View allAll Photos Tagged Scheduling,
The weather had other plans as we approached Montevideo, Uruguay. By the time we left Buenos Aires, we were a few days behind schedule.
However, by increasing the speed to over 20 knots for just the right amount of time, we made up all the lost time.
Here I have my weekly schedule set over my schedule from three months ago. As you can see, I am running back and forth less--largely since I have a "full time work" schedule, rather than a "3/4 time work + full time school" schedule.
I've been at Sitemason for almost six months and I am starting to feel quite comfortable in my work.
I feel settled in at my East Nashville home now too after a good clean of the kitchen and living room with Luke. There haven't been back-to-back weddings this month either.
This means in the recent past, I've had time to watch movies at night without worrying about other things.
I am thankful. Even if it's just a break.
Oh, and remind me not to got to college again, unless I'm rich and don't have to worry about working at the same time.
🔹🔸[000t0=Time Language, World Language, Number Language]🔸🔹
7t77=Have a nice day! 좋은 하루 보내세요!
01t01=We're best friends forever! 우린 영원한 친구!
02t02=We Go Together! 우리 함께 갑시다!
0005t=0!5=0!0=Top, Awesome 최고의
007t=Nice to meet you.
0015t=User
0009t=God bless you! 하나님의 축복이 있기를!
0t0=Amen 아멘
033t=Schedule
044t=Money
055t=Victory
066t=Textbook
77t7=Meeting
077t=Business
088t=Internet
099t=Computer
34×t=Cheer up! 힘내세요!
35×t=Best
88×t=APP 앱
99×t=Game
0t77=Global
82t82=Name Card 명함
88t8=Promise
015t=Family 👪
018t=Friend
0111×t=Dreams Come True. 꿈은 이루어진다.
0t000=TIMEnasa 타임나사
🎼🎼🎼 ✒+.×.÷/=!
※※※ (×=Multiplication sign)
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We're introducing Time Language all over the world. Time Language is the world's language consisting of numbers that anyone in the world can easily use. Time Language frees us from foreign languages. Now, there is no need for interpretation and translation. Time Language is pronounced in the language of each country and the meaning is the same. [000t0=Time Language, Copyright 1974. T.H. Kwon All Rights Reserved.] Looking forward to our interactions. Thank you. Huibok Choe, Ph.D., MBA&CMO
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••• You should google 000t0. •••
🔸🔹[The world's first smartphone, PocketBox=Smartphone, APP]🔹🔸
■ The smartphone infringed the copyright of the PocketBox.
■ I've created a PocketBox inspired by looking at the ceiling in 1978.
■ PocketBox is a creation work composed of application as well as a book composed of operating system.
■ By ignoring the copyright protection of Pocket Box works and by recklessly infringing on Author’s works, many smartphone and smart device related companies (manufacturers as well as other developers and users) have indulged in illegal use of PocketBox works without obtaining the author's permission.
☆ Do not infringe PocketBox Copyright.
☆ Do not use the same work similar to PocketBox. - If you want to use it, use it after you pay a royalty.
ㅡ PocketBox Copyright 1978. T.H. Kwon All Rights Reserved. ㅡ
🌏 TIMEnasa's Creations(Books & Works) 🌏
1. TIMEnasa 🌐
2. 000t0=Time Language, World Language, Number Language
Copyright 1974. T.H. Kwon All Rights Reserved. 🌍
3. Nti2000=IoT, Metaverse, Smart City, Smart Systems
Copyright 1978. T.H. Kwon All Rights Reserved. 🌎
4. Number Money=Digital Currency, Virtual Currency and Crypto Currency
Copyright 1969. T.H. Kwon All Rights Reserved. 💰
5. PocketBox=Smartphone, Copyright of the APP
Copyright 1978. T.H. Kwon All Rights Reserved. 📱
6. M+W=People Language 📖
7. ~ 14. TIME theory 📕
15. etc. 📡
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This template is an advanced weekly inventory scheduler with one item limitation. s-S or s-Q policies may be used to automize the process. When the parameters of the system are defined, the decision of when to order and the order size are taken automatically every week by entering the demand of the week. Weekly costs including holding cost, variable order cost, fixed order cost and backorder cost are evaluated. A report is also provided on another sheet displaying the system statistics, cost distribution and inventory-demand vs. time chart. Report can be taken up to a specified week. This template is an initial study on single item inventory and may be extended to multi-item, also including other policies like lost-sale case.
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Warwick Castle
Caesar's Tower
Standing at an impressive 44.8m tall, this is the tallest tower at the castle, and comprises of three storeys, excluding the Gaol. It was built in the 14th century and is a great example of military architecture. It has an irregular quatrefoil or cloverleaf shape and is topped by a platform with a crenellated and machicolated parapet.
