View allAll Photos Tagged Safire

As owner of the world's largest collection, and with thanks to scores of readers, let me pass along a bunch of these never-say-neverisms:

 

• Use the semicolon properly, always use it where it is appropriate; and never where it isn’t.

• Reserve the apostrophe for it’s proper use and omit it when its not needed.

• Proofread carefully to see if you any words out.

• Avoid commas, that are not necessary.

• And don’t start a sentence with a conjunction.

• If any word is improper at the end of a sentence, a linking verb is. :-)

William Safire

 

HGGT!!

 

tricyrtis, hybrid toad lily, 'Imperial Banner', j c raulston arboretum, ncsu, Raleigh, north carolina

ANDREW HAYDON PARK

Near St. Tropez

Sintiklia NEWS (@TLC):

..:: Sintiklia - Hair Safire

 

LM: maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Sintiklia/129/123/22

_______//________//______

VARONIS NEWS:

..:: VARONIS - Coven (Hat , Choker, Top and Photoboth)

_______//________//______

Boataom Skin

  

Old Barn Series, Ottawa, Canada

Model 1

>Head: CATWA HEAD Catya

>Body: Maitreya Lara Mesh Body

>Skin: Essences - Nyx

>Highlighter: . MILA . Metallic Highlighter

>Eye Makeup: L'Etre - Rose eyeshadows

>Eyes And Eyelashes: Besom

>Lipstick: ** [PUMEC] - Lipstick Pack #6

>Nails: #EMPIRE - Coffin Nails - Medium

>Rings: **RE** Elektra Nails & Rings Set

>Hair: TRUTH Oksana - Blonde @ Uber

 

Model 2

>Head: CATWA HEAD Candy

>Body: Maitreya Lara Mesh Body

>Hair: TRUTH Apple - Brunette @ Uber (Past Event)

>Choker: {le fil casse} Whitney Collection Bow Choker Exclusive

 

>Armlets: amias - SANA

@ The Trunk Show

amias Mainstore

amias MarketPlace Store

 

>Dres 1: - Safira - Reich

@ Fameshed Event

>Outfit 2: - Safira - Kylie Swimsuit - Free (Group Gift)

Safira Mainstore

Safira MarketPlace Store

 

>Chair: Mistress Chair - ADULT

@ Swank (Past Event)

Aphrodite Mainstore

Aphrodite MarketPlace Store

 

>Sex Toys: !! Follow US !! Valentine heart sex game

>Background: SAYO Sin - Manic Reverie - Bad Habits COMMON (Epiphany Gacha)

Where the Sea meets the Sky in perfect peaceful calm

she grew up with salt on her lips, the ocean breeze through her hair, painting safire dreams on every corner she passed. Morning ripples shaped her words into meaning, and the dark freezing storms were her starless nighttime.

 

Sometimes there is such a thing as belonging, and she always belonged to the ocean.

Miami Beach Series

R-99 da Força Aérea Brasileira

This city, my immortal living place.

How charming with glowing lights and Safire sky

View On Black

Oh how I’ve learned so much

About my city

About my people

 

When we move fast, running from life

when we are slow to observe life

 

The way we say hello

If we say hello!

 

When we are friendly and have hope

or when we frown with our hopes lost

 

This is my city, my immortal living place

Taken with Nikon 1

Lauderhill, officially the City of Lauderhill, is a city in Broward County, Florida, United States. As of the 2010 United States Census, the city's population was 66,887. It is a principal city of the Fort Lauderdale metropolitan area, which was home to an estimated 6,012,331 people in 2015.

 

The development that eventually came to be known as Lauderhill was original to be named "Sunnydale", but William Safire, a friend of the developer, Herbert Sadkin, convinced him to change his mind. Safire felt that "Sunnydale" sounded like a neighborhood in Brooklyn. Sadkin said there were no hills in the new town, to which Safire replied, "There are probably no dales in Lauderdale, either!" From that discussion, the name "Lauderhill" was coined. The development eventually grew to become Lauderhill, the city.

