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Howard County Library System's Evening in the Stacks held on February 22, 2014 at the Miller Branch.
Briian Stocksdale '15 presented his neuroscience work on "Analysis of the Hippocampal System's Role in Working Memory."
Howard County Library System's Evening in the Stacks held on February 22, 2014 at the Miller Branch.
On Monday, June 6, 2016, Federal Reserve Board Chair Janet Yellen spoke to members, guests, and students at a World Affairs Council of Philadelphia luncheon event.
Janet L. Yellen took office as Chair of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System on February 3, 2014, for a four-year term ending February 3, 2018. Dr. Yellen also serves as Chairman of the Federal Open Market Committee, the System's principal monetary policymaking body. Prior to her appointment as Chair, Dr. Yellen served as Vice Chair of the Board of Governors, taking office in October 2010, when she simultaneously began a 14-year term as a member of the Board that will expire January 31, 2024.
Dr. Yellen is Professor Emeritus at the University of California at Berkeley where she was the Eugene E. and Catherine M. Trefethen Professor of Business and Professor of Economics and has been a faculty member since 1980.
Dr. Yellen took leave from Berkeley for five years starting August 1994. She served as a member of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System through February 1997, and then left the Federal Reserve to become chair of the Council of Economic Advisers through August 1999. She also chaired the Economic Policy Committee of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development from 1997 to 1999. She also served as President and Chief Executive Officer of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco from 2004 to 2010.
Dr. Yellen is a member of both the Council on Foreign Relations and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. She has served as President of the Western Economic Association, Vice President of the American Economic Association and a Fellow of the Yale Corporation.
Dr. Yellen graduated summa cum laude from Brown University with a degree in economics in 1967, and received her Ph.D. in Economics from Yale University in 1971. She received the Wilbur Cross Medal from Yale in 1997, an honorary doctor of laws degree from Brown in 1998, and an honorary doctor of humane letters from Bard College in 2000.
An Assistant Professor at Harvard University from 1971 to 1976, Dr. Yellen served as an Economist with the Federal Reserve's Board of Governors in 1977 and 1978, and on the faculty of the London School of Economics and Political Science from 1978 to 1980.
Dr. Yellen has written on a wide variety of macroeconomic issues, while specializing in the causes, mechanisms, and implications of unemployment.
The Salt Lake City Public Library system's main branch building is an architecturally unique structure in Salt Lake City, Utah. It is located at 210 East, 400 South, across from the Salt Lake City and County Building and Washington Square.
The Salt Lake City main library has an area of 240,000 square feet (22,000 m2) and is a five-story tall, wedge-shaped building. The library has a collection of over 500,000 books as well as subscriptions to over 60 newspapers and magazines and 163 internet capable computers.
The structure includes 44,960 cubic yards (34,370 m3) of concrete as well as 176,368 square feet (16,385.1 m2) of glass. One of its features is the five-story curved glass wall. Designed by the same architect, the downtown Central Branch of the Vancouver Public Library has a very similar design. This is clearly apparent in the main foyer and the sweeping outer facade.
Outside the library is Library Square, a landscaped and paved plaza. Originally, much of what is now landscaped open space was to be out buildings, but Mayor Rocky Anderson asked for these to be left out and create a public park. There are several shops on the square as well as the studios of radio station KCPW-FM. Library Square is paved with limestone from Israel.
Upon entering the five story building, one enters the "Urban Room", which has the same limestone paving as the square. The room extends for all five floors and ends with a skylight of 20,000 square feet (1,900 m2). More shops line one side of the Urban Room.
A rooftop garden completes the structure. It is planted with trees, grasses, flowering bulbs and various perennial plants.
The whole library depends on natural lighting, reducing the need of lights in the library. A huge five story glass wall is where most of the light comes from.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salt_Lake_City_Public_Library
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Text_of_Creative_Commons_...
OLYMPUS OM-SYSTEM S ZUIKO AUTO-ZOOM 1:4 f=75-150mm No.276091
In May 2024, I bought a set of 12 junk Olympus OM mount lenses for 3,500 yen. Of those, four lenses were not damaged or badly stained, so I disassembled and cleaned them and they became usable. I am using them with a digital camera via a mount adapter with a helicoid.
Secretary Landgraf and Public Health Director Dr. Karyl Rattay were joined by state Sen. Bruce Ennis and Reps. Ruth Briggs-King, Dave Wilson and Harvey Kenton in recognizing the 20th anniversary of Delaware’s Statewide Trauma System. “No matter where in Delaware someone suffers a traumatic injury, they enter into the same system of care,” Secretary Landgraf said. “We are only a handful of states to have an inclusive statewide trauma system.”
