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ST. PAUL, MN AUGUST 7: Genesys Works 2014 Draft Day on August 9, 2014 in St. Paul, Minnesota. © Tony Nelson
ST. PAUL, MN AUGUST 7: Genesys Works 2014 Draft Day on August 9, 2014 in St. Paul, Minnesota. © Tony Nelson
JC Intal wears the Air21 jacket after he is selected fourth overall in the 2007 PBA rookie draft. Also in photo are Lito Alvarez, the team governor, KG Canaleta (partly hidden), the Lina family and Ranidel De Ocampo (right).
ST. PAUL, MN AUGUST 7: Genesys Works 2014 Draft Day on August 9, 2014 in St. Paul, Minnesota. © Tony Nelson
ST. PAUL, MN AUGUST 7: Genesys Works 2014 Draft Day on August 9, 2014 in St. Paul, Minnesota. © Tony Nelson
ST. PAUL, MN AUGUST 7: Genesys Works 2014 Draft Day on August 9, 2014 in St. Paul, Minnesota. © Tony Nelson
ST. PAUL, MN AUGUST 7: Genesys Works 2014 Draft Day on August 9, 2014 in St. Paul, Minnesota. © Tony Nelson
ST. PAUL, MN AUGUST 7: Genesys Works 2014 Draft Day on August 9, 2014 in St. Paul, Minnesota. © Tony Nelson
ST. PAUL, MN AUGUST 7: Genesys Works 2014 Draft Day on August 9, 2014 in St. Paul, Minnesota. © Tony Nelson
Dolhobrody, Poland — Heifer draft horse beneficiary family. (left to right) Barbara Dylewski (47), in light blue, Weslaw Dylewski, husband in dark blue (47), Zanata Dylewski (19), Matausz Dylewski (18), on crutches, Ernest Dylewski (6), young boy. Received their horse, “Barka” (which means “small boat”) in November 2007. Barka has had 2 offspring. Both of Barka’s offspring were born in Spring. Farmers in Poland intentionally plan to birth their horses in the Spring months (April) because the feed grass is abundant and the weather is good.
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Draft Horses for farmers of Dolhobrody - (Project #27-0657-01). Heifer is providing Belgium and Polish breed draft horses to 17 families in Dolhobrody village. Dolhobrody is located in the eastern part of Poland and is situated right on the border of Belarus. Population of Dolhobrody is 150-200 people. In May 2010, the village had its first Pass On ceremony. Initially, in 2007 when the project began, 10 horses were passed on in the first round. 7 in the second round. For the most part, the horses are used for farming draft power and for hauling materials and produce to market.
ST. PAUL, MN AUGUST 7: Genesys Works 2014 Draft Day on August 9, 2014 in St. Paul, Minnesota. © Tony Nelson
The proposed draft rules would repeal the Special Acts of Gilchrist, Indian River, and Manatee counties by creating 68B-3.003, FAC (Repeal of Gilchrist County Special Acts); 68B-3.004, FAC (Repeal of Indian River County Special Acts); and 68B-3.005, FAC (Repeal of Manatee County Special Acts).
The repeal of these Special Acts is a continuation of the rule cleanup process that includes the evaluation of all of these localized rules that pre-date the statewide regulation of saltwater fisheries and either repeal or revise them as required. Staff has determined that the Special Acts of Gilchrist, Indian River, and Manatee counties are no longer needed to achieve the agency mission and that their repeal would eliminate unnecessary rules and streamline FWC marine fisheries regulations.
Drafts at PROST! in Portland Oregon: Spaten Munich Helles, Aktien Zwick'l Kellerbier, Veltins Pilsner
ST. PAUL, MN AUGUST 7: Genesys Works 2014 Draft Day on August 9, 2014 in St. Paul, Minnesota. © Tony Nelson
ST. PAUL, MN AUGUST 7: Genesys Works 2014 Draft Day on August 9, 2014 in St. Paul, Minnesota. © Tony Nelson
01-01-1983, Thornhill, Ont.; Drafted round 6 #171 overall by Montreal Canadiens 2001. Eric Himelfarb played 5 years in the OHL with the Sarnia Sting, Barrie Colts and Kingston Frontenacs, before he was signed as a free agent by the Detroit Red Wings 2004. He was assigned to the Grand Rapid Griffins, their AHL affiliate. He spent 4 years with the Griffins, before he went to Switzerland for the 2007/08 season. He played with Swiss B Team Lausanne HC. Following season, Himelfarb joined the EHC Biel and made 62 games for the Swiss NLA Team. Eric Himelfarb scored 30 points and took 78 penalty minutes. After the 2008/09 season with Biel, Himelfarb went played with Langenthal and Lausanne in the Swiss B-League. He also made another 8 games for Biel during the Playouts. Between 2010/11 and 2015/16, Himelfarb was playing in Sweden. He appeared with Rögle BK in the Swedish 2nd League and with Linköping, Leksand and Malmö in the Swedish Hockey League. Himelfarb returned to Switzerland for the 2016/17 season. He mainly played in the National League B, for Thurgau, SC Langenthal and HC La Chaux-de-Fonds, but also for the SCL Tigers in the Swiss National League A. He retired from professional hockey at the end of the 2017/18 season. Himelfarb returned for the 2019/20 season and joined the EHC Basel, a team playing in the Swiss 3rd level MSL. Himelfarb was loaned to the SC Langenthal in the 2020/21 season, when the MSL season was cancelled after 7 games because of the Covid-Restriction. He played the 2021/22 season with Basel and promoted to the Swiss Leage at the end of the season. Himelfarb became an Assistant Coach for the EHC Basel for the 2022/23 season and replaced Christian Weber as a Head Coach in December 2022. His Career-Stats: GP:1196 / G:378 / A:614 / Pts:992 / PIM:1103 (1999/2000 – 2021/22).
