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They say any two people in the world can be connected through friends of friends, just in a few steps. How about artworks? Using machine-learning techniques that analyze the visual features of artworks, X Degrees of Separation finds pathways between any two artifacts, connecting the two through a chain of artworks.
Credit: Florian Voggeneder
Giardini Naxos is a comune in the Province of Messina on the island of Sicily in Italy. It is situated on the coast of the Ionian Sea on a bay which lies between Cape Taormina and Cape Schisò. Today it is a popular seaside-resort.Founded by Thucles the Chalcidian in 734 BC, Naxos was never a powerful city, but its temple of Apollo Archegetes, protecting deity of all the Greek colonies, gave it prominence in religious affairs. Leontini and Catania were both colonized from here. Hippocrates, tyrant of Gela, captured it in 494 BC. Its opposition to Syracuse ultimately led to its capture and destruction in 403 BC at the hands of Dionysius the tyrant, after it had supported Athens during that city's disastrous Sicilian Expedition. Though the site continued to be inhabited, most activity shifted to neighbouring Tauromenium.In 1544, following the raids by Turkish corsair, Barbarossa Kheir-ed-Din, several military buildings were constructed to protect Cape Schisò from the Barbary pirates who continued to attack and plunder the coastal villages. These were Schisò Castle which was rebuilt from an earlier 13th century castle, Schisò fort, and Vignazza Tower. The latter is a quadrangular watchtower which served to patrol the coast south of Port Schisò; if any pirate boats were sighted, the observers inside the tower could alert the villagers and neighbouring watchtowers by sending out smoke signals. Vignazza Tower is located in the Recanati area of Giardini Naxos, but is not open to the public.Prior to the early 1970s, Giardini Naxos was a quiet fishing village. Now it is a popular tourist destination, famous for its beaches, panoramic view of the bay and surrounding hills, and its small, but bustling fishing port. It attracts foreign visitors and Italians alike, many of whom own summer residences in the comune. The seafront, Via Tysandros, is lined with hotels, smaller pensions, pubs, restaurants and pizzerias.
Giardini-Naxos è un comune di 9.152 abitanti della provincia di Messina. Anticamente chiamata Nasso, dista 39 km da Messina e 40 da Catania.Nell'attuale collocazione di Giardini-Naxos, presso Capo Schisò, nel 734 a.C. dei coloni calcidesi fondarono quello che è da tutti ritenuto il primo insediamento greco in Sicilia. Alla nuova colonia venne attribuito il nome di Naxos come l'omonima isola nel Mar Egeo. Nonostante rimase un centro di modeste dimensioni mantenne il suo valore simbolico, in quanto venne eretto un altare in onore di Apollo Archegetes, questo era il punto di partenza degli ambasciatori greci in ritorno alla madrepatria. Durante la Guerra del Peloponneso Naxos si schierò con Atene, ma quando nel 403 a.C. la spedizione militare ateniese in Sicilia fallì, il tiranno siracusano Dionigi il Vecchio la fece radere al suolo e fece costruire sull'altura sovrastante Tauromenion (Taormina). Il territorio venne donato ai Siculi e gli abitanti furono venduti come schiavi. Il nome Naxos permase nel tempo anche in epoca romana e nell'Itinerario Antonino del III secolo d.C. viene citato come località per lo scambio di cavalli lungo la strada consolare in direzione Siracusa. Nel periodo bizantino sulle spoglie della colonia greca si andò a formare un piccolo centro abitato, questo diventò l'approdo strategico per la vicina Taormina. Il periodo di dominio arabo ha lasciato numerosi toponimi come quello del vicino fiume Alcantara o dello stesso Capo Schisò.
Font : Wikipedia
A visit to Coughton Court in Warwickshire, on the Spring Bank Holiday Weekend in late May 2018. A National Trust property, it was the home of the Throckmorton family.
