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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
Image from 'A Lytell Geste of Robin Hode, with other ancient & modern ballads and songs relating to this celebrated yeoman. To which is prefixed his history and character, grounded upon other documents than those made use of by ... “Mister Ritson.” Edited by J. M. Gutch', 001726444
Author: HOOD, Robin.
Volume: 01
Page: 9
Year: 1847
Place: London
Publisher: Longman, Brown, Green & Longmans
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.
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Relates to a site review on The Abyss (my Stumbleupon blog). Menu of posts on said blog can be found on this page.
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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.
On #GivingTuesday 2015, the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History launched the Philanthropy Initiative, a long-term project to collect, research, document, and exhibit materials relating to the history and impact of American philanthropy. So we decided to ask our visitors: How do you give your time, talent, expertise, and funding? What inspires you to give?
Share photos of your giving with us and they may be selected for display in our 2016 exhibition on American philanthropy: s.si.edu/GivingPics
Some of you might relate, some may not. The internet has changed a lot of things. But some things haven't. In the Networking and Direct Sales industry there is a stygma. It is from the improper spamming and pitching in groups, which people get added without consent to the messages in people's inboxes and messenger chats. There are plenty resources to learn and train how to network and expand, and also to generate sales. But nothing takes place of connecting and building a relationship with people you meet regardless of business model. I've written about this in my own blog. I hope you find it of benefit, or maybe you know someone who could learn from it. Have a great day! -Rich
#GoPro #workfromhome #homebusiness #networkmarketingpro #internetmarketing #attractionmarketing #itworksanditduplicates #wahm #success #facebookmarketing #directsales #entrepreneur #instaleads #follow4follow
#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...
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
Deputado Arthur Maia (PPS-BA), relator da reforma da Previdência Social na Câmara dos Deputados.
Brasília (DF) 25.01.2018 - Foto: José Paulo Lacerda
All these pictures relate to my blog for Gardeners World Magazine
while you are at it, try my other blog
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.
Sad Love Quotes :
QUOTATION – Image :
Quotes Of the day – Life Quote
Daily Inspirational and relatable quote pictures!
Sharing is Caring
- #Love
quotestime.net/sad-love-quotes-daily-inspirational-and-re...
The Problems relating to the Management & Excavations of the Archaeological Ruins of Herculaneum / Pompeii during the 20th / 21st century as reported in Foreign Press (1904-2002). "Restoration of Pompeii (...) Earthquake Damage," The Times, Sep. 4. 1981, p. 8.
Brasília 28/03/2017 Relator da reforma política na câmara, Vicente Cândido, durante entrevista para agência PT.
Foto: Lula Marques/Agência PT
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...
Statement of payment relating to the bill issued by the Union Pacific system to the Grass Creek Terminal Railway Co. for two carloads of track materials to be used in constructing a spur line from the Park City Branch to a coal mine. Track materials are used narrow gauge from the Kansas Central and Union Pacific.
This item was loaned by Jason Sanford of Western Railroad Americana Antiques from his personal collection to the Western Crossroads Railway Museum for digitization.
In 1930,a London Naval Treaty was evolved relating to Submarine warfare,to which Germany agreed in 1935.
The rules stipulated that Merchant ships were not to be sunk without warning and not without the previous removal of passengers and crew
U.30 Commanded by 25 year old Lieutenant Fritz-Julius Lemp had received order to proceed with hostilities at Noon on September 3rd 1939.
The S.S.'Athenia' of 13,581 Tons operated by Anchor-Donaldson Ltd. carrying 1,400 passengers amongst which were 292 US citizens.
The US State Department sent a protest to Germany strongly condemning this action. Strange that the first victim at sea was an unarmed Passenger ship yet it wasn't to be the last.
Poster relating to the temporary closure of Marktgasse for reconstruction from April - September 2013. This major reconstruction severed the tram lines and trolleybus route 12.
Thapusam, a religious festival held in Kuala Lumpur has been a key interest of mine and thus I have visited several times over the years. This image depicts a man who is participating in the 17km pilgrimage that is made from the center of the city to the temple.
This image contains all the significant elements that would expect to find at this festival. These includes the cigar shaped substance that the man is smoking, which has an extremely memorable smell. Alongside is the traditional dress, but he also has a long grown thumb which has various representations amongst different cultures, relating to wealth and or luck.
The image also shows in a dignified way, his dedication to the fesival and how entranced he is by the subtance and the music being played.
Being an observer at this festival has been a truely unique experiance, one that can only be had in Malaysia. But also in terms of the evironment and the intense practices that occur.
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
The Problems Relating to the Management & Excavations of the Archaeological Ruins of Herculaneum / Pompeii as Reported in Foreign Press (1904-2002). "Prof. A. Maiuri - Roman Herculaneum Rises from Its Mud." Nov. 29, 1931. p. XX6. [1/3].
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
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.
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 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.
Relates to Leeds TOTW: Comfort
Standing and waiting for trains can be a dull process. These teenagers take advantage of a dry floor to await the train's arrival at their comfortable leisure!