 

Lauderhill was one of two developments (the other in New York) that began largely as off-the-shelf architectural designs that had been available to the public at Macy's department store. The homes, which had been designed by Andrew Geller, had originally been on display at the "Typical American Houses" at the American Exhibition in Moscow. Following a group of approximately 200 of the homes constructed in Montauk, New York in 1963 and 1964, the same developer, Herbert Sadkin of the New York-based All-State Properties reprised his success in New York, building a series of similar homes in Florida, calling the development Lauderhill.

 

In 2003, the New York Times described the Macy's homes:

 

The package deal included a 730- to a 1,200-square-foot house on a 75-by-100-foot lot, as well as state-of-the-art appliances, furniture, housewares, and everything else a family would need for a weekend in the sun, including toothbrushes and toilet paper. The cost was roughly $13,000 to $17,000.

 

The Inverrary Country Club was built in 1970, and two years later, its East golf course became home to the new Jackie Gleason Inverrary Classic on the PGA Tour, which is hosted through 1983. Gleason himself built his final home on the golf course.

 

Up until the late 1980s-early 1990s, Lauderhill was mostly a retirement community for the Jewish community and the second home for snowbirds (especially in the Inverrary neighborhood). It is now home to mostly Jamaicans, West Indians, and African Americans, but it still has a sizeable white, Jewish, and Hispanic population in the Northwest section and in the Inverrary neighborhood, located north of Oakland Park Boulevard and east of University Drive.

  

Credit for the data above is given to the following websites:

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lauderhill,_Florida

www.lauderhill-fl.gov/

bcpa.net/RecInfo.asp?URL_Folio=494123090020

 

© All Rights Reserved - you may not use this image in any form without my prior permission.

Lauderhill, officially the City of Lauderhill, is a city in Broward County, Florida, United States. As of the 2010 United States Census, the city's population was 66,887. It is a principal city of the Fort Lauderdale metropolitan area, which was home to an estimated 6,012,331 people in 2015.

 

The development that eventually came to be known as Lauderhill was original to be named "Sunnydale", but William Safire, a friend of the developer, Herbert Sadkin, convinced him to change his mind. Safire felt that "Sunnydale" sounded like a neighborhood in Brooklyn. Sadkin said there were no hills in the new town, to which Safire replied, "There are probably no dales in Lauderdale, either!" From that discussion, the name "Lauderhill" was coined. The development eventually grew to become Lauderhill, the city.

 

Lauderhill was one of two developments (the other in New York) that began largely as off-the-shelf architectural designs that had been available to the public at Macy's department store. The homes, which had been designed by Andrew Geller, had originally been on display at the "Typical American Houses" at the American Exhibition in Moscow. Following a group of approximately 200 of the homes constructed in Montauk, New York in 1963 and 1964, the same developer, Herbert Sadkin of the New York-based All-State Properties reprised his success in New York, building a series of similar homes in Florida, calling the development Lauderhill.

 

In 2003, the New York Times described the Macy's homes:

 

The package deal included a 730- to a 1,200-square-foot house on a 75-by-100-foot lot, as well as state-of-the-art appliances, furniture, housewares, and everything else a family would need for a weekend in the sun, including toothbrushes and toilet paper. The cost was roughly $13,000 to $17,000.

 

The Inverrary Country Club was built in 1970, and two years later, its East golf course became home to the new Jackie Gleason Inverrary Classic on the PGA Tour, which is hosted through 1983. Gleason himself built his final home on the golf course.

 

Up until the late 1980s-early 1990s, Lauderhill was mostly a retirement community for the Jewish community and the second home for snowbirds (especially in the Inverrary neighborhood). It is now home to mostly Jamaicans, West Indians, and African Americans, but it still has a sizeable white, Jewish, and Hispanic population in the Northwest section and in the Inverrary neighborhood, located north of Oakland Park Boulevard and east of University Drive.

  

Credit for the data above is given to the following website:

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lauderhill,_Florida

www.lauderhill-fl.gov/

 

© All Rights Reserved - you may not use this image in any form without my prior permission.

Lauderhill, officially the City of Lauderhill, is a city in Broward County, Florida, United States. As of the 2010 United States Census, the city's population was 66,887. It is a principal city of the Fort Lauderdale metropolitan area, which was home to an estimated 6,012,331 people in 2015.

