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within me, without me

 

(Peter Kruder - Domination)

seat cushion with fabric from a thrift store robe...

 

blogged

Mt. Redoubt volcano, from our bedroom window...

Here she is, three days ago, looking and feeling much better after gaining back some fatty tissue. She lost 1 pound and had a lot of excess skin which looked really sad. I'm glad she's well again.

Bellevue Police have recovered a large amount of stolen property and jewelry recently. The property was recovered on 12/10/2012. Some of the property recovered was from burglaries in several cities, including Bellevue, Redmond, Bothell and Seattle.

 

If you are a victim of a burglary that occurred between October 2012 and December 10, 2012 please review the attached photos. If any property belongs to you, contact Detective Lindquist at e-mail propertydet@bellevuewa.gov.

 

Describe to him the property you believe is yours by referencing the evidence number with the photo. Leave a contact phone number, address of your burglary, and your burglary police case number. Detective Lindquist will contact you regarding viewing the property. You will need to provide verification of ownership and a police case report number prior to any items will be released.

Mark Gornal with Chief Inspector Carol Martin

 

The determination of two Bolton officers helped reunite a single father with £150 worth of Christmas presents for his daughter.

 

Great Lever resident Mark Gornall was traced by PC Hayley Fleming and Police Community Support Officer (PCSO) Julie Swift after refuse collectors uncovered the missing toys from a dustbin in the Halliwell area on the morning of 20 December.

 

Mr Gornall said: “What great festive cheer for a single dad of one. I am very happy to receive the presents that were stolen and I cannot thank the police enough for their actions today and for making my daughter’s Christmas special.”

 

Although the toys were found in their Toys R’ Us carrier bags, they had not been reported as stolen and local enquiries failed to uncover any further information.

 

The two officers contacted the store to see if the items could be traced as a single purchase and, by coincidence, discovered that a staff member had earlier served a customer who had said he was replacing gifts that had been stolen.

 

PC Fleming and PCSO Swift attended the store to see if CCTV footage or a vehicle registration number could be found to help them trace the man. However, on arrival, they discovered that he had returned since the original phone call to get a refund on an item.

 

All refunds require customers to leave brief personal details including name and address. This allowed officers to trace Mr Gornall, who had receipts for the original purchases as well as exact replacements for each of the uncovered items.

 

PC Hayley Fleming said: “We are delighted that we were able to help Mr Gornall recover the items in time for Christmas. On this occasion we were able, with the help of the refuse collectors and Toys R Us, to successfully follow up our lines of enquiry and reunite the property with its owner.

 

“However, I would strongly urge people to report any incidents or concerns to us so that we can investigate them. Remember, in almost all cases, if you do not tell us about a crime then we cannot do anything about it.”

 

To report crime, please call police on the new non-emergency number 101 or call Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555 111.

 

For information more about Greater Manchester Police please visit our website.

www.gmp.police.uk

        

Полина выздоравливает

Yes I have been missing in action! Im recovering from a severe computer crash! Its taken me days to recover and reload all my software ......whew its good to be back on the drawing board ..and how have you all been ?

Bellevue Police have recovered a large amount of stolen property and jewelry recently. The property was recovered on 12/10/2012. Some of the property recovered was from burglaries in several cities, including Bellevue, Redmond, Bothell and Seattle.

 

If you are a victim of a burglary that occurred between October 2012 and December 10, 2012 please review the attached photos. If any property belongs to you, contact Detective Lindquist at e-mail propertydet@bellevuewa.gov.

 

Describe to him the property you believe is yours by referencing the evidence number with the photo. Leave a contact phone number, address of your burglary, and your burglary police case number. Detective Lindquist will contact you regarding viewing the property. You will need to provide verification of ownership and a police case report number prior to any items will be released.

Bellevue Police have recovered a large amount of stolen property and jewelry recently. The property was recovered on 12/10/2012. Some of the property recovered was from burglaries in several cities, including Bellevue, Redmond, Bothell and Seattle.

 

If you are a victim of a burglary that occurred between October 2012 and December 10, 2012 please review the attached photos. If any property belongs to you, contact Detective Lindquist at e-mail propertydet@bellevuewa.gov.

 

Describe to him the property you believe is yours by referencing the evidence number with the photo. Leave a contact phone number, address of your burglary, and your burglary police case number. Detective Lindquist will contact you regarding viewing the property. You will need to provide verification of ownership and a police case report number prior to any items will be released.

One of Transpacific Recycling's Isuzu kerbside recycling units is seen at work in Oriental Bay Wellington.

Amy had a very hard time trusting humans again. It was hard to try and snuggle with her because of the complicated surgery that was done on her leg and I am sure it was painful.

 

Using peanut butter (which she really liked), I was able to get her to take her antibiotics and her pain meds.

 

After two days of making very little progress (she kept trying to bite me), I asked Lisa Chiarelli to give it a shot, and sure enough Amy likes women better than men.

 

Lisa was able to make a good progress, but her busy schedule made it difficult on her to give Amy what she needed - A LOT of human interaction.

This was almost blank it is so faded. There must be a better technique to tease more out of it.

pentax 6x7 smc takumar 105mm f2.4

Making things prettier is one of my favorite things to do!

Bain News Service,, publisher.

