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Tellus Science Museum occupies more than 125,000 square feet and features galleries devoted to minerals, fossils, transportation technology, and hands-on science experiences.
The 120-seat digital Planetarium hosts a variety of astronomy programs, stargazing events, and family activities and 45-minute shows are shown throughout each day. The Weinman Mineral Gallery showcases one of the largest, most comprehensive collections in the Southeast, with more than 4,000 rocks, gems and minerals on display.
Tellus is a Latin word meaning "Earth" and may refer to Tellus Mater or Terra Mater, the ancient Roman earth mother goddess, and is also an alternative name for the planet Earth, often used in the science fiction genre (e.g. the books of E. E. Smith).
Tellus is an affiliate of the Smithsonian Institution. The museum is open daily from 10:00 AM to 5:00 PM closing only on major holidays.
The Fossil Gallery features Stan, a 40-foot Tyrannosaurus rex along with other dinosaurs and fossils, allowing visitors to trace the history of life on Earth.
Collins Family My Big Back Yard offers hands-on science exhibits introducing concepts from the physical and life sciences through backyard science experiences.
Science of Motion allows visitors to re-live major developments in science and technology related to automobiles, aircraft, and space travel. In addition, Tellus includes a 200-seat presentation theater, a large multi-purpose room for events, four well-equipped science labs, an observatory, a full service cafe, and a gift shop that is almost equal in size to the Weinman’s original exhibit space.
Tellus Science Museum opened January 12, 2009, and has welcomed more than one million visitors.
Tellus was founded as the Weinman Mineral Museum in 1983, which closed in 2007 and reopened as Tellus Science Museum in 2009. The museum retains the original mineral displays in the Weinman Mineral Gallery.
visitcartersvillega.org/tellus-science-museum/
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St. Therese was devoted to the image above, "The Infant Jesus of Messine" by Ittenbach, of Infant Jesus pointing, at His hand and Himself, which she carried on a postcard apparently.
She has written upon it "I am the Jesus of Therese" "Let all that are little come to me," which is one way of translating Proverbs 9:4.
Therese wrote
"We are living now in an age of inventions, and we no longer have to take the trouble of climbing stairs … I wanted to find an elevator which would raise me to Jesus, for I am too small to climb the rough stairway of perfection. … The elevator which must raise me to heaven is Your arms, O Jesus! And for this I had no need to grow up, but rather I had to remain little and become this more and more."
Dali was even more direct, I think.
I was transfixed by this as a kid.
The lyric "I'll live in you if you live in me" from another favourite from my childhood takes on a new meaning.
www.youtube.com/watch?v=klcsqF2pplA
The gestures of the infant Jesus above is similar to Bowie's gesture on the cover of his album Heroes which seems to have been of considerable importance to the album. One of the songs on the album "Sense of Doubt" is accompanied by a video showing Bowie making the gesture starting with a hand with fingers more splayed. Bowie makes the gesture when he sings Blackout and particular the line regarding you of the song being in a cage, allowing his fingers to cast shadows on his face, like those of a bars of a cage. . The cover of "The Next Day" figures but largely hides the same gesture.
CHITRAL: Devoted Muslims Listening Friday Sermon in courtyard of Shahi Masjid in chilly heat weather under open sky of Sheikhul Haidth Maulana Dr. Sher Ali Shah who served as Professor at Madina University for 18 years have arrived here for 2 days visit who also delivered Friday Sermon at Shahi Masjid (Mosque) Chitral. He also offered Dua for prosperity of the Country. Photo by Gul Hamaad Farooqi
Jennifer (fiddle) and Hazel (guitar) Wrigley share some tunes from Orkney at Such Devoted Sisters, October 11, 2014 at St. Matthew's United Church in Inverness. photo: Mats Melin [DSC_0139]
An entire wall devoted to the Gods
No it’s not at the temple but at my living hall
From Shiva to Krishna I see all the Lords
The height of all the portraits is at least 12 feet tall.
Growing up I didn’t understand the mantras my father chanted
Nevertheless I was very much enchanted
By the tenor of his voice which deepened further in prayer
Never once he uttered a prayer for himself
His voice appealing to God to improve the lives of even naysayers
He taught me to look beyond self.
I learnt that my home was a place of worship to worship
My God-given relationships: Family.
Jacques Tocatlian, was a man of many talents.
