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Suthamate Chomdee, manager of Khaokhor Talayphu Organic Farm, shows the size of his product.
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Manager John Gibbons, R.A. Dickey and special assistant Pat Hentgen kept an eye on Delabar, who's trying to mount a comeback from a bad year in 2014.
1971-72 - Operation Ord Noah - Argyle Downs - 'The mob on shed roof at Argyle Downs' 2
Henry Hall - Operation Ord Noah Album Print Collection
Kununurra Historical Society
Archive Number - KHS-2014-140-b-P-D-06-1-Crop-1
Digitised and Documented by KHS Volunteer AB
Visit the Kununurra Museum
The mission manager’s station aboard NASA’s DC-8 airborne laboratory. This station serves as one of the DC-8’s nerve centers. From here the mission manager can monitor and control power to the multiple instrument stations aboard the aircraft and relay messages to the cockpit.
Credit: NASA / Jim Yungel
NASA's Operation IceBridge is an airborne science mission to study Earth's polar ice. For more information about IceBridge, visit: www.nasa.gov/icebridge
I have not been around very much but I am very much alive and starting a new project. I call it "Project X" and the plan is to incorporate as many of the neat parts I have been collecting over the years. It will be a 32 three window coupe and like all projects you want to start with a good foundation. So, I will be building on a "Jitney" frame from Walden Speed Shop in Pomona, California. The Jitney design is the result of a collaboration between Jake Jacobs and Bobby Walden. These pictures were taken during the frame's construction by Robert Noriega, Walden's office manager. Next up will be the assembly of the 66 Buick 401 Nailhead that is destined to reside between these sweet rails.
Sang Lee Farms Primary Manager Lucy Senesac and her team participate in the Westhampton Beach Farmers Market,, New York, November 6, 2021..
Transitioning to third generation, the family grows more than 100 varieties of specialty vegetables, heirloom tomatoes, baby greens, herbs. They continue to feature Asian produce, growing many varieties of Chinese cabbages, greens, and radishes.
The farm has been operating and growing on Long Island for over 70 years. During this time the farm has evolved and survived through economic fluctuations, family loss and growth, local changes in demographics and changes in the nature of farming on Long Island.
(FPAC photo by Preston Keres)
BASRAH, Iraq—Maj. Paula Rodriguez, 36th Infantry Division, Texas Army National Guard, is the Sexual Assault Response Coordinator and program manager of the Sexual Assault Prevention and Response Program for the Texas Army and Air National Guard. As the SARC, she works to make sure service members who are victims of sexual assault are given counseling and legal assistance. (Photo by Pvt. Andrew Slovensky)
NASA ELaNa Mission Manager Garrett Skrobot holds up a CubeSat satellite as he talks to reporters about the second Educational Launch of Nanosatellite (ELaNa) missions which will launch on the Delta II rocket with the NPOESS Preparatory Project (NPP) spacecraft at a briefing held on Wednesday, Oct. 26, 2011 at Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif. NPP is the first NASA satellite mission to address the challenge of acquiring a wide range of land, ocean, and atmospheric measurements for Earth system science while simultaneously preparing to address operational requirements for weather forecasting. NPP is scheduled to launch early Friday morning on a Delta II rocket from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California. Photo Credit: (NASA/Bill Ingalls)
Sang Lee Farms Primary Manager Lucy Senesac and her team participate in the Westhampton Beach Farmers Market,, New York, November 6, 2021..
Transitioning to third generation, the family grows more than 100 varieties of specialty vegetables, heirloom tomatoes, baby greens, herbs. They continue to feature Asian produce, growing many varieties of Chinese cabbages, greens, and radishes.
The farm has been operating and growing on Long Island for over 70 years. During this time the farm has evolved and survived through economic fluctuations, family loss and growth, local changes in demographics and changes in the nature of farming on Long Island.
(FPAC photo by Preston Keres)
The Rolle Canal (completed in 1827) terminated at a complex of large lime kilns at Rosemoor (known then as "Rowe's Moor"). The lime kiln complex, designed by James Green, survives in a ruinous condition in a working compound at the gardens, inaccessible to the public.George Braginton, the manager and later a major leaseholder of the canal, moved into the Rowe's Moor estate some time before 1851.