 

Recovered shells

 

[between ca. 1915 and ca. 1920]

 

1 negative : glass ; 5 x 7 in. or smaller.

 

Notes:

Title from unverified data provided by the Bain News Service on the negatives or caption cards.

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.22367

 

Call Number: LC-B2- 3932-6

  

In a few days she should be back on her feet :-)

I'm not a recovering alcoholic but I know many who are. As an Akronite, I am very proud of this history and the story behind it. I was able to expose my husband (from Philadelphia area) to this this year.

 

WEST AKRON — A conversation that has changed thousands of lives took place in a tiny room of a cottage on a grand Akron estate.

 

It was the historic meeting of two men, Akron surgeon Dr. Bob Smith and New York stockbroker Bill Wilson, both troubled by their addiction to alcohol.

 

The meeting, which took place in the Gate Lodge at Stan Hywet Hall & Gardens on May 12, 1935, set the stage for what would eventually be known as Alcoholics Anonymous (AA).

 

That historic meeting will be marked at Stan Hywet the weekend of June 10-12, to coincide with activities surrounding AA’s annual Founders’ Day. The Akron Area Intergroup Council of AA will honor the 76th anniversary of AA with activities June 9-11.

 

The Gate Lodge, which features an exhibit about “Dr. Bob” and “Bill W.,” will have extended hours throughout the weekend. In an adjacent tent on the Stan Hywet property, several performances of a scene from a play about the two AA founders will be performed.

 

The Gate Lodge opened to the public in 2004. The house was occupied until 1999 by Irene Seiberling Harrison, who died then at the age of 108. After her passing, it was decided that the cottage would be restored and its place in history would be noted.

 

During the past two Founders’ Day weekends, more than 7,500 people have walked through the doors of the modest cottage, according to Donna Spiegler, communications manager of Stan Hywet. The Gate Lodge is also open when the estate is open to the public and included in the price of manor tours.

 

Stan Hywet volunteer Jim Urban, of West Akron, is often stationed at the Gate Lodge to answer questions.

 

“AA members just want to see the place,” he said. “They read every single word.”

 

Urban said he also has served as a soundboard for some.

 

“Sometimes an AA member will unload on you,” Urban said. “That’s inspiring.”

 

The Gate Lodge is the building to the right of the entrance gate at Stan Hywet. It was built as a residence for the estate’s superintendent, who lived there until his death in 1923. At that point, Fred Seiberling (the eldest son of Stan Hywet owner F.A. Seiberling) moved into the cottage with his wife, Henrietta, and their three children, John, Dorothy and Mary. The couple separated in 1935, and Fred moved into the Manor House while Henrietta and the children stayed at the Gate Lodge.

 

It was Henrietta Seiberling who is credited with bringing together Dr. Bob and Bill W. According to information in the Gate Lodge, Henrietta was active in the Oxford Group, a spiritual movement popular at the time, which stressed that “moral strength was the foundation to social justice and personal change would bring about social change.”

 

Through her activities with the group, Henrietta met Dr. Bob and his wife, Anne, and knew about the doctor’s struggles with alcohol.

 

Meanwhile, Bill W. was in Akron working unsuccessfully on a business deal. He had been sober for a few months, but the failure of the deal led him to seek help on the night of May 11, 1935. He felt if he could talk to another person struggling with alcohol addiction, he would be able to resist the temptation to visit the bar at the Mayflower Hotel in downtown Akron, where he was staying. From the hotel’s church directory, he randomly selected the Rev. William Tunks, who gave Bill W. a list of 10 names of people who might know an alcoholic who would talk with him. None of the numbers led to any success until he dialed Henrietta Seiberling.

 

Henrietta called the Smiths, but Bob was sleeping off his latest binge. Anne Smith asked if they could meet the next day, Mother’s Day. Bill W. hung on and came to the Gate Lodge that day for dinner. Dr. Bob reluctantly arrived with Anne and their son, and after dinner, Dr. Bob and Bill W. retired to the small library of the Gate Lodge for what was intended to be a 15-minute conversation.

 

They stayed there for five hours.

 

Today, the library is appointed with a small table and two chairs. Three recordings — of Henrietta Seiberling, Dr. Bob and Bill W. — can be played that talk about the events that transpired to help set the stage for AA, which became an international, spiritually oriented community that helps its members stay sober and help other alcoholics do the same.

Thongs and socks

Taken whilst awaiting clearance to land at Honolulu International

Polaroid 440

Fuji 100c Recovered goop negative

My fellow teacher Neil is recovering from surgery. He was able to join us for dinner last evening

120404-N-NN926-081 ATLANTIC OCEAN (April 4, 2012) Sailors from the amphibious transport dock ship USS New York (LPD 21) recover a rigid-hull inflatable boat piloted by Commanding Officer Cmdr. Will Herrmann. New York is part of the Iwo Jima Amphibious Ready Group with the embarked 24th Marine Expeditionary (24th MEU). New York will support maritime security operations and theater security cooperation efforts in the U.S. 5th and 6th Fleet areas of responsibility. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Zane Ecklund/Released)

Dedicated to a lovely And Sick Soul one that I'm honored to have him as a friend ! (

Recovering Sick Soul)

The working end of river road Barking based Boleyn Recovery MAN 41-54- T65 four axle break down truck parked on Sudbury lorry park

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