View allAll Photos Tagged Virtual_classes.

Amanda giving her speech at graduation.

Join me for a 2-day virtual Zoom workshop about Milky Way photography!

 

During this virtual class I will cover everything you need to know to get started with and master Milky Way photography. We will cover gear, camera settings, exposure settings, star stacking, foreground exposures, panoramas, planning with PhotoPills, editing, and more.

 

In many ways this will be like a live presentation of the topics found in my new book, Night Sky Photography: From First Principles To Professional Results, combined with a live version of my Milky Way Master Class, with the ability to ask me questions live as we go along. We will cover many of the same topics, but since the book is 208 pages and the Master Class is 6 hours long, I won’t be able to cover every detail contained in those resources. In this virtual workshop you will learn an enormous amount of information about everything from camera settings to panoramas to planning and editing.

 

Learn more and book your spot here: adamwoodworth.com/product/virtual-2-day-milky-way-workshop/

…..wow this some good sleep where am I? I wonder is Professor Sunny still Yappn’, he’s long winded! Is that Ella sitting on the toilet!?!?! Poor thing, I guess she couldn’t wait, wonder does she know the cam can see her? Pffft Moreno and Grant think they slick, they have had that exact straight gaze the entire class, not even a blink, I bet they doing the board trick too! Wonder how much credit is this class? [scene 4/4]

Sooooo clearly I am NOT gonna last in this class. I just hope I don’t snore that loud. No Chance you can not get in my lap! You guys better not knock my board down! [scene 3/4]

Ok so I guess Felix being in the camera is ok, makes it look realistic right? Ugh I’m so tired, just a few more minutes…. Great now baby momma has to pop in before taking Junior to school…. please stay out the camera and HUSH!!! [scene 2/4]

Finally, I’ve been on a waiting list to take one of Professor Sunny’s Engineering classes. But what was I thinking? 8am!?!? Don’t worry, it’s early but I got a plan. Felix and Chance will help me! [scene 1/4]

Eva: Alright, Julia. Let's do this thing!

Julia: By 'do thing thing' do you mean my on-line schooling zoom meeting?

Eva: Yes. Time to get going. I love zoomies and I love school.

Julia: But when I'm in school you're usually napping.

Eva: It is a good deal. Now if you'll stop talking for a minute I have some learning to do.

Julia: Okay.

Eva: Oh! I know the answer! Turn on your microphone so that I can tell your teacher the answer!

Julia: Eva, she hasn't asked a real question yet. She was just asking if we're keeping to a regular schedule and what we're doing to stay motivated.

Eva: I know. I heard her. And the answer is that yes, I've been sure to wake everyone up to feed me breakfast at the usual time and that birds motivate me!

Julia: Dude, you've got to chill. There are no points for answers to conversational questions.

Eva: No points for answers to questions? I thought school was all about receiving external rewards for being right about stuff.

Julia: Not entirely.

Eva: Not entirely? Well then your school is backwards. Whenever I'm learning something people tell me that I’m a good girl, pat my head and feed me cookies.

Julia: That would be odd in human school.

Eva: What's odd is your attitude - and this whole on-line learning thing. How ever is your teacher going to send me cookies or pat my head for being right about stuff? Is there even a treat dispenser in this laptop?

Julia: Eva, like I said you need to chill a bit. Laptops don’t have cookie dispensers.

Eva: I'll tell you when I need to chill. My presence is the only thing keeping this on-line school business interesting. And no cookie dispenser on this thing? That makes it more of a craptop than a laptop.

Julia: Wow.

Eva: Now, unless someone starts calling me a good girl and petting my head I'm out of here and looking for a school with a better hot lunch program.

 

---------

 

Eva joined Julia for her school zoom meeting the other day. With COVID restrictions schooling has moved online with occasional virtual classes with the teachers. The virtual class was not as exciting as Eva had hoped. But at least both of Julia's teachers thought that Eva was adorable.

