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EverQuest II - Adventurers Guild panel discussion.
SOE Fan Faire 2009
Bally's
Las Vegas, Nevada
June 2009
Chuck panel started with a Jeffster show! Yes! That's right! Jeffster LIVE, baby! And it... was... AWESOME!
Then the whole cast joined them on stage and rocked it out!
One of the educational panels in the Water Well Education Garden at Botanica, The Wichita Gardens.
The garden was dedicated in 1997 after the city of Wichita redid their water wells. Instead of hiding the vent pipes and transformers Botanica decided to educate the public on how the city gets its water and the history of Wichita's water sources.
The panel everyone loved and hated the most at SXSW2005. Threats to bloggers, and code monkeys were doled out. Featuring the most colorful antics of Transfatty. That's my boy. Patrick you rule. You can also See Jason McVerry from Mediatemple and Vantageous as well as Ness Higson from I am Always Hungry.
Some shots of my 12 position fused power distribution block installation into the passenger side lower Hush Panel.
Copenhagen Comics 2015
Fotoet må frit bruges til omtale og presse relateret til Copenhagen Comics. Fotografen skal altid krediteres.
Foto: Signe Lindgren
This image demonstrated the removable panel concept and created for my second year (2010-2011) project working with Moorhouse's Brewery.
"Speaking the Inuit Way" panels at the Centre for Aboriginal Initiatives in Toronto.
Photo: Katharine Snider McNair
Dr. Candace Weber, Louisiana Policy Center, gives remarks during a panel on rural child care state successes alongside (from left to right) Dr. Robert Sanchez, Executive Director of the Idaho Association for the Education of Young Children, and Marti Beard, Vice President of Early Childhood of the Nebraska Children and Families Foundation, during the National Rural Child Care Forum on Thursday September 5th, 2024, at the USDA Headquarters, Washington D.C. The Rural Development State Operations Office hosted the event in collaboration with HHS-Administration of Children and Families and featured Rural Partners Network as well as key national organizations, regional partners and local providers discussing access to quality, affordable childcare and early learning opportunities that are imperative for rural America. (USDA Photo by Paul Sale)
Had to trim down my entries as there were so many (which is excellent news for the club) these are the 5 that finally got put up for the exhibition.
Overview of PU Sandwich Panel
PU sandwich panel usually be named as polyurethane sandwich panel, PU color steel panel aas well as PU composite panel, and it has three layers, which contains double color steel sheet and the PU core, thus, it havs good insulation feature and smoothness.
Polyurethane material is a polymer material. Polyurethane is an emerging organic polymer material and is known as the “fifth largest plastic”. It is widely used in many fields of the national economy due to its excellent performance. PU Sandwich Panel applications cover the fields like light industry, chemical, electronics, textile, medical science, construction, building materials, automotive, defense, aerospace, aviation and so on.
The Advantages of PU Sandwich Panel
Production Advantages:
1. Better thermal insulation;
2. Light weight;
3. Easy to installation;
4. Good smoothness;
5. Water proof, wet proof;
6. No poison, no smell.
A panel discussion with John Moore (English), Sara Thiel(Theatre), Andrea Stevens (English, Theatre, and Medieval Studies), Vicki Mahaffey (Kirkpatrick Professor of English and Gender and Women’s Studies), Derek Attig (Assistant Director for Student Outreach, Graduate College), Antoinette Burton(Director, IPRH), and Jason Mierek (Project Manager, Humanities Without Walls)
COMMUNITY PANELS FOR YOUTH VIDEO AND HANDBOOK Beyondmedia worked with three Chicago communities and Northwestern University's Children and Family Justice Center to produce the Community Panels for Youth two-video-and-handbook set, illustrating how to create an alternative to juvenile court and youth incarceration that is organized and run by community people.
Panel discussion with high school students, moderated by ABC TV's James O'Loghlin, at Science EXPOsed 2006, The Mint, Sydney, 2006
Wooden Door Panel
The Technology of the mind that our Heritage Furniture includes.
In the past, every home in India had a grand entrance door. It was further beautified with creepers of mallige, complex and exuberant rangoli, bells and thorans. It is far from the minimalistic approach. There was so much Emphasis on beauty.
Why? When a person comes to your home you really don't know the state of his mind. Perhaps he is irritated with the traffic or disturbed with some worries. However, when he sees something of beauty, there is a shift in the consciousness from unpleasant to pleasant, from the past or future to the present moment. You can ensure to a great extent that the person who enters has a harmonious state of mind.
Click for Best Antique Wooden Door Panels at www.madhurya.com/furniture-online.html
About 15 years ago I worked on some panels of unclear provenance that had been in storage at this church for decades. Unfortunately they had already been releaded by someone who had discarded the broken pieces, leaving me to guess at what was missing. They were perhaps originally in the now demolished church of St Luke, and have since been reinstalled in a wooden screen at the east end of the south aisle.
I've known Leamington Spa for years, and till now had visited all its major Victorian churches except this one, which had remained to me that elusive distant spire some way out in the suburbs to the south of the town centre. This omission had not gone unnoticed on my photostream over the years, so I felt it was about time I paid St John the Baptist's church a visit.
The church was built in 1877-8 to the designs of local architect John Cundall (who also designed St Mark's, much of Holy Trinity and the Town Hall so has left his mark on Leamington Spa in a big way!) and is a good example of a 'two-toned' church of mixed materials, brick for the most part with stone used for the dressings of windows and other flourishes. The tower and spire on the north side facing the street is particularly impressive. The church is an am ambitious scale, the nave with its high roof (extensively refurbished in recent years) and aisles culminating in an apse at the east end.
Stepping inside one is immediately impressed by the sense of space, this is a large building designed when the suburbs were expanding to accommodate an increased population (the congregation had since diminished but is happily rising again thanks to an inspiring vicar). There is a starkness in the use of much unadorned brick, but this is punctuated by richer furnishings and a profusion of lancet windows (especially in the aisles, glazed with a display of saints). The interior reaches a climax in the apse beyond the finely carved rood screen, with richer decoration and three fine windows by Hardman's. This is a building designed to inspire, and it certainly achieves that desire.
I'd known of this church for many years since some friends of mine were involved in re-leading the clerestorey windows of the nave, part of a major restoration which included relaying the nave roof. I heard much about it, but my only involvement was with patch repairs to a few loose panels of stained glass that had been stored at the church for years, some of which have since been incorporated into a wooden screen in the south aisle.
I thus never got to see the church for myself, so decided to get in touch and contacted Fr Stephen Parker to see if I might visit after the midweek morning service as the church is otherwise kept locked. He kindly let me in to spend some time enjoying this impressive building, and I'm glad to have become duly acquainted with it at last, finally completing my tour of the greater churches of Leamington.
A panel discussion with John Moore (English), Sara Thiel(Theatre), Andrea Stevens (English, Theatre, and Medieval Studies), Vicki Mahaffey (Kirkpatrick Professor of English and Gender and Women’s Studies), Derek Attig (Assistant Director for Student Outreach, Graduate College), Antoinette Burton(Director, IPRH), and Jason Mierek (Project Manager, Humanities Without Walls)