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Father Robert Beloin and Father Karl Davis of the Saint Thomas More, the Catholic Chapel and Center at Yale University, Elder Ron Hurt of the Deliverance Temple Pentecostal Church in New Haven, and Reverend Paul Fleck, of the Hamden Plains United Methodist Church in Hamden, accompany Jason Ramos, human- and immigration rights activists, students, and other supporters on a protest against the scheduled deportation of Franklin and Gioconda Ramos of Meriden, in front of the Abraham A. Ribicoff Federal Building, 450 Main Street, Hartford, Connecticut, Monday, September 25, 2017.

at the 2012 SmartPak West AQHA Novice Championship Show at the South Point Equestrian Center and Arena in Las Vegas. (Journal photo)

Isn't it about time everybody saw what my handwriting looked like?

 

This is my schedule for the day. Business, business, business!

Hunterspoint Ave Sta

I mainly relied on a PDF version of this on my mobile. Way too many people on Saturday to check this schedule frequently.

The Utah Army National Guard Medical Command is scheduled to conduct a change of command Saturday, May 3, at 3:45 p.m. at the Lundell Readiness Center auditorium here followed by a retirement ceremony for its former commander.

 

At the ceremony, Col. Bryce J. Taggart, commander of the Utah Medical Command, will relinquish command to Lt. Col. David J. Coates as his final official act prior to retirement from the Utah National Guard after 25 years of service.

 

Taggart, of Lehi, has commanded the Utah Medical Command since October 2012. During his command the medical readiness for Utah National Guard forces increased from 83% to an 89%. He also established many medical standard operating procedures and implemented the clinical quality management program to ensure the sustained excellence of the unit.

 

He has served in a multitude of important military assignments in his career that include deputy commander, Utah Medical Command; battalion commander, 2nd Battalion, 640th Regiment, Regional Training Institute; chief, Compliance Branch, Environmental Division, G4, National Guard Bureau; chief, Officer Personnel Branch, G1, Utah Joint Forces Headquarters; and commander, Headquarters Company, Utah State Area Command.

 

Taggart deployed to Iraq from 2010-2011 in support of United States Forces Iraq, J7, engineers, where he served as deputy commander and was responsible for closing the 100 largest bases in Iraq.

 

Coates, a South Jordan resident, is currently serving as state dental officer, Dental Section, Utah Medical Command. He has deployed in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom in 2006 and Operation Enduring Freedom in 2010. A 1995 graduate of the University of Utah, Coates currently owns and operates a successful dental practice in South Jordan, Utah.

 

With his new assignment, Coates will assume command of the 94-member unit with responsibility to provide medical support to the over 5,500 Utah National Guard servicemembers throughout the state.

 

Katie Barthel meeting with a CAFNR student to plan her class schedule.

Photo by Mary Watt | © 2022 Curators University Missouri

 

TURTLE DOVE SUMMER

Below are my observations at the nest in the Summer of 2016 of the now very rare in the U.K. Turtle Dove. Mark Joy 3.3.2017

 

I record nests of Unprotected (NON Schedule 1 bird species) for the BTO (British Trust for Ornithology) Nest Record Scheme. This helps the BTO in producing nesting data and highlights species which may need help through conservation work or even highlights success stories for certain species in the short or long term.

 

Turtle Dove Summer - Mark Joy

 

7.6.2016 10.35 a.m. Saw my first a Turtle Dove of the year when it flew and settled and rested on an electric wire near the above area.

7.6.2016 1.30 p.m. Saw 2 Turtle Doves resting together on electric wires close to this area.

15.6.2016 4.11 p.m. Saw 2 Turtle Doves flying low along river.

 

19.6.2016 Heard a Turtle Dove purring near me in thick riverside bushes. I began checking each bush and a Turtle Dove flushed from a Dog Rose bush close to the river. I looked into the bush and found a nest containing 2 eggs. Approx 1.8 metres off the ground. The front of the bush was quite open but a tall elder bush hid it from view from eye level.

 

25.6.2016 11.48 a.m. Approached the above nest very cautiously and observed from 20 yards through my camera lens the head of an adult Turtle Dove through a gap in the Dog Rose bush as it was sitting on the nest incubating the eggs. I left without disturbing it.

25.6.2016 1.45 p.m. Searched half a mile away down river, checking every one of many bushes and thickets and a young, recently fledged, Turtle Dove flew out of a bush.

 

29.9.2016 10 a.m. Approached the Turtle Dove nest, the sitting adult flew off revealing 2 young Turtle Doves on the nest, several days old.

 

30.6.2016 Set up my hide under the Elder bush near the Dog Rose bush containing the nest. 6.45 to 7.00 p.m.an adult Turtle Dove came and fed both young at the nest. Left hide set up there as it was very hidden and unobtrusive.

