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U.S. Public Health Service Capt. Leo Saligan, Dr. Carol Romano, dean and professor at the Uniformed Services University of Health Sciences Graduate School of Nursing, Col. Melissa Hoffman, deputy chief of the Army Nurse Corps, Maj. Gen. Dorothy Hogg, deputy surgeon general of the Air Force and chief of the Air Force Nurse Corps, Capt. Deborah Roy, deputy director of the Navy Nurse Corps, and U.S. Army Spc. Jonah Roggensack salute during the wreath placement at the Military Health System's 2018 National Nurses Week wreath-laying ceremony at Arlington National Cemetery Nurses Memorial, Section 21 on Monday, May 7, 2018. (Defense Health Agency Communications Division Photo)

Creator: McCurdy, James G., 1872-1942

 

Description: Image information taken from the North Olympic Library System's Kellogg Master Index, including the following note: Basket weaver at Port Townsend. Makah Basket Weaver. Used in 'By Juan de Fuca's Strait, 'Early Days of the Olympic Peninsula in Photographs,' and 'Indian Days at Neah Bay.'

 

View source image.

 

More information on the commercial rights for this photo..

 

Part of Olympic Peninsula Community Museum

University of Washington Libraries.

 

Brought to you by IMLS Digital Collections and Content.

 

Unrestricted access; use with attribution.

Creator: McCurdy, James G., 1872-1942

 

Description: Image information taken from the North Olympic Library System's Kellogg Master Index, including the following notes: This fresh water creek, flowing into the Strait of Juan de Fuca at Neah Bay, served as a primitive self-service laundry for Makah Indian women. Used in the book, 'Indian Days at Neah Bay.'

 

View source image.

 

More information on the commercial rights for this photo..

 

Part of Olympic Peninsula Community Museum

University of Washington Libraries.

 

Brought to you by IMLS Digital Collections and Content.

 

Unrestricted access; use with attribution.

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. – Some of the state’s most remarkable students gathered March 10 for the University of Missouri System’s annual Undergraduate Research Day at the Capitol in Jefferson City.

 

In total, 59 students from the university’s four campuses discussed their work with senators, representatives and other visitors. Each student was selected in a competitive process and recommended by his or her campus, including 30 from the MU campus; 10 from UMKC; 16 from Missouri S&T; and three from UMSL. The students shared their research from a variety of disciplines including criminology, biology, education, engineering, and political science.

 

"Research has been fundamental to the University of Missouri since it became a land-grant university more than 150 years ago,” Executive Vice President for Academic Affairs, Research and Economic Development Hank Foley said. “Research exposes students to the wonders and possibilities of research and innovation, and helps develop them as future scientists and entrepreneurs whose discoveries could result in new businesses and jobs, and improve the quality of life for Missourians.”

 

With research core to its mission, the UM System accounts for 96.9 percent of all research conducted by public universities in Missouri.

 

“No other public higher education institution in the state provides undergraduate students with the breadth and depth of research opportunities as the UM System,” Vice President for University Relations Steve Knorr said. “Giving our students an opportunity to showcase their work at the state Capitol with their own hometown legislators spreads the value message for higher education on a greater level.”

 

The UM System is one of the nation’s largest public research and doctoral level institutions with more than 77,000 students on four campuses and an extension program with activities in every county of the state.

 

Lying is an occupation

used by all who mean to rise:

Politicians owe their station

But to well-concerted lies.

 

These to lovers give assistance

To ensnare the fair one's heart;

And the virgin's best resistance

Yields to this commanding art.

 

Study this superior science,

Would you rise in church or state;

Bid to truth a bold defiance,

'Tis the practise of the great.

 

Laetitia Pilkington (1708–50)

 

Another of the poems showcased on the London Underground since 1986 as part of the system's Poems on the Underground program.

 

Big.

 

View the next photo in the series.

On Saturday, October 7, more than 1,700 of Rochester Regional Health’s friends and employees gathered at the Joseph A. Floreano Rochester Riverside Convention Center for the system’s signature celebration.