If within 5 seconds of seeing this and you recognize what all these numbers and codes represent, then you are a fellow airlines nerd! Welcome to my world :D
Even though it is named Hong Kong Airlines here, at one point, I wanted my imaginary airline to be called Pioneer Air (silly name, I know).
I'm a weirdo and a nerd. No, not the gaming or Cosplay sort of nerd, but an airline nerd. I'm very fascinated by airlines operations and have a collection of airlines schedules/ timetables.
Also, when I was a teen, I would spend hours and hours developing complex but realistic flight schedules pretending that I had a fleet of airliners.
Ideally, vaccines for HPV should be administered before a child reaches their teen years. Some people are surprised by the recommended age for HPV vaccination, but it’s most effective when given at an early age. Teens and adults can also receive the vaccine, but they need more doses and it may not be as effective when administered later in life. Visit for more info: hpvhub.com/hpv-vaccine-schedule/
Rollins College professor Scott Rubarth, Ph.D. gives advice to a student about his remaining academic schedule at Rollins College. Photo: Scott Cook
Age: 17
Ethnicity: Han
Hometown: Shanghai
I called Yale one Monday night to schedule an interview with him. He was on the way home on his bike. He told me he’d call me back when he gets home.
It was a Saturday morning, I went to XuJiaHui where my friend Gracie and Yale lived. They were neighbors.
After finding my way to the Shanghai Stadium station, I saw Yale with his Nikon D90 camera.
As we were walking back to his compound, we walked the Shanghai Stadium (of course). He broke the ice by telling me who he hated the idea of knowing his three favorite singers/bands will never come to Shanghai. He named The first one would be Michael Jackson, obviously because he is no longer alive. U2, because their lyrics are too politically sensitive *cough*. Thirdly, Enimem, thanks to his usage of vulgar words, it would be a dream for him to come to China, let alone Shanghai.
I chuckled, and listened to him go on about the differences between the police cars in Shanghai and Germany.
When we got to his compound, the guards greeted him and told him it was rare of him not to bring his bike along. Later, he explained he never went to places without his bike.
During our interview, Yale told me he wished he went to an international school so that he could take the SATs and apply to universities in the United States. Yale goes to a foreign language school in Shanghai called 上海工商外国语学校.
Without a doubt, when I asked him what his hobbies were, he told me riding his bike and taking pictures with his camera. He enjoys taking pictures of sceneries and people in general. He said his photography hobby was inspired by his father.
Since he lived 5 minutes away from the Shanghai Stadium, I decided we should take pictures there. While Gracie (our mutual friend), Christie (one of the teenagers I interviewed), Yale and I were riding our bikes to the stadium, a question about why did his parents name him after a university occurred in my mind.
His father’s friend graduated from Yale University and requested the name ‘Yale’ for his friend’s baby son. His father checked the name directory to see if ‘Yale’ was a valid name or not. Harvard and Princeton weren’t, but Yale was! So he was named Yale. The other reason was it was definitely his dream to study in Yale University.
“我是到哪儿都会骑着我的自行车。”
Bradford Cathedral, or the Cathedral Church of St Peter, is an Anglican cathedral in Bradford, West Yorkshire, England, one of three co-equal cathedrals in the Diocese of Leeds alongside Ripon and Wakefield. Its site has been used for Christian worship since the 7th century, when missionaries based in Dewsbury evangelised the area. For many centuries it was the parish church of St Peter and achieved cathedral status in 1919. The cathedral is a Grade I listed building.
Background
The first church on the site was believed to have been built in Anglo-Saxon times and fell into ruin after the Norman Conquest in 1066. A second church was built around 1200. The first mention of the parish of Bradford as distinct from being part of the parish of Dewsbury appears in the register of the Archbishop of York in 1281. Alice de Lacy, widow of Edmund de Lacy, one of the descendants of Ilbert de Lacy, gave a grant to the parish of Bradford that is recorded in the register of the Archbishop Wickwayne. Around 1327, Scottish raiders burnt down most of this stone church.
During the 14th century the church was rebuilt and some of the older masonry may have been used in the reconstruction of the nave. The construction of the third church was completed in 1458. The tower in the Perpendicular style was added to the west end and finished in 1508. A clerestory was added by the end of the 15th century. Proprietary chapels were founded, on the north side of the chancel by the Leventhorpe family, and on the south by the owners of Bolling Hall. In 1854 Robert Mawer carved a new reredos in Caen stone for the church. There is a photograph of it in the church archive. This reredos was lost during the 1950s rebuild by Edward Maufe.
Originally in the Diocese of York, the church was in the Diocese of Ripon before becoming a cathedral in 1919, when the Diocese of Bradford was created; it became one of three co-equal cathedrals of the new Diocese of Leeds upon its creation on 20 April 2014.