Coughton Court is an English Tudor country house, situated on the main road between Studley and Alcester in Warwickshire. It is a Grade I listed building.
The house has a long crenelated façade directly facing the main road, at the centre of which is the Tudor Gatehouse, dating from 1530; this has hexagonal turrets and oriel windows in the English Renaissance style. The gatehouse is the oldest part of the house and is flanked by later wings, in the Strawberry Hill Gothic style, popularised by Horace Walpole.
The Coughton estate has been owned by the Throckmorton family since 1409. The estate was acquired through marriage to the De Spinney family. Coughton was rebuilt by Sir George Throckmorton, the first son of Sir Robert Throckmorton of Coughton Court by Catherine Marrow, daughter of William Marrow of London. The great gatehouse at Coughton was dedicated to King Henry VIII by Throckmorton, a favorite of the King. Throckmorton would become notorious due to his almost fatal involvement in the divorce between King Henry and his first wife Catherine of Aragon. Throckmorton favoured the queen and was against the Reformation. Throckmorton spent most of his life rebuilding Coughton. In 1549, when he was planning the windows in the great hall, he asked his son Nicholas to obtain from the heralds the correct tricking (colour abbreviations) of the arms of his ancestors' wives and his own cousin and niece by marriage Queen Catherine Parr. The costly recusancy (refusal to attend Anglican Church services) of Robert Throckmorton and his heirs restricted later rebuilding, so that much of the house still stands largely as he left it.
After Throckmorton's death in 1552, Coughton passed to his eldest son, Robert. Robert Throckmorton and his family were practicing Catholics therefore the house at one time contained a priest hole, a hiding place for priests during the period when Catholics were persecuted by law in England, from the beginning of the reign of Queen Elizabeth I. The Hall also holds a place in English history for its roles in both the Throckmorton Plot of 1583 to murder Queen Elizabeth I of England, and the Gunpowder Plot of 1605, although the Throckmorton family were themselves only indirectly implicated in the latter, when some of the Gunpowder conspirators rode directly there after its discovery.
The house has been in the ownership of the National Trust since 1946. The family, however, hold a 300-year lease and previously managed the property on behalf of the Trust. In 2007, however, the house reverted to management by the National Trust. The management of the property is renewed every 10 years. The family tenant until recently was Clare McLaren-Throckmorton, known professionally as Clare Tritton QC, until she died on 31 October 2017.
The house, which is open to the public all year round, is set in extensive grounds including a walled formal garden, a river and a lake.
The gatehouse at Coughton was built at the earliest in 1536, as it is built of stones which came from Bordesley Abbey and Evesham Abbey after the Dissolution of the Monasteries Act in 1536. As with other Tudor houses, it was built around a courtyard, with the gatehouse used for deliveries and coaches to travel through to the courtyard. The courtyard was closed on all four sides until 1651, when Parliamentary soldiers burnt the fourth (east) wing, along with many of the Throckmorton's family papers, during the English Civil War.
After the Roman Catholic Relief Act was passed in 1829, the Throckmorton family were able to afford large-scale building works, allowing them to remodel the west front.
Grade I Listed Building
A look around the inside of Coughton Court.
The Roof
From the roof of the gatehouse you get superb views of the house's complex roofscape and of the surrounding countryside beyond.
The Old Village - house seen in the distance on Birmingham Road.
Interaction between Asian Elephants @ Chester Zoo !
Photo tips...... the camera helps as it has a 28 - 900mm equivalent lens , yet is so small and very light !
Only slight issue is no viewfinder ( so used a bit like an old rangefinder type of camera ) Pleased with results now that i've mastered it :)))))) M
Leave unsaid unspoken
Eyes wide shut unopened
You and me
Always between the lines
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Photo taken from Matthiessen State Park Utica, IL
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Sorry, been shying away from Flickr lately...but will visit your streams soon ;)
Between the beads and the spices, a striking painting of Samuel Beckett . Just off Portobello Rd and painted by Alex Martinez based on the famous photo by Jane Bown. Alex also painted the now gone Deva Station mural on Golborne Rd.
see it here - www.flickr.com/photos/normko/276624963/in/photostream/
slowly re-processing my iceland photos. Well, not "re" as much as just doing it properly.
