View allAll Photos Tagged Relator
Les Invalides contains museums and monuments, all relating to the military history of France, as well as a hospital and a retirement home for war veterans, the building's original purpose. The buildings house the Musée de l'Armée (the military museum of the Army of France), the Musée des Plans-Reliefs and the Musée d'Histoire Contemporaine, as well as the Dôme des Invalides, a large church, the tallest in Paris at a height of 350 feet. It houses tombs of some of France's war heroes, most notably Napoleon. The architect of Les Invalides was Libéral Bruant. By the time the enlarged project was completed in 1676, the river front measured 643 feet, and the complex had 15 courtyards, the largest being the cour d'honneur ("court of honor") for military parades. Jules Hardouin-Mansart assisted the aged Bruant, and the chapel for veterans was finished in 1679. This chapel was known as Église Saint-Louis des Invalides, and daily attendance of the veterans in the church services was required. Shortly after the veterans' chapel was completed, Louis XIV commissioned Mansart to construct a separate private royal chapel referred to as the Église du Dôme. The domed chapel was finished in 1708. The building retained its primary function of a retirement home and hospital for military veterans until the early 20th century. In 1872 the musée d'artillerie (Artillery Museum) was located within the building to be joined by the musée historique des armées (Historical Museum of the Armies) in 1896. The two institutions were merged to form the present Musée de l'Armée in 1905. At the same time, the veterans in residence were dispersed to smaller centers outside Paris, as the building became too large for its original purpose. The modern complex includes facilities about a hundred elderly or incapacitated former soldiers, including one gentleman sitting outside in full World War II army dress.
My photo relates to my iquiry of How technology has changed the world with my 90 year old granmother's hands in the photo using a social media platform. It shows age diversity with the use of technology.
to take my photo i had my grandma hold her ipad and i tried to get up close to get the texture of her skin. i edited it to be black in white in photoshop.
Your employees when you ask them to track their time accurately
clockk.com/memes/spongebob-burning-paper-meme-timer-emplo...
Photo credit: UNDP
Relates to the project 'Reducing the Vulnerability of Cambodian Rural Livelihoods through Enhanced Sub-National Climate Change Planning and Execution of Priority Actions' www.adaptation-undp.org/projects/reducing-vulnerability-c...
Historic documents relating to the German immigration to British Kaffraria in the 1850's, photographed in the Courtenay-Latimer Hall at the East London Museum, Eastern Cape, South Africa on July 7, 2008. Original Prospectus referring to the German Colony at the Cape of Good Hope giving details of eligibility, terms, regulations relating to baggage, allocation of water and meals to be served, etc. Dated 15 June 1858. I photographed the same document in the archive in Stettin (Szczecin), Poland in 2003.
Relator Especial para la Libertad de Expresión, Edison Lanza, durante una audiencia. 156 Período de Sesiones de la CIDH. Sede en Washington, DC, Octubre de 2015.
Photo credit: UNDP
Relates to the project 'Reducing the Vulnerability of Cambodian Rural Livelihoods through Enhanced Sub-National Climate Change Planning and Execution of Priority Actions' www.adaptation-undp.org/projects/reducing-vulnerability-c...
All these pictures relate to my blog for Gardeners World Magazine
while you are at it, try my other blog
The Problems Relating to the Management & Excavations of the Archaeological Ruins of Herculaneum / Pompeii as Reported in Foreign Press (1904-2002). [Reform of the Min. Pub. Inst.] - "Prod For Italy's Arts Watchdog." The Times, Feb. 7, 1964, p. 10.
This photo relates to my travel blog at http://www.heatheronhertravels.com/a-cycle-in-the-turia-gardens-in-valencia/
Restaurants
This photo is licensed under Creative commons for use including commercial on condition that you link back to or credit http://www.heatheronhertravels.com/.
See my profile for more detail.
Warning relating to previous post... Aha!
"If you are found in possession of cannabis you will be arrested"
www.flickr.com/photos/stefan-szczelkun/182698408/
(replaces an earlier photo of a b/w photocopy of the same notice)
Images relate to the pandemic, others are portraits of famous people (Keanu Reeves!) while the remainder reflect the student's interest in Banksy, manga cartoons or interpretations of different songs.