The building was extended in the 1950s and 1960s by Edward Maufe. The east end of the cathedral is Maufe's work, as well as the two west wings which contain the Song Room and Cathedral offices. In his east end extension he reused the Morris & Co. stained glass from the old east window. There is Victorian stained glass throughout the building including at the west end, where there is a window showing women of the Bible, and stained glass in the First World War memorial window dating from 1921. The many wall monuments include a sculpture by John Flaxman.
In 1987 the nave and west end were re-ordered to accommodate a growing number of visitors. The roof panelling was cleaned and restored, and new lighting was installed. To enable flexibility of use, the Victorian pews were replaced by chairs. The nave organ was removed to give more light and space at the west end, and a Bradford Computer Organ was installed, complementing the pipe organ in the choir with loudspeakers in the nave, though this is no longer in use.
At the beginning of the 21st century, the cathedral authorities decided to develop a museum of religion in St Peter's House (built in the 19th century as Bradford's main post office). The visitor numbers were much lower than expected, and the project collapsed, leaving the cathedral in debt, from which it was discharged in 2007. St Peter's House is now owned by a South Asian arts group, Kala Sangam.
The cathedral is set in a small conservation area which includes the close to its north. The close provides modern housing for the dean and canons residentiary, the bishop's official residence, Bishopcroft, being in Heaton, approximately 3 miles (4.8 km) from the city centre.
The cathedral and its predecessors were built on the shelf of alluvial land that had formed on the outside of the bend where Bradford Beck turns north, but the town grew up on the lower ground on the other side of the beck, so the church was always just outside the centre of town. In the 19th and 20th centuries the cathedral was partly hidden from the centre by buildings, first by the post office just below it, and subsequently by the 1960s developments of Forster Square and Petergate. The latter areas were demolished in 2006, leaving the cathedral more visible than for many years prior to the completion of the Broadway Centre in 2015.
Dean and chapter
As of 21 May 2023:
Dean – Andy Bowerman (since 19 June 2022)
Canon for Intercultural Mission and the Arts – Ned Lunn (since 31 January 2023)
Minor Canon for Worship and Nurture – Pete Gunstone (since 21 May 2023)
Music
Bradford Cathedral has long been a place of music. During term-time, Choral Services are sung as follows: Sunday 10.30 am Choral Eucharist (rotates girls/adults, boys/adults or Cathedral Consort); Sunday 3:30 pm Choral Evensong (adults choir); Monday 5:30 pm Choral Evensong (girls choir); Tuesday 5:30 pm Choral Evensong (boys choir)
The boys and girls of the Choir sing as separate top lines and are drawn from as many as 20 local schools at any time. New entrants spend a couple of terms as a probationer, receiving basic training in singing and musicianship, before progressing to full membership. Full choristers have the opportunity to take up individual, free-of-charge tuition in singing, musicianship, theory or piano on a 1:1 basis each week. The lay clerks of the Choir are highly skilled volunteers, most of whom make their living outside of music. In September 2015 residential choral scholarships were introduced. The Cathedral Consort, a high standard chamber choir consisting of adult sopranos and lay clerks, completes the Choral Foundation.
In addition to the schedule above, the Choir also performs other concerts and services within and outside the diocese. Although foreign tours have been undertaken, the most recent being to Barcelona in 2010 and Bavaria in 2008, touring more recently has been within the UK, with the girls and boys each undertaking a residential tour annually, with or without the choir adults. Tours have been undertaken in recent years to Bristol, Worcester, Edinburgh and Durham.
The girls and men are involved with the annual Yorkshire Cathedrals' Girls' Choirs' Festival and hosted the Festal Evensong in March 2015. The boy choristers had not been involved with the Yorkshire Three Choirs Festival since 1981, but with the recent renaissance of an independent boys' top-line at the cathedral they, along with the lay clerks, were re-included in this annual festival from October 2015. Bradford Cathedral hosted the festival in October 2016.
In July 2012, the Choir recorded two services for the BBC Radio 2 Sunday Half Hour programme, which were broadcast in Autumn 2012, and the girls and men sang live for BBC Radio 4 Sunday Worship in December 2012. The Choir recorded a CD of Evening Canticles, including Humphrey Clucas's 'Bradford Service' in November 2013, and February 2014 saw the Choir recording two programmes of BBC Songs of Praise, airing on 2 March 2014 and Palm Sunday, 13 April 2014. Since 2015, the Choir has performed annually with the European Union Chamber Orchestra, singing Vivaldi's Gloria, Haydn's Little Organ Mass, and Schubert's Mass No. 2 in G major.