Dr. Rattay said the state’s trauma system is credited with saving 1,319 lives and caring for 101,000 seriously injured people since 2000, an almost 50 percent decrease in the mortality rate in that time. The Delaware mortality rate is now consistently lower than the national rate reported by the federal National Trauma Data Bank.
Fourteen individuals who have 20 years of continuous service to the trauma system were honored at the ceremony in the House chambers at Legislative Hall:
•Edward L. Alexander III, MD, FACS of Bayhealth Kent General Hospital
•Marilynn K. Bartley, MSN, RN of Christiana Care Health System
•Steven Blessing, MA, Chief, EMS and Preparedness Section, DPH
•Steven D. Carey, MD, FACS of Nanticoke Memorial Hospital
•Dean Dobbert, MD, FACEP, Kent County EMS Medical Director
•Deborah Eberly, BSN, RN, CEN, CNML of Bayhealth
•Gerard J. Fulda, MD,FACS of Christiana Care Health System
•Linda Laskowski Jones, MS, APRN, ACNS-BC, CEN, FAWM, FAAN of Christiana Care Health System
•MarySue Jones, RN, MS, State Trauma System Coordinator, OEMS, DPH
•James P. Marvel, Jr., MD, FACS of Beebe Healthcare
•Ross E. Megargel, DO, FACEP, State EMS Medical Director
•Stephen G. Murphy, MD, FACS of Nemours/Alfred I. duPont Hospital for Children
•Lawrence E. Tan, Esq., NRP, Chief of Emergency Medical Services, New Castle County
•Glen H. Tinkoff, MD, FACS of Christiana Care Health System
Sen. Ennis, who advocated for and helped to push through the enabling legislation, read a joint resolution recognizing the trauma system’s anniversary. Rep. Kenton in honoring Sen. Ennis’ role in creating the trauma system said, “We’ll never know, Senator, how many lives you saved.” Rep. Briggs-King in praising the statewide system of care said, “For a small state, you’ve made a huge statement.”
Trauma survivor Melanie Pertain shared how the system helped her and her family after they were involved in a serious motor vehicle crash on Concord Pike in 2013. “I received tremendous care in the ER and then the OR after we were transported to Christiana Hospital,” said Pertain, who spent two weeks in the surgical ICU after suffering a traumatic brain injury and other injuries in the accident. “My new mantra is ‘Be grateful, not hateful.’”
Howard County Library System's Evening in the Stacks held on February 22, 2014 at the Miller Branch.
New Mexico Museum of Space History
The solid-fueled Little Joe 2 was used to test the Apollo Launch Escape System and verify the performance of the command module parachutes. Powered by nine rocket motors with combined thrust of 860,000 pounds, Little Joe 2 boosted the "boilerplate" (test) spacecraft on a path that duplicated an Apollo-Saturn "in-flight emergency." During the in-flight "emergency," the escape system's rockets fired and pulled the Apollo Command Module containing the astronauts safely away from the booster. Five Little Joe 2 tests were conducted at White Sands Missile Range between August 1963 and January 1966.
On loan from the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum, Washington, D.C.
Fun Fact: The name "Little Joe" was provided by NASA engineer and Mercury capsule designer Max Faget. He said the rocket's four large fins reminded him of the "Little Joe" roll in the dice game "Craps." In craps, "Little Joe" is a Hard 4 -or- two twos.
Built by the Plant System's Jacksonville, Tampa & Key West Railway in 1885, the Pierson depot was originally on the east side of the tracks, but was relocated to the west side in 1915. It was finally moved in 1982 to nearby Barberville for a museum, and photographed there on May 18, 2014. Pierson is located about midway between Crescent City and DeLand. Courtesy G. Gerard
Klasický tříkomorový školní batoh NUN 201 A s motivem motýlků a kytiček pro školačky v 1. až 4. třídě.
Rozměry/Dimensions: 40 x 20 x 27
Materiál/Material: Nylon 420 D
Hmotnost/Weight: 0,96 kg
Nosnost/Load: 7 kg
Ergonomicky tvarovaný zádový systém s polstrováním a vyjímatelným hliníkovým rámem společně s délkově nastavitelnými ramenními popruhy zaručí pohodlné a bezpečné používání batohu. Na obou popruzích jsou háčky na přichycení jinak volných konců popruhů.