He was a devoted family man who lived on three continents and always provided for his family. He was a diplomat who carried his work with devotion and conviction, with competence and success. He was a builder who laid the foundation for the revival of the Library of Alexandria. He was a writer who looked at the world with humor and tolerance.
Jacques was also a painter who wasn’t bound by borders, defined by labels, or frightened of critics. He painted in a variety of styles. His work was good enough to win a first prize but sometimes went unappreciated. It was experimental. It was mostly happy. It was sometimes unfinished. It captured moments and places he cared to remember and share with others.
When Jacques passed away on January 24, 2019, we assembled in his room close to 200 paintings that he had painted over the course of a half century. Many of these painting had been stored in the basement and seldom seen. Rediscovering his works was like Ali Baba discovering a cave full with treasures.
But unlike Ali Baba, the family decided to give away most of the paintings to friends and family. It was our way to share his legacy and for Jacques to live on in the hearts of those who knew him. Below is a compilation of many of his works. Thank you to everyone that is displaying his paintings in your homes and offices. We know how much it means to Jacques.
VIEW FROM FIFTH AND MARKET STREETS.
[Pg 13]
CHAPTER VI.
SCENES OF TERROR, DEATH AND HEROISM.
Thrilling Escapes and Deeds of Daring—Sublime Bravery and Self-Sacrifice by Men and Women—How the United States Mint and the Treasuries Were Saved and Protected by Devoted Employes and Soldiers—Pathetic Street Incidents—Soldiers and Police Compel Fashionably Attired to Assist in Cleaning Streets—Italians Drench Homes with Wine103
CHAPTER VII.
THRILLING PERSONAL EXPERIENCES.
Scenes of Horror and Panic Described by Victims of the Quake Who Escaped—How Helpless People Were Crushed to Death by Falling Buildings and Debris—Some Marvelous Escapes119
CHAPTER VIII.
THRILLING PERSONAL EXPERIENCES—CONTINUED.
Hairbreadth Escapes from the Hotels Whose Walls Crumbled—Frantic Mothers Seek Children from Whom They Were Torn by the Quake—Reckless Use of Firearms by Cadet Militia—Tales of Heroism and Suffering132
CHAPTER IX.
THROUGH LANES OF MISERY.
A Graphic Pen Picture of San Francisco in Flames and in Ruins—Scenes and Stories of Human Interest where Millionaires and Paupers Mingled in a Common Brotherhood—A Harrowing Trip in an Automobile141
CHAPTER X.
WHOLE NATION RESPONDS WITH AID.
Government Appropriates Millions and Chicago Leads All Other Cities with a Round Million of Dollars—People in All Ranks of Life from President Roosevelt to the Humblest Wage Earner Give Promptly and Freely157
CHAPTER XI.
ALL CO-OPERATE IN RELIEF WORK.
Citizens’ Committee Takes Charge of the Distribution of Supplies, Aided by the Red Cross Society and the Army—Nearly Three-Fourths of the Entire Population Fed and Sheltered in Refuge Camps162
CHAPTER XII.
OUR BOYS IN BLUE PROVE HEROISM.
United States Troops at the Presidio and Fort Mason Under Command of General [Pg 14]Funston Bring Order Out of Chaos and Save City from Pestilence—San Francisco Said “Thank God for the Boys in Blue”—Stricken City Patrolled by Soldiers171
CHAPTER XIII.
IN THE REFUGE CAMPS.
Scenes of Destitution in the Parks Where the Homeless Were Gathered—Rich and Poor Share Food and Bed Alike—All Distinctions of Wealth and Social Position Wiped Out by the Great Calamity178
CHAPTER XIV.
RUINS AND HAVOC IN COAST CITIES.
San Jose, the Prettiest Place in the State, Wrecked by Quake—State Insane Asylum Collapsed and Buried Many Patients Beneath the Crumbled Walls—Enormous Damage at Santa Rosa189
CHAPTER XV.
DESTRUCTION OF GREAT STANFORD UNIVERSITY.
California’s Magnificent Educational Institution, the Pride of the State, Wrecked by Quake—Founded by the Late Senator Leland Stanford as a Memorial to His Son and Namesake—Loss $3,000,000198
CHAPTER XVI.
FIGHTING FIRE WITH DYNAMITE.