A specification of the William Hill pipe organ (1904), with later modifications by Hill, Norman & Beard (1961) and J. W. Walker (1977), can be found on the National Pipe Organ Register. A series of organ recitals takes place on many Wednesday lunchtimes throughout the year at 1.00 pm, attracting many well-known players. An Organ Appeal was launched in February 2013, aiming to raise £250,000 over several years, in order to secure the continued reliability of the instrument, as well as making possible several tonal adjustments. A. J. Carter of Wakefield and Andrew Cooper are working in conjunction to carry out this work on a phased basis over the coming years. The first phase, entailing the substantial upgrading of the console, was carried out in October 2014. The second phase, to clean, revoice and extend the Chancel (Positive) Division, was completed in the first half of 2018.
Organists and Directors of Music
John Simpson c. 1820 – 1860
Absalom Rawnsley Swaine c. 1861 – 1893
Henry Coates 1893–1939
Charles Hooper 1939–1963
Keith Vernon Rhodes 1963–1981
Geoffrey John Weaver 1982–1986
Alan Graham Horsey 1986–2002
Andrew Teague 2003–2011
Alexander Woodrow 2012–2016
Alexander Berry 2017–present
Sub Organists and Assistant Directors of Music
Martin D. Baker 1982–2004 (Asst. Organist)
Jonathan Kingston 1997–2000 (Sub Organist)
Paul Bowen 2004–2011 — Paul Bowen held the office of Cathedral Organist from late 2011 to late 2014
David Condry 2009–2012
Jonathan Eyre 2012–2016
Jon Payne 2016–2018
Ed Jones 2018–2019
Graham Thorpe 2019–present
Monuments of interest
Memorial to Abraham Balme main promoter of the Bradford Canal, sculpted by John Flaxman RA.
Monument to Abraham Sharp (d.1742) by Peter Scheemakers
Monument to Robert Lowry Turner and George Whyte Watson
The Bradford City Football Ground Fire Disaster Memorial
The Battle of the Steeple / Market Charter plaque
Memorial to Joseph Priestley
Bradford is a city in West Yorkshire, England. It became a municipal borough in 1847, received a city charter in 1897 and, since the 1974 reform, the city status has belonged to the larger City of Bradford metropolitan borough. It had a population of 349,561 at the 2011 census; the second-largest subdivision of the West Yorkshire Built-up Area after Leeds, which is approximately 9 miles (14 km) to the east. The borough had a population of 546,976, making it the 9th most populous district in England.
Historically part of the West Riding of Yorkshire, the city grew in the 19th century as an international centre of textile manufacture, particularly wool. It was a boomtown of the Industrial Revolution, and amongst the earliest industrialised settlements, rapidly becoming the "wool capital of the world"; this in turn gave rise to the nicknames "Woolopolis" and "Wool City". Lying in the eastern foothills of the Pennines, the area's access to supplies of coal, iron ore and soft water facilitated the growth of a manufacturing base, which, as textile manufacture grew, led to an explosion in population and was a stimulus to civic investment. There is a large amount of listed Victorian architecture in the city including the grand Italianate city hall.
From the mid-20th century, deindustrialisation caused the city's textile sector and industrial base to decline and, since then, it has faced similar economic and social challenges to the rest of post-industrial Northern England, including poverty, unemployment and social unrest. It is the third-largest economy within the Yorkshire and the Humber region at around £10 billion, which is mostly provided by financial and manufacturing industries. It is also a tourist destination, the first UNESCO City of Film and it has the National Science and Media Museum, a city park, the Alhambra theatre and Cartwright Hall. The city is the UK City of Culture for 2025 having won the designation on 31 May 2022.
History
The name Bradford is derived from the Old English brad and ford the broad ford which referred to a crossing of the Bradford Beck at Church Bank below the site of Bradford Cathedral, around which a settlement grew in Anglo-Saxon times. It was recorded as "Bradeford" in 1086.
Early history
After an uprising in 1070, during William the Conqueror's Harrying of the North, the manor of Bradford was laid waste, and is described as such in the Domesday Book of 1086. It then became part of the Honour of Pontefract given to Ilbert de Lacy for service to the Conqueror, in whose family the manor remained until 1311. There is evidence of a castle in the time of the Lacys. The manor then passed to the Earl of Lincoln, John of Gaunt, The Crown and, ultimately, private ownership in 1620.
By the middle ages Bradford, had become a small town centred on Kirkgate, Westgate and Ivegate. In 1316 there is mention of a fulling mill, a soke mill where all the manor corn was milled and a market. During the Wars of the Roses the inhabitants sided with House of Lancaster. Edward IV granted the right to hold two annual fairs and from this time the town began to prosper. In the reign of Henry VIII Bradford exceeded Leeds as a manufacturing centre. Bradford grew slowly over the next two-hundred years as the woollen trade gained in prominence.
