View allAll Photos Tagged Physicians,
We ought to be as careful in the choice of our historians as we are in the selection of our physicians. We think, "Oh well, history is history," and let it go at that :-)
Hendrik Willem van Loon, The Story of Mankind, 1921
Truth Matters!
prunus mume, japanese flowering apricot, 'Omoi-no-mama', j c raulston arboretum, ncsu, raleigh, north carolina
Physician of the Gods,
the Merciful One.
I ask you to speed medical healing,
to speed the recovery
of illness or injury.
I ask you to inspire the doctors...
Read the rest and grab the events and designer information on Threads and Tuneage
love this house and the time it represents. Not sure if the doctor is still living and if this was his office. I have enjoyed this sign in the window for at least twenty years.
On the left, at the level of the second tier, above the arch of the transept, the large multi-figure composition "Transfiguration of the Lord" is one of the twelve scenes of the Virgin and Christological cycles.
On the right, at the level of the second tier, above the transept arch, there is a large multi-figure composition “The Ascension of the Lord”.
The church in the former hospital building began to be revived in 2016. Since this is a former hospital building, the church was named after Saint Agapit the Physician.
The new temple was consecrated on December 7, 2021.
Церква преподобного Агапіта Печерського у Києво-Печерській Лаврі.
Ліворуч, на рівні другого ярусу, над аркою трансепта, велика багатофігурна композиція «Преображення Господнє» - одна із дванадцяти сцен богородичного та христологічного циклів.
Праворуч, на рівні другого ярусу, над аркою трансепта, велика багатофігурна композиція «Піднесення Господнє».
Церкву в колишній лікарняній будівлі почали відроджувати у 2016 році. Оскільки це колишній лікарняний корпус, то назвали храм саме в ім’я преподобного Агапіта Лікаря.
Новий храм було освячено 7 грудня 2021 року.
In Mexico, it is Physician's Day, and what a better homage than this wonderful re-version of this magnificent song. Tower of strength, by The Mission.
She is my Tower of Strength, she is the best hepatologist in the world.
Please sit down, look the photo, and listen the song and the video, it is so emotional too.
En México, el 23 de octubre se celebra el Día del Médico, y qué mejor homenaje en estos tiempos que esta magnífica re-versión de este himno que es "Tower of Strength" de The Mission, llena de gran significado. Todas las ganancias provenientes de esta canción van destinadas a hospitales que han atendido pacientes con COVID-19.
Por favor, siéntense, disfruten la música y vean el video, vale mucho la pena también.
Wayne Hussey and friends remake the classic Mission anthem
'Tower Of Strength' in support of Covid-19 related charities globally.
All proceeds to charities personally chosen by each contributorNominated charities:
UK NHS - St. Jude’s Children’s Hospital, Memphis - Music Venue Trust - Covenant House, New Orleans - Disasters Emergency Committee - MusiCares - Plan International - Direct Relief - Alzheimer’s Scotland - Liberty Hill Foundation - The Shrewsbury Ark - Memorial Sloan Kettering Center, NYC - Prostate Cancer UK - The Teddy Bear Clinic - RedRover - Help Musicians UK - Crew Nation - Venice Family Clinic - Anthony Walker Foundation - The San Francisco City Covid-19 Fund - Projeto Cáo Communitário
"You raise me up
When I'm on the floor
You see me through
When I'm lonely and scared
And I'm feeling true to the written word
And you're true to me
And still I need more
It would tear me apart
To feel no one ever cared
For me
Me
For me
You are a tower of strength to me
You stand firm and proud
When the wind blows in your face
And when the sun shines in your eyes
You just turn your head away
To me
To me
To me
You are a tower of strength to me
You rescue me
You are my faith, my hope, my liberty
And when there's darkness all around
You shine bright for me
You are the guiding light..."