ATLANTIC OCEAN (July 8, 2014) -- Gas Turbine System's Technician Mechanical 2nd Class Amber Coleman, a Washington native, tests the flashpoint of fuel F-76 on a Naviflash aboard the guided-missile destroyer USS Forrest Sherman (DDG 98). Sherman is underway participating in Exercise Greyhound Armor in support of Destroyer Squadron 2. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist Seaman Bounome Chanphouang/RELEASED).

  

Five of the Manatee County Public Library System's locations are pleased to welcome members of the Suncoast Blues Society for Blues performance and discussion during the first week of December.

 

· On Monday, December 1st, 2014, Walker Smith, singer/songwriter and guitarist will perform at the Manatee County Central Library from 6-7:30 PM.

 

· On Tuesday, December 2nd, 2014, Brian Leneschmidt, guitarist, will perform at the South Manatee Branch Library from 12:30-2:00 PM.

 

· On Wednesday, December 3rd, 2014, Steve Arvey, veteran Blues player and teacher of Blues history will perform at the Braden River Branch Library from 2-3:30 PM.

 

· On Thursday, December 4th, 2014, Bodie Valdez, guitarist and harmonica player, will perform at the Palmetto Branch Library from 6:30-8:00 PM.

 

· On Friday, December 5th, 2014, Walker Smith, singer/songwriter and guitarist, will perform at the Rocky Bluff Branch Library from 2-3:30 PM.

  

These free events are sponsored by The Friends groups of all five library branches and the Suncoast Blues Society.

 

For general information about the Manatee County Public Library System, visit us on the web at www.mymanatee.org/library.

  

Kirby Road School

Cincinnati, Ohio

Listed 9/3/2013

Reference Number: 13000681

 

The Kirby Road School is significant under Criterion A for its association with the Cincinnati school system's implementation of educational reforms during the Progressive Movement in Cincinnati. Various changes were made resulting in a new school that provided a broader range of teaching, classroom, and school site reforms that addressed the educational development of schools in general and within the Cincinnati neighborhood of Northside. Beginning with its construction in 1910 and continuing into the late 1960s and 1970s, these reforms continued to address the primary school needs of the northern portion of the neighborhood of Northside. It is also significant under Criterion A for the role the school played in the physical and cultural development of the community. With residential development of the neighborhood, especially during the late-19th and early-20th century, the community required a new modern public primary school that functioned with the existing Salmon P. Chase School in fulfilling the public educational needs of the community. As Northside developed, matured, and maintained its neighborhood vibrancy into the 1970s, the school was an active contributor to and facilitator of a variety of neighborhood functions beyond those basic to the educational role of a school. These included activities that resulted from the school being open to numerous community wide programs and events. In addition, the school is significant under Criterion C for its architectural distinction associated with its Neo-Classical Revival-inspired design and for the high level of intact original design integrity. The building is one of a very few Neo-Classical Revival schools designed for the Cincinnati school system during the early 20th century.

 

National Register of Historic Places Homepage

 

Kirby Road School, Cincinnati, Ohio Summary Page

 

National Register of Historic Places on Facebook

The Enchanted Garden at Howard County Library System's Miller Branch is now certified by MonarchWatch as an official Monarch Waystation. The plaque was unveiled last night at during a Tween Sprouts youth garden club class in the garden during which students planted hots plants for monarchs, including milkweed.

 

The Enchanted Garden contributes to monarch conservation and provides a habitat and resources necessary for monarchs to produce successive generations and sustain their migration. We have three youth garden clubs, The Green Fingers, The Tween Sprouts, and The Enchanted Garden Youth Corps.

Haven't "released" an issue in while, thought I should do a special issue on today's rut our bus system's in currently.

Col. Karen O'Brien, Madigan's Deputy Commander for Clinical Services, has been named the 2013 Military Health System's Senior Female Physician as outstanding female physician and exemplary role model for other female physicians.

Howard County Library System's Evening in the Stacks: Sparkle and Spurs held on Saturday, February 23, 2013 at the Charles E. Miller Branch. Left - Valerie J. Gross President and CEO of the Howard County Library System.