On the death in 1931 of Robert Horace Walpole, the fifth Earl of Orford, the estate became the property of his daughter, Lady Anne Berry (then Palmer). She created the original garden of 8 acres (3.2 ha) in 1959, and developed it over a 30-year period. The garden developed in a naturalistic style, with sweeping lawns and curving borders set out as the plantings expanded. There was no masterplan, but designer John Codrington who later became a life member of the Royal Horticultural Society (RHS), provided drawings, in particular for the early development of warmer sheltered areas near the house.
The garden was first opened to the public in 1967, under the National Gardens Scheme.A small nursery was started in 1979. Both the garden and nursery were noted for rare and unusual plants. By the 1980s, the garden was attracting significant numbers of visitors.
A gazebo in the garden
In 1988 Lady Palmer gave the garden to the RHS, together with an additional 32 acres (13 ha) of land. In the mid 1990s 37.5 hectares (0.375 km2) of woodland surrounding the site, mainly coniferous forest, was added to the garden, securing the land bordering the garden from unwanted change, providing opportunities to blend the garden into its surrounding landscape and also providing it with a range of additional experiences for visitors.
Christopher Bailes, curator of Rosemoor Garden, described the garden in 2008 thus: "Tucked into the north-east corner of the estate, it remains very much a plantswoman's garden, dominated by surrounding woodlands, with a number of discrete areas where choice subjects take full advantage of the warmth and shelter offered by the south-westerly aspect and high ground to the north."
Today Rosemoor Garden covers 65 acres (26 ha) and it includes a visitor centre, a library, a plant centre, a shop, a restaurant and the Wisteria tearoom. In 2017 the garden received 231,060 visitors.
This picture is #6 in my 100 strangers project. Find out more about the project and see pictures taken by other photographers at www.100Strangers.com.
This is Kevin. He is the shipping manager at a restaurant in Durham at Brightleaf Square. I was walking past this door, a service entrance, when I saw him. What a sweet guy. He wanted a few pictures taken with the menu for the restaurant. When he stood up to shake my hand, I couldn't believe how tall he was: 6'9". He got my email address so I can get the picture to him.
Back: Jim Chandler (manager), Fiona Barry (physio), Simon Tickner, Richard Georgiou, James Dickie, Adam Gant, Kevin Stephens, Charlie Hasler, Andy Jones, Ozie Foster, David Allen, Robbie Carroll, Kofi Nyamah, Paul Campbell, Stewart Margolis (coach), Peter Hammatt (coach).
Front: Steven Velandia, Glenn Harvey, Andy Edmunds, Bryan Hammatt, Ricci Crace, David Bastian, Dean Nyman, Rudi Hall, Jamie Nay, Michael Lyons.
Good quality copies of this photo (without the word "Sample" across them!) are, or will shortly be, available from Enfield Town Football Club.
The theater in the East Garrison of decommissioned and abandoned Fort Ord, February 2007. Site cleared in 2008. Now a housing subdivision.
Reprocessed and replaced, February 2024.
Night, completely dark space, 50 seconds, f5.6, red-gelled strobe and natural flashlight.
The Art Gallery is abuzz with visitors this Friday. It's 12:39 and the General Manager of the Gallery's catering is pacing about busily. She leaves the Café bound for the restaurant upstairs. I run after her for a grab. She stops in her tracks. She listens. I ask. She objects. I ask again. She hesitates. I spot an opportunity. She seems resigned and gives me a look of amused impatience. Click. I say thank you and we move on.
Bain News Service,, publisher.
[Bill C. Phillips, manager, Indianapolis Federal League (baseball)]
[1914]
1 negative : glass ; 5 x 7 in. or smaller.
Notes:
Original data provided by the Bain News Service on the negatives or caption cards: Phillips, D.
Corrected title and date based on research by the Pictorial History Committee, Society for American Baseball Research, 2006.
Forms part of: George Grantham Bain Collection (Library of Congress).
Format: Glass negatives.
Rights Info: No known restrictions on publication.
Repository: Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division, Washington, D.C. 20540 USA, hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.print
General information about the Bain Collection is available at hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.ggbain
Higher resolution image is available (Persistent URL): hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/ggbain.18552
Call Number: LC-B2- 3396-10