TOS2020: youtu.be/VE1I6q-s6Vo
The College of Physicians of Philadelphia is the oldest private medical society in the United States. Founded in 1787 by 24 Philadelphia physicians "to advance the Science of Medicine, and thereby lessen human misery, by investigating the diseases and remedies which are peculiar to our country" and to promote "order and uniformity in the practice of Physick," it has made important contributions to medical education and research. The College hosts the Mütter Museum, a gallery of 19th-century specimens, teaching models, instruments, and photographs, as well as the Historical Medical Library, which is one of the country's oldest medical libraries.[3][4][5]
The College of Physicians of Philadelphia Building, designed by the firm of Cope & Stewardson and built in 1909, was designated a U.S. National Historic Landmark in October, 2008. It was also then listed on the National Register of Historic Places
Loved the intense blue of these tiny spring flowers, in the garden of the Royal College of Physicians, Central London
Leonora Veterano on Glenn Losack ( once known as the furious physician )
this was written atleast 5 years ago:
Dr. Glenn Losack is a very busy man telling the stories of the world, our world and you’re bound to listen. The seeker of truth is no way content in “just being a Doctor.” This physician, psychiatrist, photojournalist, musician, lecturer and charity worker just to name a few is on a mission and will not be stopped! A man who has many varied interests and expertise in several areas he is “The Renaissance Man.” This Brooklyn born native of a low middle class family and one of three children all born on the same day, May 7th, but different years is mad as hell and he’s not going to take it anymore! “I am an extreme pessimist, I am furious; I think countries like India will survive because they have religion, morals, ethics and culture. The USA has none of this, we read the Ten Commandments like a comic book,” he says.
Why the “Furious Physician”? Dr. Losack is furious at the injustices in the world and sees life from a pessimistic perspective, a lot if not most of the time.
He is a man who practices what he preaches. Dr. Losack who is semi-retired from his medical practice in order to follow his passions lives a part of the year taking photographs in third world countries. Earthquakes in India, civil war in Sri Lanka, typhoons in Bangladesh, political unrest in the Dominican Republic and the 2004 Tsunami. Here in his native country, the United States he has photographed our own tragedy 9/11. In December of 2009, he heads to India to shoot festivals. He has won several awards for his photographic work, and has been published in many magazines, including National Geographic. One of his prouder moments includes one of his photos owned by Yoko Ono, the wife of Beatle John Lennon. One of his life aspirations before becoming a Doctor, he wanted to be in the Beatles. By the age of fourteen he could play every Beatles song on guitar or piano. Dr. Robi Ludwig (national commentator, bestselling author and psychotherapist) is also the proud owner of several pieces of Dr. Losack’s work. He contributes Dr. Ludwig as helping him take himself and his artistic talents seriously and encouraged him to do something legitimate about it as an artist and musical tune writer. “She has helped me immensely.”
But what makes this Doctor so unusual, extraordinary; exceptional is he allows himself to be exposed to danger in order to photograph the dark side of humanity. These countries are no country clubs where a steak and potatoes meal only requires one to place an order from a menu. His journey includes countries susceptible to nature’s wrath, man’s shortcomings and many disappointments to its native people. Dr. Losack is the advocate for all these causes. The underdog, the downtrodden, the scapegoated and the disenfranchised, he is a champion for them all in his artistry. “I shoot pain, agony, human suffering, I shoot those who have no advocates, you can see this in my work.” The pleasures, the pain, the underdog with no voice are all expressed in his work, if only you have the courage to look. He photographs as if he could touch anything without hurting the subject and leaving them with their courage and dignity intact. The Doctor shows how much he loves these people; they are clearly a part of his life. He is a man who not only seeks for knowledge and truth, but interacts it in his art. Dr. Losack depicts the human drama in parts of the world, where some are quick to be beaten but have a faith in life and love, no easy task to pursue. “People do not have a clue, not a clue what real suffering is, I find it fascinating.”
Although Dr. Losack’s art explores the dark side of humanity, they still reflect his humble love of life. He is a man who has a heart or why else would he do what he does with his subjects. “I seem to want to take care of them or let them know they are not forgotten. I want to make it palatable to look at people who are so deformed and forgotten and self hating. If people don’t run from Lepers they can help them.” Perhaps this all started with his own beginnings. His father was a truck driver and his mother was a housewife. He feels his father gave him the artistic gene which his dad was not allowed to pursue. “My father got a scholarship to Cooper Union but his pop said, No Way! I think my father’s life was rough, he couldn’t be what he wanted to be or was good at; his father took it away from him.”
Dr. Losack shows in his work that we all can be heroes, admired for our own achievements and qualities. He shows the world the people who struggle with their lives every single moment are heroes. “Every beggar, every deformed, every leper, every man and woman who walks on their hands and are blinded by their parents so they are profitable beggars are heroes. They are all worthy of that, these are my heroes.” Some have called him the “conscience of photography,” but what Dr. Losack wants is to make people see what they are afraid of. He wants them to understand that a leper is a human being and not the monster many may view them as. In these turbulent times of today the message is clear: “I want them to see that beauty can be ugly and the reverse true also!” Ladies and Gentlemen “the Doctor is in!”