Přední komora batohu je nejprostornější, prostřední a zadní komory jsou stejně velké. Vepředu je kapsa na zip. V ní najdete štítek na jméno školáka a karabinu na klíče. V prostřední komoře je malý organizér, v přední komoře poutko s karabinou, na kterou je možné zavěsit pytlík na přezůvky (CHI 555).
Pro oživení vnitřního prostoru mají batohy pestrobarevné podšívky.
Na obou bocích jsou nápaditě řešené postranní kapsy na stažení gumičkou, do kterých je možné umístit láhev s pitím o obsahu půl litru.
Všechny tyto batohy do školy jsou doplněny o četné reflexní plochy pro zvýšení bezpečnosti dítěte za každých povětrnostních podmínek. Dno batohu chrání pevný materiál, plastové nožky. Zpevněné jsou také spodní hrany batohu. Nepřehlédněte ani kvalitní zipy s originálními kovovými taháčky. Nahoře mají batohy úchyt pro přenášení v ruce. V zadní části batohu mezi popruhy je poutko k zavěšení batohu na lavici.
Příslušenství: výrazná reflexní pláštěnka a pytlík na papuče.
Pořiďte si k tomuto batohu také skvělé školní pouzdro NUN 202 A!
Howard County Library System's Evening in the Stacks held on February 22, 2014 at the Miller Branch.
Howard County Library System's Evening in the Stacks held on February 22, 2014 at the Miller Branch.
Ecived Electronics and Technology Co.,Ltd. devotes itself into researching and producing hands free access control system.
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Howard County Library System's Evening in the Stacks held on February 22, 2014 at the Miller Branch.
Skye, the newest facility dog, was brought on to support the health system’s caregivers. Skye will work with staff-assigned chaplains to address employee distress and promote resilience at Penn State Health Milton S. Hershey Medical Center and the Children’s Hospital.
One of 10 made for James Bond in 'Quantum of Solace'
Chassis n° SCFAB05D59GE00042
Zoute Sale - Bonhams
Estimated : € 180.000 - 240.000
Sold for € 149.500
Zoute Grand Prix 2024
Knokke - Zoute
België - Belgium
October 2024
A true 'James Bond' car, this Aston Martin DBS is one of 10 identical examples ordered by the production company for the motion picture Quantum of Solace (2008) starring Daniel Craig as secret agent 007. Aston Martin has enjoyed an immensely fruitful relationship with the James Bond franchise over the years, stretching all the away back to the famous 'Silver Birch' DB5 driven by Sean Connery in Goldfinger (1964) and most recently by Daniel Craig in No Time to Die (2021).
According to the Aston Martin Heritage Trust: "These cars were sequentially numbered E00038 to E00047 and were painted in a new colour, initially called 'Prototype - Bond 22', later named Quantum Silver. Some stunt cars were expected to be destroyed during the filming. The others that were only damaged were saved and are displayed at events. Some were undamaged 'hero' cars and might have been used in the film for interior or close-up shots or perhaps only for publicity.
"E00038 to E00041 were the special effects stunt cars. E00038 and E00041 were retained damaged and are often displayed with the bullet holes. E00039 and E00040 were scrapped.
"E00042 to E00047 were the hero cars although one of those appears also to have been scrapped (E00046), which leaves 5 hero cars that survived [...] This car, E00042 is one of the six hero cars and one of five that have survived intact."
The 10 Aston Martins were finished in a paint colour initially referred to as 'Prototype – Bond 22', later Quantum Silver. As they were portraying an Italian car in the movie, all were ordered in left-hand drive configuration with a six-speed manual transmission. Other specification highlights include the following: Obsidian Black semi-aniline leather with silver stitching; High specification alarm; Piano Black facia; Black brake calipers; Sports seats; Tracking device; Smoker's kit; Powerfold mirrors; Alcantara seat panels; Warm Charcoal seatbelts; First Aid kit; Garage door opener; Auto-dim mirror.
Built in February 2008 as a 2009 model, this DBS #E00042 was first registered in the UK as 'KX57 CMU' before being registered in Switzerland in 2009, where it has remained ever since. The current odometer reading is less than 37,800 kilometres. The accompanying documentation includes its current original Swiss carte grise; the stamped service book, regularly updated, mostly by Aston Martin in Saint-Gallen.; an Aston Martin Heritage Trust Vehicle Heritage Certificate with a Quantum of Solace appendix information; photocopy of the European conformity certificate; Aston Martin communication system's data; The car also comes with its exquisite glass key, embodying luxury, that elegantly starts the Aston Martin with a simple insertion, along with a spare key, an Aston Martin umbrella, and a battery trickle charger.