Þingvellir National Park in Iceland...it was a very cold rainy late september day and Jamie and I were pretty much the only two people hiking in the crevice between the European and North American continental plates.
Wandelend tussen Glenlivet en Tomintoul als zijsprong van de Speyside wandeling zoals wij die in de zomer van 2007 hebben gemaakt. De plaats op de kaart is slechts een globale indicatie van waar de foto genomen is.
Walking the Tomintoul spur, between Glenlivet and Tomintoul, as part off the Speyside walk wich we made in the summer off 2007. The point on the map is just a rough indication because it was difficult to find te correct spot on the map.
Looking up at the figure between the two massive portals of Notre Dame de Paris. The portal (doorway) of The Last Judgment sits in the center (or your left in this shot) while the portal of Saint Anne sits in the right. I'm guessing that the statue you see in this picture might be that of Saint Genevieve, the patron saint of Paris.
This is one of the impressive sights you can find if you're facing the west façade of the Cathedral of Notre-Dame.
It's my second time in Paris and I'm still impressed by this grand monument.
Golden Grad List
John Hunter
Tim Mulligan
Joe Pucillo
John Sidorski
Stu Stebbins
Al Striplen
Tony Broyles (unable to be in attendance today)
Robert Burwell (unable to be in attendance today)
Eigoro Hashimoto (deceased)
Jim Spaid (deceased; medal received today by his wife, Jan)
The Golden Grads graduated from HSU between 1967 and 1970 and majored in Zoology, Biology, Fisheries, Oceanography, Sociology, and Wildlife Management & Conservation. They all lived in Nelson Hall, which was then a residence option for male students. They frequented places like The Keg, College Cove, and the Big Four and were members of the Boot and Blisters Club for hikers. They started getting together in the summer twelve years ago and meet at a different group member's hometown location each year. This is their second trip to Humboldt, and as you could see today, they had a tremendous amount of fun and formed great friendships while at HSU.
Saihanba is a vast forest area at the border between Hebei Province and Inner Mongolia in Northern China. Highly recommended for hiking and cycling and for getting away from it all, but quite remote and difficult to reach (you'll need time). I stayed there in summer 2011 and explored the area on my road bike.
There is only one permanent settlement and this consists mainly of shops, restaurants and hotels for the few tourists who come here. This part of the world is sparsely populated by humans. It's easy to travel for 50 km without seeing a village. Some settlements just have numbers instead of names.
The best map of Saihanba that I could find was this big signboard at the only intersection. Print it out if you ever go to visit.
I entered from the remotest part, through the West Gate (西門). The road there is unpaved and just about manageable on a road bike (picture here).
The West Gate as well as the Noth Gate (北門) lead to Inner Mongolia. I was not allowed to pass though the North Gate, probably because horses are bred for the People's Liberation Army on the Mongolian side and military people don't like to have tourists around. I don't know if Chinese citizens are allowed to enter.
The East Gate (東門) is a beautiful mountain pass in deep forest (picture here). The road beyond leads to other interesting landscapes, mainly grassland. From there you can continue further east or north to a secret crossing into Inner Mongolia without grumpy guards holding you back.
Then there is the Main Gate (正門) in the south-east. This is where most people come through. I didn't go there and only rode half way down in that direction. The road is pavé and you need to be tough if you want to do that on road bike tyres. Next time, maybe.
After 2 days I left Saihanba through the South Gate (南門) to Yudaokou and, ultumately, back to civilisation.
Between 1961 and 1965 Exeter City Transport bought only Massey bodied Leyland PD2/30's and in 1980 after passing to Devon General six of the twenty-four were enjoy a Saurday's rest.
