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The Crimes of Grindelwald Subway Entrance Night - Harry Potter Universe Continued Movie Billboard - film poster billboards advertisement transportation Theatre 2018 Broadway 7th Avenue and 42nd Street Theater District in New York City 10/26/2018 AD Advertisement pop popular art mural tile J K Rowling Wizarding World Etc director David Yates Eddie Redmayne beasts nite
Shipments to the region, which is near the Syrian border, could be challenging at times but assembly proceeded as normal
BrainSell Education - Continuing Education - Advanced Clinical Communication Skills for Healthcare Professionals Seminar for Physical Therapists - PTs, Physical Therapy Assistants - PTAs, Occupational Therapists - Occupational Therapy Assistant OTs, OTAs, SLPs, Nurses, RNs, RNAs, LPNs, Social Work Examiners, LCSW, www.brainselleducation.com
BrainSell Education - Continuing Education - Advanced Clinical Communication Skills for Healthcare Professionals Seminar for Physical Therapists - PTs, Physical Therapy Assistants - PTAs, Occupational Therapists - Occupational Therapy Assistant OTs, OTAs, SLPs, Nurses, RNs, RNAs, LPNs, Social Work Examiners, LCSW, www.brainselleducation.com
Army Continuing Education Services Division holds a graduation celebration for military members, DA civilians, dependents, and veterans who are receiving degrees. Ceremony held at Fort Campbell's Family Readiness Center.
Continued refurbishment at old Esslemont & MacIntosh (E&M) building, Union Street, Aberdeen. Lower floors to become a Jamie Oliver Italian restaurant
This pair is definitely heavily into the nest-building phase. I suspect they realize they're a bit behind the times. I also am rethinking my previous observation that they (at least the male) weren't/(wasn't) trying to mate when he landed on her frequently yesterday. (those pics are still awaiting upload). Even though I've been doing this for 2 seasons now, I'm getting more excited about the potential with this nest..
Oh, and hats off to Jon (Nikographer) for the frequent feedback that is helping me improve so rapidly with these shots (yeah, the better weather is helping some, too). I was clearly underestimating the severity of the effects of using the teleconverter, and misjudging DoF/aperture needs, etc. I'm very happy with the results shown here..
The Dallas YMCA continued 50+ year tradition of jump-starting the Dallas community on Thanksgiving morning. Over 12,000 participants joined the Dallas YMCA to trot at Dallas City Hall or virtually!
Gobble Gobble!
Continuing White-throated Sparrow at Guadalupe Beach entrance willows. Photographed 14 February, 2015
Photo Title: Cataract Continues
Submitted by: Donell Gumiran
Category: Professional
Country: Philippines
Organisation: Deerect
COVID-19 Photo: No
Photo Caption: India has a wide geographical area and its peculiar terrain of Himalayan Areas, North East areas, The country diverse but with limited connectivity to each other. Ophthalmic problems also vary according to the geographical terrain. Cataract continues to be the topmost cause of blindness in India despite cost-effective treatment is available in India compared to Western countries.
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Photo uploaded from the #HopeInSight Photo Competition on photocomp.iapb.org held for World Sight Day 2020.
The Bank of the West Beach Games. July 21-30, 2006. Huntington Beach, CA.
THE summertime tradition in Huntington Beach, where beautiful people from all around come to experience the sun, sand and surf, and witness the merging of skateboarding, BMX, FMX, and beach volleyball. There's music, free schwag, and this thing they call the Honda US Open of Surfing, the most prestigious surfing event in the world.
Rob Machado won his 3rd Honda US Open of Surfing. Huntington Beach local, Dodger Kremel won the US Open of Longboarding. Ben Dunn Won the Lost Jr. Pro, and Tim Curran Won the Life Rolls On Expression Session.
Held July 21-30, 2006 in Huntington Beach, CA.
Saturday, and I was feeling a little better. Better enough to realise how shit I had felt the previous two days, and needing something to break the cabin fever, soo it would be churchcrawling.
Off to Tesco for supplies, and delight that "party food" has appeared, and although there would be no party at Chez Jelltex, there would be party food to munch on during the evening game.
Back home for breakfast, and Jools decided not to join in the church fun, instead stay home to do overdue chores.
And so the great round of revisits to record details of the stained glass that I previously missed continues.
Elmsted not Elmstead.
Off Stone Street and down past Yockletts Bank and along towards Hastingleigh, before taking a lane back up the down, which double hairpins to the village above, and by the village crossroads is St James.
A huge church for what is a farm and a handful of houses now. I parked beside the road, in a narrow strip between the tarmac and where the verge turned to swamp, got my bag out of the car and walked through the gate, noticing better the shapes of the grave markers repurposed for the path, some even dates being still visible.
The church is cool and still, I had done a pretty good job before, windows excepted, so got to work snapping and moving about. Sun poured in through the mostly clear glass windows, making it seem a place of divine light, even if the sun shone from the south, not the Orient.
Back to the car, and down the down, back to the main road a a quick climb up to Hastingleigh, where the church is a good mile outside the village, beside a farm. It does, at least, have a large car park, so no parking in people's drives or blocking the lane through the village.
