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Three days after this timetable took effect, Pan Am shut down forever.

This card was an insert in the October 27, 1991 Pan Am system timetable

Sherwood forest at Rothbury

Dated 1677 and re-erected on stepped base 1875. Scheduled in 1953 and listed (category B) in 1972.

shaun smith/cleveland browns 2009 schedule

PLEASE DO NOT CLICK ON "YOUR PHOTOSTREAM" ON THE RIGHT.

 

To view my "Photo By Russell Kwock" Bay Area Sports Time Machine photo gallery, go here:

www.flickr.com/photos/golfbumsf/sets/72157628794754707/

No. RK000371-F0040

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Who :

What : 1975 Cal Football Schedule, UC-Berkeley (Berkeley, California)

Where :

When :

Event :

 

Photographer :

Image Source : Russell

Scanned By : Russell

Contributor : Russell

 

Russ-Pedia Notes : Copyright Russell Kwock

 

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"Photo By Russell Kwock"

*** San Francisco Bay Area Sports Photographer ***

Since 1971...

 

All photographs and videos are

COPYRIGHT RUSSELL KWOCK

 

More 35mm black/white sports pics from my photo vault will be added to Flickr...check back...

 

Oct. 2012 New: "Thailand - Asia Photo Blog"

www.flickr.com/photos/golfbumsf/sets/72157631862809626/

 

Updated: 2014 0409

The 2016 Football Schedule 16x9

Minister Nkoana-Mashabane to address BRICS Science, Technology and Innovation meeting

The Minister of International Relations and Cooperation, Ms Maite Nkoana-Mashabane, is scheduled to speak at the BRICS Science, Technology and Innovation ministerial meeting in Cape Town on 10 February 2014.

This meeting originates within the context of the First Summit of the BRICS Leaders held in 2009 in Yekaterinburg, Russia, where the Leaders at that time envisaged cooperation in the field of Science, Technology and Innovation with the aim to engage in fundamental research and development of advanced technologies.

The theme for the first Science, Technology and Innovation Ministerial Meeting, i.e. “A Strategic Partnership for Equitable Growth and Sustainable Development”, presents BRICS with a unique opportunity to address, on the one hand, the challenges of global competitiveness and leadership in frontier sciences and new technologies, and enhance, on the other, equitable growth and sustainable development through strategic cooperation in the fields of science, technology and innovation.

The First BRICS Science, Technology and Innovation Ministerial Meeting will play a pivotal role in deliberating the BRICS implementation framework for science, technology and innovation. This strategic framework will serve to clearly define the modalities and operational instruments to support STI cooperation within the framework of BRICS. In connection herewith there is already broad agreement amongst the BRICS partners on possible priority areas for BRICS STI cooperation.

These include, amongst others, exchange of information on Science, Technology and Innovation policies and programmes and promotion of innovation; food security and sustainable agriculture; climate change and natural disaster mitigation; new and renewable energy and energy conservation; nanotechnology; basic research; space, aeronautics, astronomy and earth observation; medicine and biotechnology; water resources and pollution treatment; high-technology zones/science parks and technology incubators; and technology and knowledge transfer.

Therefore the first BRICS ministerial meeting in this strategic sector will convey a very important signal to the global community regarding the positive role that BRICS wish to play to promote cooperation to ensure equitable growth and sustainable development. The meeting in Cape Town will also ensure innovative complementarities vis-à-vis the key outcomes of the Fifth BRICS Summit, i.e. enhanced cooperation with Africa, notably regarding increased access to technology as well as the launch of the BRICS Business Council and the BRICS Think Tanks Council.

For further information please contact DIRCO Spokesperson, Mr Clayson Monyela, on 0828845974

ISSUED BY THE DEPARTMENT OF INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS AND COOPERATION

OR Tambo Building

460 Soutpansberg Road

Rietondale

Pretoria

COLOMBO, Sri Lanka (March 26, 2016) Sailors attached to the U.S. 7th Fleet flagship USS Blue Ridge (LCC 19), man the rails as the ship arrives in Colombo, Sri Lanka. Blue Ridge is conducting a regularly scheduled port visit during its patrol of the 7th Fleet area of operations, strengthening and fostering relationships in the Indo-Asia-Pacific region. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist Seaman Timothy Hale/RELEASED)

LY-VEN operating the Thomas Cook schedule

Canoe trips can be scheduled anytime of the week with an interpretive ranger. Watch for bald eagles as they perch in trees and soar over the bay.