Project 365, 2022 Edition: Day 213/365

100x: 60/100

 

I'm just back from 9 days at the cottage, a working vacation. Sunday evening to Friday was spent in a solo writing retreat, with Danny joining me for the long weekend. We're only home in Waterloo till next weekend, then going back for a week of vacation together.

 

I took photos every day, too. Although the cottage has no electricity service or cable, we pick up data from a nearby tower new 3 years ago. Early in the week I was able to upload 8 photos directly from my phone to Flickr. That stopped working. I don't know why. I run my laptop off a marine battery. It is also possible to tether the computer to my phone and upload photos that way. However, I didn't do it this time because I had to watch my usage. I was able to attend a virtual class for a writing course, and on Sunday we had an annual reunion with old school friends of mine, but I couldn't afford to go over my data limit.

 

I shot photos every day. I have about 400 Canon and 180 phone images of many different subjects to wade through. Once they're sorted, I'll pick a favourite from each day for Project 365.

 

I didn't want to neglect the other project, 100x. To approximate the studio conditions in my home office, I set up a few shots like this one on the dark pine table in the living room. The cottage offers no artificial light except propane lamps, which are far too yellow. However, the living room has better natural light than home. I will probably include two more photos from earlier in the week for 100x, which would make this 60/100, but I'll update the info once they're processed.

 

This image is kind of a souvenir containing mementoes of the week found lying around while I was cleaning up to leave yesterday: lichen, clubmoss, an apricot pit, a game token from Dominion, and a bit of female cardinal yarn from Songbirdfibres.ca -- little bits of things I'm fond of.

 

Thank you to everyone who visits, faves, and comments.

Entrance to the inner courtyard of the modern (and very large) student apartment block in Fountainbridge by the Union Canal. Not an especially nice building, most of the exterior in dull shades of grey, but this inner part marked in colours and with this large, square entrance caught my eye.

 

Edinburgh, like many cities, has seen far too many of these place flung up in recent years - few object to some blocks just for students, but this area has five or six within a short walk which kinds of imbalances the local community too much (with a transient rather than resident locals) and most would prefer some of these but with more modern long-term housing.

 

Of course right now there are barely any students and with universities talking about having virtual classes only in the next academic year, you have to wonder what will happen to the many student blocks flung up around the town with abandon that are now suddenly surplus to their original purpose?

Taught yesterday during our virtual class.

 

Folded from a square of Torreón paper of 25 cm on the side.

I have heard schools are opening today. For the first time in our history, most students will be attending virtual classes remotely from their home using their computers. Imagine almost a hundred years ago during the influenza pandemic, how students coped with their education. This historic schoolhouse in San Ramon must have told that story as it has been around for well over a hundred years.

 

Film: Fujichrome Provia 100f

Camera: Nikon FM2n

Lens: Voigtlander Ultron 40mm F2 SL IIS

Our local paint & sip studio is doing Zoom classes during the Covid quarantine. My daughter is here since she was furloughed so I signed us up for a virtual class. It worked out well since the #FlickrFriday is #familytime. We spent our time painting

This is 153318 and 153368 at Bristol Temple Meads, which happens to be both vehicles from the former 155318. They were even coupled the 'right' way round (with new cabs together)!

Six-year-old girls used a “Winky Dink” drawing kit on their home TV screen as they watch the kids’ program, Winky Dink and You, 1953. The show, which aired for four years in the 1950s, has been cited as “the first interactive TV show,” especially in light of its “magic drawing screen” a piece of plastic that stuck to the TV screen, and on which viewers could trace the action on the screen.

Walter Sanders The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

 

Credit:

www.life.com/lifestyle/classic-photos-of-people-and-their...

 

I ran out of time to "create" an image, but as I was sitting at my desk taking a virtual class this morning I noticed the pattern of the bamboo along the side of my desk. I was fascinated by the patterns. After my class, I pulled out my macro lens, put it on a tripod and shot straight-on as close as I could focus. I chose to make it B&W because I could push the contrast more to enhance the patterns.