A poor wren was trapped inside, but I made it even more desperate than it had been when I entered, and try as I might I couldn't get close to it. And the two fine windows, one of St Michael the Archangel, that I came out especially to photograph had boards up outside, so they could barely be seen.
The rest of the Victorian glass is of a very fine standard, so record all that.
Next church was a twenty minute drive away, Mersham, which can be seen from the train just before entering the outskirts of Ashford, its spire pointing into the morning skies as I zoom past en route to Denmark.
Here there is a most extraordinary west window. Cathedral sized, though it has lost of of the ancient glass that filled it, fragments remain, and I wanted to record those.
Outside a lady was clearing leaves, and inside another was refreshing the floral displays with poppies for services on Sunday.
The window is a wonder, and a burden, as it lets in so much light, that during the summer months the cinema nights they have cannot take place.
I very much like Mesham, and received a quite wonderfully warm and friendly greeting from the two ladies.
One last church to try would be Nackington, back near Canterbury, where the small church has some of the oldest glass in the country.
It was quite a hike across the county to get there only to find the church locked. This was a church that was always open before COVID, and was a major disappointment.
So, back home through Bridge and onto the A2 back to Dover, to get back at midday, just in time to cook lunch.
And settle down then for an afternoons groaning at the football on the wireless.
Norwich were away at Cardiff, and after four straight defeats, hopes were low. But City took the lead, only to concede twice before half time, which suggested the same old story.
But in the second, City played better, and in the closing ten minutes, scored twice to nick the three points.
Well.
The party food was aptly enjoyed as I watched the evening game.
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A pretty, many-gabled church with a fine short shingled spire. The church is a fourteenth-century rebuild of a Norman original that had been enlarged in the late 1200s. O slightly later date, and to be found on a tie-beam in the chancel is a carved head of Joan, Countess of Kent, who was married to the Black Prince, son of Edward III at Windsor in 1361. There is a fair amount of medieval glass, in the chancel and nave west windows whilst the screens which separate the south chapel from the chancel and south aisle are wonderful examples of seventeenth-century craftsmanship. The base comprises solid panels, the upper levels are of very closely set barley-twist balusters, and the top is of tall iron spikes. The south chapel contains many memorials to the local Knatchbull family whose ancestral home, Mersham-le-Hatch stands to the north of the village. Above the screen is a corbel of possibly thirteenth-century date which depicts a bishop, and which could be part of an earlier door or window. There is a fine Royal Arms of 1751 and a good holy water stoup by the south door with superb carving of Tudor roses.
www.kentchurches.info/church.asp?p=Mersham
“a hide of land for a Church at Mersham” was bequeathed by ‘John Siweard and his wife Edith’ in their will dated c. 1040 AD . A church has existed on this site by 1086 AD, as recorded in the Domesday Book.
The Church was rebuilt by the Normans c.1100 AD and further rebuilding was accomplished in the second half of the fourteenth century (1350-1400 AD). The Church is substantially the same today, although over the years it has been altered and changed internally over the years to reflect the current fashions of the day.
The present church contains significant monuments to the local members of the Brabourne and Knatchbull families
www.a20churches.org.uk/mersham.htm
his is a beautiful Church although I have to admit that from the North side it did rather remind me of a Mennonite farmhouse. (For those of you who have not lived in Southern Ontario as I have, Mennonites do tend to expand their farmhouses as the family grows, usually resulting in lots of additional "bits" added onto the original building. St. John the Baptist Church at Mersham gives the same appearance). Although not actually architecturally visible, the oldest part of this Church is Norman. The South wall at the East end of the building has a thicker wall than the Western end as this once formed part of that original small Norman Church which measured only 36 feet by 25 feet. There was a Saxon Church here and the earliest documentation to confirm this was written in 1040 A.D. The Church was rebuilt in the latter half of the fourteenth century and much of the building we see today dates from that time. Even the main roof trusses and king posts in the Nave (picture top left) date from the fouteenth century.
The Church is well known for the various monuments and memorials to the Knatchbull family. The Chapel in the South East corner of the Church is know knonw as the Knatchbull Chapel although it was original The Lady Chapel. Under the floor at the East end of the Chapel is the Knatchbull family vault and there is also an area on the South side of the churchyard where there also additional Knatchbull family graves. More than one member of the family presided as a magistrate at the local Quarter Sessions and are already mentioned briefly on my smuggling pages. Certain of these memorials to this family are rather interesting for genealogists and you will find additional detail on the next page (see below).
In the Chancel there is some fine oak paneling said to date in one reference from the 14th Century but carrying a date carved into one section in the early 17th Century and some unusual altar rails which do date from the 17th Century. The Church also has some unusual and attractive ancient glass and the tracery in the West window is most unusual containing parts from two different styles of architecture.
When I was in the Church, there were works of art by local children proudly adorning the screen to the Knatchbull Chapel which at least shows that this delightful building is still playing a regular part in the daily lives of this country community. It was also nice to think that two centuries ago, members of my own direct family were being baptised in this Church.
www.kentresources.co.uk/mersham-sjb1.htm
MERSHAM is within the ECCLESIASTICAL JURISDICTION of the diocese of Canterbury, and deanry of Limne.