A panel schedule shows the mix of classic journalism with new technology that typifies IRE.

This photo was incorporated as part of Krista Tippett's entry on SOF Observed.

 

"Mississippi on My Mind"

September 25, 2008

 

I spent three fascinating, moving days in Oxford, Mississippi at the University of Mississippi (Ole Miss) in August — the site of the first scheduled presidential debate. I was honored with an invitation to speak to the remarkable Honors College of Ole Miss by its dean Douglass Sullivan-Gonzales. Oxford was the home of William Faulkner, and it is one of the most intriguing places I have ever visited — marked by a loveliness of people as well as place. Even then, in mid-August, the Secret Service and other affiliated debate authorities had begun to tear up and rearrange that beautiful campus — building elaborate security perimeters and state of the art communications facilities for thousands of journalists. The august building in which I was to speak, the appointed site of the debate, had already been locked down and quarantined. I couldn't help but think of all these practicalities — at public expense — as I heard John McCain's announcement of his wish to postpone the debate yesterday. I imagine many hearts sank in Oxford.

 

And it's been a wild ride for them all along. The first debate was originally planned to focus on issues of domestic policy and the economy. The Ole Miss faculty and administration created an interdisciplinary semester curriculum around these issues. They lined up an astonishing array of visiting lectures and extracurricular seminars. Then just as school began, the McCain and Obama campaigns agreed to shift the Ole Miss debate focus to foreign policy. Right now it looks like the original plan was more prescient. The university took the change in stride, moving forward with its own well-laid plans, though with some understandable frustration. I joked — but not all in jest — that by November the students at Ole Miss will be the best-informed, most well-rounded thinkers in the nation.

 

But there are deeper issues at play around this debate, in particular, a convergence of more fundamental national dynamics that could easily be missed in all the politicking around this ultra-politicized event. In 1962, the nation's eyes focused on Oxford and Ole Miss, as race riots accompanied the integration of the university by a determined African-American student named James Meredith. In just a few days there, I learned that for people who live in and love Oxford even in 2008, history's subdivisions and ephiphanies still fall on either side of this living memory: time is divided into "before Meredith" and "after Meredith."

 

I remember especially one woman who stood with me at the monument to James Meredith at the center of the campus — a wonderful dean at the honors college from an old Oxford family. Her grandparents were close friends of William Faulkner and his wife, icons of a paradoxical past — at once immensely gracious and essentially cruel. She spoke of how after the riots hearts and minds changed individually and ultimately collectively. She suggested, softly, that Oxford has become something of a model for how people and communities can evolve. This is not a story so often told. She said, "We had to realize that we had been wrong — and wrong about a way of life we loved." I was humbled to be in her presence. I have not spent much time in the Deep South in my life, though I grew up in Oklahoma, where issues of race and bigotry have not often enough met with profound public reflection. In Oxford, I saw people wrestling carefully, searchingly, self-critically, and gracefully with the unresolved American encounter with race. I was impressed.

 

And so hosting this historic 2008 civil debate between a white candidate for president and an African-American candidate for president means more to the people of Oxford than most of us can imagine. The current chancellor of the university was himself a student "during Meredith." History is present at Ole Miss, and it is history that we have scarcely found ways in our common life to name and discuss even in the midst of Barack Obama's historic candidacy. I for one will be watching the people of Oxford tomorrow, not just the candidates. I hope very much that the debate happens.

 

(photo caption: October 1, 1962. On the campus of the University of Mississippi, James Meredith, the first African-American student to attend the University of Mississippi, walks to class accompanied by U.S. marshals. [photo: Marion S. Trikosko])

An orthodontic appointment scheduled for today gave Max a big surprise...he got his temporary braces off! Only being on his top four adult teeth, they've been on since August.