You are thinking the quote relates to the global economic downturn occurring all around us - it’s actually for a golf industry keynote today!
But it actually relates to both! (My wife thinks the rhyming is kind of hokey. I’m going to run with it anyways!) Later this morning, I’ll be on stage with an opening keynote for the Canadian Golf Superintendents Association of Canada, with a talk on the growth opportunities in the world of golf.
I suspect this might be the last stage keynotes for a bit of time as the global event industry unwinds as a result of the rapid spread of Covid-19, the related economic changes that are underway, and a new era of business uncertainty.
With that in mind, I will be spending my Tuesday in my home broadcast studio, getting it ready for a new era of video leadership keynotes. Stay tuned!
What’s my message? In a time of uncertainty, you’ve got to move quickly into the next phase with the downturn: getting beyond shock and denial and anger of the last two weeks — into acceptance!
The golf industry message today? The same!
Part of my message for these folks - and my message for previous keynotes for the PGA of America & others in the global golf industry - is that in order to innovate within the world of golf, we’ve got to move beyond looking at the doom and gloom stories: courses shutting down, declining participation numbers, less interest by mobile obsessed millennials in a 4-5 hour game.
Stay focused on those stories & you come away convinced there is no future for the sport.
Or … focus on innovation, change, adapting!
Innovations like TopGolf! Webcam’s on par-3’s for that elusive hole-in-one. Using social media as a means to attract parents of young children into the game. Experimenting with new hyper-connected golf clubs for swing analysis and more.
There are lots of opportunities for growth!
The world has changed in a big way - so get moving!
View on Instagram ift.tt/2Te8oPd
Debate sobre a MP 651 no Senado Federal cujo o relator é o dep. Newton Lima (PT-SP)
Brasília, 02/set/2014
Foto:Gustavo Bezerra
Relating helps you develop a very sensitive, even telepathic resonance with your surroundings. This opens up your intuition. Relating begins from an attitude of not knowing and stays open to perceiving changes and new possibilities as they unfold.
From the book "Getting Real"
SB1082 (Relating to Transportation of School Children) simplifies Section 302A-406, Hawaii Revised Statutes. The bill allows for more flexibility by the BOE and DOE regarding contract requirements. This measure will provide the DOE with a tool to control costs of school bus transportation by removing statutory requirements related to school bus procurement.
SB1083 (Relating to Transportation of School Children) exempts contracts for transportation for school services from Section 103-55, Hawaii Revised Statutes. Under the provisions of this bill, the DOE will not need to require school bus contractors to certify that they pay same wages as public officers and employees. The bill removes the statutory requirements related to school bus procurement.
Information relating to the statue of Queen Victoria outside the Queen Victoria Building in Sydney.
The site of the Queen Victoria Building was the location of the George Street Markets, and was selected for the construction of a grand government building. Architect George McRae designed the QVB in the ornate Romanesque Revival style with the express purpose of employing a great number of skilled craftsmen who were out of work due to a severe recession. The building was completed in 1898 and named the Queen Victoria Building after the monarch.
The completed building included coffee shops, showrooms and a concert hall. It provided a business environment for tradesmen such as tailors, mercers, hairdressers, and florists. The concert hall was later changed to a municipal library and the building was partitioned into small offices for Sydney City Council. The building steadily deteriorated and in 1959 was threatened with demolition. It was restored between 1984 and 1986 by Ipoh Ltd at a cost of $86 million, under the terms of a 99-year lease from the City Council and now contains mostly upmarket boutiques and "brand-name" shops.
This bronze statue of Queen Victoria, located on the forecourt, was originally located in front of the Irish Parliament in Dublin until 1947. It was given to the people of Sydney as a gift from the people of Ireland and unveiled in 1987.
Relates to UNDP-supported GCF-funded project 'Strengthening the Resilience of Smallholder Farmers in the Dry Zone to Climate Variability and Extreme Events' (known locally as CRIWMP)
Resident Representative's field visit, Feb 2023. Credit: UNDP Sri Lanka
Postcard
The Fay Thomas Collection includes family archives relating to the Thomas family. Moses Thomas (1825-1878) was a significant figure in the history of the area now known as the City of Whittlesea, Victoria, Australia. Thomas and Ann and their family lived at "Mayfield", Mernda, Victoria.