 

The development that eventually came to be known as Lauderhill was original to be named "Sunnydale", but William Safire, a friend of the developer, Herbert Sadkin, convinced him to change his mind. Safire felt that "Sunnydale" sounded like a neighborhood in Brooklyn. Sadkin said there were no hills in the new town, to which Safire replied, "There are probably no dales in Lauderdale, either!" From that discussion, the name "Lauderhill" was coined. The development eventually grew to become Lauderhill, the city.

 

Lauderhill was one of two developments (the other in New York) that began largely as off-the-shelf architectural designs that had been available to the public at Macy's department store. The homes, which had been designed by Andrew Geller, had originally been on display at the "Typical American Houses" at the American Exhibition in Moscow. Following a group of approximately 200 of the homes constructed in Montauk, New York in 1963 and 1964, the same developer, Herbert Sadkin of the New York-based All-State Properties reprised his success in New York, building a series of similar homes in Florida, calling the development Lauderhill.

 

In 2003, the New York Times described the Macy's homes:

 

The package deal included a 730- to a 1,200-square-foot house on a 75-by-100-foot lot, as well as state-of-the-art appliances, furniture, housewares, and everything else a family would need for a weekend in the sun, including toothbrushes and toilet paper. The cost was roughly $13,000 to $17,000.

 

The Inverrary Country Club was built in 1970, and two years later, its East golf course became home to the new Jackie Gleason Inverrary Classic on the PGA Tour, which is hosted through 1983. Gleason himself built his final home on the golf course.

 

Up until the late 1980s-early 1990s, Lauderhill was mostly a retirement community for the Jewish community and the second home for snowbirds (especially in the Inverrary neighborhood). It is now home to mostly Jamaicans, West Indians, and African Americans, but it still has a sizeable white, Jewish, and Hispanic population in the Northwest section and in the Inverrary neighborhood, located north of Oakland Park Boulevard and east of University Drive.

  

Credit for the data above is given to the following website:

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lauderhill,_Florida

www.lauderhill-fl.gov/

 

© All Rights Reserved - you may not use this image in any form without my prior permission.

Lauderhill, officially the City of Lauderhill, is a city in Broward County, Florida, United States. As of the 2010 United States Census, the city's population was 66,887. It is a principal city of the Fort Lauderdale metropolitan area, which was home to an estimated 6,012,331 people in 2015.

 

The development that eventually came to be known as Lauderhill was original to be named "Sunnydale", but William Safire, a friend of the developer, Herbert Sadkin, convinced him to change his mind. Safire felt that "Sunnydale" sounded like a neighborhood in Brooklyn. Sadkin said there were no hills in the new town, to which Safire replied, "There are probably no dales in Lauderdale, either!" From that discussion, the name "Lauderhill" was coined. The development eventually grew to become Lauderhill, the city.

 

Lauderhill was one of two developments (the other in New York) that began largely as off-the-shelf architectural designs that had been available to the public at Macy's department store. The homes, which had been designed by Andrew Geller, had originally been on display at the "Typical American Houses" at the American Exhibition in Moscow. Following a group of approximately 200 of the homes constructed in Montauk, New York in 1963 and 1964, the same developer, Herbert Sadkin of the New York-based All-State Properties reprised his success in New York, building a series of similar homes in Florida, calling the development Lauderhill.

 

In 2003, the New York Times described the Macy's homes:

 

The package deal included a 730- to a 1,200-square-foot house on a 75-by-100-foot lot, as well as state-of-the-art appliances, furniture, housewares, and everything else a family would need for a weekend in the sun, including toothbrushes and toilet paper. The cost was roughly $13,000 to $17,000.

 

The Inverrary Country Club was built in 1970, and two years later, its East golf course became home to the new Jackie Gleason Inverrary Classic on the PGA Tour, which is hosted through 1983. Gleason himself built his final home on the golf course.

 

Up until the late 1980s-early 1990s, Lauderhill was mostly a retirement community for the Jewish community and the second home for snowbirds (especially in the Inverrary neighborhood). It is now home to mostly Jamaicans, West Indians, and African Americans, but it still has a sizeable white, Jewish, and Hispanic population in the Northwest section and in the Inverrary neighborhood, located north of Oakland Park Boulevard and east of University Drive.

