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Howard County Library System's Evening in the Stacks: Sparkle and Spurs held on Saturday, February 23, 2013 at the Charles E. Miller Branch.
University of Missouri System’s Advocacy-Mentoring Program held its 2012 Torch Awards on Nov. 15, 2012 to mark the completion of an 18-month mentorship program.
The mentoring relationship is meant to increase the number of competitive minority- and women-owned firms that wish to do business with one of the University of Missouri’s four campuses. Women- or minority-owned businesses are defined as business entities in which at least 51 percent of the ownership interest, stock or otherwise, is minority or woman owned.
Trailing behind a storm system's cold front! I've never seen the sky so clear... Pics taken from around San Jose, CA. (Sunday morning, January 22, 2017)
Weather scenario:
Strong and gusty winds with rain showers was observed overnight as yet another potent storm system pushed into the region. Talk about so many storms this month. This was storm #3, the last storm of this 2nd storm series/'atmospheric river' event this month... 3 strong storms were aimed to affect California in the week of Jan 18-23. An atmospheric river had already drenched the state earlier this month. A series of 3 strong storms were set to sweep across the state beginning Wednesday and continuing thru next Monday, dropping widespread heavy rainfall and bringing strong gusty southerly winds to nearly the entire state...
Weather update/forecast: Bay Area residents were bracing for the worst and most powerful storm of this storm series... As the Bay Area endures its wettest January in 15 years, yet another winter storm with significant rainfalls and high winds was expected to hit the region Saturday night into Sunday. A strong cold front was to push through the area late Saturday night into Sunday and was to result in strong to very strong southerly winds ahead of and along with the frontal passage. Wind speeds in excess of 40-50 mph were be possible with gusts exceeding 60 mph! The strongest winds were likely along the coast and in higher elevations, however strong winds were felt throughout the entire Bay Area. Throughout the day Sunday, spotty showers were in the forecast across the region that can later develop into thunderstorms lasting into Monday...
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.
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.
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: Award-winning author Mary Doria Russell. Right: Lisa Bankman, Events & Seminars Manager.
I tried condensing the entire ~150 odd page LEED for Neighborhood Development rating system's credit thresholds onto a single sheet. Making this beforehand and re-re-reading it on the way over to the exam certainly helped.
Another useful, if not quite as compact, condensation of the credit thresholds is included as an appendix to the "Citizen's Guide."
Selective Service System Acting Director Joel C. Spangenberg, right, John A. Arbogast, center, the system’s new state director for California, and Arbogast’s wife, Nancie, left, are photographed after Arbogast’s swearing in ceremony, March 13, 2023, at Joint Forces Training Base, Los Alamitos, California. Arbogast, a U.S. Coast Guard veteran and Pasadena resident who has served in a variety of community roles including city commissioner, history teacher and track coach in addition to other Selective Service Systems positions at the state and local level, was nominated for his new role by California Governor Gavin Newsom. (U.S. Air National Guard photo by Staff Sgt. Crystal Housman)
On May 19, the Juno spacecraft once again swung by Jupiter in its looping 53 day orbit around the Solar System's ruling gas gaint. Beginning at the top, this vertical 14 frame sequence of enhanced-color JunoCam images follows the spacecraft's rapidly changing perspective during its two hour passage. They look down on Jupiter's north polar region, equatorial, and south polar region (bottom images). With the field-of-view shrinking, the seventh and eighth images in the sequence are close-up. Taken only 4 minutes apart above Jupiter's equator they were captured just before the spacecraft reached perijove 6, its closest approach to Jupiter on this orbit. Final images in the sequence pick up white oval storm systems, Jupiter's "String of Pearls", and the south polar region from the outward bound spacecraft. via NASA ift.tt/2rLehHf
Martini Racing Porsche System's Porsche 935/78 (Type-3.2L Turbo Flat-6) #43 driven by Manfred Schurti and Rolf Stommelen
Howard County Library System's Evening in the Stacks: Sparkle and Spurs held on Saturday, February 23, 2013 at the Charles E. Miller Branch.
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
Description: Image information taken from the North Olympic Library System's Kellogg Master Index, including the following note: Makah fish spears (seal hunter's spear).
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.
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
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.
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.
Minister of Communications Faith Muthambi accepts the Lifetime Achievement Award succeeded by King Edward Masinga she is surrounded by Government Communications and Information System’s Acting Director General Donald Liphoko and Koos Radebe at the Sandton Convention Centre in Johannesburg. (Photo: GCIS)
Howard County Library System's Evening in the Stacks: Sparkle and Spurs held on Saturday, February 23, 2013 at the Charles E. Miller Branch.
Description: Image information taken from the North Olympic Library System's Kellogg Master Index.
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.