 

1.7.2016 8.35 a.m. Adult not on nest or in the vicinity. 2 young resting in nest and made clicking noises with their beaks as I walked past them to my hide.

10 a.m. an adult settled in a nearby bush and began purring. The young responded with some sounds back to it. It walked through branches from this bush to the nest and fed the young from 10.02 to 10.05 a.m.and remained standing on the nest near them until 10.15 a.m.

4.47 p.m.it began pouring with rain but the 2 young were very sheltered from it.

5.23 p.m. Heard an adult settle in a nearby bush and at 5.27 p.m.it was purring to the young as it rested on a Dog Rose branch a few feet from the nest. It fed both young together (2 beaks in its mouth and throat) from 5.27 p.m.until 5.29 p.m.and then stood near them on the nest. Rain had now started to drip through the branches so it sat on and brooded them both from 5.32 p.m. until 6.10 p.m. One was totally covered by the adult but the second one because of their growing in size was tucked at the front off the adults chest. It preened the front unhidden chick and itself as it sat there. It then walked along the branches out of the bush and flew to get more food. I waited a few minutes then left.

 

2.7.2016 8.58 a.m. Arrived and sat in my hide. No adults on the nest or in the vicinity.

1.29 p.m. An adult Turtle Dove flew straight in and perched on a large Dog Rose stem in front of the nest and fed both young until 1.32 p.m.

6.18 p.m.an adult was purring nearby in a bush. It came to the nest and fed the 2 young from 6.30 to 6.32 p.m.and then left. I left a few minutes afterwards.

 

3.7.2016 8.00 a.m.arrived and went into my hide. No adults around.

8.17 a.m. An adult was purring nearby and walked to the nest after first settling in a close to Hawthorn bush and then flying onto the Dog Rose bush. It fed the young from 8.19 to 8.21 a.m. I left my hide at 11.30 a.m.

 

4.7.2016 1.25 p.m.arrived and went into my hide. No adults around.

One of the young Turtle Doves on the nest had been making 'hungry tweets' at 2.10 p.m.so I guessed correctly that it wouldn't be long before the adults returned to feed them. I was proved right when at 2.19 p.m.an adult flew onto the right hand side of the Dog Rose bush and walked along branches to the nest and fed both young until 2.21 p.m.

The next visit was just the same to the nest & the adult fed the young from 7.11 to 7.12 p.m.

While the adults were away collecting food the young were preening themselves a lot now and flapping and testing their well feathered wings.

When they knew the adults were nearby and coming to feed them they always became excited , standing up, even at a quite early age and also with much wing flapping, even more as they were older...often covering the adult's body with their wings!

 

5.7.2016 2.50 p.m.arrived and went into my hide. No adults around again.

3.45 p.m.an adult fluttered in and was purring in a nearby bush. It came to the nest and fed the young from 3.52 to 3.53 p.m.

6.39 p.m.an adult fluttered in and was purring in a nearby bush. It or its mate, came to the nest and fed the young from 6.44 to 6.46 p.m.

 

6.7.2016. 3.20 p.m. Got into my hide. The 2 young weren't standing or resting on the nest but were on a Dog Rose branch very close to it. 3.22 p.m.both young climbed back onto the nest.

4.32 p.m. I heard both Turtle Dove adults settle in bushes on different sides of the Dog Rose bush. One was purring and walked in from the right and fed the young from 4.35 to 4.36 p.m.

8.20 p.m.an adult flew to the Dog Rose bush, both young rushed off the nest & down a large branch to meet it very close to my hide's hidden window. It fed them from 8.20 to 8.21 p.m.

 

7.7.2016 8.25 a.m.arrived at my hide.

11.08 to 11.10 a.m. an adult Turtle Dove came and fed the 2 young.

4.12 to 4.13 p.m. an adult Turtle Dove came and fed the 2 young.

 

9.7.2016 Today was the day that I was there to actually witness both young fledge!

3.50 p.m.arrived at my hide.

5.35 p.m. An adult Turtle Dove flew and settled in a Hawthorn bush just to the right of the nest on branches overhanging the water. As soon as it began purring, one of the young Turtle Doves walked off the nest down a large bare Dog Rose branch and actually flew 8 feet from the nesting bush to land on a Hawthorn branch at the side of one of its parents. The other fledgling followed it straight away and landed on the branch, the other side of the adult! Both young had just fledged successfully!

Their parent fed them then flew away, presumably to collect more food.

Both young birds sat happily side by side on that same branch while I packed my hide and equipment up. They had survived everything, including the many Magpies and Carrion Crows which , the summer before had decimated at the egg stage, the only 2 Turtle Dove nests in that area.