San Francisco Conflagration Eventually Checked by the Use of Explosives—Lesson of Baltimore Needed in Coast City—Western Remnant of City in Residence Section Saved by Blowing Up Beautiful Homes of the Rich208
CHAPTER XVII.
MISCELLANEOUS FACTS AND INCIDENTS.
Many Babies Born in Refuge Camps—Expressions of Sympathy from Foreign Nations—San Francisco’s Famous Restaurants—Plight of Newspaper and Telegraph Offices214
CHAPTER XVIII.
DISASTER AS VIEWED BY SCIENTISTS.
Scientists are Divided Upon the Theories Concerning the Shock That Wrought Havoc in the Golden Gate City—May Have Originated Miles Under the Ocean—Growth of the Sierra Madre Mountains May Have Been the Cause230
[Pg 15]CHAPTER XIX.
CHINATOWN, A PLAGUE SPOT BLOTTED OUT.
An Oriental Hell within an American City—Foreign in Its Stores, Gambling Dens and Inhabitants—The Mecca of All San Francisco Sight Seers—Secret Passages, Opium Joints and Slave Trade Its Chief Features246
CHAPTER XX.
THE NEW SAN FRANCISCO.
A Modern City of Steel on the Ruins of the City that Was—A Beautiful Vista of Boulevards, Parks and Open Spaces Flanked by the Massive Structures of Commerce and the Palaces of Wealth and Fashion255
CHAPTER XXI.
VESUVIUS THREATENS NAPLES.
Beautiful Italian City on the Mediterranean Almost Engulfed in Ashes and Lava from the Terrible Volcano—Worst Eruption Since the Days of Pompeii and Herculaneum—Buildings Crushed and Thousands Rendered Homeless267
CHAPTER XXII.
SCENES IN FRIGHTENED NAPLES.
Blistering Showers of Hot Ashes—The People Frantic—Cry Everywhere “When Will It End?”—Atmosphere Charged with Electricity and Poisonous Fumes279
CHAPTER XXIII.
VOLCANOES AND EARTHQUAKES EXPLAINED.
BY TRUMBULL WHITE.
The Theories of Science on Seismic Convulsions—Volcanoes Likened to Boils on the Human Body, Through Which the Fires and Impurities of the Blood Manifest Themselves—Seepage of Ocean Waters Through Crevices in the Rocks Reaches the Internal Fires of the Earth—Steam Is Generated and an Explosion Follows—Geysers and Steam Boilers as Illustrations—Views of the World’s Most Eminent Scientists Concerning the Causes of the Eruptions of Mount Pelee and La Soufriere285
CHAPTER XXIV.
TERRIBLE VOLCANIC DISASTERS OF THE PAST.
BY TRUMBULL WHITE.
Destruction of Sodom, Gomorrah and the Other Cities of the Plain—The Bible Account a Graphic Description of the Event—Ancient Writers Tell of Earthquakes and Volcanoes of Antiquity—Discovery of Buried Cities of Which No Records Remain—Formation of the Dead Sea—The Valley of the Jordan and Its Physical Characteristics303
[Pg 16]CHAPTER XXV.
VESUVIUS AND THE DESTRUCTION OF POMPEII.
BY TRUMBULL WHITE.
Most Famous Volcanic Eruption in History—Roman Cities Overwhelmed—Scenes of Horror Described by Pliny, the Great Classic Writer, an Eye-Witness of the Disaster—Buried in Ashes and Lava—The Stricken Towns Preserved for Centuries Excavated in Modern Times as a Wonderful Museum of the Life of 1,800 Years Ago309
CHAPTER XXVI.
MOUNT ÆTNA AND THE SICILIAN HORRORS.
BY TRUMBULL WHITE.
A Volcano with a Record of Twenty-five Centuries—Seventy-eight Recorded Eruptions—Three Hundred Thousand Inhabitants Dwelling on the Slopes of the Mountain and in the Valleys at Its Base—Stories of Earthquake Shocks and Lava Flows—Tales of Destruction—Described by Ancient and Modern Writers and Eye-Witnesses321
CHAPTER XXVII.
LISBON EARTHQUAKE SCOURGED.
BY TRUMBULL WHITE.
Sixty Thousand Lives Lost in a Few Moments—An Opulent and Populous Capital Destroyed—Graphic Account by an English Merchant Who Resided in the Stricken City—Tidal Waves Drown Thousands in the City Streets—Ships Engulfed in the Harbor—Criminals Rob and Burn—Terrible Desolation and Suffering334
CHAPTER XXVIII.
