View allAll Photos Tagged decison
Future Dillard University students pose for photos during Dillard Decision Day. (Photo by Sabree Hill/ Dillard University Photographer)
Future Dillard University students pose for photos during Dillard Decision Day. (Photo by Sabree Hill/ Dillard University Photographer)
Future Dillard University students pose for photos during Dillard Decision Day. (Photo by Sabree Hill/ Dillard University Photographer)
This station opened in 1994 as a P+R Park and Ride station directly on the Autobahn Berlin - Salzburg and was rebuilt in 2005/06 after the decison to locate the Allianz Arena nearby
Future Dillard University students pose for photos during Dillard Decision Day. (Photo by Sabree Hill/ Dillard University Photographer)
This station opened in 1994 as a P+R Park and Ride station directly on the Autobahn Berlin - Salzburg and was rebuilt in 2005/06 after the decison to locate the Allianz Arena nearby
Future Dillard University students pose for photos during Dillard Decision Day. (Photo by Sabree Hill/ Dillard University Photographer)
Future Dillard University students pose for photos during Dillard Decision Day. (Photo by Sabree Hill/ Dillard University Photographer)
Putting your hard earned money for long term will be a tough decison for anyone, but with SKJ Landbase you will never regret !! Listen what our client Mr. Parshant has to say:
Future Dillard University students pose for photos during Dillard Decision Day. (Photo by Sabree Hill/ Dillard University Photographer)
Abby, our beer wench. (Her husband offered us her services if we let them in the tailgate. Best decison we've ever made)
Future Dillard University students pose for photos during Dillard Decision Day. (Photo by Sabree Hill/ Dillard University Photographer)
Future Dillard University students pose for photos during Dillard Decision Day. (Photo by Sabree Hill/ Dillard University Photographer)
Future Dillard University students pose for photos during Dillard Decision Day. (Photo by Sabree Hill/ Dillard University Photographer)
Future Dillard University students pose for photos during Dillard Decision Day. (Photo by Sabree Hill/ Dillard University Photographer)
Future Dillard University students pose for photos during Dillard Decision Day. (Photo by Sabree Hill/ Dillard University Photographer)
Future Dillard University students pose for photos during Dillard Decision Day. (Photo by Sabree Hill/ Dillard University Photographer)
After months of waiting, I was finally able to cast a vote for Barack Obama for President of the United States of America!
First election I've participated in where I did not have a strong feeling I was simply voting for "the lesser of two evils". Am I a "sucker"? Time will tell, but today I feel good about the decison I made!
Future Dillard University students pose for photos during Dillard Decision Day. (Photo by Sabree Hill/ Dillard University Photographer)
Anyone that knows me knows that I edit the same photo a handful of time so I can decide which version I like best. And that's usually a very difficult decison.
Future Dillard University students pose for photos during Dillard Decision Day. (Photo by Sabree Hill/ Dillard University Photographer)
Future Dillard University students pose for photos during Dillard Decision Day. (Photo by Sabree Hill/ Dillard University Photographer)
Future Dillard University students pose for photos during Dillard Decision Day. (Photo by Sabree Hill/ Dillard University Photographer)
Future Dillard University students pose for photos during Dillard Decision Day. (Photo by Sabree Hill/ Dillard University Photographer)
Future Dillard University students pose for photos during Dillard Decision Day. (Photo by Sabree Hill/ Dillard University Photographer)
Future Dillard University students pose for photos during Dillard Decision Day. (Photo by Sabree Hill/ Dillard University Photographer)
A few years ago an intersection in Victoria was targeted for expensive repairs to address aging and problematic infrastructure, most of it unseen and underground. The sagging road in the middle of the image, where you can see the vehicle moving deeper into the photo (westbound towards the background), tilting to the right. The road was in danger of collapse as sewer and water pipes underground sagged into the swampy subsurface that was the original landscape of this location near downtown Victoria. While the decison making process to move forward was slow and frustrating, the final project was well worth the expense (in excess of $4 million). The road base is aerated concrete that floats on the swamp and keeps water and sewer pipes from sagging in the middle (the older infrastructure was in danger of snapping in half and causing huge dmage and bigger headaches for all sorts of reasons). The new road is levelled up, and the adjacent businesses, who were nosily impatient with the construction work, have mostly recovered. Of note, however, was the failure of a computer business a block away for whom the roadworks may have been the straw that broke the camel's back. The business disappeared and the location only belatedly has a new and likely successful tenant business.
Future Dillard University students pose for photos during Dillard Decision Day. (Photo by Sabree Hill/ Dillard University Photographer)
We have now enetered Cambodia and I took the decison to visit the Killing Fields where millions of innocent Cambodians were brutally slaughtered by the Khmer Rouge. It was a difficult visit but I am very glad that I went.
A nice example of a small twin-loophole pillbox on the River Wye. It is one of a pair, the second being across the river facing this one. They appear to protect what may have been an important railway crossing.
The pillbox is made from reinforced cast-concrete to the bullet-proof standard. There are only two loopholes, side by side, and facing south along the railway bridge. There is standing room only, but a generous firing shelf has been provided below the loopholes. This is a solid shelf to ground level, increasing the thickness of the lower front face of the pillbox to around 4 feet; and could be considered shell-proof.
After the initial frenzy of pillbox construction in 1940/1941 the decison was made to abandon the pillbox as a forom of permenant stop-line fortification and to adopt the more adaptable (and cheaper) field fortification. Pillboxes were to be authorised in special circumstances, but would be supported by a network of field defences. By 1941 it was also acknowledged that the original bullet-proof standard of pillbox would perform poorly against the heavier German weapons, and that specification was to be diminished. This pillbox, not built to a recognised standard, is likely to have been build
Future Dillard University students pose for photos during Dillard Decision Day. (Photo by Sabree Hill/ Dillard University Photographer)
John McEnroe complaining to the referee about the officials decison during the third day of the BlackRock Tour of Champions at the Odyssey Arena on February 23, 2008 in Belfast, Northern Ireland. (Photo by Kirth Ferris)
A nice example of a small twin-loophole pillbox on the River Wye. It is one of a pair, the second being across the river facing this one. They appear to protect what may have been an important railway crossing.