Part of a delightful opening-night virtual class with Seattle International Film Festival's (SIFF) week of Cinema Italiano, still ongoing. This is a screen photo from a clip shown by guest fil curator Antonio Iannotta, who's currently at UCSD.

My creation using the Perfect Form pattern. Finished late yesterday. It was barely started 3-5 years ago in a 1 day class intro and remained a UFO until I had the opportunity to take the multiple session virtual class with Jen. That format worked so well. Thank you.

 

A week ago I was headed skiing when all the ski resorts decided to close. Today I am looking for workout virtual classes online. Surreal seems an understated response.

For the virtual class led by Laure Ferlita

Jason Contreras, colt training class instructor, Fresno State equine unit, September 15, 2020, photo by Geoff Thurner, Copyright 2020.

Taken for JMU Technology & Design by Lauren Telinde. All rights reserved. No usage without permission.

I am honored to be a speaker at Night Photo Summit 2022. This event will have 40 classes with over 25 speakers discussing all things night photography. This includes NPAN's own elite group of instructors. Sign up here using my link, thanks! npsummit.live/ken #nightphotosummit #npan #nightphotography

  

www.washingtonpost.com/health/2022/05/28/covid-memorial-d...

 

Covid was vanishing last Memorial Day. Cases are five times higher now.

Covid-weary Americans enter summer with little effort to contain a still-raging pandemic

 

For the third year, Americans are greeting the unofficial start of summer shadowed by the specter of the coronavirus amid rising covid-19 cases and hospitalizations across the country.

 

The United States is recording more than 100,000 infections a day — at least five times higher than this point last year — as it confronts the most transmissible versions of the virus yet. Immunity built up as a result of the record winter outbreak appears to provide little protection against the latest variants, new research shows. And public health authorities are bracing for Memorial Day gatherings to fuel another bump in cases, potentially seeding a summer surge.

 

It’s a far cry from a year ago, with predictions of a “hot vax summer” uninhibited by covid concerns. Back then, coronavirus seemed to teeter on the brink of defeat as cases plummeted to their lowest levels since spring 2020 and vaccines became widely available for adults. Even the vaccinated and boosted now grudgingly accept the virus as a formidable foe that’s here to stay as governments abandon measures to contain it.

 

As the virus morphs and the scientific understanding of how it operates shifts with each variant, Americans are drawing their own lines for what they feel comfortable doing.

 

“This time last year, I was so hopeful,” said Margaret Thornton, a 35-year-old Philadelphia researcher preparing to spend her summer socializing mostly outdoors because of her weakened immune system. “Now, I don’t know when it’s going to be over, and I don’t think there is necessarily a light at the end of the tunnel. Or rather, if there is a light, is it an opening to get out? Or is it a train?”

 

Parents of children too young to be vaccinated are making cross-country travel plans. Octogenarians are venturing to bars. And families are celebrating graduations and weddings with throngs of mostly unmasked revelers — mindful they may get sick. Again.

 

More than half of the U.S. population is living in areas classified as having medium or high covid-19 levels by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The latest cases have yet to overrun hospitals, but that could change as the virus spreads among more vulnerable people. The dominant strains circulating in the United States are the most contagious thus far.

 

“This one is really revved up, and it’s probably getting up there with something as transmissible as measles,” said Peter Hotez, dean of the National School of Tropical Medicine at Baylor College, describing the BA.2.12.1 subvariant now accounting for more than half of new cases. “Over the Memorial Day holidays, if you are in settings where you are indoors with large numbers of people without masks … there is a good likelihood you will suffer a breakthrough infection.”

 

Experts had hoped that the explosion of the omicron variant this winter, estimated to have infected a quarter of Americans who hadn’t already been infected, and the subsequent spring wave of omicron’s even more transmissible subvariants, would provide a buffer against future surges.

 

But an emerging body of research suggests those infections will not confer lasting protection as the virus’s latest iterations show remarkable ability to escape immunity. Experts say the recently infected who also received booster shots can count on at least several months of immunity, while the unvaccinated should expect little protection.