JAPAN AND ITS DISASTROUS EARTHQUAKES AND VOLCANOES.
BY TRUMBULL WHITE.
The Island Empire Subject to Convulsions of Nature—Legends of Ancient Disturbances—Famous Volcano of Fuji-yama Formed in One Night—More Than One Hundred Volcanoes in Japan—Two Hundred and Thirty-two Eruptions Recorded—Devastation of Thriving Towns and Busy Cities—The Capital a Sufferer—Scenes of Desolation after the Most Recent Great Earthquakes344
CHAPTER XXIX.
KRAKATOA, THE GREATEST OF VOLCANIC EXPLOSIONS.
BY TRUMBULL WHITE.
East Indian Catastrophes—The Volcano that Blew Its Own Head Off—The Terrific Crash Heard Three Thousand Miles—Atmospheric Waves Travel Seven Times Around the Earth—A Pillar of Dust Seventeen Miles High—Islands of the Malay Archipelago Blotted Out of Existence—Native Villages Annihilated—Other Disastrous Upheavals in the East Indies353
[Pg 17]CHAPTER XXX.
OUR GREAT HAWAIIAN AND ALASKAN VOLCANOES.
BY TRUMBULL WHITE.
Greatest Volcanoes in the World Are Under the American Flag—Huge Craters in Our Pacific Islands—Native Worship of the Gods of the Flaming Mountains—Eruptions of the Past—Heroic Defiance of Pele, the Goddess of Volcanoes by a Brave Hawaiian Queen—The Spell of Superstition Broken—Volcanic Peaks in Alaska, Our Northern Territory—Aleutian Islands Report Eruptions363
CHAPTER XXXI.
SOUTH AMERICAN CITIES DESTROYED.
BY TRUMBULL WHITE.
Earthquakes Ravage the Coast Cities of Peru and the Neighboring Countries—Spanish Capitals in the New World Frequent Sufferers—Lima, Callao and Caracas Devastated—Tidal Waves Accompany the Earthquakes—Juan Fernandez Island Shaken—Fissures Engulf Men and Animals—Peculiar Effects Observed373
CHAPTER XXXII.
EARTHQUAKES AND VOLCANOES IN CENTRAL AMERICA AND MEXICO.
BY TRUMBULL WHITE.
A Region Frequently Disturbed by Subterranean Forces—Guatemala a Fated City—A Lake Eruption in Honduras Described by a Great Painter—City of San Jose Destroyed—Inhabitants Leave the Vicinity to Wander as Beggars—Disturbances on the Route of the Proposed Nicaragua Canal—San Salvador Is Shaken—Mexican Cities Suffer382
CHAPTER XXXIII.
CHARLESTON, GALVESTON, JOHNSTOWN—OUR AMERICAN DISASTERS.
BY TRUMBULL WHITE.
Earthquake Shock in South Carolina—Many Lives Lost in the Riven City—Galveston Smitten by Tidal Wave and Hurricane—Thousands Die in Flood and Shattered Buildings—The Gulf Coast Desolated—Johnstown, Pennsylvania, Swept by Water from a Bursting Reservoir—Scenes of Horror389
CHAPTER XXXIV.
ST. PIERRE, MARTINIQUE, ANNIHILATED BY A VOLCANO.
BY TRUMBULL WHITE.