During the Civil War the town was garrisoned for the Parliamentarians and in 1642 was unsuccessfully attacked by Royalist forces from Leeds. Sir Thomas Fairfax took the command of the garrison and marched to meet the Duke of Newcastle but was defeated. The Parliamentarians retreated to Bradford and the Royalists set up headquarters at Bolling Hall from where the town was besieged leading to its surrender. The Civil War caused a decline in industry but after the accession of William III and Mary II in 1689 prosperity began to return. The launch of manufacturing in the early 18th century marked the start of the town's development while new canal and turnpike road links encouraged trade.
Industrial Revolution
In 1801, Bradford was a rural market town of 6,393 people, where wool spinning and cloth weaving were carried out in local cottages and farms. Bradford was thus not much bigger than nearby Keighley (5,745) and was significantly smaller than Halifax (8,866) and Huddersfield (7,268). This small town acted as a hub for three nearby townships – Manningham, Bowling and Great and Little Horton, which were separated from the town by countryside.
Blast furnaces were established in about 1788 by Hird, Dawson Hardy at Low Moor and iron was worked by the Bowling Iron Company until about 1900. Yorkshire iron was used for shackles, hooks and piston rods for locomotives, colliery cages and other mining appliances where toughness was required. The Low Moor Company also made pig iron and the company employed 1,500 men in 1929. when the municipal borough of Bradford was created in 1847 there were 46 coal mines within its boundaries. Coal output continued to expand, reaching a peak in 1868 when Bradford contributed a quarter of all the coal and iron produced in Yorkshire.
The population of the township in 1841 was 34,560.
In 1825 the wool-combers union called a strike that lasted five-months but workers were forced to return to work through hardship leading to the introduction of machine-combing. This Industrial Revolution led to rapid growth, with wool imported in vast quantities for the manufacture of worsted cloth in which Bradford specialised, and the town soon became known as the wool capital of the world.
A permanent military presence was established in the city with the completion of Bradford Moor Barracks in 1844.
Bradford became a municipal borough in 1847, and a county borough in 1888, making it administratively independent of the West Riding County Council. It was honoured with city status on the occasion of Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee in 1897, with Kingston upon Hull and Nottingham. The three had been the largest county boroughs outside the London area without city status. The borough's boundaries were extended to absorb Clayton in 1930, and parts of Rawdon, Shipley, Wharfedale and Yeadon urban districts in 1937.
Bradford had ample supplies of locally mined coal to provide the power that the industry needed. Local sandstone was an excellent resource for building the mills, and with a population of 182,000 by 1850, the town grew rapidly as workers were attracted by jobs in the textile mills. A desperate shortage of water in Bradford Dale was a serious limitation on industrial expansion and improvement in urban sanitary conditions. In 1854 Bradford Corporation bought the Bradford Water Company and embarked on a huge engineering programme to bring supplies of soft water from Airedale, Wharfedale and Nidderdale. By 1882 water supply had radically improved. Meanwhile, urban expansion took place along the routes out of the city towards the Hortons and Bowling and the townships had become part of a continuous urban area by the late 19th century.
A major employer was Titus Salt who in 1833 took over the running of his father's woollen business specialising in fabrics combining alpaca, mohair, cotton and silk. By 1850 he had five mills. However, because of the polluted environment and squalid conditions for his workers Salt left Bradford and transferred his business to Salts Mill in Saltaire in 1850, where in 1853 he began to build the workers' village which has become a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
Henry Ripley was a younger contemporary of Titus Salt. He was managing partner of Edward Ripley & Son Ltd, which owned the Bowling Dye Works. In 1880 the dye works employed over 1000 people and was said to be the biggest dye works in Europe. Like Salt he was a councillor, JP and Bradford MP who was deeply concerned to improve working class housing conditions. He built the industrial Model village of Ripley Ville on a site in Broomfields, East Bowling close to the dye works.
Other major employers were Samuel Lister and his brother who were worsted spinners and manufacturers at Lister's Mill (Manningham Mills). Lister epitomised Victorian enterprise but it has been suggested that his capitalist attitude made trade unions necessary. Unprecedented growth created problems with over 200 factory chimneys continually churning out black, sulphurous smoke, Bradford gained the reputation of being the most polluted town in England. There were frequent outbreaks of cholera and typhoid, and only 30% of children born to textile workers reached the age of fifteen. This extreme level of infant and youth mortality contributed to a life expectancy for Bradford residents of just over eighteen years, which was one of the lowest in the country.