Miss Lily Thomas (1871-1946), Thomas and Ann’s fourth daughter lived there all her life. She collected postcards which her family and friends sent her on a very regular basis. It was an easy and enjoyable way to keep in touch. Production of postcards blossomed in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Lily’s collection encompasses the so-called Golden Age (1890-1915) with many postmarked 1906-1907. Some were sent to other members of the family.
The collection document the natural landscape as well as the built environment—buildings, gardens, parks, and tourist sites. Topographical Postcards showing street scenes and general views from Australian and international locations, some of which are artistic views. Popular postcard manufacturers such as Tuck’s Postcards are included in the collection.
Decorative cards, many embellished with floral motives (as a nod to the receiver Lily?) and embossing. Greeting cards are common for Christmas, New Year, Easter and of course birthdays.
Regular senders can be identified from Kyneton and the Great Ocean Road area, Victoria and there is a siginifant collection from Scotland (but not sent from there).
YPRL hold digital copies of the Papers of the Moses Thomas Family held at State Library Victoria
Copyright for these images is Public domain but a credit to the Fay Thomas Collection and YPRL would be appreciated.
Enquiries: Yarra Plenty Regional Library
.
Relates to a site review on The Abyss (my Stumbleupon blog). Menu of posts on said blog can be found on this page.
.
If you’ve a sweet tooth, you would relate to that endless guilt trips that we have while munching our favorite sweet! Now, let’s face it, how-much-so-ever we try, we are never able to forbid ourselves from gobbling on sweet delicacies. But what if we tell you that there are some healthier ways to satisfy that sweet craving post meal.
Just swap your regular sweets with these healthy snacks and notice the difference: goo.gl/s6dJ22
The Problems Relating to the Management & Excavations of the Archaeological Ruins of Herculaneum / Pompeii as Reported in Foreign Press (1904-2002). [Prof. Amedeo Maiuri - War Damage] "Naples preserved Most of its Art." The N. Y. Times, Oct. 7, 1943. p. 5 [2/2].
Just wanted to relate to you all how important it is in life to cherish every moment God lets you live with your loved ones. For two weeks my father had asked me to take him to a special place he wanted to eat lunch and taste the shrimp in that area. At 81, and in a fairly good health after his last stroke, my father wanted to eat shrimp by the bay. I was busy, doing my every day things and took me two weeks to take him. Once there my father told me the story why he wanted to go to that special place. When he was very young, my grandfather had a factory in the city and shipped his goods all thru the country from that special shipping port. They lived close by and he remembered dearly those moments when his father used to take him there (fishers market down town) and he ate those same shrimps over 70 years ago. He was so happy there, he enjoyed every moment, ate slowly and remembered grandma and grandpa who have longed passed away. He felt close to them and just lived the moment second by second every bite he took was just like being there again 70 years before.
I write this with the deepest pain in my heart, so bad it hearts deeply, as I felt God was telling me he is getting ready to reunite my Dad with my grand parents, let him live again but now forever, those unforgettable moments he carries in his heart for all his life, let him have a well deserved peace and tranquility he has more than earned thru his 80 years of being the best Dad anyone can have, the most amazing example of a brave man, who never gave up to give us all the best any one can give and get.
As I sit here praying to God he lets me reimburse my Dad for all he has given us, I wanted to make it public, and ask any of you out there to take one minute and ask God to keep him with us for as much as he wishes so we can all enjoy him for the last days, months o years of his life he has left. We certainly can’t change the past but can absolutely change the future. God I made my deepest desire to you public in my most sincere hope you hear us all and have mercy upon us. God Bless you all.