Before I left them for the very last time, I said my goodbyes to them, thanked them for their company over the last two weeks and wished them well on their first long flight to overwinter in Africa. My parting words were 'take care and I hope to see you and your parents here next spring and summer'. Then I left, and I will forever remember my last view of them as they were cosily nestled next to each other on that Hawthorn branch.

 

Mark Joy

3.3.2017

Father Robert Beloin and Father Karl Davis of the Saint Thomas More, the Catholic Chapel and Center at Yale University, Elder Ron Hurt of the Deliverance Temple Pentecostal Church in New Haven, and Reverend Paul Fleck, of the Hamden Plains United Methodist Church in Hamden, accompany Jason Ramos, human- and immigration rights activists, students, and other supporters on a protest against the scheduled deportation of Franklin and Gioconda Ramos of Meriden, in front of the Abraham A. Ribicoff Federal Building, 450 Main Street, Hartford, Connecticut, Monday, September 25, 2017.

The 25th annual UN Conference of Parties (COP25) to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, was initially scheduled to take place in Santiago, Chile. However, a massive popular feminist and student uprising against neoliberalism, which started in Santiago, led the Chilean government to move COP25 to Spain.

 

Chilean popular movements announced that even tough COP25 moved to Spain, the peoples mobilization would continue. We decided to stand with the courageous Chilean social movements, who continue the resistance in the face of police repression and violence. We took to the streets, and we are took part in the Cumbre de los Pueblos and the Carpa de Mujeres, to build an alternative to the extractive systems of production and consumption, which have caused climate change.

 

More info: climatejusticealliance.org/cop25/

Alex takes a brief notice of the schedule screen and reminds himself that he will need to double check that on his way in tonight

Our schedule for graduation & prom....wow...the photos were cheap, huh? Too bad no one ever got the prom photos!

 

Thanks, Robert Koenig! I have to ask though, why did you save this?

seoul fashion week 2011 s/s schedule

Opponents of Donald Trump gathered outside the ConventionCenter in Wildwood, N.J. where the President was scheduled to speak.

A second visit to Baddesley Clinton (in around 8 years). Saw the garden again, but this time went into the house for the first time.

  

Baddesley Clinton is a moated manor house, located some 8 miles (13 km) north-west of the historic town of Warwick in the English county of Warwickshire. The house probably originated in the 13th century, when large areas of the Forest of Arden were cleared for farmland. The site is a Scheduled Ancient Monument and the hall a Grade I listed building.

 

In 1438, John Brome, Under-Treasurer of England, bought the manor, which passed to his son, Nicholas. Nicholas was responsible for the extensive rebuilding of the nearby parish church dedicated to St Michael, done as penance for killing the parish priest, a murder reputed to have taken place in the great house itself. The house from this period was equipped with gun-ports, and possibly a drawbridge. When Nicholas Brome died in 1517, the house passed to his daughter, who married Sir Edward Ferrers (High Sheriff of Warwickshire) in 1500. The house remained with the Ferrers family until 1940, when it was purchased by Thomas Walker, a relative of the family who changed his name to Ferrers. His son, who inherited it in 1970, sold the estate in 1980 to the National Trust, which now manages it.

 

Henry Ferrers "The Antiquary" (1549–1633) made many additions to Baddesley Clinton, including starting the tradition of stained glass representing the family's coat of arms. Such glass now appears in many of the public rooms in the house. It is thought that he was responsible for building the great hall. In the 18th century the great hall was rebuilt in brick, and the east range was extended, though with great care to continue the style of the original building.

 

The house was inhabited in the 1860s by the novelists Georgiana Chatterton and her second husband Edward Heneage Dering, both of whom converted to Catholicism. The house's Catholic chapel was rebuilt, along with a general refurbishment of the house. Major interior changes took place up until the 1940s, with the first floor outside the chapel being completely altered. The house as it now exists has extensive formal gardens and ponds, with many of the farm buildings dating back to the 18th century. St Michael's church, which shares much history with the house, is a few hundred yards up a lane. Inside the house are a beautiful great hall, parlour and library, amongst other rooms, and there is a great deal of 16th century carving and furniture to be seen, as well as the 19th century accessories the later inhabitants used.

  

The Walled Garden at Baddesley Clinton. In the summer there is a lot of lovely colourful flowers here.

  

Flowers

Utrecht is a train hub -- most trains go through here to get anywhere else.

Proposed run schedule. For cross training each hour of cycling or mtn biking is equivalent to 5 miles of running. Rest days will include either walking or cycling because I am bad at rest days - but no running on rest days, generally.

The event was scheduled to be a 10K cross country run; unfortunately Area I weather of late has damaged the course so nearly 60 runners took to the roads of Camps Casey and Hovey on July 27.