You might not guess it, but sunrise was still hours away when this nightscape was taken, a view along the eastern horizon from a remote location in Chile's Atacama desert. Stretching high into the otherwise dark, starry sky the unusually bright conical glow is sunlight though, scattered by dust along the solar system's ecliptic plane . Known as Zodiacal light, the apparition is also nicknamed the "false dawn". Near center, bright star Aldebaran and the Pleiades star cluster seem immersed in the Zodiacal light, with Orion toward the right edge of the frame. Reddish emission from NGC 1499, the California Nebula, can also be seen through the tinge of airglow along the horizon. Sliding your cursor over the picture (or following this link) will label the sky over this future site of the Giant Magellan Telescope at Las Campanas Observatory. via NASA ift.tt/1tzF2Fb

Stainless steel piping stretches over most of the cathedral attic delivering pressurized water and gas to the system’s 246 mist nozzles.

The Moon is Earth's only natural satellite. It orbits at an average distance of 384,400 km (238,900 mi), about 30 times the diameter of Earth. Over time Earth's gravity has caused tidal locking, causing the same side of the Moon to always face Earth. Because of this, the lunar day and the lunar month are the same length, at 29.5 Earth days. The Moon's gravitational pull – and to a lesser extent, the Sun's – are the main drivers of Earth's tides.

 

In geophysical terms the Moon is a planetary-mass object or satellite planet. Its mass is 1.2% that of the Earth, and its diameter is 3,474 km (2,159 mi), roughly one-quarter of Earth's (about as wide as Australia.) Within the Solar System, it is the largest and most massive satellite in relation to its parent planet, the fifth largest and most massive moon overall, and larger and more massive than all known dwarf planets. Its surface gravity is about one sixth of Earth's, about half of that of Mars, and the second highest among all Solar System moons, after Jupiter's moon Io. The body of the Moon is differentiated and terrestrial, with no significant hydrosphere, atmosphere, or magnetic field. It formed 4.51 billion years ago, not long after Earth's formation, out of the debris from a giant impact between Earth and a hypothesized Mars-sized body called Theia.

 

The lunar surface is covered in lunar dust and marked by mountains, impact craters, their ejecta, ray-like streaks and, mostly on the near side of the Moon, by dark maria ("seas"), which are plains of cooled magma. These maria were formed when molten lava flowed into ancient impact basins. The Moon is, beside when passing through Earth's shadow during a lunar eclipse, always illuminated by the Sun, but from Earth the visible illumination shifts during its orbit, producing the lunar phases. The Moon is the brightest celestial object in Earth's night sky. This is mainly due to its large angular diameter, while the reflectance of the lunar surface is comparable to that of asphalt. The apparent size is nearly the same as that of the Sun, allowing it to cover the Sun almost completely during a total solar eclipse. From Earth about 59% of the lunar surface is visible over time due to cyclical shifts in perspective (libration), making parts of the far side of the Moon visible.

 

For humans the Moon has been an important source of inspiration and knowledge, having been crucial to cosmography, mythology, religion, art, time keeping, natural science, and spaceflight. On September 13, 1959, the first human-made object to reach an extraterrestrial body arrived on the Moon, the Soviet Union's Luna 2 impactor. In 1966, the Moon became the first extraterrestrial body where soft landings and orbital insertions were achieved. On July 20, 1969, humans for the first time landed on the Moon and any extraterrestrial body, at Mare Tranquillitatis with the lander Eagle of the United States' Apollo 11 mission. Five more crews were sent between then and 1972, each with two men landing on the surface. The longest stay was 75 hours by the Apollo 17 crew. Since then, exploration of the Moon has continued robotically with crewed missions being planned to return beginning in the late 2020s.

 

The origin of the Moon is usually explained by a Mars-sized body striking the Earth, creating a debris ring that eventually collected into a single natural satellite, the Moon, but there are a number of variations on this giant-impact hypothesis, as well as alternative explanations, and research continues into how the Moon came to be formed. Other proposed scenarios include captured body, fission, formed together (condensation theory, synestia), planetesimal collisions (formed from asteroid-like bodies), and collision theories.