As if photography isnt enough the doctor is avidly composing tunes, jingles and taking his musical chops more seriously. He has written and performed “THE THEME for Dr ROBI” which will appear on various of her venues.
hear it all evolving at
www.youtube.com/results?search_query=losackmd&aq=f
www.youtube.com/results?search_query=losackmd&aq=f
www.youtube.com/results?search_query=losackmd&aq=f
Dr. Losack’s present exhibit, presented by Salon Ciel, “His Photography, His Music” . A portion of the proceeds will go to benefit “Doctors without borders”. He will also have a photographic gallery show in India in January 2010. Details soon to come.
Asheville, North Carolina
Symmetry
Photography’s new conscience
The College of Physicians of Philadelphia is the oldest private medical society in the United States. Founded in 1787 by 24 Philadelphia physicians "to advance the Science of Medicine, and thereby lessen human misery, by investigating the diseases and remedies which are peculiar to our country" and to promote "order and uniformity in the practice of Physick," it has made important contributions to medical education and research. The College hosts the Mütter Museum, a gallery of 19th-century specimens, teaching models, instruments, and photographs, as well as the Historical Medical Library, which is one of the country's oldest medical libraries.
The College of Physicians of Philadelphia Building, designed by the firm of Cope & Stewardson and built in 1909, was designated a U.S. National Historic Landmark in October, 2008. It was also then listed on the National Register of Historic Places. 129
The Healer’s Cot Heiltrud lies sheltered from the wind, half sunken into the earth, and you step down a few steps to reach the entrance door. Small and cozy, the small cot offers space for a herbalist of the Middle Ages or in a medieval fantasy setting. The furniture includes a rustic fireplace, a cozy alcove bed (adult version also available), a work table, a richly decorated small shelf and seating in the form of chairs.
Available and with 25% off for We love role-play event, July 4-29:
Herbalist’s Cot Heiltrud
Herbalist’s Fireplace Heiltrud
Herbalist’s Alcove Bed Heiltrud (Standard & Adult Version available)
Herbalist’s Worktable Heiltrud
Herbalist’s Shelf Heiltrud
Herbalist’s Chair Heiltrud
Complete Set-Up with surrounding garden plants and furniture has a land impact of only 38. The cot without plants has a land impact of only 11. Terraforming is required to lower the terrain inside the cottage.
Door and window shutters with kool door script.
All items are Original Mesh and advanced lighting enabled, low prim and copy /mod.
Sekiro: Shadows Die Twice
I can't fool myself, I don't want nobody else to ever love me
You are my shinin' star, my guiding light, my love fantasy
There's not a minute, hour, day or night that I don't love you
You're at the top of my list 'cause I'm always thinkin' of you
I still remember in the days when I was scared to touch you
How I spent my day dreamin' plannin' how to say I love you
You must have known that I had feelings deep enough to swim in
That's when you opened up your heart and you told me to come in
Oh, my love
A thousand kisses from you is never too much
I just don't wanna stop
Oh, my love
A million days in your arms is never too much
I just don't wanna stop
Too much, never too much, never too much, never too much
I'm too good to you
I'm way too good to you
You take my love for granted
I just don't understand it
No, I'm too good to you
I'm way too good to you
You take my love for granted
I just don't understand it
I don't know how to talk to you
I don't know how to ask you if you're okay
My friends always feel the need to tell me things
Seems like they're just happier than us these days
Yeah, these days I don't know how to talk to you
I don't know how to be there when you need me
It feels like the only time you see me
Is when you turn your head to the side and look at me differently
And last night I think I lost my patience
Last night I got high as your expectations
Last night, I came to a realization
And I hope you can take it
I hope you can take it
Oh, my love
A thousand kisses from you is never too much
I just don't wanna stop
Oh, my love
A million days in your arms is never too much
I just don't wanna stop
Too much, never too much, never too much, never too much
Physician Response Unit
Skoda Kodiaq - H06 - LY69 OJN
Thanks for viewing my Photos - NO UNAUTHORISED USE
seated figure of the physician Sesheshen-sa-Hathor
Middle Kingdom, 12th Dynasty, c. 1880 BC, Ezbet Rushdi
Staatliches Museum Ägyptischer Kunst, München, Deutschland / State Museum of Egyptian Art, Munich, Germany
- ♫ Sound
- EVENT
→ «GENRE» – March 15th – April 12th
→ «The Arcade» March 1st – 31st
- 📷 taken at NATHAN ART Studio (ephemeral scenery)
Art&Ko - Healer Set
Doux - Venezia
SFU - Ruevit Bindi
Violent Seduction - Hera Ring (White)
Pepe Skins - Leanne V2 / Moonbeam / LE
Pepe Skins - Toned V2 / Moonbeam
TF: Body Veins :: Heavy :: Light
Gloom. - Rhys Collection - Light Gray
Maitreya Mesh Body
LeLUTKA.Head.Lake.