 

On hand to make the award presentations was the Commander of 1st Brigade Special Troops Battalion Lt. Col. Mark Danner.

 

Even though this was an individual competition, Danner could see the fellowship among the runners and he liked what he saw during the contest.

 

“Esprit de corps… fosters unit pride… we can’t ask for anything more for our Soldiers,” said Danner. “This is an example of what we’re all about here in the 2nd Infantry Division.”

 

Runners competed in five categories and here are the individual results:

 

Women's Senior:

1st place: Leilani Douthit

 

Women's Open:

1st place: Spc. Robin Thomas

2nd place: Christine Sing

3rd place: Kendra Cox

 

Men’s Senior:

1st place: Chief Warrant Officer Joel Lord

2nd place: Chief Warrant Officer Ronald Miller

3rd place: Sgt. 1st Class Joshua Bradley

 

Men’s Open:

1st place: Cpt. Elder Bennett

2nd place: Sgt. Edward Lopez

3rd place: Pfc. Jason Pulido

 

Stroller:

1st place: Cpt. Timothy Cox

2nd place: Sgt. 1st Class Guy Sing

3rd place Staff Sgt. Sean Watts

Weekly Schedule Template #01

Weekly Schedule Template #01

Image Size: 644 x 525, File Size: 9 KB

  

onlinecalendarweb.com/2014/04/weekly-schedule-template-01/

A self portrait of myself doing some music scheduling work for a volunteer radio station.

Father Robert Beloin and Father Karl Davis of the Saint Thomas More, the Catholic Chapel and Center at Yale University, Elder Ron Hurt of the Deliverance Temple Pentecostal Church in New Haven, and Reverend Paul Fleck, of the Hamden Plains United Methodist Church in Hamden, accompany Jason Ramos, human- and immigration rights activists, students, and other supporters on a protest against the scheduled deportation of Franklin and Gioconda Ramos of Meriden, in front of the Abraham A. Ribicoff Federal Building, 450 Main Street, Hartford, Connecticut, Monday, September 25, 2017.

The stage manager and his crew uses this note to keep track of the bands playing on stage. How did comic sans become the only font they found appropriate to convey this information?

While we had stoped at a petrol station to refill, i noticed an old house with a huge fence around it accross from where i was sitting, in my car. so being the lil criminal i am i crossed the road n jumped the fence to get some great shots of this amazing house Scheduled for demolition in a few weeks...it made me sad to think that something so beautiful will soon no longer exist.

Family and friends of the crew of Los Angeles-class fast attack submarine USS Houston (SSN 713) gather at the submarine piers at Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam for lunch before Houston departs Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam Tuesday, July 15, for a regularly scheduled six-month deployment to the Western Pacific region. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Steven Khor/Released)

Photo Courtesy of Paul Hammersley, Office of Mayor Gary Christenson

Rachael Chobany, a sophomore mathamatics major at PennWest California, works as a peer mentor.

Ben Corpening, right, the staff evangelist at Lakewood Baptist Church, Huntsville, Alabama, goes over the 2012 VBS preview schedule with his pastor, Terrell Boyd, his wife Paulette, and Sue Geron, the Sunday School and VBS director for the church.

Family and friends gather at the submarine piers at Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam for lunch with the crew of the Los Angeles Class fast attack submarine USS Cheyenne (SSN 773) before Cheyenne departs Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam for a scheduled six-month deployment to the Western Pacific region. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Steven Khor/Released)

The event was scheduled to be a 10K cross country run; unfortunately Area I weather of late has damaged the course so nearly 60 runners took to the roads of Camps Casey and Hovey on July 27.

 

On hand to make the award presentations was the Commander of 1st Brigade Special Troops Battalion Lt. Col. Mark Danner.

 

Even though this was an individual competition, Danner could see the fellowship among the runners and he liked what he saw during the contest.

 

“Esprit de corps… fosters unit pride… we can’t ask for anything more for our Soldiers,” said Danner. “This is an example of what we’re all about here in the 2nd Infantry Division.”

 

Runners competed in five categories and here are the individual results:

 

Women's Senior:

1st place: Leilani Douthit

 

Women's Open:

1st place: Spc. Robin Thomas

2nd place: Christine Sing

3rd place: Kendra Cox

 

Men’s Senior:

1st place: Chief Warrant Officer Jael Lord

2nd place: Chief Warrant Officer Ronald Miller

3rd place: Sgt. 1st Class Joshua Bradley

 

Men’s Open:

1st place: Cpt. Elder Bennett

2nd place: Sgt. Edward Lopez

3rd place: Pfc. Jason Pulido

 

Stroller:

1st place: Cpt. Timothy Cox

2nd place: Sgt. 1st Class Guy Sing

3rd place Staff Sgt. Sean Watls

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