Howard County Library System's Evening in the Stacks: Sparkle and Spurs held on Saturday, February 23, 2013 at the Charles E. Miller Branch. Award-winning author Mary Doria Russell.
Edited MRO image of detail of Olympus Mons' (probably the solar system's largest volcano) north scarp.
The Atlantic County Library System's Brigantine Branch held an adult craft night Thursday, July 18, 2019. Patrons put together decorative made mason jars filled with homemade potpourri.
Pictured: Jeanne DiCecco, of Brigantine.
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.
3-21-14 BALTIMORE, MD- Med student Keith King, and his wife Melissa celebrating his acceptance into the General Surgery Residency at Rutgers University with a kiss. Photo taken at the University of Maryland Medical System's Match Day, which was held at the Hippodrome Theater on March 21st, 2014. (The Daily Record/Maximilian Franz)
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.
A stack of Rig Mat System's beautiful Crane Mats ready for shipment.
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. Dave Chappell & The Lone Stardusters.
Dr. Carol Romano, dean and professor at the Uniformed Services University of Health Sciences Graduate School of Nursing delivers opening 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)
Howard County Library System's Evening in the Stacks: Sparkle and Spurs held on Saturday, February 23, 2013 at the Charles E. Miller Branch.
Howard County Library System's Evening in the Stacks: Sparkle and Spurs held on Saturday, February 23, 2013 at the Charles E. Miller Branch.
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 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.
At Victoria Regional Transit System's Langford Transit Centre under unfortunately harsh lighting conditions.
4/25/25 - Howard County Library System’s 2025 Battle of the Books held at Merriweather Post Pavilion in Columbia.
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.
The Orange Country Library System's Guide by Cell audio tour brochure. Now patrons can use their cell phone to find books, discover upcoming events, and navigate library resources.
At the May 4 Health Care Commission meeting, DHSS Secretary Walker framed a discussion about preventing violence in Delaware while also engaging health care providers from Christiana Care, St. Francis, A.I. duPont Hospital for Children/Nemours, Henrietta Johnson Medical Center and Westside Family Healthcare on their efforts. "How do we collectively develop something that is a real wrap-around service?" Secretary Walker asked as she went through slides documenting gun violence statistics in Wilmington, the impact of trauma, the role health care providers can play in terms of interventions, the recommendations of the CDC Community Advisory Council and the resulting increase in services for youth this summer. She committed DHSS resources, including a possible plan to "redeploy our social workers in a different way."
Yvette Gbemudu, medical director for Henrietta Johnson and a family physician, said she used the center's behavioral health services to intervene on behalf a woman struggling after she lost her 22-year-old son to gun violence. Gbemudu said emergency rooms see the immediate victims of gun violence, but places like Henrietta Johnson see "the people who are bleeding from the inside."
Chris Manning of Nemours said the system's Jessup Street Clinic has a memorial board for those who have been lost to gun violence and impacted by it. Nemours is added 15 new behavioral health workers across all of its sites.
St. Francis and Westside both have outreach programs to the surrounding neighborhoods they serve in Wilmington as a way to build trust. St. Francis will hire 10 young people through its Summer Youth Job Program, and Lolita Lopez, president and CEO of Westside, said cultural competence is critical with at-risk families.
Secretary Walker said city officials hope to increase the capacity of community centers this summer and invest in a year-round youth employment program.
See the Secretary’s presentation here:
University of Missouri System’s Advocacy-Mentoring Program held its 2012 Torch Awards on Nov. 15, 2012 to mark the completion of an 18-month mentorship program.
The mentoring relationship is meant to increase the number of competitive minority- and women-owned firms that wish to do business with one of the University of Missouri’s four campuses. Women- or minority-owned businesses are defined as business entities in which at least 51 percent of the ownership interest, stock or otherwise, is minority or woman owned.
San Mateo County Library brought Marvelyn Brown, author of "The Naked Truth: Young, Beautiful and (HIV) Positive," to speak with Seniors at East Palo Alto Phoenix Academy on 10/27/2011. Ana Martinez from the San Mateo County Health System's HIV/STI program joined us as well.
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.
Howard County Library System's Evening in the Stacks: Sparkle and Spurs held on Saturday, February 23, 2013 at the Charles E. Miller Branch.
Howard County Library System's Evening in the Stacks: Sparkle and Spurs held on Saturday, February 23, 2013 at the Charles E. Miller Branch.
University of Missouri System’s Advocacy-Mentoring Program held its 2012 Torch Awards on Nov. 15, 2012 to mark the completion of an 18-month mentorship program.
The mentoring relationship is meant to increase the number of competitive minority- and women-owned firms that wish to do business with one of the University of Missouri’s four campuses. Women- or minority-owned businesses are defined as business entities in which at least 51 percent of the ownership interest, stock or otherwise, is minority or woman owned.