 

“You should not think, ‘Oh, I had omicron, I don’t need any shots’ or ’I don’t need any more shots,'” said Melanie Ott, director of the Gladstone Institute of Virology and a co-author of a paper recently published in Nature finding limited natural immunity from the omicron variant. “We are going into a surge of the omicron subvariants that are more and more able to infect people who have preexisting immunity.”

 

Experts say vaccines are still showing durability in protecting people against severe illness. But the initial burst of antibodies from shots or infections fades after several months, said Celine Gounder, an infectious-diseases specialist and senior fellow at Kaiser Health News. That means the virus can develop into an infection before the body’s immune system kicks in.

 

Burhan Yardimci, his wife and their three young children — who had all contracted coronavirus in February — joined thousands of Turkish Americans on Madison Avenue recently for the return of New York’s annual Turkish Day Parade, canceled the last two years because of the pandemic. The next day, the family stood among another crowd of thousands for the Celebrate Israel Parade.

 

Yardimci doesn’t take much solace in his recent infection as an extra layer of protection. He thought his booster shot would stop infections, but he knows people who’ve had the virus three times. Because no one in his family became seriously ill, he doesn’t see the need to upend his life when everyone around him appears to be carrying on as normal.

 

“Hopefully, we’ll never get it again,” said Yardimci, 42.

 

In the Boston suburbs, Mandy Boyd found herself humbled by coronavirus after getting infected twice in five months: during the massive omicron wave in January, and again in May after attending a 150-person indoor wedding. Neither case was severe.

 

The experience left the 35-year-old health technology worker reassessing how to protect her 4- and 6-year-old children from infections that would disrupt their schooling or summer camp. She still plans to dine out and go to the gym, but her family will wear masks on their flight to Seattle for an upcoming vacation as well as when they watch a WNBA game while there. She worries about passing on a future variant to her children, even if her short-term immunity protects her from getting sick.

 

“We’re in a strange spot because it turned into a much more minor virus,” said Boyd of Swampscott, Mass. “From that perspective, I don’t see that the world should stop or schools should close.”

 

Graduations, proms and weddings have also returned after being canceled in earlier stages of the pandemic when cases were lower than they are now.

 

Adeline Rosales, 26, was among the hundreds of California State University Long Beach students in caps and gowns flooding into Angel Stadium in Anaheim on a recent morning. It was her first encounter with some classmates in the College of Health and Human Services who were only familiar as faces on a computer screen during virtual class. She felt comfortable marching alongside them through a tunnel and onto the field knowing the university required vaccines and booster shots. And it was important for her relatives to celebrate the occasion with her because she is the first in the family to graduate college.

 

But to avoid graduation crowds, she said the family waited several days for their celebratory dinner because they were “a little scared” as infections rose and Los Angeles County moved from a low to medium covid-19 risk level. Rosales lives with her parents, both of whom have preexisting conditions, and six other relatives.

 

“I don’t want to risk it at this point,” Rosales said. “We’re just trying to be as respectful to my parents as possible.”

 

For most Americans, coronavirus has faded from the foreground.

 

More than half say they are not too concerned or not at all concerned with coronavirus, according to a May survey by Monmouth University.

 

Nearly three-quarters say they hope to vacation this summer and less than a third say coronavirus is a major factor in their plans, according to a recent Washington Post-Schar School poll. The Transportation Security Administration on Thursday reported screening more than half a million additional fliers a day compared with the same day last year.

 

Experts are paying close attention to the Southeast for a potential covid resurgence because the region did not experience as many cases in the spring as the Northeast, and rising temperatures are driving people indoors.

 

Florida residents are bracing for the return of another summer surge in sharply different ways.

 

For Jeff Schulte, a 63-year-old retiree, coronavirus has never really gone away, and he sees no reason to change his behavior for an omnipresent threat. He is not planning on masking, social distancing or getting booster shots this summer.