  

Credit for the data above is given to the following websites:

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lauderhill,_Florida

www.lauderhill-fl.gov/

bcpa.net/RecInfo.asp?URL_Folio=494123090020

 

© All Rights Reserved - you may not use this image in any form without my prior permission.

Sports mode

standing

over me

 

Heli Helikopter helicopter Hubschrauber Drehflügler whirlybird helo chopper Helicóptero Hélicoptère ヘリコプター

 

Polizei Hubschrauber

D-HBWU

owner/operator: Polizei Baden-Württemberg

callsign: Bussard 11

ICAO243DD794

locationGöppingen - Holzheim / Polizei (Rigisteige) Heliport

countryGermany

 

logo/emblem/sticker:

Polizeistern Baden-Württemberg - Emblem Stauferlöwe

Hersteller: Airbus Helicopters

 

Geschichte der BK-117:

 

Die BK-117 entstand als Kooperationsprojekt der Firmen Messerschmitt-Bölkow-Blohm (MBB) und Kawasaki Heavy Industries (KHI) aus Japan.

#

Hubschrauberstaffel der Polizei Baden-Württemberg:

Die Staffel wurde im Jahr 1965 gegründet und hatte zuerst zwei Alouette II, ab 1969 drei Hubschrauber zur Verfügung. Ab 1974 begann der Betrieb mit den Hubschraubertyp Bo 105, von diesem Modell wurde fünf Maschinen erworben. Vor allem für den Transport von Einsatzkräften (SEK) bestellte das Staatsministerium des Innern BW 1975 eine Bell 212. Neben dem Transport des SEK (Göppingen) wurde die Maschine auch für den VIP-Transport (Landesregierung BW) eingesetzt. Im Dezember 1998 kam es zu einem Unfall am Heimatstützpunkt Flughafen Stuttgart mit dem Totalverlust des Hubschraubers, deshalb wurde temporär eine gemietete Bell 412 als Ersatz eingesetzt. Ab 2001 bis 2015 waren zwei EC-155 als Transporthubschrauber im Dienst. Ab 1988 waren zusätzlich insgesamt drei BK117 im Dienst. Ab 2003 wurden sechs MD 900 Explorer und die zwei EC-155 eingesetzt.

Insgesamt hat die Polizeihubschrauberstaffel Baden-Württemberg ab 2015 sechs H145 erhalten, welche bis Ende 2016 ausgeliefert wurden. Die H145 ersetzt die zwei EC155 und sechs MD902 Explorer der Staffel.

 

Modelldaten der BK117-D3:

 

Triebwerke: 2 x Turbomeca Arriel 2E Turboshaft

Leistung: 2 x 771 shp Dauerleistung (2 x 894 shp Startleistung / 1.072 bis 1.038 shp in Single-Engine-Notbetrieb)

Leergewicht: 1.869 kg

Maximum Take-Off Weight: 3.800 kg

Gesamtnutzlast: 1.881 kg

Max. Außenlast: 1.500 kg

Ausstattung (u.a.):

 

Suchscheinwerfer (Searchlight): Trakkabeam A800 (Firma Trakka Corp /Australien)

Windenbeschläge (optional Winch mit 90m Kabellänge, 272kg Tragkraft)

Fast Roping, Rappelling and Human External Cargo Device (Firma ECMS)

Kombination FLIR + Videokamerasystem (FLIR® Systems, Typ: Star Safire 380HD)

NVG (Night Vision Goggle)

digitales Avioniksystem Helionix® mit 4-Achsen-Autopilot

EuroNav 7 / Missionsmanagement-System (Firma Euroavionics)

D-HBWU (ex: D-HCBV)

MBB-BK117

bos-fahrzeuge.info/einsatzfahrzeuge/126827/D-HBWU_cn_2004...

 

AIRBUS Helicopters BK117 D3 / H145 / EC145 T2

c/n: 20041

Baujahr: 2015 / Umbau 2021-2022 auf D3

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