Fifty Thousand Men, Women and Children Slain in an Instant—Molten Fire and Suffocating Gases Rob Multitudes of Life—Death Reigns in the Streets of the Stricken City—The Governor and Foreign Consuls Die at Their Posts of Duty—No Escape for the Hapless Residents in the Fated Town—Scenes of Suffering Described—Desolation Over All—Few Left to Tell the Tale of the Morning of Disaster397
[Pg 18]
ILLUSTRATIONS
The Awful Horror of an EarthquakeFrontispiece
A Panorama of the RuinsFrontispiece
Business District of San FranciscoFrontispiece
Former Mayor James D. Phelan11
Mayor Eugene E. Schmitz11
Looking East on Market Street12
View from Fifth and Market Streets12
Market Street, Scene of Ruins31
United States Guards in Charge of Dead32
Street Torn Up by Earthquake41
Stockton Street42
Grant Avenue42
Mission Street43
O’Farrell Street43
Looking North from Sixth and Market Streets44
The Orpheum Theatre44
San Francisco on Fire53
Destroyed Wholesale Houses54
Cracks in Earth63
Ruins of Emporium Building63
Map—Bird’s-Eye View of San Francisco64
Ruins of Hall of Justice65
Looking Down Market Toward Call Building66
From California Street Toward Call Building66
Market Street Before the Disaster75
The Devouring Flames76
Mark Hopkins Institute, Nob Hill85
United States Mint86
New Postoffice Building87
Jefferson Square88
Chronicle Building97
St. Francis Hotel (Before the Earthquake)97
Ferry House98
Free Water115
Distributing Clothes115
[Pg 19]Wires Destroyed116
Military Camp116
Kitchens in the Street133
Wing of City Hall, Crumbled133
Cattle Killed134
St. John’s Church, Ruined134
Camp Kitchen in Ball Park151
Shacks in Golden Gate Park151
Governor Pardee152
Major General Adolphus Greely152
Refugees on Telegraph Hill169
General Funston and Wife170
Vendome Hotel, San Jose187
Postoffice, San Jose188
Corner of Baptist Church205
Kearney Street, San Francisco205
Ferry Building206
Military Quarters206
Randolph Storage223
Switchboard Destroyed223
St. Dominici Church, Freak with Steeple224
St. Dominici Church, Wrecked224
Chinese Refugees241
Flat Building, Sunk242
Seeking Lost Friends259
All that Was Left of a Fine Residence259
Soldiers’ Encampment260
Alameda Park260
Dolores Mission277
Wreck and Ruin278
Wreck and Ruin278
Crack in Earth295
Ghoulish Thieves Looting the Dead296
Effect of Earthquake on Modern Steel Building313
Vesuvius During Recent Eruption314
Road Leading to Vesuvius Before Eruption314
[Pg 20]
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The number of girls we saw walking around in mini-skirts in -10 degree Seoul weather was astonishing. Some even without leggings. They were truly devoted to fashion.
CHITRAL: Devoted Muslims Listening Friday Sermon in courtyard of Shahi Masjid in chilly heat weather under open sky of Sheikhul Haidth Maulana Dr. Sher Ali Shah who served as Professor at Madina University for 18 years have arrived here for 2 days visit who also delivered Friday Sermon at Shahi Masjid (Mosque) Chitral. He also offered Dua for prosperity of the Country. Photo by Gul Hamaad Farooqi
May - Divers 2018
KANAL - Centre Pompidou!
13 months of exhibitions and shows before conversion work begins
Before it becomes the largest cultural institution in Brussels, with 35,000 m2 devoted to artistic creation in all its forms, KANAL - Centre Pompidou proposes a unique cultural immersion in the buildings of the former Citroen garage.
Before conversion work begins, KANAL - Centre Pompidou will open its doors from May 2018 until June 2019 to allow the public to discover an exceptional cultural heritage, rich in history and preserved in its current state. Benefiting from the richness of the collections of the Centre Pompidou, the former Citroen garage will turn into a site hosting several exhibitions mixing visual arts, design, architecture, major installations and creations by Brussels-based artists, as well as a programme of performing-arts shows co-produced for this occasion with many of the city's cultural actors.
A future cultural hub
The ambition of KANAL - Centre Pompidou is to offer a centre of culture and exchange open to all, to put the creative scene of Brussels in the limelight, and to contribute to the capital's cultural appeal.
Driven by the Brussels-Capital Region, this ambitious project seeks to provide Brussels with a cultural hub favourable to the aura of the capital of Europe. In the context of a ten-year partnership with the Centre Pompidou, the future KANAL - Centre Pompidou will not only house a museum of modern and contemporary art, but also the rich collections of architecture and urbanism of the CIVA Foundation. It will also accommodate many public spaces with a range of functions, including several stages for the performing arts.
A wide-ranging programme
Events imagined in response to the identity of the site and its unique aesthetic qualities, but also its history
From 5 May 2018 until 10 June 2019, following a radically experimental approach, the former Citroen garage will turn into a platform open to a reflection on the stakes of the museum of the future. Curated by Bernard Blistene, the director of the Musee national d'art moderne, Centre Pompidou, a multidisciplinary programme will seek to fill the spaces that were recently emptied of their functions and left in their current state. Many of the proposals seek to echo the identity of the site, but also its human and social history, tangible across the different workshops and offices and in the different fittings of this vast complex.