 

“For the rest of our lives, it’s here,” he said while smoking a cigarette outside the library in downtown Sarasota. “It’s going to catch every one of us.”

 

To the north near Tampa, Rick Kilby, 57, donned a KN95 mask as he hawked his book about the Victorian-era belief in the healing properties of Florida springs at Floridania Fest in a Gulfport casino ballroom. Mostly unmasked attendees snaked past his table, conveniently situated near an open door that brought in fresh air.

 

He’s not worried about getting seriously ill after a second booster shot. But after hearing about five vaccinated friends getting infected in just two days, he does fret about having to cancel his upcoming trip to western Pennsylvania — the only vacation he had planned for the year.

 

“It’s not like it was two years ago where you are really concerned about going to the hospital and not getting out. Now, it’s more of a concern that this is going to be a real inconvenience to my schedule,” said Kilby, who lives in Orlando. “That’s the wonder of the vaccine. It made it from a life-threatening condition to one that’s really more like having a flu or cold or something.”

 

Others at the vintage Florida memorabilia festival feared worse consequences.

 

Patti Kane-Wood, 78, entered the expo wearing a blue surgical mask but felt uncomfortable by how attendees “were squeezed in there like sardines” and didn’t stay long. She has heard about more people getting covid in the last month than in the last two years. While she feels well-protected from getting her second booster dose, she worries about long-term complications after watching friends develop persistent breathing problems following their illnesses. A recent study found vaccines may offer little protection against most long-covid symptoms.

 

“If I catch covid, even the slightest case of covid, it’s possible I have long covid and have issues for the rest of my life,” Kane-Wood said. “I’m very afraid because people are very relaxed now and understandably so, but it’s not a time to let our guard down.”

 

Parents of young children are entering Memorial Day weekend frustrated that children younger than 5 remain the only group ineligible for vaccines. The prospect of regulators clearing shots by the end of June is becoming increasingly likely after Pfizer-BioNTech reported data showing their three-dose regimen proved 80 percent effective in preventing symptomatic infections in children 6 months to 4 years old.

 

In the meantime, parents are navigating how to protect their unvaccinated children when cases are rising and others are dropping their guards.

 

In Portland, Oregon, Jessica Poole said she is not taking her 5-year-old daughter, Lucía, and 3-year-old son, Max, to indoor play facilities, where Lucía would catch illnesses even before covid. She asks Lucía to wear a mask while she’s at prekindergarten. And the family isn’t planning any travel, because Max is too young to get vaccinated.

 

But Poole, 37, is not trying to avoid the virus at all costs.

 

“Whatever strain is going around now, you can’t be too terrified of it,” Poole said outside a CrossFit gym where she planned to work out without a mask on. “We need to live a normal life now.”

 

At a southeast Portland pub, George Cummings, 85, took a leap of faith as he joined his friends from a local mountaineering and climbing club for drinks. He knows he’s at a higher risk because of his age and wears a mask at the grocery store. He said he has not received a second booster shot because his doctor had not told him they were available.

 

He went maskless as he drank lemonade, ate a cheeseburger and mingled with a group of two dozen in the crowded bar.

 

“I’m not sure I’m 100 percent comfortable with my decision, but the alternative was not to go to the event,” said Cummings, who lives alone and had suspended his social life for the better part of two years.

 

“It’s almost a question of, do you want to live — and that includes some sort of social life for a human being — or am I going to hide in my basement?”

This crib quilt began as a sample block I made after taking Sue Bodis’ virtual class through Thimbles and Things called "Deb Tucker Ruler Demos".

I used the Tucker Trimmer, which as you can see makes very accurate points!

The fabric is from Thimbles and Things which in real life is a bit lighter in value than this photo.

 

I’m also taking your Monday Night quilt along. I have made about 7 of each block so far – trying to catch up as I should be up to at least 12 by April (of course I didn’t start till beginning of March). I’ve attached a pic of those too, just for fun.