 

The standard giant-impact hypothesis suggests that a Mars-sized body, called Theia, impacted the proto-Earth, creating a large debris ring around Earth, which then accreted to form the Moon. This collision also resulted in the 23.5° tilted axis of the Earth, thus causing the seasons. The Moon's oxygen isotopic ratios seem to be essentially identical to Earth's. Oxygen isotopic ratios, which may be measured very precisely, yield a unique and distinct signature for each Solar System body. If Theia had been a separate protoplanet, it probably would have had a different oxygen isotopic signature than proto-Earth, as would the ejected mixed material. Also, the Moon's titanium isotope ratio (50Ti/47Ti) appears so close to the Earth's (within 4 parts per million) that little if any of the colliding body's mass could likely have been part of the Moon.

 

"One of the challenges to the longstanding theory of the collision, is that a Mars-sized impacting body, whose composition likely would have differed substantially from that of Earth, likely would have left Earth and the moon with different chemical compositions, which they are not."

 

Some theories have been stated that presume the proto-Earth had no large moons early in the formation of the Solar System, 4.425 billion years ago, Earth being basically rock and lava. Theia, an early protoplanet the size of Mars, hit Earth in such a way that it ejected a considerable amount of material away from Earth. Some proportion of these ejecta escaped into space, but the rest consolidated into a single spherical body in orbit about Earth, creating the Moon.

 

The hypothesis requires a collision between a proto-Earth about 90% of the diameter of present Earth, and another body the diameter of Mars (half of the terrestrial diameter and a tenth of its mass). The latter has sometimes been referred to as Theia, the name of the mother of Selene, the Moon goddess in Greek mythology. This size ratio is needed in order for the resulting system to have sufficient angular momentum to match the current orbital configuration. Such an impact would have put enough material into orbit around Earth to have eventually accumulated to form the Moon.

 

Computer simulations show a need for a glancing blow, which causes a portion of the collider to form a long arm of material that then shears off. The asymmetrical shape of the Earth following the collision then causes this material to settle into an orbit around the main mass. The energy involved in this collision is impressive: possibly trillions of tonnes of material would have been vaporized and melted. In parts of the Earth, the temperature would have risen to 10,000 °C (18,000 °F).

 

The Moon's relatively small iron core (compared to other rocky planets and moons in the Solar System) is explained by Theia's core mostly merging into that of Earth. The lack of volatiles in the lunar samples is also explained in part by the energy of the collision. The energy liberated during the reaccretion of material in orbit around Earth would have been sufficient to melt a large portion of the Moon, leading to the generation of a magma ocean.

 

The newly formed Moon orbited at about one-tenth the distance that it does today, and spiraled outward because of tidal friction transferring angular momentum from the rotations of both bodies to the Moon's orbital motion. Along the way, the Moon's rotation became tidally locked to Earth, so that one side of the Moon continually faces toward Earth. Also, the Moon would have collided with and incorporated any small preexisting satellites of Earth, which would have shared the Earth's composition, including isotopic abundances. The geology of the Moon has since been more independent of the Earth.

 

A 2012 study on the depletion of zinc isotopes on the Moon found evidence for volatile depletion consistent with the giant-impact origin for Earth and the Moon. In 2013, a study was released that indicated that water in lunar magma is indistinguishable from that in carbonaceous chondrites and nearly the same as that of Earth in isotopic composition.

 

Although the giant-impact hypothesis explains many aspects of the Earth–Moon system, there are still a few unresolved problems, such as the Moon's volatile elements not being as depleted as expected from such an energetic impact.

 

Another issue is lunar and Earth isotope comparisons. In 2001, the most precise measurement yet of the isotopic signatures of Moon rocks was published. Surprisingly, the Apollo lunar samples carried an isotopic signature identical to Earth rocks, but different from other Solar System bodies. Because most of the material that went into orbit to form the Moon was thought to come from Theia, this observation was unexpected. In 2007, researchers from Caltech showed that the likelihood of Theia having an identical isotopic signature as the Earth is very small (less than 1 percent chance). Published in 2012, an analysis of titanium isotopes in Apollo lunar samples showed that the Moon has the same composition as Earth, which conflicts with the Moon forming far from Earth's orbit.