Like many major cities Bradford has been a destination for immigrants. In the 1840s Bradford's population was significantly increased by migrants from Ireland, particularly rural County Mayo and County Sligo, and by 1851 about 10% of the population were born in Ireland, the largest proportion in Yorkshire. Around the middle decades of the 19th century the Irish were concentrated in eight densely settled areas situated near the town centre. One of these was the Bedford Street area of Broomfields, which in 1861 contained 1,162 persons of Irish birth—19% of all Irish born persons in the Borough.
During the 1820s and 1830s, there was immigration from Germany. Many were Jewish merchants and they became active in the life of the town. The Jewish community mostly living in the Manningham area of the town, numbered about 100 families but was influential in the development of Bradford as a major exporter of woollen goods from their textile export houses predominately based in Little Germany and the civic life of Bradford. Charles Semon (1814–1877) was a textile merchant and philanthropist who developed a productive textile export house in the town, he became the first foreign and Jewish mayor of Bradford in 1864. Jacob Behrens (1806–1889) was the first foreign textile merchant to export woollen goods from the town, his company developed into an international multimillion-pound business. Behrens was a philanthropist, he also helped to establish the Bradford chamber of commerce in 1851. Jacob Moser (1839–1922) was a textile merchant who was a partner in the firm Edelstein, Moser and Co, which developed into a successful Bradford textile export house. Moser was a philanthropist, he founded the Bradford Charity Organisation Society and the City Guild of Help. In 1910 Moser became the first Jewish Lord Mayor of Bradford.
Jowett Cars Eight badge
To support the textile mills, a large manufacturing base grew up in the town providing textile machinery, and this led to diversification with different industries thriving side by side. The Jowett Motor Company founded in the early 20th century by Benjamin and William Jowett and Arthur V Lamb, manufactured cars and vans in Bradford for 50 years. The Scott Motorcycle Company was a well known producer of motorcycles and light engines for industry. Founded by Alfred Angas Scott in 1908 as the Scott Engineering Company in Bradford, Scott motorcycles were produced until 1978.
Independent Labour Party
The city played an important part in the early history of the Labour Party. A mural on the back of the Bradford Playhouse in Little Germany commemorates the centenary of the founding of the Independent Labour Party in Bradford in 1893.
Regimental colours
The Bradford Pals were three First World War Pals battalions of Kitchener's Army raised in the city. When the three battalions were taken over by the British Army they were officially named the 16th (1st Bradford), 18th (2nd Bradford), and 20th (Reserve) Battalions, The Prince of Wales's Own (West Yorkshire Regiment).
On the morning of 1 July 1916, the 16th and 18th Battalions left their trenches in Northern France to advance across no man's land. It was the first hour of the first day of the Battle of the Somme. Of the estimated 1,394 men from Bradford and District in the two battalions, 1,060 were either killed or injured during the ill-fated attack on the village of Serre-lès-Puisieux.
Other Bradford Battalions of The Prince of Wales's Own (West Yorkshire Regiment) involved in the Battle of the Somme were the 1st/6th Battalion (the former Bradford Rifle Volunteers), part of the Territorial Force, based at Belle Vue Barracks in Manningham, and the 10th Battalion (another Kitchener battalion). The 1/6th Battalion first saw action in 1915 at the Battle of Aubers Ridge before moving north to the Yser Canal near Ypres. On the first day of the Somme they took heavy casualties while trying to support the 36th (Ulster) Division. The 10th Battalion was involved in the attack on Fricourt, where it suffered the highest casualty rate of any battalion on the Somme on 1 July and perhaps the highest battalion casualty list for a single day during the entire war. Nearly 60% of the battalion's casualties were deaths.
The 1/2nd and 2/2nd West Riding Brigades, Royal Field Artillery (TF), had their headquarters at Valley Parade in Manningham, with batteries at Bradford, Halifax and Heckmondwike. The 1/2nd Brigade crossed to France with the 1/6th Battalion West Yorks in April 1915. These Territorial Force units were to remain close to each other throughout the war, serving in the 49th (West Riding) Division. They were joined in 1917 by the 2/6th Battalion, West Yorks, and 2/2nd West Riding Brigade, RFA, serving in the 62nd (2nd West Riding) Division.
Recent history
Bradford's Telegraph and Argus newspaper was involved in spearheading the news of the 1936 Abdication Crisis, after the Bishop of Bradford publicly expressed doubts about Edward VIII's religious beliefs (see: Telegraph & Argus#1936 Abdication Crisis).
After the Second World War migrants came from Poland and Ukraine and since the 1950s from Bangladesh, India and particularly Pakistan.