You’ve got me sort of hooked on them, so much so that I went looking for more 4.5” blocks and found a log cabin, bow tie and flower basket pattern and made them too. I’ve been using my Stonehenge scraps from the anniversary block party, but getting pretty low now, will have to buy some more if I want to keep going with that line.

Thanks for holding these virtual classes, it’s a great deal and I've learned so much.

 

Yoga encourages you to become conscious of those saved emotions so you may begin to recognize them and release them. You can anticipate slow, deep stretches and meditation at a Online Yoga class that balances and strengthens the entire body, mind, and soul.

Having arrived at Carlisle as 9S65 11.43 London Euston To Glasgow Central Via Birmingham New Street

 

The scenario is based on the actual December 2013 - May 2014 Timetable.Scenario I have created.

Donated by RJ Kikuchiyo, valued as priceless.

 

1635 prims, yes the whole ship! uses 1/3 of a sim

 

this is a vehicle with all the detail of the display version at New England

but sails using racewind setters in Blake Sea and normal SL wind,

FULL PERMS

 

Schooner Ernestina is unique among the surviving Grand Banks fishing schooners. The Ernestina is one of the oldest Essex-built schooners afloat, the oldest remaining Grand Banks schooner built in the U.S., a prime example of the schooner-based dory fishing fleet which played a key role in the commercial fishing industry and economy of the northeastern United States and maritime Canada, a coastal packet in Newfoundland and an Arctic Ocean explorer under Capt. Robert Bartlett, a naval supply and charting vessel in WWII under Capt. Bartlett and Cmdr. Alexander Forbes, a trans-Atlantic and inter-island packet from Cape Verde and the last sailing vessel in regular service to bring immigrants to this country, the Official Vessel of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, proven platform for cultural and heritage community support, tourism, environmental, cultural, arts, music, and science education, and a living example of the challenge and craft of constructing and sailing wooden tall ships.

 

WHAT'S THE STORY!

 

The Historic Schooner Ernestina is open to all at the New England Sim!

 

We'll be adding a new chapter to the overall story and excitement of the educational history that has surrounded the Real Life Ernestina for over 115 years as a great New England Schooner.

 

After a national search for a quality boatyard, the real life Ernestina is being rebuilt right now in the real life town of Boothbay, Maine. At the same time, our “second life” Ernestina was also being built in the Boothbay sim, right here in SLNE by our own RJ Kikuchiyo.

How cool is that?

  

The Ernestina will be like a “magic carpet” used to explore the world with Captain Jack and his diverse family of friends, creating a daily children’s television program devoted to teaching earth sciences, marine biology and an appreciation of our fragile ecology and perhaps a tad of good sense.

 

The proposed TV series now being planned and created by Mister Wind in SLNE has began creating the assets required to create a ten minute pilot for investors.

 

The full program will educate kids in three ways:

 

1. A (2D) TV TWO DIMENSIONAL series, intended for either commercial broadcast or national broadcast on Public Television

 

2. A (3D) THREE DIMENSIONAL VIRTUAL REALITY posting a story through a set of age appropriate concepts to be explored in a new virtual class room on the web. 

This interactive part of the program will be in partnership with New England Universities.

 

3. A REALITY. The thirty islands that make up Boston Harbor Islands National Park, that children can in REAL LIFE camp on–these Islands. So come and breathe deeply

New Englands salty ocean air and explore, what belongs to US! All of us.

 

The Show, “Captain Jack's Log,” starts out in Boston Harbor (a National Park) and from there she will take many adventures with a very diverse cast from the harbor islands and around the world. Asking the questions ... finding the answers.

 

(That’s the quick story!)

 

Want to know more about the Ernestina? www.ernestina.org/

  

Arriving at Penrith as 9S70 12.43 London Euston To Edinburgh Waverly via Birmingham new street.

 

The scenario is based on the actual December 2013 - May 2014 Timetable.Scenario I have created.

Old Tobacco Road virtual class with Kelly D.