 

To help resolve these problems, a theory published in 2012 posits that two bodies—each five times the size of Mars—collided, then recollided, forming a large disc of mixed debris that eventually formed Earth and the Moon.

 

The Moon is traditionally thought to have coalesced from the debris ejected by a giant impact onto the early Earth. However, such models struggle to explain the similar isotopic compositions of Earth and lunar rocks at the same time as the system's angular momentum, and the details of potential impact scenarios are hotly debated. Above a high resolution threshold for simulations, a study published in 2022 finds that giant impacts can immediately place a satellite with similar mass and iron content to the Moon into orbit far outside Earth's Roche limit. Even satellites that initially pass within the Roche limit can reliably and predictably survive, by being partially stripped and then torqued onto wider, stable orbits. Furthermore, the outer layers of these directly formed satellites are molten over cooler interiors and are composed of around 60% proto-Earth material. This could alleviate the tension between the Moon's Earth-like isotopic composition and the different signature expected for the impactor. Immediate formation opens up new options for the Moon's early orbit and evolution, including the possibility of a highly tilted orbit to explain the lunar inclination, and offers a simpler, single-stage scenario for the origin of the Moon.

 

In 2004, Russian astrophysicist Nikolai Gorkavyi proposed a novel model titled the multiple large asteroid impacts model, which found support from a notable group of Russian astronomers in 2013 and later, in 2017, by planetary researchers at Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot, Israel. In general terms, the main idea of the model suggests that the Moon was formed as a result of a violent rain of large asteroids (1–100 km) that repeatedly hammered the fledgling Earth over millions of years. Such a series of smaller impacts, which were likely more common in the early Solar System, could blast enough rocky Earth debris into orbit to form a protosatellite disk which later forms into a small moonlet. As repeated impacts created more balls of debris, the moonlets could merge over time into one large moon.

 

In 2018 researchers at Harvard and the UC Davis developed computer models demonstrating that one possible outcome of a planetary collision is that it creates a synestia, a mass of vaporized rock and metal which forms a biconcave disc extending beyond the lunar orbit. The synestia will eventually shrink and cool to accrete the satellite and reform the impacted planet.

 

This hypothesis states that the Moon was captured by the Earth. This model was popular until the 1980s, and some points in its favor are the Moon's size, orbit, and tidal locking.

 

One problem is understanding the capture mechanism. A close encounter of two planetary bodies typically results in either collision or altered trajectories. For this hypothesis to work, there might have been a large atmosphere around the primitive Earth, which would slow the movement of the Moon by aerobraking before it could escape. That hypothesis may also explain the irregular satellite orbits of Jupiter and Saturn. However, this hypothesis does not adequately explain the essentially identical oxygen isotope ratios of the two bodies.

 

This is the now discredited hypothesis that an ancient, rapidly spinning Earth expelled a piece of its mass. This was first proposed by George Darwin (son of the famous biologist Charles Darwin) in 1879 and retained some popularity until Apollo. The Austrian geologist Otto Ampferer in 1925 also suggested the emerging of the Moon as cause for continental drift.

 

It was proposed that the Pacific Ocean represented the scar of this event. Today it is known that the oceanic crust that makes up this ocean basin is relatively young, about 200 million years old or less, whereas the Moon is much older. The Moon does not consist of oceanic crust but of mantle material, which originated inside the proto-Earth in the Precambrian.

 

The hypothesis of accretion suggests that the Earth and the Moon formed together as a double system from the primordial accretion disk of the Solar System or even a black hole. The problem with this hypothesis is that it does not explain the angular momentum of the Earth-Moon system or why the Moon has a relatively small iron core compared to the Earth (25% of its radius compared to 50% for the Earth).