The textile industry has been in decline throughout the latter part of the 20th century. A culture of innovation had been fundamental to Bradford's dominance, with new textile technologies being invented in the city; a prime example being the work of Samuel Lister. This innovation culture continues today throughout Bradford's economy, from automotive (Kahn Design) to electronics (Pace Micro Technology). Wm Morrison Supermarkets was founded by William Morrison in 1899, initially as an egg and butter merchant in Rawson Market, operating under the name of Wm Morrison (Provisions) Limited.
The grandest of the mills no longer used for textile production is Lister Mills, the chimney of which can be seen from most places in Bradford. It has become a beacon of regeneration after a £100 million conversion to apartment blocks by property developer Urban Splash.
In 1989, copies of Salman Rushdie's The Satanic Verses were burnt in the city, and a section of the Muslim community led a campaign against the book. In July 2001, ethnic tensions led to rioting, and a report described Bradford as fragmented and a city of segregated ethnic communities.
The Yorkshire Building Society opened its new headquarters in the city in 1992.
In 2006 Wm Morrison Supermarkets opened its new headquarters in the city, the firm employs more than 5,000 people in Bradford.
In June 2009 Bradford became the world's first UNESCO City of Film and became part of the Creative Cities Network since then. The city has a long history of producing both films and the technology that produces moving film which includes the invention of the Cieroscope, which took place in Manningham in 1896.
In 2010 Provident Financial opened its new headquarters in the city. The company has been based in the city since 1880.
In 2012 the British Wool Marketing Board opened its new headquarters in the city. Also in 2012 Bradford City Park opened, the park which cost £24.5 million to construct is a public space in the city centre which features numerous fountains and a mirror pool surrounded by benches and a walk way.
In 2015 The Broadway opened, the shopping and leisure complex in the centre of Bradford cost £260 million to build and is owned by Meyer Bergman.
In 2022, Bradford was named the UK City of Culture 2025, beating Southampton, Wrexham and Durham. The UK City of Culture bid, as of 2023, was expected to majorly stimulate the local economy and culture as well as attracting tourism to the city. By 2025, the UK City of Culture bid is expected to support potential economic growth of £389 million to the city of Bradford as well as to the surrounding local areas, creating over 7,000 jobs, attracting a significant amount of tourists to the city and providing thousands of performance opportunities for local artists.
Wimblestone standing stone
Overview
Heritage Category: Scheduled Monument
List Entry Number: 1006137
Date first listed: 01-Jan-1900
County: Somerset
District: Sedgemoor (District Authority)
Parish: Shipham
National Grid Reference: ST 43345 58475
Summary Standing stone called Wimblestone.
Reasons for Designation
Standing stones are prehistoric ritual or ceremonial monuments with dates ranging from the Late Neolithic to the end of the Bronze Age for the few excavated examples. They comprise single or paired upright orthostatic slabs, ranging from under lm to over 6m high where still erect. They are often conspicuously sited and close to other contemporary monument classes. They can be accompanied by various features: many occur in or on the edge of round barrows, and where excavated, associated subsurface features have included stone cists, stone settings, and various pits and hollows filled in with earth containing human bone, cremations, charcoal, flints, pots and pot sherds. Similar deposits have been found in excavated sockets for standing stones, which range considerably in depth. Several standing stones also bear cup and ring marks. Standing stones may have functioned as markers for routeways, territories, graves, or meeting points, but their accompanying features show they also bore a ritual function and that they form one of several ritual monument classes of their period that often contain a deposit of cremation and domestic debris as an integral component. No national survey of standing stones has been undertaken, and estimates range from 50 to 250 extant examples, widely distributed throughout England but with concentrations in Cornwall, the North Yorkshire Moors, Cumbria, Derbyshire and the Cotswolds. Standing stones are important as nationally rare monuments, with a high longevity and demonstrating the diversity of ritual practices in the Late Neolithic and Bronze Age. The standing stone called Wimblestone survives well with a rich local tradition and will retain archaeological and environmental evidence relating to its erection, function, longevity, territorial significance, funerary and ritual practices and overall landscape context.
Details
Triangular shaped standing stone 1.8m tall with a hole through it, near Winscombe in Somerset. Additional stones were thought to have once been nearby.
This record was the subject of a minor enhancement on 27 August 2015. This record has been generated from an "old county number" (OCN) scheduling record. These are monuments that were not reviewed under the Monuments Protection Programme and are some of our oldest designation records.
This monument includes a standing stone situated on a gentle west facing slope in the wide valley of the Towerhead Brook. The standing stone survives as an upright earthfast triangular monolith measuring approximately 1.8m high, 1.6m wide and 0.3m thick. Further stones are once thought to have been located nearby.