Members of the media visited the International Space Station Processing Facility "high bay" on August 11, 2017 to view the Space Launch System's Interim Cryogenic Propulsion Stage (ICPS). Representative from NASA and Boeing were on hand to answer questions.
The Interim Cryogenic Propulsion Stage (ICPS) is the first segment for NASA's Space Launch System (SLS) rocket to arrive at the agency's Kennedy Space Center in Florida and is currently in the Space Station Processing Facility. The ICPS will be located at the very top of the SLS, just below the Orion capsule. During Exploration Mission-1, NASA's first test mission of the SLS rocket and Orion, the ICPS, filled with liquid oxygen and liquid hydrogen, will give Orion the big in-space push needed to fly beyond the Moon before returning to Earth. The ICPS was designed and built by ULA in Decatur, Alabama, and Boeing in Huntsville, Alabama.
(Photos by Michael Seeley / We Report Space)
Howard County Library System's Evening in the Stacks held on February 22, 2014 at the Miller Branch.
Howard County Library System's Evening in the Stacks held on February 22, 2014 at the Miller Branch.
VA employees, Veterans and community members at the VA Ann Arbor Healthcare System's Toledo Community Based Outreach Clinic (CBOC) put on their walking shoes and joined in the fourth nationwide VA2K event on May 21, 2014. The annual Walk and Roll of about 1.2 miles took place at VA hospitals and CBOCs encourages people to step up their fitness level and to support homeless Veterans with donated food and clothing items.
Launched in 1989 as Metro Vision, PATHVISION is the PATH rail system's in-house television network, appearing on trains and in stations.
New York City Mayor Eric Adams and NYC Health + Hospitals President and CEO Dr. Mitchell Katz today announced ‘Housing for Health’ — a comprehensive initiative to serve the health system’s large patient population experiencing homelessness by connecting them to affordable homes and housing supports in Queens on Thursday, November 3, 2022. Michael Appleton/Mayoral Photography Office
Howard County Library System's Evening in the Stacks held on February 22, 2014 at the Miller Branch.
Wow, talk about a stormy night! Very strong & gusty southerly winds & rain were observed as this strongly awaited atmospheric river/storm system’s main cold front made ‘landfall’ in the Bay Area. This was indeed the strongest storm so far this season for the region. Conditions outside looked like a tropical storm! Certainly, this was a stormy night for the region. The Sierras were also looking at feet of snowfall before all this is said & done. This evening was just the 1st part of the storm. More heavy rain & wind was in store for the state over the next day or two as this atmospheric river was forecast to inch back north towards the South Bay the very next day... Things would finally die down by Friday. Stay safe out there, everyone! (Video taken Tuesday nearing midnight, January 26, 2021)
*Weather forecast/update: A strong Pacific storm, or atmospheric river, was expected to bring periods of moderate to heavy rain to the region. This system was forecast to arrive by Tuesday (Jan 26) & was to bring periods of heavy rain & high winds. This will likely result in an increased risk of mudslides over steep terrain, debris flow over wildfire burned areas, as well as localized ponding of water in low-lying areas. Up to 3 inches of rain was expected in urban areas & 3-7 inches possible over higher terrain. The entire area from Napa south thru Monterey & San Benito Counties would get a good soaking from this atmospheric river. Latest model guidance suggests the coastal slopes of the Santa Cruz Mountains & Big Sur look to be the primary target of the heaviest rain. On top of this, a high wind watch was also in effect during the period. South winds 20-30 mph with gusts up to 50-60 mph are possible. North Bay, San Francisco Bay Shoreline, East Bay, Santa Cruz Mountains, and the South Bay will all be affected. Timing of the strongest winds are forecast to happen Tuesday evening thru Wednesday morning as this strong system’s cold front sweeps thru. Damaging winds can blow down trees & power lines which may result in power outages… Stay tuned to the latest forecast for the most up-to-date weather info online…
Edited Hubble Space Telescope image of Saturn, taken about one month ago. Color/processing variant.
Original caption: Saturn is by far the solar system’s most photogenic planet, and in this latest Hubble Space Telescope snapshot it is especially so because Saturn’s magnificent ring system is near its maximum tilt toward Earth (which was in 2017).
Hubble was used to observe the planet on June 6, 2018, when Saturn was only approximately 1.36 billion miles from Earth, nearly as close to us as it ever gets.