#love #lovequotes #quotes #tumblr #sadquotes #sad #quote #grunge #life #lovequote #gay #lifequotes #softgrunge #indie #funnyquotes #follow4follow #depressed #bi #tumblrquotes #ana #depressedquotes #crushquotes #lanadelrey #followforfollow #relatable #palegrunge #arianagrande #follow #relationship #depression - i_been_icey
Dear Mouschi,
I'm feeling disturbed and tormented because relating to people is hard for me. On many more than one occasion I have found myself experiencing the worst type of feeling. Bitterness, nearly hate. I feel this, I think, not because I don't love...but because I have a lack of understanding. Ok, not even a lack of understanding, but an impassivity that makes me play dead and not try to comprehend them. Each and every one of us carry our own dictionaries. Your picture of a house will probably be different from my picture of a house. When I'll ask you to look at my house, you'll say to yourself that its not a house, its a bungalow. If you are like myself, you probably will not want to hurt my feelings, telling me that my house is a bungalow. Before we know it, the misunderstanding starts off and we are arguing over the difference between a poppy and a violet. We're always forgetting that a blossom is still a blossom and a home is either a house, a bungalow or anywhere I can rest my corpse at night.
Everything I've ever done, is everything I ever know. I just keep doing it over and over and over.
My biggest struggle is to find an equilibrium between living in truth of myself and my integrity and managing to make a compromise for love. When I will give birth and become a mother is when I think I'll manage to give everything. I wish I didn't find it so hard to show people that I care. If I care it means that I can also hurt. I don't want them to know that I can hurt because then they will start hurting me too. My pathetic attempts at trying to protect my dear ones only causes them to hurt me more.
Perhaps I shouldn't try and protect others from feeling after all. I'm learning that one of the most important things in our lives is to feel. I'll find it hard to be unpretended.
Despite all said this morning, one of my favourite things about you so far and what I very much envy is how you can express yourself so candidly and be so brutaly honest.
I need to sleeeeeeep...
Deputado Arthur Maia (PPS-BA), relator da reforma da Previdência Social na Câmara dos Deputados.
Brasília (DF) 25.01.2018 - Foto: José Paulo Lacerda
The first of the several buildings I wanted to take a close look at was the Museo Soumaya. I didn't actually go inside - I tend to not hit museums unless it's raining, but I did stare at the exterior for quite a bit.
Postcard
The Fay Thomas Collection includes family archives relating to the Thomas family. Moses Thomas (1825-1878) was a significant figure in the history of the area now known as the City of Whittlesea, Victoria, Australia. Thomas and Ann and their family lived at "Mayfield", Mernda, Victoria.
Miss Lily Thomas (1871-1946), Thomas and Ann’s fourth daughter lived there all her life. She collected postcards which her family and friends sent her on a very regular basis. It was an easy and enjoyable way to keep in touch. Production of postcards blossomed in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Lily’s collection encompasses the so-called Golden Age (1890-1915) with many postmarked 1906-1907. Some were sent to other members of the family.
The collection document the natural landscape as well as the built environment—buildings, gardens, parks, and tourist sites. Topographical Postcards showing street scenes and general views from Australian and international locations, some of which are artistic views. Popular postcard manufacturers such as Tuck’s Postcards are included in the collection.
Decorative cards, many embellished with floral motives (as a nod to the receiver Lily?) and embossing. Greeting cards are common for Christmas, New Year, Easter and of course birthdays.
Regular senders can be identified from Kyneton and the Great Ocean Road area, Victoria and there is a siginifant collection from Scotland (but not sent from there).
YPRL hold digital copies of the Papers of the Moses Thomas Family held at State Library Victoria
Copyright for these images is Public domain but a credit to the Fay Thomas Collection and YPRL would be appreciated.
Enquiries: Yarra Plenty Regional Library
Brasília 28/03/2017 Relator da reforma política na câmara, Vicente Cândido, durante entrevista para agência PT.
Foto: Lula Marques/Agência PT
Something that surfaced during our discussion with Tortie relates to outsourcing. She reflecting that doing this in England can be difficult for reasons above and beyond the cost of labour. At the risk of generalising, we might say this stems for a broad dislike of being told what to do. There is a strong commitment to experimenting in English culture and this has pros and cons. Whether you call this 'eccentric' or something else, it's good for cultural cachet but not for other things, like reproducing complex processes in a consistent way.
