View allAll Photos Tagged aw...
Notice that the door does in fact still say BFI.
Owned by: Allied Waste
Chassis: Mack LE
Body: Labrie
Truck number: 4820
Type of truck: Manual Side Loader
Notes: This is, by far, the most obvious example of a former BFI truck I've ever seen. You can see that it actually says BFI on the door, but very vaguely.
Owned by: AW Allied Waste Industries
Chassis: Autocar Xpeditor WXLL
Body manufacturer: McNeilus
Type of truck: Automated Side Loader
Unit number: 2402
Addition notes: Phone Ad.
Location of photo: N/A
Last night's birthday girl. Sigh. Love her so much.
Her half-sister (who turns 22 in March) came over with her and my kiddo's father, which was so very nice. We (my parents, my husband, my daughter and they two) all went out for a yummy dinner then back to my parents' house for cake and presents.
Manuscript title: Evangelary of Erchenbaldus
Manuscript summary: This 10th century Latin manuscript originated in the St. Gall scriptorium. It belonged to the Bishop of Strasbourg Erchembald (965-991) and was kept in the Cathedral of Strasbourg. The humanist Wimpheling mentions consulting it in Strasbourg in the early years of the 16th century. This manuscript appeared in the sales catalog of the Ambroise Firmin-Didot collection and was bought by the Mulhouse alderman Armand Weiss (1821-1892); after his death, he left it to the Industrial Society of Mulhouse. The Carolingian Gospel Book was written on vellum and contains 300 initials decorated with gold and silver. The beginning and end of the manuscript contain historical annotations. The original binding no longer exists; it was replaced with a contemporary binding during restoration at the Bibliothèque Nationale around 1970.
Origin: St. Gall (Switzerland)
Period: 10th century
Image source: Mulhouse, Bibliothèque municipale, AW 1, f. 76r – Evangelary of Erchenbaldus (www.e-codices.unifr.ch/en/list/one/bmm/Erk)
Another shot of the guys with the Confederate flag. I still say it's no more racist than you want it to be. That's the Duyche's Building in the background to the left. The white building to the right is an apartment building. The shot wast taken on Fry Street looking west-northwest. Note the smoker/cooker to the right. A good fair deserves good fair food.
Here's the intersection of Fry Street and West Hickory, looking north-northeast. The Dyche's Building still has the Pizza Express, but its the Flying Tomato across Fry Street that becme famous.
That’s our dinner well ablaze at the Half Shell Oyster House, Biloxi. The gentleman is an expert oyster shucker and charbroiler and is preparing our cooked oyster platter selection of oysters in charbroiled, Rockeller, Bienville and New Orleans styles.
Crowd scene at the 1982 Fry Street Fair. I believe that this is on the East side of Fry Street, on towards the Corkscrew and West Oak. An opening onto a parking area is visible in the bakcground.