 

Before then, he's had baby teeth removed, an expander attached to his top jaw for 7 months so I'd say he's happy for a rest!

 

A retainer has been moulded and he'll have that to keep everything in place until all his adult teeth come down and re-assessed.

 

This is a before photo :)

www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10150655503843922&set...

PDX Grand Opening Scheduled August 14th, 2024. We have all waited over four years for this day. Not to exaggerate, but it truly is exciting.

Take a walk through Harlech Castle's legendary gatehouse. This castle, along with Conwy Castle, Caernarfon Castle, and Beaumaris Castle, are part of Edward I's Iron Ring in northern Wales. Conwy Castle's build - and the siege it faced - are profiled in Battle Castle: Conwy.

 

Battle Castle is an action documentary series starring Dan Snow that is now airing on History Television and is scheduled to premiere on Discovery Knowledge in the UK in Spring 2012 and on various BBC-affiliated channels in the near future.

 

For the latest air dates, Like us on Facebook (www.battlecastle.com/facebook) or follow us on Twitter (www.twitter.com/battlecastle)

 

This show brings to life mighty medieval fortifications and the epic sieges they resist: clashes that defy the limits of military technology, turn empires to dust, and transform mortals into legends.

 

Website: www.battlecastle.tv/

 

Twitter: www.twitter.com/battlecastle

 

YouTube: www.youtube.com/battlecastle

 

Flickr: www.flicker.com/battlecastle

 

Facebook: www.facebook.com/battlecastle

   

Castles conjure thoughts of romantic tales, but make no mistake, they are built for war.

 

Dover: Prince Louis' key to England. Malaga: the Granadans final stronghold. And Crac des Chevaliers: Crown Jewel of Crusader castles. Through dynamic location footage and immersive visual effects, Battle Castle reveals a bloody history of this epic medieval arms race.

 

As siege weapons and technology become more ruthless, the men who design and built these castles reply ... or perish. Follow host Dan Snow as he explores the military engineering behind these medieval megastructures and the legendary battles that became testaments to their might.

 

Each episode will climax in the ultimate test of the castle's military engineering -- a siege that will change the course of history. Which castles will be conquered and which will prevail? You'll have to watch to find out.

 

But the journey doesn't end there --in fact, it's just beginning. Battle Castle extends into a multi-platform quest, taking us deep into the secret world of medieval warfare and strategy. Become the ultimate 'Castle Master'. Stay tuned for more on the Battle Castle experience.

 

- Taken at 8:57 AM on February 09, 2006; cameraphone upload by ShoZu

Patel ( my roommate ) would make these exam schedule and paste it on the wall ... this happened every sem , a month before exam ... pretty much like a war cry by patel, letting every one in room know that he has started studying and we better fall in line , exams hv arrived ... every one would be studying during those days ... the worse thing was this was right next to my bed ... ne ways ... it's all so over ... I miss those days, where we lived with just one purpose to PASS. ;)

While all jobs are necessary, not all jobs are exciting. This worker ensures water is pumped out of the construction site. Even in the dry season, water flows into the bottom of trenches and must be removed.

 

The Paramaribo New Embassy Compound (NEC) Project continues to make excellent progress and continues to remain ahead of schedule of the July 2016 completion date. For the Month of October 2014, the project completed approximately $2 million of work. The project is approximately 30 percent complete. Approximately 300 Surinamese workers are employed on the site with responsibilities ranging from labors, to skilled technicians, to office workers to professional engineers.

Image Description: The schedule for the 1983 Homecoming events included: the NDSU Athletic Hall of Fame inductions, alumni socials, the Alumni Achievement Awards and Banquet, the alumni dance, the Homecoming Parade, the Bison Feed, and the game against the University of South Dakota, various socials, and the Bison Bidders Bowl.

 

Date of Original: October 3-8, 1983

 

Item Number: AA.1a.59

 

Ordering Information: library.ndsu.edu/archives/collections-institute/photograp...

 

This is why I'm almost constantly confused about when I'm scheduled to work

Bolsover Castle is in the town of Bolsover, (grid reference SK471707), in the north-east of the English county of Derbyshire. Built in the early 17th century, the present castle lies on the earthworks and ruins of the 12th-century medieval castle; the first structure of the present castle was built between 1612 and 1617 by Sir Charles Cavendish.