Saturn was photographed as it approached a June 27 opposition, when the planet is directly opposite to the Sun in the night sky and is at its yearly closest distance to the Earth. Though all of the gas giants boast rings, Saturn’s are the largest and most spectacular, stretching out eight times the radius of the planet.
Saturn’s stunning rings were first identified as a continuous disk around the planet by Dutch astronomer Christiaan Huygens in 1655. 325 years later, NASA’s Voyager 1 spacecraft flyby of Saturn resolved thousands of thin, fine ringlets. Data from NASA’s Cassini mission suggests the rings formed 200 million years ago, roughly around the time of the dinosaurs and Earth’s Jurassic period. The gravitational disintegration of one of Saturn’s small moons created myriad icy debris particles, and collisions today likely continually replenish the rings.
Visible in this Hubble image are the classic rings as recorded by early skywatchers. From the outside in are the A ring with the Encke Gap, the Cassini Division, the B ring, and the C ring with the Maxwell Gap.
Saturn’s appearance changes due to its seasons, caused by the planet’s 27-degree axial tilt. It is now summer in Saturn’s northern hemisphere and the atmosphere is more active. This may be responsible for a string of bright clouds visible near the northern polar region that are the remnants of a disintegrating storm. Small, mid-latitude puffs of clouds are also visible. Hubble’s view also resolves a hexagonal pattern around the north pole, a stable and persistent wind feature discovered during the Voyager flyby in 1981.
Saturn’s colors come from hydrocarbon hazes above the ammonia crystals in the upper cloud layers. Unseen lower-level clouds are either ammonium hydrosulfide or water. The planet’s banded structure is caused by the winds and the clouds at different altitudes.
This is the first image of Saturn taken as part of the Outer Planet Atmospheres Legacy (OPAL) project. OPAL is helping scientists understand the atmospheric dynamics and evolution of our solar system’s gas giant planets.
A pair of EMD SD-26s move through Guilford Rail System's East Deerfield Yard in East Deerfield, MA. GRS is now known as PanAm Railways, and I'm pretty sure these two locomotives are at the very least out of service, if not already been scrapped. Taken on May 31, 2003 on Fuji Provia 400
The calm after the storm... Gotta love the sunlight reflecting off of the wet street! Thunderstorms had occurred in the region during the morning hours this day. It was finally feeling a lot like fall! They were still predicting a strong El Niño this upcoming winter... Pic taken from around San Jose, CA. (Monday around sunset, November 9, 2015; 4:39 p.m.)
Weather update:
A cold storm system was to bring periods of rain to the Bay Area from late Saturday night thru Monday. This system which had dropped down from the Gulf of Alaska was to bring rain to across much of northern and central California, along with mountain snow. Rain had began in the North Bay late Saturday night as the system's cold front pushed in. The front then pushed southward into our region by Sunday. Widespread shower activity was to follow the front from Sunday night through Monday. T-storms were likely on Monday due to an unstable airmass behind the front. Showers were forecast to taper off by Monday evening. Drier weather was forecast to return by Tuesday...
Members of the media visited the International Space Station Processing Facility "high bay" on August 11, 2017 to view the Space Launch System's Interim Cryogenic Propulsion Stage (ICPS). Representative from NASA and Boeing were on hand to answer questions.
The Interim Cryogenic Propulsion Stage (ICPS) is the first segment for NASA's Space Launch System (SLS) rocket to arrive at the agency's Kennedy Space Center in Florida and is currently in the Space Station Processing Facility. The ICPS will be located at the very top of the SLS, just below the Orion capsule. During Exploration Mission-1, NASA's first test mission of the SLS rocket and Orion, the ICPS, filled with liquid oxygen and liquid hydrogen, will give Orion the big in-space push needed to fly beyond the Moon before returning to Earth. The ICPS was designed and built by ULA in Decatur, Alabama, and Boeing in Huntsville, Alabama.
(Photos by Michael Seeley / We Report Space)
Howard County Library System's Evening in the Stacks held on February 22, 2014 at the Miller Branch.
Školní batoh Topgal CHI 187 I
Moderní dvoukomorový školní batoh CHI 187 v nejnovějším stylu. Navíc školní pouzdro zdarma jako dárek!
Ideální batoh pro holky na prvním stupni ZŠ.
Ergonomicky tvarovaný zádový systém s polstrováním a vyjímatelným hliníkovým rámem společně s délkově nastavitelnými ramenními popruhy zajistí pohodlné a bezpečné používání tohoto batohu.