Eager to integrate Kanal - Centre Pompidou in its context, the programme will let a vast audience have access, in one and the same venue, to a wide-ranging and unique cultural offer. The programme follows the rhythm of the Brussels cultural calendar, in partnership with, among others, Kunstenfestivaldesarts, BOZAR, Performatik Festival, Flagey, Kaaitheater and La Raffinerie (Charleroi Danse).
Photos of May 2018
Photos de mai 2018
( Diverses photos prisent en 2018 sans sujet reel.
Various pictures taken in 2018 without real subject. )
Decker Barnette, a devoted son, an attorney, a historian, a pianist extraordinaire, a vintage car enthusiast, a founding member of the antique car museum downtown and an irreplaceable member of Beech Street First Baptist Church past away suddenly today from a heart attack. He was a friend to many people in this town and has left a hole in our hearts. I can't begin to imagine the joy he is experiencing in heaven being united with his beloved mom and dad and seeing Jesus face to face. We love you Decker...
I remember the day I took this photo. We were on our way to church and he past us going down State Line Avenue in that black Lincoln, one of many that he owned. We followed him down to his little parking spot and I snapped his pic. He always had a smile on his face like he does in this photo.
This car was used in one of the TV shows about the assassination of JFK. I am thinking Decker was even driving. It was on the Discovery channel.
I have been to Jerusalem in May 2009 for the purpose of a scientific historical research that was devoted to international politics in the Middle East. After spending a month in Jerusalem, visiting archives and a library, historical places and strolling along the streets, I got acquainted with the unique atmosphere of this ancient city. Jerusalem is a city of three world religions, a city where everything seems familiar and native, it is very cozy and benevolent. For those who are familiar with biblical stories, the city seems to be an animated historical book, the city of kings and prophets, a city that has gone through history and conquered time itself. Jerusalem is situated on the hills, in the beginning of May the weather turned out to be quite cool, a strong spring wind blew from the desert, but then the hot Middle Eastern weather was established. The heat in Jerusalem is not like one in the plains or on the coast of the country, here it gets dark very early, which is unusual for the summer months in Russia. I lived in a small hotel in the center of the city and got the opportunity to go for a walk on the historical center and the Old City. The streets of the city are full of visitors and tourists from all over the world, many languages are heard here. Quiet and benevolent atmosphere. This city has a special soul. This is exactly the impression that Jerusalem made on me.
Living in Jerusalem, I visited other places in Israel: Galilee and the Mediterranean coast.
The videos of my journey also in english and italian on my youtube channel: www.youtube.com/channel/UCmBhDl0gEZaEuLZRf_08aww
Sono stato a Gerusalemme nel maggio 2009 per lo scopo di una ricerca storica scientifica dedicata alla politica internazionale in Medio Oriente. Dopo aver trascorso un mese a Gerusalemme, visitando archivi e la biblioteca, luoghi storici, solamente passeggiando per le vie di Gerusalemme, ho conosciuto l'atmosfera unica di questa antica città. Gerusalemme è una città di tre religioni del mondo più diffuse, una città dove tutto sembra familiare e “nativo”, è molto accogliente e benevolo. Per chi ha familiarità con le storie bibliche, la città sembra essere un libro storico animato, la città dei re e dei profeti, una città che ha passato attraverso la storia e ha conquistato il tempo stesso. Gerusalemme è situata sulle colline, all'inizio di maggio il tempo si è rivelato piuttosto fresco, un forte vento primaverile ha soffiato dal deserto, ma poi è stato stabilito il caldo di Medio Oriente. Il caldo a Gerusalemme non è come quello nelle pianure o sulla costa del paese, in Israele fa buio molto presto, una cosa insolita per i mesi estivi in Russia. Ho vissuto in un piccolo hotel nel centro della città e ho avuto l'opportunità di fare molte passeggiate nel centro storico e nella Città Vecchia di Gerusalemme. Le strade della città sono piene di visitatori e turisti da tutto il mondo, qui si parlano molte lingue. Atmosfera tranquilla e benevola. Questa città ha un'anima speciale. Questa è una buonissima impressione che Gerusalemme ha lasciato su di me.
Vivendo a Gerusalemme, ho visitato altri luoghi in Israele: Galilea e la costa mediterranea.