 

Dutch scientists Rob de Meijer and Wim van Westrenen suggested in 2010 that the Moon may have formed from a nuclear explosion caused by the centrifugal force of an earlier, spinning proto-Earth. The centrifugal force would have concentrated heavy elements such as thorium and uranium on the equatorial plane and at the boundary between the Earth's outer core and mantle. If the concentrations of these radioactive elements were high enough, this could have led to a nuclear chain reaction that became supercritical, causing a nuclear explosion ejecting the Moon into orbit. This natural nuclear fission reactor has been observed on Earth at a much smaller scale.

 

In 2011, it was theorized that a second moon existed 4.5 billion years ago, and later had an impact with the Moon, as a part of the accretion process in the formation of the Moon.

 

One hypothesis, presented only as a possibility, was that the Earth captured the Moon from Venus.

 

Uranium–lead dating of Apollo 14 zircon fragments shows the age of the Moon to be about 4.51 billion years.

 

A team of researchers of the Miniature Radio Frequency (Mini-RF) instrument on NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) spacecraft concluded that the Moon's subsurface may be richer in metals, like iron and titanium, more than scientists had believed.

 

In July 2020 scientists report that the Moon formed 4.425 ±0.025 bya, about 85 million years later than thought, and that it hosted an ocean of magma for substantially longer than previously thought (for ~200 million years).

 

On 1 November 2023, scientists reported that, according to computer simulations, remnants of a protoplanet, named Theia, could be inside the Earth, left over from a collision with the Earth in ancient times, and afterwards becoming the Moon.

A look at Rig Mat System's CLT Crane Mats' hook.

 

Our Crane mats are made from CLT, can be up to 40 feet long, are extremely strong and can hold up the heaviest of equipment.

Howard County Library System's Evening in the Stacks: Sparkle and Spurs held on Saturday, February 23, 2013 at the Charles E. Miller Branch.

Learn more about Institute for System's Biology's Symposium: symposium.systemsbiology.net

The Aspen Institute Economic Opportunities Program, in collaboration with the Forum for Community Solutions, hosted our latest Working in America event, "Race, Work, and Opportunity in America," at the Aspen Institute offices in Washington, DC, on October 25, 2017. Panelists -- including New Jersey Institute for Social Justice's Ryan P. Haygood, Carolinas HealthCare System's Debra Plousha Moore, University of Massachusetts Professor Don Tomaskovic-Devey, National Black Worker Center Project's Tanya Wallace-Gobern, and Center for Community Change Action's Dorian T. Warren -- discussed the history and ongoing impact of systemic barriers that Black workers face in the American workforce today.

 

Property of the Aspen Institute / Credit: Riccardo Savi

On Saturday, October 7, more than 1,700 of Rochester Regional Health’s friends and employees gathered at the Joseph A. Floreano Rochester Riverside Convention Center for the system’s signature celebration.

Scandinavian Airlines System's Boeing 737-800, LN-RCY, taking off at London Heathrow, July 2011.

 

The flight was SK0806 to Oslo Airport, Gardermoen, Norway.

On Saturday, October 7, more than 1,700 of Rochester Regional Health’s friends and employees gathered at the Joseph A. Floreano Rochester Riverside Convention Center for the system’s signature celebration.

Thanks to the Indian rail system's lax safety standards, we were able to swing ourselves up through the open door of a moving train at the Bangalore train station. This is Kevin just after sitting down to catch his breath.

 

Due to horrendous traffic, we were late for our train and arrived breathless on the platform, only to find it pulling out of the station. No biggie -- that's what they leave the doors open for.

Future system's media center on the "Lord's Cricket Ground".

  

See where this picture was taken. [?]

Learn more about Institute for System's Biology's Symposium: symposium.systemsbiology.net

Sunderland 16 was built in 1900 by Dick, Kerr & Co. in Preston for Sunderland Corporation Tramways, part of a batch of five open top double-decker trams, numbered 13 to 18. It is the sole-surviving original Sunderland tram, Sunderland having been the second-largest tramway undertaking in the North East. This batch had to wait until after World War One to have its open top rebuilt as a closed deck, something which had been done to most of the rest of the fleet by 1916. Subsequent modifications in the 1920s and 1930s saw changes to the interior (seating and staircases), running gear (trucks) and current collector (a bow set up replacing trolley pole). Following the Sunderland system's closure in 1954, it was one of a few trams to escape destruction, instead finding use as changing rooms for football teams, before being broken up in the late 1950s - its lower saloon being moved to Westwood Farm in Low Warden near Hexham, for use as a tool shed and apple store.