 

Bolsover Castle is in the town of Bolsover, (grid reference SK471707), in the north-east of the English county of Derbyshire. Built in the early 17th century, the present castle lies on the earthworks and ruins of the 12th-century medieval castle; the first structure of the present castle was built between 1612 and 1617 by Sir Charles Cavendish. The site is now in the care of the English Heritage charity, as both a Grade I listed building and a Scheduled Ancient Monument.

  

Medieval History

The original castle was built by the Peverel family in the 12th century and became Crown property in 1155 when William Peverel the Younger died. The Ferrers family who were Earls of Derby laid claim to the Peveril property.

 

When a group of barons led by King Henry II's sons – Henry the Young King, Geoffrey Duke of Brittany, and Prince Richard, later Richard the Lionheart – revolted against the king's rule, Henry spent £116 on building at the castles of Bolsover and Peveril in Derbyshire. The garrison was increased to a force led by 20 knights and was shared with the castles of Peveril and Nottingham during the revolt. King John ascended the throne in 1199 after his brother Richard's death. William de Ferrers maintained the claim of the Earls of Derby to the Peveril estates. He paid John 2000 marks for the lordship of the Peak, but the Crown retained possession of Bolsover and Peveril Castles. John finally gave them to Ferrers in 1216 to secure his support in the face of country-wide rebellion. However, the castellan Brian de Lisle refused to hand them over. Although Lisle and Ferrers were both John's supporters, John gave Ferrers permission to use force to take the castles. The situation was still chaotic when Henry III became king after his father's death in 1216. Bolsover fell to Ferrers' forces in 1217 after a siege.

 

The castle was returned to crown control in 1223, at which point £33 was spent on repairing the damage the Earl of Derby had caused when capturing the castle six years earlier. Over the next 20 years, four towers were added, the keep was repaired, various parts of the curtain wall were repaired, and a kitchen and barn were built, all at a cost of £181. From 1290 onward, the castle and its surrounding manor were granted to a series of local farmers. Under their custodianship, the castle gradually fell into a state of disrepair.

 

Post-medieval

Bolsover castle was granted to George Talbot, 6th Earl of Shrewsbury, by King Edward VI in 1553. Following Shrewsbury’s death in 1590, his son Gilbert, 7th Earl of Shrewsbury, sold the ruins of Bolsover Castle to his step-brother and brother-in-law Sir Charles Cavendish, who wanted to build a new castle on the site. Working with the famous builder and designer Robert Smythson, Cavendish’s castle was designed for elegant living rather than defence, and was unfinished at the time of the two men’s deaths, in 1614 and 1617 respectively. Accounts survive for building the early stages of the "Little Castle." Unusually for this period female labour was recorded, and the women's names or husband's names are given.

 

The building of the castle was continued by Cavendish’s two sons, William and John, who were influenced by the Italian-inspired work of the architect Inigo Jones. The tower, known today as the 'Little Castle', was completed around 1621. Construction was interrupted by the Civil Wars of 1642 to 1651, during which the castle was taken by the Parliamentarians, who slighted it, when it fell into a ruinous state. William Cavendish, who was created Marquess of Newcastle in 1643 and Duke of Newcastle-upon-Tyne in 1665, added a new hall and staterooms to the Terrace Range, and by the time of his death in 1676 the castle had been restored to good order. The main usage of the building extended over twenty years, and it is presumed that the family lived at the castle towards the end of that period. It then passed through Margaret Bentinck, Duchess of Portland into the Bentinck family, and ultimately became one of the seats of the Earls and Dukes of Portland. After 1883, the castle was uninhabited, and in 1945 it was given to the nation by the 7th Duke of Portland. The castle is now in the care of English Heritage.

 

Bolsover Castle is a Scheduled Ancient Monument a "nationally important" historic building and archaeological site which has been given protection against unauthorised change. It is also a Grade I listed building (first listed in 1985) and recognised as an internationally important structure.

Does not match whats on the internet.

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