Cassandra Shape
marketplace.secondlife.com/p/Cassandra-Shape-Lelutka-Evo-Lake/20788536
Zue Nightlife
Tribute Night to the First Responders.
Wearing: Bella Moda: Citta Femmina Black Suit Jacket - M
Dr Carla_ZUE_033020_026F
Physician Response Unit
Skoda Kodiaq - H06 - LY69 OJN
Thanks for viewing my Photos - NO UNAUTHORISED USE
At a conference in London which was held at the Royal College of Physicians. It is an impressive building.
In the 17th century Edinburgh physicians began to meet in their own homes to discuss the regulation of medical practice and ways in which standards in medicine could be improved. Sir Robert Sibbald, an eminent physician and noted historian, was a member of this group. Through his friendship with the King’s Physician, he had the opportunity to petition King Charles II who granted the College its Royal Charter in 1681.
The founding Fellows of the College were concerned not only with the advancement of medicine as a reputable science, but also with alleviating the miseries of the city’s poor and needy. In 1682 the College established the first dispensary in Britain to distribute free medicine to the sick poor and was
instrumental in founding the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh in 1729.
For more than 300 years, the College has remained independent of control by government and its mission today remains close to the ideals of its founders, namely to promote the highest standards in internal medicine.
Nearly 3 years after getting my medical license as a physician, I finally thought of getting me a Parker Jotter pen and have my name engraved. Sadly, my name can't fit, thus I chose to have my surname engraved instead.
I must say, it looks good alongside a prescription pad and my Littmann Cardiology III stethoscope that I happen to have engraved my name as well.
Shooting Information:
•Nikon D7200 with MB-D15 Battery Grip
•Sigma 17-50mm f/2.8 EX DC OS HSM
•Manual Mode
•1/250th @ 50mm zoom, f/5.6
•ISO 200
•2x Off Shoe Nikon SB-600 Flash Fired
Off Shoe Flash Information:
•Commander/Trigger: Nikon SU-800 Wireless Speedlight Commander
•Flash 1: Nikon SB-600 with no modifier on the left, manually at 1/16th power
•Flash 2: Nikon SB-600 with no modifier on the right, manually at 1/32nd power
Post Processing Information:
•Adobe Lightroom Classic CC 7.1
•Not Cropped
I accept any comment, from praises, awards, invitations, all the way to criticisms - as long as the criticism is constructive that I can learn and improve from. So, don't shy away with the comments!! =]
Also, consider following me! I will certainly follow back! You can never have too many friends!! =]
Located by the south-eastern end of Regent's Park, the building opened in 1964 and was designed by architect Denys Lasdun. It is Grade I listed by Historic England.
It could be described as semi-brutalist because it combines both bare concrete (the spiral stairs and roof tower) and mosaic tiles (on the walls of the central building - these tiles are visible if you view this shot at full size).
The shuttered concrete staircase in the foreground strongly resembles those providing access to the Hayward Gallery in London's Southbank Centre.
Ightham Mote (National Trust)
16th October 2024.
On this day......
1846 - William Thomas Green Morton first demonstrated the use of ether as a general anesthetic before a gathering of physicians at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston.
1987 - The south east of England woke to a scene of descruction, the worst affected area following a massive overnight storm. With winds gusting at up to 100mph, there was massive devastation across the country and 18 people were killed. About 15 million trees were blown down. Many fell on to roads and railways, causing major transport delays. Others took down electricity and telephone lines, leaving thousands of homes without power for more than 24 hours.
Buildings were damaged by winds or falling trees. Numerous small boats were wrecked or blown away, with one ship at Dover being blown over and a Channel ferry was blown ashore near Folkestone. While the storm took a human toll, claiming 18 lives in England, it is thought many more may have been hurt if the storm had hit during the day.