Přední komora batohu je prostornější, je zde umístěný praktický organizér, karabina na klíče, šikovná kapsa ze síťoviny a další malá zipová kapsička. Zadní komora poskytuje dostatek prostoru pro další školní pomůcky. Mezi těmito komorami je důmyslně skrytá, zipem uzavíratelná kapsa na box na svačinu, nebo na jiné věci, které chcete oddělit od ostatních školních potřeb v batohu. Na čelní straně mají batohy do školy dvě menší kapsy. Do obou z nich se bez problému vejde penál CHI 190 nebo CHI 191 a jiné menší věci.
Pro oživení vnitřního prostoru batohu je použito pestrobarevné podšívky.
Na jedné straně batohu je menší elastická kapsa na 1,5l láhev s pitím a popruh k zafixování lahve. Druhá menší postranní kapsa obsahuje poutko s karabinou, na kterou je možné zavěsit pytlík na přezůvky nebo si lze do kapsy uschovat jiné drobnosti.
Na popruzích jsou umístěny háčky pro zavěšení dlouhých konců popruhů a držák na PET lahev. Kromě úchytu s plastovou rukojetí pro pohodlné přenášení batohu v ruce je přidáno i poutko na zavěšení batohu na školní lavici. Batohy je doplněn o četné reflexní plochy pro zvýšení viditelnosti školáka za každých povětrnostních podmínek. Dno batohu je chráněno pevným materiálem, plastovými nožkami a zpevněné jsou také spodní hrany.
Součástí batohu je pytlík na papuče a pláštěnka na batoh a penál CHI 190!!!
Penál CHI 190 a CHI 191 ve stejném designu jako dárek zdarma!
Howard County Library System's Evening in the Stacks held on February 22, 2014 at the Miller Branch.
Operators at the Pine Bluff Explosive Destruction System prepare to load munitions into the system’s fragment suppression system. The FSS protects the EDS’ interior from fragments during treatment. (Photo courtesy U.S. Army)
For the full story, photos and video, visit www.cma.army.mil/45percentmilestone.aspx
Secretary Landgraf and Public Health Director Dr. Karyl Rattay were joined by state Sen. Bruce Ennis and Reps. Ruth Briggs-King, Dave Wilson and Harvey Kenton in recognizing the 20th anniversary of Delaware’s Statewide Trauma System. “No matter where in Delaware someone suffers a traumatic injury, they enter into the same system of care,” Secretary Landgraf said. “We are only a handful of states to have an inclusive statewide trauma system.”
Dr. Rattay said the state’s trauma system is credited with saving 1,319 lives and caring for 101,000 seriously injured people since 2000, an almost 50 percent decrease in the mortality rate in that time. The Delaware mortality rate is now consistently lower than the national rate reported by the federal National Trauma Data Bank.
Fourteen individuals who have 20 years of continuous service to the trauma system were honored at the ceremony in the House chambers at Legislative Hall:
•Edward L. Alexander III, MD, FACS of Bayhealth Kent General Hospital
•Marilynn K. Bartley, MSN, RN of Christiana Care Health System
•Steven Blessing, MA, Chief, EMS and Preparedness Section, DPH
•Steven D. Carey, MD, FACS of Nanticoke Memorial Hospital
•Dean Dobbert, MD, FACEP, Kent County EMS Medical Director
•Deborah Eberly, BSN, RN, CEN, CNML of Bayhealth
•Gerard J. Fulda, MD,FACS of Christiana Care Health System
•Linda Laskowski Jones, MS, APRN, ACNS-BC, CEN, FAWM, FAAN of Christiana Care Health System
•MarySue Jones, RN, MS, State Trauma System Coordinator, OEMS, DPH
•James P. Marvel, Jr., MD, FACS of Beebe Healthcare
•Ross E. Megargel, DO, FACEP, State EMS Medical Director
•Stephen G. Murphy, MD, FACS of Nemours/Alfred I. duPont Hospital for Children
•Lawrence E. Tan, Esq., NRP, Chief of Emergency Medical Services, New Castle County
•Glen H. Tinkoff, MD, FACS of Christiana Care Health System
Sen. Ennis, who advocated for and helped to push through the enabling legislation, read a joint resolution recognizing the trauma system’s anniversary. Rep. Kenton in honoring Sen. Ennis’ role in creating the trauma system said, “We’ll never know, Senator, how many lives you saved.” Rep. Briggs-King in praising the statewide system of care said, “For a small state, you’ve made a huge statement.”