Latrobe Street between East Lanvale and Federal Street in Baltimore MD on Monday afternoon, 27 May 2019 by Elvert Barnes Photography
GREENMOUNT WEST
www.facebook.com/greenmountwest/
Learn about Greenmount West Baltimore at en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greenmount_West,_Baltimore
MEMORIAL DAY MONDAY Photo Walk
Elvert Barnes MEMORIAL DAY WEEKEND 2019 docu-project at elvertbarnes.com/MDW2019.html
Schloss Rastatt is a historical building in Rastatt, Germany. The palace and the Garden were built between 1700 and 1707 by the Italian architect Domenico Egidio Rossi as ordered by Margrave Louis William of Baden.
History
During the Palatine war of succession the residence of Margrave Louis William of Baden-Baden had been burnt by French troops. A rebuild of the destroyed castle would not have suited the representative needs of the count of Baden. Since he also needed a home for his wife Sibylle Auguste of Saxe-Lauenburg, whom he had married in 1690, he a had a new residence built in place of the former hunting lodge.
During this operation the 1697 hunting lodge was demolished to leave space for the new castle. The village of Rastatt was promoted to city status in 1700 and the Margrave moved here with his court. The residence in Rastatt is the oldest Baroque residence in the German Upper-Rhine area. It was built according to the example of the French Palace of Versailles. During the 19th century the castle was used as headquarters.
The castle was not damaged during World War II. Today the castle is home of two museums, the "Wehrgeschichtliche Museum" (military history) and Erinnerungsstätte für die Freiheitsbewegungen in der deutschen Geschichte (Memorial site for the German liberation movement). WIKIPEDIA
Built between 1889 and 1895, this grand and massive Chateauesque-style mansion was designed by Richard Morris Hunt for George Washington Vanderbilt II and his wife, Edith Vanderbilt, whom had decided that Asheville would be an ideal place to build a French-style self-sufficient country estate.
The house is the largest private residence in the United States, with a 178,926 square foot (16,622.8 square meter) interior floor space. The house was named for De Bilt, the place where the Vanderbilt family came from in the Netherlands, and originally sat at the center of a 125,000 acre (195 square mile or 510 square kilometer) estate, which included Mount Pisgah, much of the present Pisgah National Forest Biltmore Village, and the upscale Asheville suburbs of Biltmore Forest and Biltmore Park, much of which has been parceled off and sold to help assist with keeping the estate running, with 86,700 acres of reforested land surrounding Mount Pisgah being sold to the United States government in 1915. Prior to becoming part of the estate, the land, which straddles the French Broad River, was home to small farms, and was in very poor condition, with Frederick Law Olmsted designing the landscape of the estate, reforesting large areas and creating a park-like setting with natural and artificial landscaped areas surrounding the house.
Part of the estate included Biltmore Village, formerly a small railroad town known as Best, which was redesigned to resemble a rural French medieval village, with a fan-shaped street grid centering around the Episcopal Cathedral of All Souls, which was attended regularly by the Vanderbilt family. The village also features Norman-style cottages, various shops, a train station, a hospital, and a school for the families of workers at the estate, with many of the buildings being designed by Richard Sharp Smith, who took over as lead architect following the death of Richard Morris Hunt. Today featuring many shops, restaurants, and tourist accommodations, Biltmore Village has since been annexed by the city of Asheville. The portion of the estate bordering Biltmore Village features an iconic gatehouse, which melds the cottage-like materials of the village with the more imposing design language of the mansion inside the estate. Between the gatehouse and the mansion, a 3-mile-long (5 kilometer long) driveway known as the Approach Road winds its way through carefully cultivated landscapes, as well as crossing under Interstate 40.