¶The church, which is dedicated to St. John Baptist, consists of two isles and two chancels, having a handsome square tower at the west end, in which are five bells. In the north window of the high chancel is the figure of a bishop, with his mitre and crosier, praying, and the figure of a saint, with the dragon under his feet. On the rector's pew is carved in wood, a coat of arms, being A fess, in chief, three balls. In this chancel is a memorial for Elizabeth, widow of William Legg, of New Sarum, and mother of dame Grace, wife of Sir Edward Knatchbull, bart. obt. 1771; and several monuments and memorials for the Knatchbull family. The south chancel belongs to them, in which are several monuments and memorials of them, particularly a most superb one for Sir Norton Knatchbull, who died in 1636, having his figure in full proportion lying on it, and above that of his lady kneeling in a praying posture, under a canopy supported by two figures; above are the arms of Knatchbull impaling Ashley; underneath this chancel is a large vault, in which this family lie buried. A monument for Margaret Collyns, daughter of Thomas Tourney, gent. and wife of William Collyns, gent. obt. 1595; arms, Vert, a griffin, or, gerged with a ducal coronet, argent, impaling Tourney. In the north isle are several memorials for the Boys's, of this parish; for Richard Knatchbull, esq. and for Mary Franklyn, obt. 1763. In the west window, which is very large, nearly the whole breadth of the isle, and consists of many compartments, are eight figures of men, pretty entire, and much remains of other painted glass in the other parts of it. The arms of Septvans and Fogge were formerly in one of the windows of the high chancel.
The church of Mersham was formerly appendant to the manor, and belonged with it to the convent of Christ-church; but when the survey of Domesday was taken in the year 1080, it appears to have been in the possession of the archbishop, with whom the manor did not continue long before it was again vested in the convent; but the advowson of the rectory remained with the archbishop, and has continued parcel of the possessions of the see of Canterbury to this time, his grace the archbishop being the present patron of it.
This rectory is valued in the king's books at 26l. 16s. 10½d. and the yearly tenths, which are now payable to the crown-receiver, at 2l. 13s. 8¼d.
In 1578 here were communicants two hundred and forty-seven. In 1640, one hundred and eighty, and it was valued at eighty pounds.
150829-A-ZA034-206 TRUJILLO, Honduras (Aug. 29, 2015) Cmdr. Bradley Killenbeck, a native of Spencer Port, N.Y., assigned to Naval Medical Center Portsmouth, Va., donates soccer balls to children during a soccer game with local Honduran police, military and fire department personnel during a community relations event at a public soccer field in support of Continuing Promise 2015. Continuing Promise is a U.S. Southern Command-sponsored and U.S. Naval Forces Southern Command/U.S. 4th Fleet-conducted deployment to conduct civil-military operations including humanitarian-civil assistance, subject matter expert exchanges, medical, dental, veterinary and engineering support and disaster response to partner nations and to show U.S. support and commitment to Central and South America and the Caribbean. (U.S. Army photo by Spc. Tomarius Roberts/Released)
I got all the usable laminate that I removed from upstairs and still had floor to cover. We have tons of these ceramic tiles in our shed. Since this is just a temporary (read a couple of years) solution I didn’t want to cement them down so I’m trying a cheater approach of silicone between the tiles. Part of it will have a rubber mat over it for the treadmill and the rest has the fridge and freezer on top so it should do the trick. Tomorrow I have one more section to figure out and then I can put everything back into place.
Chartwells and District 99 mobilized on Tuesday, March 17, 2020 to deliver meals to those in need. We will continue to do so through April.
Continuing with the theme of In My Kitchen and yesterday's image of the Mad Housewife Chardonnay, here's the cork! Fortunately Voice from the Couch is fairly neat and with my Social Security check I'm now having the house cleaned every other week!
Looking seaward under Teignmouth pier. When we were kids we used to search under here for coins dropped through the floorboards by the slot machine players.
12 January 2010 ... My lighting experimentation continues. Flash diffused and bounced off a white board held above subject.
Got the last two Orla Kiely chair cushions, much the envy of those behind me in the checkout lane. And those napkins, well in my excitement, I failed to notice that one of the set of four was missing, so I called the store, and they located it. Hooray! Good thing I took this picture, as I might not have immediately realized.
This is the last year I'll be at the CNE for a while - I'll be out of the country for next year's and things after that are still undecided. I've been taking a photo of the city from the CNE ferris wheel for a number of years. I can't find all of the photos anymore (I'm certain I have more) but I'll add a comment below with a few of them. They moved the ferris wheel this year so the angles aren't all the same, and all the images below from before 2007 where scanned from prints so the quality varies!
Chartwells and District 99 mobilized on Tuesday, March 17, 2020 to deliver meals to those in need. We will continue to do so through April.
This photo represents the idea that it is easy for anyone to become immersed in their own little world, ceasing their attention on whats going on around them. When you're not watching, life will just continue around you and you'll always miss things. Sometimes people need to retreat to their own little worlds when the real world becomes too much for them. They shouldn't stay there for too long though, they need to come back because who knows what they'll miss out on.