 

The museum then rescued the body as a potential restoration project, moving it to the museum in 1989. Returning it to 1920s closed top condition, the reconstructed lower deck was mounted on a refurbished second hand Peckham P35 truck, with a new upper deck built from scratch. The restored tram entered service in July 2003. Following another overhaul, it returned to service in December 2014. Re-tyred in 2018.

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beamish_Museum_transport_collection...

On Saturday, October 7, more than 1,700 of Rochester Regional Health’s friends and employees gathered at the Joseph A. Floreano Rochester Riverside Convention Center for the system’s signature celebration.

On Feb. 8, 2018, three 644th RSG Soldiers were promoted during a ceremony at Fort Bliss, Texas. 1st Lt. Nhu Hoang, Personnel (S-1) officer, was promoted to Captain. Promoted by his wife, 1st Lt. Marco Alcantar, Information Management Systems (S-6) OIC, advanced to Captain. Also, Spec. Chailey Reshetar was promoted to the rank of Sergeant, and is now a Non-commissioned Officer. The 644th RSG Commander, Col. Dominic Wibe, addressed the entire group and said he couldn't have promoted a more deserving group of individuals into higher ranks of increased responsibility. Congratulations to all three who were promoted! And nothing like an open taco bar to celebrate the day

Description: Image information taken from the North Olympic Library System's Kellogg Master Index, including the following note: Cutting up a whale; inflated sealskin floats in foreground; children sitting on whale and people standing on whale in center; Samuel Morse, Indian agent, on right; man in overcoat and hat on left; Indian man and woman beside man on left; children on far right.

 

View source image.

 

More information on the commercial rights for this photo..

 

Part of Olympic Peninsula Community Museum

University of Washington Libraries.

 

Brought to you by IMLS Digital Collections and Content.

 

Unrestricted access; use with attribution.

Capt. Deborah Roy, deputy director of the Navy Nurse Corps delivers the concluding remarks at the Military Health System's 2018 National Nurses Week wreath-laying ceremony at Arlington National Cemetery Nurses Memorial, Section 21 on Monday, May 7, 2018. (Defense Health Agency Communications Division Photo)

Belinda Wong (volunteer program coordinator) and Teresa (residence manager) from S.U.C.C.E.S.S. Austin Harris Residence welcomed Sierra System's Elnaz Seyednejad and her team for a day of caring in the seniors centre garden.

 

The Sierra System's team filled many garbage bags with weeds and mud. After much toiling they were treated to afternoon tea by very satisfied staff!

 

Thank you team SS!

If you will tell me why the fen

appears impassable, I then

will tell you why I think that I

can get across it if I try.

 

Marianne Moore (1887-1972)

 

Another of the poems showcased on the London Underground as part of the system's Poems on the Underground program.

 

View the first photo in the series or the previous one.

Here is a depiction of the Wisconsin Technical College System's 100 year history.

ovgznr.aeodoctor.ru/

This additional channel however increases the load on the graphics system's memory bandwidth. Ichise has no interest and keeps asking where Ran is. Aditi has missed a period. The flowers are followed by small woody capsules 0. Reckord also issued orders posthumously promoting Captain Detrick to the rank of Major.

With little physical evidence and only psychiatric reports to rely on, Steel must convince the jury of Darnell's involvement. Alhassan was a young child. The theory was proposed by Cecilia Heyes in 2000. Patrick's Day show at Zaphod Beeblebrox in Ottawa.Round 4 of the championship. Octagon Theatre Bolton production. Makuck does not see nature as wholly benevolent. Buchanan's Station in Ripley County. The Child Development Center and Math Learning Center opened in Fall 2001.