The grounds around the estate include a walled garden with rusticate granite walls, a large rose garden, gardener’s cottage, and a conservatory featuring various tropical plants that would not naturally grow in the local climate. Closer to the house, the large South Terrace enclosed by a rusticated retaining wall stands immediately south of the house, with a gazebo at the southwest corner of the terrace. East of the terrace is the Italian Garden, which features a formal layout, fountains, and Italian-style sculptures, with a more natural Shrub Garden and vine-covered arbor south of the Italian Garden. In front of the house is a large lawn, which runs east to the Esplanade, a stone wall with a series of stairs and ramps that switchback to an upper lawn, with a decorative series of six stone fountains embedded into the base of the wall, and a small belvedere with a Statue of Diana at the upper end of the lawn. West of the house is a grassy knoll, which leaves the views from the house of the surrounding mountains unobstructed. Finally, below the Walled Garden, an enlarged former mill pond, which predated the estate by many decades, is now known as the Biltmore Bass Pond, and has been stocked with fish, and features a boathouse, with a dam and waterfall at the lower end of the pond along the exit road from the house.
The Biltmore House features elements from various historic French Chateaux, including the stair tower and hipped roofs of the Chateau Royal de Blois, as well as various elements from the Chateau de Chenonceau, Chateau de Chambord, also in France, and Waddesdon Manor in England. The house features a facade clad in Indiana Limestone, with lots of Gothic details, leaded glass windows, casement windows, and double-hung windows, towers with steeply pitched hipped slate roofs and decorative copper cresting, ornate wall dormers, an elevator tower at one side of the staircase, a large conservatory known as the Winter Garden next to the front entrance tower, which features an octagonal glass roof with an wooden Gothic support structure, a loggia on the west side of the house with sweeping views of the Pisgah National Forest in the distance, and a stable wing on the north end of the house, with a porte cochere tower entrance to the stable courtyard, stone chimneys, and a loggia on the south side of the house. The smooth limestone exterior of the house is contrasted by the house’s rusticated granite base, quarried on the grounds of the house, which also was utilized in the massive retaining wall around the adjacent South Terrace.
Inside, the house features luxurious finishes, including carved woodwork, intricate plaster details, electric lighting and steam heat, multiple fireplaces, a large kitchen and laundry in the basement, many guest rooms, a massive four-story chandelier in the grand staircase, a basement swimming pool, bowling alley, and gymnasium, a large grand banquet hall, bedrooms for staff, and a two-story library. The house features antiques and decorations sourced from the Vanderbilts’ many international excursions and antique dealers, as well as lots of art.
The house was opened for public tours in 1930, which has, over time, expanded in scale to feature more areas of the house and estate. The house was utilized to store 62 paintings and 17 sculptures from the National Gallery of Art in Washington, DC 1942, with Asheville believed to be a safe haven for them in the event that the United States was invaded by a foreign military, with the house remaining the repository for these important works until 1944, when the tides of war had turned. Biltmore Estate was designated as a National Historic Landmark 1963, and was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1966, owing to the house’s significant size, intact detailing, and connections to notable individuals. Still owned by the Cecil family, the descendants of Cornelia Vanderbilt Cecil, George and Edith Vanderbilt’s only child, the house is today utilized as a museum and open to tours, with the 8,000 remaining acres comprising the modern grounds of the estate having been developed with tourist amenities, including the conversion of the estate’s various barns into museums, restaurants, and a winery, as well as the construction of a luxury hotel, shops, and additional support facilities. The estate today is a major tourist attraction, seeing nearly 2 million visitors every year.
= = Second title suggested by a comment by Trish Mayo. Thanks, Trish!
A few weeks ago, I was taking a "walkabout" in my neighborhood and came upon this scene. A store--more of a luncheonette, really--with seven pineapples along the counter (many more pineapples than stools!); the lights were blazing, but there was no one in sight. Perhaps it's a store for phantoms--but phantoms wouldn't need the light on!
Washington Heights, Upper Manhattan
New York, NY
Manufactured by Herold Products Co. Chicago, USA.