 

Kinesiology master's student Melody Blu adjusts to virtual classes after suspension of in-person instruction.

(Jason Halley/University Photographer/CSU, Chico)

Commissioner Jeff Baran speaks – for the eighth time – to a virtual class of international and U.S. senior #nuclear plant managers organized by the Institute for Nuclear Power Operations.

 

Visit the Nuclear Regulatory Commission's website at www.nrc.gov/.

 

Photo Usage Guidelines: www.flickr.com/people/nrcgov/

 

Privacy Policy: www.nrc.gov/site-help/privacy.html.

 

For additional information, or to comment on this photo contact: OPA Resource.

Arriving at Penrith as 9S70 12.43 London Euston To Edinburgh Waverly via Birmingham new street.

  

The scenario is based on the actual December 2013 - May 2014 Timetable.Scenario I have created.

Ever since I graduated college whenever I go into an interview I ...

 

1. Wear a red power suit.

2. Pray "God, you are going to either close the door or open a window. I trust you to lead me to what is best for me"

 

So those that have been following my stream know I applied for a new position with my company. This time was no different. Even though my interview was over the phone, I wore red. And I prayed my prayer and added, but let me know it is you closing the door.

 

I really thought I wanted this job because it would get me off the road. Less travel and more time to be with my loved ones. The interview went well, but the week following I started to have doubts ... things were hitting me up side the head making me wonder if this would be the right decision for me. It would be a more stressful job and a possible cut in pay considering my bonuses. But the constant pressure had me questioning the quality time I would have even being home because shutting it down would be difficult.

 

So when the phone call came saying I didn't get the job I applied for I was relieved. Then I was offered another job with my company ~ training online (virtual classes) rather than in front of a classroom or at the customer site. This would allow me to stay home and train from my house. While at the same time taking an occasional classroom or onsite class if I get bored or itchy travel feet. No stress... at the end of the day I can shut it down and spend quality time with my loved ones.

 

Hallelujah!

Miami Seaquarium Field Trip

Lauderdale Lakes Middle School

3911 NW 30th Ave

Lauderdale Lakes, FL 33309

754-322-3500

James F. Griffin – Principal

www.facebook.com/LauderdaleLakesMiddleSchoolVikings

llms.crhosts.com

We are an “A” District

 

Miami Seaquarium Field Trip

Lauderdale Lakes Middle School

3911 NW 30th Ave

Lauderdale Lakes, FL 33309

754-322-3500

James F. Griffin – Principal

www.facebook.com/LauderdaleLakesMiddleSchoolVikings

llms.crhosts.com

We are an “A” District

 

NRC Senior Instructor Jeff Griffis teaches a virtual class from the agency’s Technical Training Center in Chattanooga, Tenn.

Jason Contreras, colt training class instructor, Fresno State equine unit, September 15, 2020, photo by Geoff Thurner, Copyright 2020.

Working to Carlisle as 9S65 11.43 London Euston To Glasgow Central Via Birmingham New Street

  

The scenario is based on the actual December 2013 - May 2014 Timetable.Scenario I have created.

Arriving at Penrith as 9S70 12.43 London Euston To Edinburgh Waverly via Birmingham new street.

  

The scenario is based on the actual December 2013 - May 2014 Timetable.Scenario I have created.

Having arrived at Carlisle as 9S65 11.43 London Euston To Glasgow Central Via Birmingham New Street

  

The scenario is based on the actual December 2013 - May 2014 Timetable.Scenario I have created.

Working to Carlisle as 9S65 11.43 London Euston To Glasgow Central Via Birmingham New Street

  

The scenario is based on the actual December 2013 - May 2014 Timetable.Scenario I have created.

Illustration depicting a student sitting at a desk with a pile of books and a laptop, taking part in a virtual class run by a teacher remotely.

 

This image was released under the Creative Commons Attribution licence, meaning you may use it for your own projects both personally and commercially but we do ask that you please credit us with ownership of the image by linking back to www.digits.co.uk

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