Walking down Harley Street (the traditional home of the creme de la creme of private medical specialists) the raindrops on the black paintwork drew my attention to this Lamborghini Aventador S (according to my son). Only when I was focussing on the Prancing Bull badge did the private registration number filter into my consciousness. Could this be the Dark Lord's personal physician's car??
Sir Arthur Ignatius Conan Doyle was a British writer and physician. He created the character Sherlock Holmes in 1887 for A Study in Scarlet, the first of four novels and fifty-six short stories about Holmes and Dr. Watson. The Sherlock Holmes stories are milestones in the field of crime fiction.
This was one of the earliest maternity hospitals in Great Britain. It opened in 1767 on Westminster Bridge Road, London and closed in 1971. Lying-in is an archaic term for childbirth (referring to the month-long bed rest prescribed for postpartum confinement).
The hospital was an initiative of Dr John Leake, a physician, and the site chosen was on the north side of Westminster Bridge Road, Lambeth, then on the outskirts of London. Its foundation stone was laid in August 1765 and the facility opened as the Westminster New Lying-in Hospital in April 1767.
With a view to expansion, the governors bought a lease of a plot of ground with 100-foot frontage on the east side of York Road, Lambeth (above) in the early 1820s. The new building was designed by Henry Harrison and was built at a cost of about £3,000. On 22 September 1828, the minutes record that "On Friday Morning a Patient was delivered of a Son in the New Hospital and the Committee met this day in the new Hospital for the first time." The facility was incorporated by royal charter as the General Lying-In Hospital in 1830. A new ward and a training school for midwives was established in 1879.
Joseph Lister became consulting surgeon in March 1879 and Sir John Williams and Sir Francis Champneys were appointed physicians the following year. Two houses on the north side of the hospital, known as the Albany Baths, were converted into a nurses' home (i.e. staff accommodation) in 1907; this facility was re-built between 1930 and 1933 as a modern red-brick building with a mansard roof, designed by E Turner Powell. The hospital was evacuated to Diocesan House, St Albans during the Second World War, but returned to Lambeth and joined the National Health Service under the management of St Thomas' Hospital in 1946.
The hospital closed in 1971 and fell into a state of dereliction. It was restored and refurbished in 2003 at a cost of £4.27 million financed in part by a grant from the Guy's and St Thomas' Charity. Since March 2013 the building has comprised part of the Premier Inn Hotel Waterloo.
The former hospital has been recorded as a Grade II listed building since 1981. The shot was taken from the middle of Forum Magnum Square.
In the uncertainty of this third Millennium, it feels good to think about every year we have this important Anniversary celebrating the Archangels Legacy of God.
First of all: Saint MICHAEL, Saint GABRIEL, Saint RAPHAEL.
I only know Michaels! I believe I'm closer to that Hierarchy, by temperament.
*** Happy Name Anniversary Day to all my Michael Friends and valued Group Members! ***
Happy Day to all the luminous warriors for the Good, to all the doctors, physicians, health practitioners, the teachers, the friends, the messengers...
Last but not least: the lighting warriors can also be the Photographers! So happy Feast of Light to you all!
Furtherly: I superlike the fact that the Archangels are present in all the monotheistic religions, so, in their path, we can all feel a lil together, independently from anyone own Creed! Wow, this is a true plus!
In my photo: modern wooden hand sculpted and hand painted statue of St. Michael the Archangel (Middle XX Ct), ancient Parrosh Church, Loreo, Italy.
Nikon Cool Pix33, my lil magic one, no in-camera effects (my Cool Pix sees almost as my eyes) Light/colour adjustment as low indoor-lighting, slight oval semi-transparent smoky frame overlapped as a foreground layer. Noise on the face gives intensity but looses clarity; what I like of this photo is the strange gradient of a golden light at the apex, deeming from upwards to the lower part of the sculpture. Framing allowed me to isolate the statue from the closeness of frescoes with other subjects and to delicatelly accompany and caress the sinous line of the chains.
My shooting position: laying on church floor, untill the Parrosh arrived to meet me and see what I was doing on the floor. So, I didn't have many attempts for this particular angle, just one or two. I have much better & focused shots from other perspectives but this it the one I may prefer.