Country: England County: Somerset Type: Standing Stone (Menhir)
Nearest Town: Windscombe Nearest Village: Star
Map Ref: ST43355848 Landranger Map Number: 172
Latitude: 51.322588N Longitude: 2.814348W
My schedule from today:
-Work
-Bake brownies with Justin
-Chase butterflies
The last one is what got you this little guy. I really wanted to take a better picture, but the sun was almost down :/
Anyway, I'm planning on using him in a picture tomorrow too :)
My last week of school starts tomorrow! Yay!
Samsung Galaxy S20 and Fold 2 Unpacked 2020 event said to be scheduled for February 11 www.appsgadget.com/samsung-galaxy-s20-and-fold-2-unpacked...
This is the back of a bus map and schedule. I want to go back and paste a sticker that says: God is the sum aggregate total of the effects of all life on Earth. Novas exploded and the starstuff coalesced in a disk around our sun. Stromatolites reproduced in the harsh early atmosphere and through the carbon-oxides scrubbing process of their life over eons oxygenated the air so much that the seas became saturated and the suspension of iron rusted and precipitated to the ocean floor making way for the explosion of life which resulted in you - a starstuff manifestation of the universe to examine itself and manifest god, and save the earth we now know by reducing your carbon footprint and riding this bus."
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Artist: Kathy A Turner, Title: The Lost Child: Yuki-onna Story # 1, Media: watercolor, Price: $450, Dimensions: 30x34".
Exhibit: Take Away Art.
Dates: June 18-July 31, 2020.
Curators: Dawn Wyse Hurto and Dale Spivey.
Location: Del Ray Artisans, 2704 Mount Vernon Avenue, Alexandria VA 22301.
If you would like to purchase this artwork, visit the gallery during new hours: Thursdays & Fridays 12-6pm, Saturdays 12-4pm. You may also make purchase by emailing the title, artist's name or description to Gallery@DelRayArtisans.org to make payment arrangements and schedule pick up.
More information at www.delrayartisans.org/event/take-away-art/
Exhibit: Tell Me a Story.
Dates: March 6–23 (in-person) and March 30–June 10 (online), 2020.
Opening Reception: Friday, March 6 from 7-9pm.
Curator: Lesley Hall.
Location: Del Ray Artisans, 2704 Mount Vernon Avenue, Alexandria VA 22301.
More information at www.delrayartisans.org/event/tell-me-a-story/
This is Bugsy's medicine schedule for the next week. Poor ol' dog...
He's home for the weekend, feeling a bit better but his billirubin is increasing for some reason. We're trying a new med (on top of the others) and he'll get re-checked Monday. I hope the meds will do the trick and that a second ultrasound (and surgery) won't be necessary.
Tioga-Hammond Lakes project hosted a snowshoe hike at the Ives Run Recreation Area on Sunday, Feb. 8. The event was a moderately-strenuous, family-oriented hike on the Stephenhouse Trail, which winds through hardwood forest and along scenic Stephenhouse Run for 1.25 miles. For a schedule of upcoming winter events, visit 1.usa.gov/16L1l5e.
Those who find themselves out of work or in need of a more lucrative salary feel they need to enhance their resumes by taking classes part-time. The most convenient form of education for a busy schedule is the online class. We are seeing more and more mothers and fathers enrolling these online classes because of the convenience.
Backstage - Fox Theater
Oakland, CA
I was invited to photograph Spank Rock performing during his tour with Ke$ha & LMFAO yesterday. This was an experience I'll never forget. Seeing the entire process how a show comes to life, seeing the lives of these artist before they go on stage to entertain thousands of people with their music, it blew my mind away. So much work and people involved. It was great photographing the process . Thanks to everyone for being so wonderful with me last night and for showing me how to party like a rock star.. haha
Two books for the year's class schedule, with different departments in each book. Both books were divided into sections for fall and spring semesters. Each semester had a two-page spread for every day of the week. Across the top were class periods, down the left=hand side were departments. You could look up your department and a time slot and clearly see what classes were available then.
4800 N Ravenswood Ave
Chicago, IL 60640
Metra Union Pacific North Line
Zone B
Milepost 6.5
metrarail.com/metra/en/home/maps_schedules/metra_system_m...
ATLANTA, GA – June 10, 2012 Alicia Witt’s Atlanta debut at 99x’s Unplugged in the Park at Park Tavern, overlooking Piedmont Park.
Danielle Boise/Target Audience Magazine
63rd Street & Dorchester Avenue
Chicago, IL 60637
Metra Electric District (Main Line)
Zone B
NICTD South Shore Line
Zone 2
Milepost 7.92
metrarail.com/metra/en/home/maps_schedules/metra_system_m...
www.nictd.com/riding-the-train/maps-stations/station-loca...
This is an image of the IRS K1 Form being filled out. This photo was taken to be used on seniorguidance.org. If you have a need to use it, please feel free to do so, but please give link attribution to seniorguidance.org.