Trauma survivor Melanie Pertain shared how the system helped her and her family after they were involved in a serious motor vehicle crash on Concord Pike in 2013. “I received tremendous care in the ER and then the OR after we were transported to Christiana Hospital,” said Pertain, who spent two weeks in the surgical ICU after suffering a traumatic brain injury and other injuries in the accident. “My new mantra is ‘Be grateful, not hateful.’”
Secretary Landgraf and Public Health Director Dr. Karyl Rattay were joined by state Sen. Bruce Ennis and Reps. Ruth Briggs-King, Dave Wilson and Harvey Kenton in recognizing the 20th anniversary of Delaware’s Statewide Trauma System. “No matter where in Delaware someone suffers a traumatic injury, they enter into the same system of care,” Secretary Landgraf said. “We are only a handful of states to have an inclusive statewide trauma system.”
Dr. Rattay said the state’s trauma system is credited with saving 1,319 lives and caring for 101,000 seriously injured people since 2000, an almost 50 percent decrease in the mortality rate in that time. The Delaware mortality rate is now consistently lower than the national rate reported by the federal National Trauma Data Bank.
Fourteen individuals who have 20 years of continuous service to the trauma system were honored at the ceremony in the House chambers at Legislative Hall:
•Edward L. Alexander III, MD, FACS of Bayhealth Kent General Hospital
•Marilynn K. Bartley, MSN, RN of Christiana Care Health System
•Steven Blessing, MA, Chief, EMS and Preparedness Section, DPH
•Steven D. Carey, MD, FACS of Nanticoke Memorial Hospital
•Dean Dobbert, MD, FACEP, Kent County EMS Medical Director
•Deborah Eberly, BSN, RN, CEN, CNML of Bayhealth
•Gerard J. Fulda, MD,FACS of Christiana Care Health System
•Linda Laskowski Jones, MS, APRN, ACNS-BC, CEN, FAWM, FAAN of Christiana Care Health System
•MarySue Jones, RN, MS, State Trauma System Coordinator, OEMS, DPH
•James P. Marvel, Jr., MD, FACS of Beebe Healthcare
•Ross E. Megargel, DO, FACEP, State EMS Medical Director
•Stephen G. Murphy, MD, FACS of Nemours/Alfred I. duPont Hospital for Children
•Lawrence E. Tan, Esq., NRP, Chief of Emergency Medical Services, New Castle County
•Glen H. Tinkoff, MD, FACS of Christiana Care Health System
Sen. Ennis, who advocated for and helped to push through the enabling legislation, read a joint resolution recognizing the trauma system’s anniversary. Rep. Kenton in honoring Sen. Ennis’ role in creating the trauma system said, “We’ll never know, Senator, how many lives you saved.” Rep. Briggs-King in praising the statewide system of care said, “For a small state, you’ve made a huge statement.”
Trauma survivor Melanie Pertain shared how the system helped her and her family after they were involved in a serious motor vehicle crash on Concord Pike in 2013. “I received tremendous care in the ER and then the OR after we were transported to Christiana Hospital,” said Pertain, who spent two weeks in the surgical ICU after suffering a traumatic brain injury and other injuries in the accident. “My new mantra is ‘Be grateful, not hateful.’”
Howard County Library System's Evening in the Stacks held on February 22, 2014 at the Miller Branch.
Howard County Library System's Evening in the Stacks held on February 22, 2014 at the Miller Branch.
Howard County Library System's Evening in the Stacks held on February 22, 2014 at the Miller Branch.
Soaring 368 metres into the sky, Berlin’s TV Tower is the city’s most visible landmark. But the tower on Alexanderplatz is not just literally a must-see sight, it is also the highest building in Europe open to the general public. And from the dizzying height of its viewing platform, you have spectacular 360-degree panoramic views out across the entire city and beyond!
The Berlin TV Tower was inaugurated on 3 October 1969 – shortly before East Germany held its twentieth anniversary celebrations. For Walter Ulbricht, then East Germany’s head of state, the TV Tower, constructed in just four years, was emblematic of the communist system's superiority – unequivocal evidence that the GDR was building a better future. The tower was designed by Hermann Henselmann and the group of architects around Fritz Dieter, Günter Franke and We Source: www.visitberlin.de
Howard County Library System's Evening in the Stacks held on February 22, 2014 at the Miller Branch.
Howard County Library System's Evening in the Stacks held on February 22, 2014 at the Miller Branch.
Školní batoh Topgal CHI 187
Moderní dvoukomorový školní batoh CHI 187 v nejnovějším stylu. Navíc školní pouzdro zdarma jako dárek!
Ideální batoh pro holky na prvním stupni ZŠ.