I video del mio viaggio in inglese e italiano in my youtube channel: www.youtube.com/channel/UCmBhDl0gEZaEuLZRf_08aww
Devoted fans of the Cotuit Kettleers root for their team at the final game of the Cape Cod Baseball League Championship game, August 13, 2010 where the Kettleers defeated the Yarmouth-Dennis Red Sox for the League trophy. Photo by Emma Charpentier (fans-Game 3 007)
Grave of Henry Byron Reed MP, killed in an accident on the Isle of Wight, Undercliffe Cemetery, Bradford
Henry (Rufus Collins) a devoted lover of 1960s pop music, enlists wife Charlotte (Meg Gibson) to help him choose records for an appearance on a radio program in the Huntington Theatre Company’s production of “The Real Thing,” part of the 2005-2006 season. Photo by T. Charles Erickson.
#My #Love #Life #Passion #That #Gorgeous #Nigger #Man #Pride #Idol #Devoted #Chris #Leao #Follow #FollowBack #ChrisLeao
Handed down form generation to generation the religious art of Santeros is a vibrant and important as it was centuries ago. Before the first English colonists set sail for Jamestowne on 1607, Spanish settlers arrived in northern New Mexico bringing their heritage and culture to this new world -- traditions that still exist today. Devoted to the Saints looks closely at the history, role and inspirational value of the Santos, or little saints, carved from wood and revered through the ages.
WATCH: www.youtube.com/watch?v=1zTHo2xEAv4
OWN: www.knme.org/ecommerce/catalog/product_info.php/cPath/21/...
Magazine devoted to yoga & sport. Redesign of corporate identity. Design of the 3d number.
Журнал ЁГА. Создание модульной сетки. Дизайн третьего номера. Редизайн фирменного стиля.
It didn't take long for His Highness to realize that the tree offers yet another hiding spot. It was dark when I took the shot, and I loathe the flash, so it's pretty grainy...thus, for "Rem's most devoted fans". ;)
Mosaics designed by John Clayton, of the firm of Clayton and Bell; and manufactured by the firm of Salviati from Murano, Venice.
SCULPTURA - Sculpture, with phidias and m.angelo (Michelangelo) (both are also depicted in the Frieze of Parnassus, Phidias, no. 131, and Michelangelo even twice, 60 and 146).
Around the canopy, below its cornice, is a dedicatory legend split into four parts, one for each side. The legend reads:
QUEEN VICTORIA AND HER PEOPLE
TO THE MEMORY OF ALBERT PRINCE CONSORT
AS A TRIBUTE OF THEIR GRATITUDE
FOR A LIFE DEVOTED TO THE PUBLIC GOOD.
Tellus Science Museum occupies more than 125,000 square feet and features galleries devoted to minerals, fossils, transportation technology, and hands-on science experiences.
The 120-seat digital Planetarium hosts a variety of astronomy programs, stargazing events, and family activities and 45-minute shows are shown throughout each day. The Weinman Mineral Gallery showcases one of the largest, most comprehensive collections in the Southeast, with more than 4,000 rocks, gems and minerals on display.
Tellus is a Latin word meaning "Earth" and may refer to Tellus Mater or Terra Mater, the ancient Roman earth mother goddess, and is also an alternative name for the planet Earth, often used in the science fiction genre (e.g. the books of E. E. Smith).
Tellus is an affiliate of the Smithsonian Institution. The museum is open daily from 10:00 AM to 5:00 PM closing only on major holidays.
The Fossil Gallery features Stan, a 40-foot Tyrannosaurus rex along with other dinosaurs and fossils, allowing visitors to trace the history of life on Earth.
Collins Family My Big Back Yard offers hands-on science exhibits introducing concepts from the physical and life sciences through backyard science experiences.
Science of Motion allows visitors to re-live major developments in science and technology related to automobiles, aircraft, and space travel. In addition, Tellus includes a 200-seat presentation theater, a large multi-purpose room for events, four well-equipped science labs, an observatory, a full service cafe, and a gift shop that is almost equal in size to the Weinman’s original exhibit space.
Tellus Science Museum opened January 12, 2009, and has welcomed more than one million visitors.
Tellus was founded as the Weinman Mineral Museum in 1983, which closed in 2007 and reopened as Tellus Science Museum in 2009. The museum retains the original mineral displays in the Weinman Mineral Gallery.
visitcartersvillega.org/tellus-science-museum/
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