This cultural difference also came up in the talk by Andreas Lang (of public works) in the second cycle tour. Only for Andreas, the drive to experiment wired into the English DNA is a real boon. In Ol' Blighty, laws are based on precedence. This means there's scope for trying them out and if they don't work, finding a better way. Its' about being pragmatic and ensuring things are fit for purpose. When it comes to legal structures, this seems different than in Lang's native Germany, where laws are prescribed and the creative part comes in figuring how to follow them.
Go to www.tortiehoare.co.uk to see more of Tortie's classic contemporary designs.
Caption by Marsha Bradfield based on an audio recording of the session - coming soon to a website near you.
***************************************************************************************
We visited Tortie Haore at Clements Yard/Pullens Yard on the first Creative Practice Cycle Tour, The Good, the Bad & the Ugly, 16th June 2014.
Curated by Marsha Bradfield and Claire Heafford and funded by The University of the Arts London
Image from 'Historical collections of Virginia ... relating to its history and antiquities; together with geographical and statistical descriptions. To which is appended an historical and descriptive sketch of the District of Columbia', 001748053
Author: HOWE, Henry.
Page: 213
Year: 1845
Place: Charleston, S.C
Publisher:
Following the link above will take you to the British Library's integrated catalogue. You will be able to download a PDF of the book this image is taken from, as well as view the pages up close with the 'itemViewer'. Click on the 'related items' to search for the electronic version of this work.
Postcard
The Fay Thomas Collection includes family archives relating to the Thomas family. Moses Thomas (1825-1878) was a significant figure in the history of the area now known as the City of Whittlesea, Victoria, Australia. Thomas and Ann and their family lived at "Mayfield", Mernda, Victoria.
Miss Lily Thomas (1871-1946), Thomas and Ann’s fourth daughter lived there all her life. She collected postcards which her family and friends sent her on a very regular basis. It was an easy and enjoyable way to keep in touch. Production of postcards blossomed in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Lily’s collection encompasses the so-called Golden Age (1890-1915) with many postmarked 1906-1907. Some were sent to other members of the family.
The collection document the natural landscape as well as the built environment—buildings, gardens, parks, and tourist sites. Topographical Postcards showing street scenes and general views from Australian and international locations, some of which are artistic views. Popular postcard manufacturers such as Tuck’s Postcards are included in the collection.
Decorative cards, many embellished with floral motives (as a nod to the receiver Lily?) and embossing. Greeting cards are common for Christmas, New Year, Easter and of course birthdays.
Regular senders can be identified from Kyneton and the Great Ocean Road area, Victoria and there is a siginifant collection from Scotland (but not sent from there).
YPRL hold digital copies of the Papers of the Moses Thomas Family held at State Library Victoria
Copyright for these images is Public domain but a credit to the Fay Thomas Collection and YPRL would be appreciated.
Enquiries: Yarra Plenty Regional Library
Closest I've gotten to a 'solution' so far.
At the very least, if 'SINNER', 'TERROR', and 'RELATE' are correct, you can only have Heather or Midge forming 'TERROR' - as otherwise you wouldn't be able to form 'RELATE' or 'SINNER'
Of course, that does nothing for the issues on the other side of the hexagon since there arent any good words starting with ATI, ONS or HIP with any of the letters we have.
This is also assuming I have these faces correct.
Please can everyone buy my friend Adam Whitener’s books, Werewolves Of Bristol Manor and Wrath Of The Wendigo which are part of his growing series The Chronicles Of Crispin Lipton and contain my favourite character ever Eden Lambert. He has spent many years working extremely hard into these books and both are wonderful. I loved both so much I read book one within a few days which is extremely unusual for me despite the fact I love books and reading because I like to take my time reading a book especially if it’s my first time reading it or if it’s one of my favourites, the second book took me a bit longer to read due time having a lot going on at the time, otherwise I would have read it equally as quickly as I did the first book. Although I wanted to savour these books , they were both so good that I couldn’t stop reading them. The combination of an engaging and original storyline, relatable and interesting characters , some with with very unique names, beautiful friendships, suspense and more make for an incredible read for both books, I promise you won’t be disappointed.