Until you get this car, the loan shark will not give you a second look. July 13, 1965 to June 1, 1967. Liu Bei comes in when Cao Cao is about to leave for the war. He becomes familiar with the local inhabitants of the nearby villages of Karyni and Penthili, and gains their trust and respect. Palm Springs Short Film Festival, Palm Springs, CA.

Slopes range from 0 to 15 percent. Many organisms rely on the soil derived phosphorus for their phosphorus nutrition. America honors and was one of five standouts on that team who eventually played professionally. The time comes for Hekja to spend the summer up the mountain with the other girls of the village. Poster of Witch Yoo Hee.

 

--

Rosalyn

Sent with Airmail

Elizabeth shares Mother-Daughter stories as part of the Pioneer Library System's Big Read 2012

On Saturday, October 7, more than 1,700 of Rochester Regional Health’s friends and employees gathered at the Joseph A. Floreano Rochester Riverside Convention Center for the system’s signature celebration.

The MINI TRAXION self-jamming pulley is the best choice for rescue hauling systems.

 

Photo © Boris Stephan

Sentry Air System’s Model 300 BKT Fume Extractor helps to capture toxic fumes while drawing them away from client’s and stylist’s respiratory zone during hair treatments such as Brazilian Keratin Treatment and Brazilian Blowout.

 

This helps reduce fume exposure to the customer, the stylist, and other patrons in the salon.

 

www.sentryair.com/specs/Air-Purifier-Spec-300-FS.htm

 

Watch a video demonstration youtu.be/3WHRIZJIwi4

On 25th Street outside the car house switching tracks the day before the system's opening on 8-21-03

Elizabeth shares Mother-Daughter stories as part of the Pioneer Library System's Big Read 2012

This bridge above the tracks of the city train system (S-bahn) on Warschauer Strasse is a melting pot, very famous place of meetings, especially before going for party on Friedrichshein (students district). Especially during the evenings is full of younger and older people, mostly with very alternative style :) It's full of subcultures, colors, races, languages...

 

Ten most nad torami kolejki miejskiej (S-bahn) na ul. Warszawskiej jest punktem spotkań, tyglem pełnym indywidualistów. Jest bardzo słynnym miejscem spotkań, szczególnie przed imprezowaniem na Friedrichshein (dzielnicy studenckiej). Szczególnie wieczorami pełen jest on ludzi w różnym wieku, głównie o bardzo alternatywnym (w naszym pojęciu) stylu ;) Jest miejscem pełnym subkultur, kolorów, ras, języków...

Howard County Library System's Evening in the Stacks: Sparkle and Spurs held on Saturday, February 23, 2013 at the Charles E. Miller Branch.

Learn more about Institute for System's Biology's Symposium: symposium.systemsbiology.net

One 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! (Tuesday evening, ‎January ‎26, ‎2021; 11:41 p.m.)

 

*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…

181009-N-KA046-0421

 

MEDITERRANEAN SEA (Oct. 9, 2018) – Information System's Technician 3rd Class Josh Hartneck scores a target during a live-fire exercise aboard the Blue Ridge-class command and control ship USS Mount Whitney (LCC 20), Oct. 8, 2018.

Mount Whitney, forward-deployed to Gaeta, Italy, operates with a combined crew of U.S. Navy Sailors and Military Sealift Command civil service mariners. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class James R. Turner/Released)

 

Description: Image information taken from the North Olympic Library System's Kellogg Master Index, including the following notes: May be Warringer Smith (Norman's brother). Hear Sweet Ranch.

 

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Belinda Wong (volunteer program coordinator) and Teresa (residence manager) from S.U.C.C.E.S.S. Austin Harris Residence welcomed Sierra System's Elnaz Seyednejad and her team for a day of caring in the seniors centre garden.

 

The Sierra System's team filled many garbage bags with weeds and mud. After much toiling they were treated to afternoon tea by very satisfied staff!

 

Thank you team SS!

On Saturday, October 7, more than 1,700 of Rochester Regional Health’s friends and employees gathered at the Joseph A. Floreano Rochester Riverside Convention Center for the system’s signature celebration.

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