Model: c. 1954 (produced between 1951-54)
All Spartus 35 produced between 1947-1954.
35mm film Viewfinder camera
Lens: 50mm f/6.3 filter slip-on serial no.none
Aperture: (no scale or ring on the lens), setting: rotating plate with 4 holes corresponding the aperture numbers f/6.3-7.7-11-16, by wheel under the lens-shutter barrel, markings on it: cloudy, hazy, bright, dull
Focusing: manual front focusing, guess the distance
Focus range: 4-20 feet +inf
Shutter: Simple spring rotary shutter, one speed, Instant (1/50) +T (B), setting lever on the shutter
Cocking lever and Shutter release: by the same lever, for instant press once and release, on the lens-shutter barrel
Frame counter: on the top plate, manual setting, not works wo/film in the camera
Winding knob: on the top plate, double exposure prevention
Viewfinder: reverse telescopic finder, in the top housing
Re-wind knob: on the top plate
Re-wind release: knob on the back cover
Flash: Dedicated Spartus bulb flash unit, fits to the two holes on the the top plate
Flash PC socket: none
Back cover: removable, opens by a latch on it
Tripod socket: 1/4"
Strap lugs:none
Body: Bakelite; Weight: 408g w/flash unit
serial no.none
+Original ever ready case and flash
There are many lens shutter combinations and cosmetic body differences in its producing period.
More info:
McKeown's 12th Ed. p.899
"The difference between the "natural" individuation process, which runs its course unconsciously, and the one which is consciously realized, is tremendous. In the first case consciousness nowhere intervenes; the end remains as dark as the beginning. In the second case so much darkness comes to light that the personality is permeated with light, and consciousness necessarily gains in scope and insight. The encounter between conscious and unconscious has to ensure that the light which shines in the darkness is not only comprehended by the darkness, but comprehends it. The filius solis et lunae (the son of the Sun and Moon) is the possible result as well as the symbol of this union of opposites. It is the alpha and omega of the process, the mediator and intermedius. "It has a thousand names," say the alchemists, meaning that the source from which the individuation process rises and the goal toward which it aims is nameless, ineffable."
- C. G. Jung
Taking between soundchecks
at the Orpheum Theatre in
downtown L.A. - first time they'd
seen each other in ages -
John asked Loudon to stay
and join him for a
song, but Loudon said he
had to get in his rental car
and zip straight to LAX after his
opening set to get back to NY for
the graduation of his
daughter.
Both were amazing in
concert - to see these two great
songwriters in one night, a very
special event.
Between the cracks in cement and in the scent-enriched pad of a rusty metal garbage dumpster. Minolta 50mm 2.0 on micro 4/3 body.
Lying between the CIMM / Marine Mammal Interpretation Centre and the dry dock, the Jardin de la Grève is an area for relaxation, contemplation and activities. In addition to its 5,500 plants typical of the Côte-Nord region, the garden features five life-size beluga sculptures.
"Tadoussac is quite rightly listed as one of the 50 most beautiful bays in the world.
Tadoussac is also the oldest village in Canada. In fact, the village celebrated its 400th anniversary in 2000.
But above all, Tadoussac is an internationally-renowned whale-watching site." From the link below.
www.authentikcanada.com/holidays/tourist-office-tadoussac
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tadoussac
A few days ago, I started on photos taken during the week friends and I spent in Quebec, 12-18 May 2018. Some photos were taken in the small, coastal village of Tadoussac itself, others were taken in the wonderful garden of the home in which we stayed all week, and the rest were taken on several drives we made further along the coast.
At the end of our 4-day stay at Point Pelee, we had to drive all the way back to Toronto, from where we flew to Quebec City airport. From there, we had a four-hour drive to Tadoussac on the coast of the St. Lawrence Seaway. This is such a delightful, small place and in a beautiful setting. One of our friends, Anne B, and her husband have a summer cabin further along the cliff from the few stores and port. She had invited the four of us to go with her from Pelee to spend a week at her beautiful home. What an absolute treat this was! We were able to meet some of her relatives, too, who also have built cabins out there. We were looked after so well, and we were able to see and photograph all sorts of birds and other things.