Here the benefits of having an 8 Meg Fuji Camera are priceless. This image was taken over 40 yards away in the neighbouring NCP. I didn't even need to venture by the platforms.
From: creativefeel.co.za/2018/05/chris-soal-orbits-of-relating/
“We think we are liberated by individualism, but in reality we’ve given up so much power. People are so caught up in the nuances of their own personal realm that they’ve lost real civic relationships with one another. We’ve lost that collective power.” – Andrea Zittel
Chris Soal’s artistic practice, is initially concerned with materiality. Specifically thus far, the materiality of objects which are available en mass and utilised daily by millions of people globally and then disposed of. These objects (toothpicks and bottle tops for example) are not only easily attainable, but are so common that they have become invisible to our eyes. They are manufactured for a single utilitarian purpose and are then discarded, once having served their purpose. They hold no value beyond that moment. These objects are manufactured to become debris. They exist on the margins of human existence, and they are indicators of a capitalist system that has a hierarchy of value, in relation to objects, materials, and even people. The choice to use these marginal materials was not immediate however, as the artist himself was entrapped by these very systems of value which he seeks to critique, and initially dismissed toothpicks and bottle tops as “unworthy” material for an artwork.
Chris Soal Soal is interested in the knowledges which are transmitted when bodies come into contact with one another. This is where he sees aesthetic judgment residing; in the world of things, not merely in concepts, emerging as the result of physical experience. It is due to this, that he consciously foregrounds the use of material in the artwork, with the intention of producing physical sensation. The viewer is integral and foremost in mind as the artist engages with the materials. For this body of work, it is the formal dynamism produced by the arrangement and use of toothpicks as a medium, which engages the viewer on a physical level, encouraging a visceral reaction; in some it urges them to recoil. On the other end of the spectrum, some viewers are overcome with a desire to touch the work.
The singular becomes plural. And it is in this plurality that the material begins to transcend itself. It is then in the moment of unveiling, the moment where the object is not only revealed but renewed for the viewer, that the value of it is altered, and thus our understanding of its value in relation to ourselves, changes. In this way the work gains political currency, and the titles become triggers for further contemplation. The artworks utilise form and materiality to reiterate that the viewer is a member of the “polis,” the citizenry; a part of a community.
Titles such as Orbits of relating, A delight in knowing and being known, and Little moments that remind us of ourselves, suggest a communal relating through the use of plural pronouns, read in the voice of the viewer, the first person. This not only suggests the concept of relational collectivity between viewers in the exhibition space, but also allows the artworks to become relatable themselves, by assuming anthropomorphic qualities. The quote by artist Andrea Zittel, whilst only discovered towards the end of the process, encapsulated and vocalised the artist’s desire that the work speak to a common human experience, a reminder which is sorely needed in a global society becoming seemingly evermore fractured.
This exhibition marks Chris Soal’s first solo body of work, to be publicly exhibited, since his graduation show at Wits Art Museum in 2017. It combines the artist’s previous use of bottle tops, as well as pointing into his sporadic forays into cement and rebar as materials, whilst foregrounding this body of work as a material exploration of toothpicks through sculptures, installations, drawing and three-dimensional wall pieces.
Chris Soal was born in South Africa in 1994. He graduated from the University of Witwatersrand with a Bachelor’s in Fine Art (Honours) in 2017. Today he lives and works in Johannesburg. He was awarded the Sculpture category and Overall Award at the PPC Imaginarium in 2018. He was selected as a finalist for the Cassirer Welz Award in 2017, the Wits Young Artist Award in 2016 and 2017, The SA Taxi Art Award in 2016 and the Thami Mnyele Award in 2015. Chris Soal was awarded a residency in 2018 by the South African Foundation for Contemporary Art. This residency was held in Knysna at Entabeni Farm for a duration of six weeks alongside fellow South African artist, Minnette Vari. He has exhibited in group shows at institutions such as Aeroplastics Contemporary in Brussels (2017), Wits Art Museum (2017), Fried Contemporary (2017), Museum of African Design (2016), Assemblage (2016), No End Contemporary (2017, 2018) and Galerie Noko (2016). Chris regularly exhibits at art fairs around Europe with Clifton Boulder Gallery.
Alongside his own artistic practice Chris works as a cinematographer at the Centre for the Less Good Idea, founded by South African-born, internationally renowned artist William Kentridge, and as a contributing writer on art and culture for Bubblegum Club.
Soal’s exhibition Orbits Of Relating will show from 24 May – 23 June 2018 at No End Contemporary Art Space | 60 4th Ave Linden, Johannesburg.
Image from 'A Lytell Geste of Robin Hode, with other ancient & modern ballads and songs relating to this celebrated yeoman. To which is prefixed his history and character, grounded upon other documents than those made use of by ... “Mister Ritson.” Edited by J. M. Gutch', 001726444
Author: HOOD, Robin.
Volume: 02
Page: 479
Year: 1847
Place: London
Publisher: Longman, Brown, Green & Longmans
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.
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.