopha nemorella

Ypsolopha parenthesella

Ypsolopha scabrella

Ypsolopha ustella

Ypsolopha vittella

Zeiraphera isertana

Game One. Ed Murray Roofing Softball Team. Hutley's was also a part sponsor that season as you can see the logo on the left sleeve of some of the shirts.

 

Hutley's

501 Main St, Islip, NY

Now Maxwell's (by Lessing's)

Less than two weeks to go before Dalton and Lawrence Tower's a blown up.

 

The day before this was some green lorries on the land.

 

Was also an Ainscough mobile crane here the day before.

 

Now on the far right are some green trailers.

 

Obviously the land is ok now to drive cars, vans and lorries onto. Even saw a UPS delivery van!

Captain Yesterday, The King, and Clobberella....some of my costumes from the Heros and villians meet

"Less is more."

~ Ludwig Mies van der Rohe

  

memories from my neighborhood

Stair Hole, less than half a mile away from Lulworth Cove, is an infant cove which suggests what Lulworth Cove would have looked like a few hundred thousand years ago. The sea has made a gap in the Portland and Purbeck limestone here, as well as small arch.

 

Stair Hole, Lulworth Bay on Wikipedia

Der Gesundheitstag 2017 der PLUS stand unter dem Motto "less-stress@work".

In der NaWi konnten sich die Besucherinnen und Besucher über ihre Gesundheit, interne Kraftquellen, Stressbewältigung und ihren persönlichen Fitnessstand informieren.

Daneben waren der Nordic Walking Aktiv Treff, das Schaukochen und die Vorträge gut besuchte Programmpunkte.

 

Bilder: Hans-Christian Gruber.

De kinderen van het dorple Kau gaan heel graag naar school. Bij gebrek aan klaslokalen is iedereen welkom in de schaduw onder de takken van de reuze baobab.

 

De leraars en de chefs vragen financiële ondersteuning voor klaslokalen.

335 E 51st St, Chicago, Illinois.

Even less of a salubrious location, Rotherham's Masborough station, long since closed. 66027 waits for the signals on the right as a Voyager heads south. 21 June 2011

For the weekly group. This weeks theme. Less is More.

De kinderen van het dorple Kau gaan heel graag naar school. Bij gebrek aan klaslokalen is iedereen welkom in de schaduw onder de takken van de reuze baobab.

 

De leraars en de chefs vragen financiële ondersteuning voor klaslokalen.

Less than Jake - July 17, 2011 - Warped Tour - Hartford, CT

 

Photo by Charlotte Zoller © 2011

www.charlottezoller.com

 

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Less than 24 hours after returning to Judaism, two couples from Belmonte, Portugal met with friends and family for a moving tour of the Old City followed by their Jewish marriage. Incredible!

 

Photo Credit: Laura Ben-David, Shavei Israel

 

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(Tympanuchus pallidicinctus)

Canadian, Tx

Ancient, with the paint worn off and the wood drying and cracking. From a sailing ship wrecked off the Atlantic coast about 150 years ago. There are a huge number of ships that have sunk in our waters over the last 500 years.

 

According to one resource 19,200 ships have been wrecked in Atlantic Canada since the 1500's. Robert Parson of Newfoundland and Labrador has personally documented over 500 wrecks around Newfoundland and on the Grand Banks.

Less Autre

MRRAY - gitaar, toetsen, stem, arrangementen

Mattia Swinnen - drums, percussie, arrangementen

Peter Fias - gitaar, stem, tekst en muziek

Charles Guillaume Leroi - bass type Guillaume 3

Swie Junior Grandjean - saxen

 

Winterfeest Aarschot - Avond van de Butterfly

28-Dec-2019

 

Photo's © Patrick Van Vlerken 2019

 

Male between displays. Near Milnesand, NM. 12 Apr 2008.

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