Several trips were made to see different places along the coast, including the Cap Tourmente National Wildlife Area, where we were able to see endless thousands of Snow Geese, in flight and also up close. Breathtaking!
We also had two boat trips from Tadoussac - one was a whaling trip in a Zodiac, where we saw very, very distant Beluga and Minke Whales. The Belugas looked almost like the white wave crests - but they were Belugas. The other boat trip was to the Brandy Pot Islands, inhabited by thousands of Razorbills and Common Murres, which were new birds for us, and Double-crested Cormorants that were nesting in tree tops. That long boat trip (in a tiny boat named Juno) started off in the rain and dark clouds and it was soooo cold! Thermal underwear, layers of fleece and toque and gloves were needed. This day was arranged through a contact of Anne's and it was so much enjoyed! Of course, we anchored a distance away from the island and sat there and ate our sandwiches and took endless photos - difficult when bobbing up and down on the rough water! It is forbidden to land on the island at nesting time.
Anne B, I can't thank you enough for organizing this holiday for us all and for inviting us to spend a week at your cabin. You worked so hard and it was so much appreciated by each and every one of us. Thank you for doing all the many hours of driving, too! Janet and Anne, thank you so much for compiling the lists of birds seen each day at various locations, and posted to ebird. These entries will be a huge help while I try and sort out where we were and when, and what species we saw. Miss your cookies and muffins, Janet, that you kindly made for us in Tadoussac, to go along with the wonderful meals that Anne planned and made for us : )
Link to my album (358 images) about Point Pelee and area, Ontario: www.flickr.com/photos/annkelliott/albums/72157667191771677
Bain News Service,, publisher.
Geo. M. Landers
[between ca. 1910 and ca. 1915]
1 negative : glass ; 5 x 7 in. or smaller.
Notes:
Title from data provided by the Bain News Service on the negative.
Photograph shows businessman George M. Landers, who served as President of the Connecticut State Senate, mayor and city councilman of New Britain, Connecticut, and was also President of the Pressure Lighting Company. (Source: Flickr Commons project, 2011)
Forms part of: George Grantham Bain Collection (Library of Congress).
Format: Glass negatives.
Rights Info: No known restrictions on publication.
Repository: Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division, Washington, D.C. 20540 USA, hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.print
General information about the Bain Collection is available at hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.ggbain
Higher resolution image is available (Persistent URL): hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/ggbain.16669
Call Number: LC-B2- 3162-6
Dual meet between San Francisco State Gators and New Mexico Highlands Cowboys.
Held at the "Swamp" on Friday 25th January 2019.
141 – Darian Manzanares (NMHU) def. Josh Villaflor (SFS) (11-4)
San Francisco State 26, NMHU 15
125 – Brandon Vu (SFS) def. Dom Rivera (NMHU) (6-4)
133 – Jordan Gurrola (SFS) def. Kyler Gonzalez (NMHU) (11-2)
141 – Darian Manzanares (NMHU) def. Josh Villaflor (SFS) (11-4)
149 – Jonathan Trujillo (NMHU) def. Isiah Alva (SFS) (7-4)
157 – Mason Boutain (SFS) def. Allen Michel (NMHU) (Inj. 1:24)
165 – Max Schneider (SFS) def. Kenny Yara (NMHU) (18-2)
174 – Kurtis Clem (SFS) def. Lance Killgore (NMHU) (8-4)
184 – Justin Pichedwatana (SFS) def. Denzell Morrow (NMHU) (16-0)
197 – Luke Allan (NMHU) wins via forfeit
285 – Julian Sanchez (NMHU) def. Kevin Henry (SFS) (7-1)