Ergonomicky tvarovaný zádový systém s polstrováním a vyjímatelným hliníkovým rámem společně s délkově nastavitelnými ramenními popruhy zajistí pohodlné a bezpečné používání tohoto batohu.
Přední komora batohu je prostornější, je zde umístěný praktický organizér, karabina na klíče, šikovná kapsa ze síťoviny a další malá zipová kapsička. Zadní komora poskytuje dostatek prostoru pro další školní pomůcky. Mezi těmito komorami je důmyslně skrytá, zipem uzavíratelná kapsa na box na svačinu, nebo na jiné věci, které chcete oddělit od ostatních školních potřeb v batohu. Na čelní straně mají batohy do školy dvě menší kapsy. Do obou z nich se bez problému vejde penál CHI 190 nebo CHI 191 a jiné menší věci.
Pro oživení vnitřního prostoru batohu je použito pestrobarevné podšívky.
Na jedné straně batohu je menší elastická kapsa na 1,5l láhev s pitím a popruh k zafixování lahve. Druhá menší postranní kapsa obsahuje poutko s karabinou, na kterou je možné zavěsit pytlík na přezůvky nebo si lze do kapsy uschovat jiné drobnosti.
Na popruzích jsou umístěny háčky pro zavěšení dlouhých konců popruhů a držák na PET lahev. Kromě úchytu s plastovou rukojetí pro pohodlné přenášení batohu v ruce je přidáno i poutko na zavěšení batohu na školní lavici. Batohy je doplněn o četné reflexní plochy pro zvýšení viditelnosti školáka za každých povětrnostních podmínek. Dno batohu je chráněno pevným materiálem, plastovými nožkami a zpevněné jsou také spodní hrany.
Součástí batohu je pytlík na papuče a pláštěnka na batoh a penál CHI 190!!!
Penál CHI 190 a CHI 191 ve stejném designu jako dárek zdarma!
Installation View
Juror Statement:
It was a delight to jury EDGE 2017. The chosen works explore and experiment along the edges, where quilters meet and mingle with painters, weavers, collage/assembly artists.
When approaching an artwork in any media I look for several things: skill in the use of the media, a recognition of the history and traditions of the materials being used, strong formal visual language skills, an awareness of artistic conventions (including when they are artfully broken), and the ability of the artist to combine these elements into original content that can engage the viewer deeply in an aesthetic, emotional, intellectual, or spiritual way.
The artists in this exhibit honor traditional media and criteria for excellence while celebrating experimentation and creative use of materials. They exemplify high skill and wild innovation. I selected a total of 28 exceptional works that include expressions that range from abstract and textured to graphic and figurative. These works truly do forge new pathways, and new connections with other visual disciplines.
HELEN KLEBESADEL, juror
Bio:
Helen Klebesadel is an artist, an educator, and an activist. Best known for her environmental and women centered watercolors, she is particularly interested in how myths and stories socialize us to have different expectations for some people than others. She uses the creative process to re-examine and re-present narratives that resist and contest existing power structures by revealing they exist.
Helen earned her BS and MFA from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. She taught studio art and chaired the art department at Lawrence University (Appleton, WI) from 1990-2000, before leaving to accept the position of Director of the University of Wisconsin System’s Women’s and Gender Studies Consortium in 2000. From 2013-2016 Helen was the Director of the UW-Madison Division of Continuing Studies’ Wisconsin Regional Art Program. Helen continues to direct the Women’s and Gender Studies Consortium, now hosted by UW-Madison Department of Gender and Women’s Studies.
Digital Aerial Sketch Mapping (DASM) system's laptop, power board, Garmin GPS, and KDS touchscreen in a computer rack designed by the Forest Health Technology Enterprise Team (FHTET).
Photo by: Unknown
Date: circa 2004
Credit: USDA Forest Service, Region 6, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection.
Source: Aerial Survey Program collection.
For geospatial data collected during annual aerial forest insect and disease detection surveys see: www.fs.usda.gov/detail/r6/forest-grasslandhealth/insects-...
For related historic program documentation see:
archive.org/details/AerialForestInsectAndDiseaseDetection...
Johnson, J. 2016. Aerial forest insect and disease detection surveys in Oregon and Washington 1947-2016: The survey. Gen. Tech. Rep. R6-FHP-GTR-0302. Portland, OR: USDA Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Region, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection. 280 p.
Image provided by USDA Forest Service, Region 6, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection: www.fs.usda.gov/main/r6/forest-grasslandhealth