The pillbox is made from reinforced cast-concrete to the bullet-proof standard. There are only two loopholes, side by side, and facing south along the railway bridge. There is standing room only, but a generous firing shelf has been provided below the loopholes. This is a solid shelf to ground level, increasing the thickness of the lower front face of the pillbox to around 4 feet; and could be considered shell-proof.
After the initial frenzy of pillbox construction in 1940/1941 the decison was made to abandon the pillbox as a forom of permenant stop-line fortification and to adopt the more adaptable (and cheaper) field fortification. Pillboxes were to be authorised in special circumstances, but would be supported by a network of field defences. By 1941 it was also acknowledged that the original bullet-proof standard of pillbox would perform poorly against the heavier German weapons, and that specification was to be diminished. This pillbox, not built to a recognised standard, is likely to have been built after the post-Dunkirk frenzy and is likely to have formed part of the protective defences surrounding the industrial area across the river to which production may have switched to vital aircraft parts of other war machinery.
Quito (Pichincha), 15 de abril del 2019.- El ministro del Trabajo, Andrés Madero (c); el director del INEC, Roberto Castillo (d), y el viceministro de Finanzas, Fabián Carrillo, informaron sobre las acciones que se tomarán con el fin de generar plazas de trabajo. Dieron a conocer que a través de la red Socio Empleo se vinculará a cerca de 45 mil personas a empleos dignos. Foto: Freddy Constante/Presidencia de la República.
Real Madrid beat Barcelona
Real Madrid beat rivals Barcelona 2-1 at home in an entertaining, rain-soaked Clasico on Saturday to go top of La Liga.
Karim Benzema put the champions in charge at a soggy Alfredo Di Stefano stadium with a delightful back-heel in the 14th minute while a deflected Toni Kroos free kick doubled their lead in the 28th.
Barca hit back on the hour mark through Oscar Mingueza and the defender almost found the equaliser later on, while the Catalans had a huge penalty appeal waved away when Martin Braithwaite fell following a challenge by Ferland Mendy.
Barcelona coach Ronald Koeman was left fuming afterward by the decison to reward his side a penalty.
"First of all I want to say in the first half we weren't good, attacking or defending," Koeman said. "Second half we improved and I only ask that the referees get decisions right.
"It's a penalty and four minutes of extra time when the referee had three minutes with his shoulder issue. The penalty is clear."
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Future Dillard University students pose for photos during Dillard Decision Day. (Photo by Sabree Hill/ Dillard University Photographer)
Future Dillard University students pose for photos during Dillard Decision Day. (Photo by Sabree Hill/ Dillard University Photographer)
A nice example of a small twin-loophole pillbox on the River Wye. It is one of a pair, the second being across the river facing this one. They appear to protect what may have been an important railway crossing.
The pillbox is made from reinforced cast-concrete to the bullet-proof standard. There are only two loopholes, side by side, and facing south along the railway bridge. There is standing room only, but a generous firing shelf has been provided below the loopholes. This is a solid shelf to ground level, increasing the thickness of the lower front face of the pillbox to around 4 feet; and could be considered shell-proof.
After the initial frenzy of pillbox construction in 1940/1941 the decison was made to abandon the pillbox as a forom of permenant stop-line fortification and to adopt the more adaptable (and cheaper) field fortification. Pillboxes were to be authorised in special circumstances, but would be supported by a network of field defences. By 1941 it was also acknowledged that the original bullet-proof standard of pillbox would perform poorly against the heavier German weapons, and that specification was to be diminished. This pillbox, not built to a recognised standard, is likely to have been build
today was a weird day.. i was very confused due to the office shift with a colleague.. but my computer arrived and I moved to my new office finally - a decison was made in July. Oh well, a new environment brings new hopes, and hopefully a good start to a countdown to finalize my PhD thesis! good luck to me :)
Future Dillard University students pose for photos during Dillard Decision Day. (Photo by Sabree Hill/ Dillard University Photographer)
protesta degli attivisti di Greenpeace presso le agenzie di Intesa Sanpaolo. In tutta Italia hanno distribuito ai clienti della banca "barattoli di scorie nucleari" per denunciare la decisone del Gruppo di finanziare il completamento di due vecchi reattori nucleari a Mochovce, in Slovacchia. In questo pericoloso progetto è coinvolta Enel.
Per maggiori informazioni:
www.greenpeace.org/italy/news/scorie-nucleari-intesa
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A nice example of a small twin-loophole pillbox on the River Wye. It is one of a pair, the second being across the river facing this one. They appear to protect what may have been an important railway crossing.
The pillbox is made from reinforced cast-concrete to the bullet-proof standard. There are only two loopholes, side by side, and facing south along the railway bridge. There is standing room only, but a generous firing shelf has been provided below the loopholes. This is a solid shelf to ground level, increasing the thickness of the lower front face of the pillbox to around 4 feet; and could be considered shell-proof.
After the initial frenzy of pillbox construction in 1940/1941 the decison was made to abandon the pillbox as a forom of permenant stop-line fortification and to adopt the more adaptable (and cheaper) field fortification. Pillboxes were to be authorised in special circumstances, but would be supported by a network of field defences. By 1941 it was also acknowledged that the original bullet-proof standard of pillbox would perform poorly against the heavier German weapons, and that specification was to be diminished. This pillbox, not built to a recognised standard, is likely to have been build