I will never be tired to photograph this and other Saint Michael statues and paintings. Almost every year I come back to see this statue and I find it positioned in other places in the church. The last time was 2 years ago and the inner light had been much improved to allow me to take better shots. Michaels Angels have always a very potent appearance, a carismatic glaze which is a powerful statement.
I had the opportunity to take some interesting photos to a St. Michael marble statue this summer, near the medieval castle of Copertino (Lecce, Italy) and in the year 2016 in Belgique at the wooden statue of Saint Michel in Bruxelles, Concathédrale Saints Michel-et-Gudule. That statue almost animated in front of my camera. I and my friend could both take some very phenomenal photos with two different cameras and the peculiar effect was there in both cameras. We never shared those pics, we are still a lil scared. I would need an expert in detecting paranormal activity and in validating the absence of any edits to our photos. So I am keeping them pristine, raw until I find an expert willing to "read" them.
I think maybe two experts would be needed: an image detective and a mystic... Complicated but I keep on the hope.
*** Was the last battle over or will we prophetically have another ultimate final battle at the end of times? Will the battle conclude the story or will it initiate a totally new and different Era and Dimension ? ***
Taken on a sunny morning in London whilst I was on a photography walk. Took a while to get a clear shot, but I think it was worth the wait.
The British Museum is a museum in London dedicated to human history and culture. Its permanent collection, numbering some 8 million works, is among the largest and most comprehensive in existence and originates from all continents, illustrating and documenting the story of human culture from its beginnings to the present.
The British Museum was established in 1753, largely based on the collections of the physician and scientist Sir Hans Sloane. The museum first opened to the public on 15 January 1759 in Montagu House in Bloomsbury, on the site of the current museum building. Its expansion over the following two and a half centuries was largely a result of an expanding British colonial footprint and has resulted in the creation of several branch institutions, the first being the British Museum (Natural History) in South Kensington in 1881. Some objects in the collection, most notably the Elgin Marbles from the Parthenon, are the objects of controversy and of calls for restitution to their countries of origin.
Until 1997, when the British Library (previously centred on the Round Reading Room) moved to a new site, the British Museum housed both a national museum of antiquities and a national library in the same building. The museum is a non-departmental public body sponsored by the Department for Culture, Media and Sport, and as with all other national museums in the United Kingdom it charges no admission fee, except for loan exhibitions.Since 2002 the director of the museum has been Neil MacGregor.
To celebrate the 50th Anniversary of Doctor Who, I've made this little scene depicting the last moments of the Eighth Doctor, just before regenerating into the War Doctor (John Hurt), from the miniepisode "The Night of the Doctor" by Steven Moffat.
I used to be an avid Chess player, but as I gotten older and my being a physician took over most of my brain (trust me, not much space up there), I haven't played a game in years.
My dad found one of my older Chess boards, complete with all the pieces, and gave it to me just for keeps.
And well, I knew I wanted to photograph.
Shooting Information:
•Nikon D7200 with MB-D15 Battery Grip
•Sigma 17-50mm f/2.8 EX DC OS HSM
•Aperture Priority
•1/60th @ 50mm zoom, f/11
•ISO 200
•1x Off Shoe Nikon Speedlight SB-910 Flash Fired
Off Shoe Flash Information:
•Commander/Trigger: Nikon SU-800 Wireless Speedlight Commander
•Flash 1: Nikon Speedlight SB-910 with no flash modifiers, on the right, pointed towards the subject, 1/64th power
Post Processing Information:
•Phase One Capture One Pro
•DxO Nik Collection Silver Efex Pro 2
•Not Cropped
I accept any comment, from praises, awards, invitations, all the way to criticisms - as long as the criticism is constructive that I can learn and improve from. So, don't shy away with the comments!! =]
You are also free to use any of my photos without a fee (except any photos that are portraits of any of my friends or family members), I only ask in return that you credit me, link my Flickr profile, not re-editing any of my shots, and not removing my watermark.
Finally, consider following me! I will certainly follow back! You can never have too many friends!! =]
The steps on the left represent one of the portals to the Riverfront Park. This is the corner of West Northampton and South River Streets. Most of the buildings in the foreground belong to Wilkes University, but you can also catch a glimpse of the bell tower of the First Baptist Church. In the background is the once-majestic Citizens' Bank Building, it's many offices once occupied by attorneys, dentists, CPAs, physicians, hairdressers, makers of false teeth, insurance brokers, and so much more. In the distance, in the left, barely visible, are the minarets of, again, the once-majestic Irem Temple. Things change.