I have been questioned many times about the various stages involved in the metamorphosis of the
Black Swallowtail Butterfly (Papilio polyxenes). Although not scientific data, I can relate my experiences as I witnessed them.
The host plant for Black Swallowtails is likely to be any of the carrot family such as dill, parsley, fennell and others.
The adult female lays her fertilized eggs (yellow in color) on the host plant and the next generation begins.
One instar after another feeds gregariously on the host plant, shedding it's skin to allow room for growth of
the next instar (four total I believe), until the full grown caterpillar is ready to enter the chrysalis stage.
At this point in the wild, the full grown caterpillar seems to disappear never to be seen again. I confess, I have
never found a BS chrysalis in the wild. I really have no idea where they go but I suspect nearby weedy vegetation where
they can string up and morph into a chrysalis. Others have told me they find them in the garden or attached to a foundation etc.
If you wish to watch the mystery of metamorphosis unfold, you may want to collect the caterpillar when it is in the last instar
and before the birds make a feast of it. I fashioned a 10 gallon fish tank into a rearing chamber using a small window screen
to enclose the open side and still allow airflow through it. Keep fresh host plant readily available for the caterpillar as
it continues it's journey to a butterfly. I place small bare branches, 8-9 inches in length and about the same
girth as a pencil, propped up in the corners to provide a stable place for the cat to "string up". Once it has strung up,
it sheds it's skin for the final time and appears in the pupa stage. Inside that chrysalis during the next 2-3 weeks,
a whole new life is created, the adult butterfly.
I have found that the chrysalis changes to a darker color just before the adult ecloses. This may not always be the case.
Even the colors and pattern of the wings may be visible through the now thinning shell. As eclosing time nears, you will
want to watch it closely as this happens fairly quickly.
There was once a man who noticed a beautifully woven
cocoon on a tree outside his home. He carefully watched
the cocoon every day in order to catch the first glimpse
of the beautiful butterfly he knew would emerge. Finally,
one day he saw a tiny hole in the cocoon which grew quickly
as the hours passed. He sat watching the butterfly break
her way out of the cocoon. However, suddenly he noticed
that it seemed the butterfly had stopped making progress.
The hole did not get any larger and the butterfly seemed
to be stuck. The cocoon was bouncing up and down on the
branch as the butterfly tried to squeeze herself, unsuccessfully,
through the hole she had created.
The man watched in dismay as it seemed his butterfly would
not be able to emerge. Finally, he went inside, took a small
pair of scissors, and carefully cut the cocoon, allowing the
butterfly to emerge easily. However, the butterfly immediately
dropped to the ground instead of soaring gracefully
into the sky as he imagined she would.
The man noticed that the butterfly’s stomach was swollen
and distended but her wings were small and shriveled, explaining
her inability to fly. He assumed that after some
time, the stomach would shrink and the wings would expand,
and she would fly in her fullest glory. However, this
was never to be.
Relates to UNDP-supported GCF-funded project 'Strengthening the Resilience of Smallholder Farmers in the Dry Zone to Climate Variability and Extreme Events' (known locally as CRIWMP)
Resident Representative's field visit, Feb 2023. Credit: UNDP Sri Lanka
28 - coins relating to George Washington. Some of the coins in this collection date back to the 1780s, while one is a 1960 restrike. One interesting specimen is a 1795 Washington grate Halfpenny, which was minted and used in Britain at the time. Grate halfpennies such as this one were minted as a part of a promotion for a fireplace grate manufacturing company. Another pair of interesting specimens are the North Wales Halfpennies. These halfpennies were minted in Birmingham as "evasion tokens", which were basically legal conterfeits. Because counterfeiting in Britain was only illegal for Regal Coinage, counterfeiters could legally produce facsimiles of other coinage as "tokens" which would then be used in place of actual currency. Gift of the Estate of Charles Lark Jr. Images are available at www.flickr.com/photos/scrc/5446172942/. Located in T&E S6 SS2, Box 1. Mss 1984.042.J1-J28
See scrc.swem.wm.edu/index.php?p=collections/controlcard&... for more information about items in the Manuscripts Artifact Collection.
From the collections of the Special Collections Research Center, Earl Gregg Swem Library at the College of William and Mary.