Norwegian Lines' 'Norwegian Epic' cruise ship stats: Built Chantiers de L'Atlantique, St Nazaire, France, 2009; gross tonnage: 155,870; length: 1080 ft; draft: 29 ft; decks: 19; passenger capacity: 4100; crew max: 1700
Apparently our voyage had fewer passengers and crew than the maximum.
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Also known as the Belgian Draught, Belgian Draft, Brabancon (Brabant) and Belgian Heavy draft. Until the early 1900s there were three similar yet distinct types of Belgian breeds. The "Big Horse of the Dendre", the "Colossal Horse of Mehaigne" and the "Grey Horse of Nivelles". Over time, these horses were bred together and the final result is the Belgian of today. - History of the Breed
The Belgian draft horse is one of the oldest of the draft horse breeds. The Brabant horse is quite possibly connected directly to the Forest horse, one of the four original types of horses.
The T-7 was originally designated by Boeing as the "eT-7", as it was electronically designed. Fortunately, this designation was eventually dropped, but I did primarily design this aircraft in Lego Studio, with updates as I translated the draft into an actual model.
From my Ukrainian archive .Military draft in small Ukrainian village.
It was the third year of our pointless presence in Afghanistan.Senseless presence for which we paid the price: 13 thousand young lives (official info).But we suspected, we lost more.
As I recall, nobody laughed among those people-friends and relatives-who came to say" bye" to young man and wish him luck,nobody even smiled and women's eyes were full of tears.
Meiji Shrine (明治神宮 Meiji Jingū?), located in Shibuya, Tokyo, is the Shinto shrine that is dedicated to the deified spirits of Emperor Meiji and his wife, Empress Shōken.[1] When Emperor Meiji died in 1912 and Empress Shōken in 1914, the Japanese people wished to pay their respects to the two influential Japanese figures. It was for this reason that Meiji Shrine was constructed and their souls enshrined on November 1, 1920.[2]
After the emperor's death in 1912, the Japanese Diet passed a resolution to commemorate his role in the Meiji Restoration. An iris garden in an area of Tokyo where Emperor Meiji and Empress Shōken had been known to visit was chosen as the building's location. Construction began in 1915, and the shrine was built in the traditional Nagarezukuri style and is made up primarily of Japanese cypress and copper. It was formally dedicated in 1920, completed in 1921, and its grounds officially finished by 1926.[3]
The original building was destroyed during the Tokyo air raids of World War II. The present iteration of the shrine was funded through a public fund raising effort and completed in October, 1958.[4]
Meiji Shrine was brought into the flow of current events with the 2009 visit of United States Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. After arriving in Tokyo on her first foreign trip representing the newly elected President Barack Obama, she made her way to this shrine in advance of meetings with Japan's leaders to show her "respect toward history and the culture of Japan." [5]
Meiji Shrine is located in a forest that covers an area of 700,000 square-meters (about 175 acres). This area is covered by an evergreen forest that consists of 120,000 trees of 365 different species, which were donated by people from all parts of Japan when the shrine was established. The forest is visited by many people both as a spiritual home of the people and as a recreation and relaxation area in the center of Tokyo.[2] The shrine itself is comprised of two major areas:
[edit]Naien
The Naien is the inner precinct, which is centered on the shrine buildings and includes a treasure museum that houses articles of the Emperor and Empress. The treasure museum is built in the Azekurazukuri style.
[edit]Gaien
The Gaien is the outer precinct, which includes the Meiji Memorial Picture Gallery that houses a collection of 80 large murals illustrative of the events in the lives of the Emperor and his consort. It also includes a variety of sports facilities, including the National Stadium, and is seen as the center of Japanese sports. It also includes the Meiji Memorial Hall, which was originally used for governmental meetings, including discussions surrounding the drafting of the Meiji Constitution in the late 19th century. Today it is used for Shinto weddings.
Still on the subject of engineering, this was my CAD system in the 1970s. The big black thing is a Vemco drafting machine for drawing straight lines at any angle, with a set of K&E compasses nestled in its arm for drawing circles. The greenish thing toward the right is a little more esoteric: it's called an Acu-Arc, and it can draw an arc of any radius from about 7 inches to ... well, it will go all the way to a straight line, but the longest marked radius is 200 inches.
I had lots of other high tech stuff back then: a cordless electric eraser with a pencil pointer on the back end; drafting vellum with blue grid lines at 1/8" spacing so I could add notes anywhere without having to make guide lines; a Rapidograph attachment for my compasses..... I was really cutting edge, right up until the edge fell off.
I wonder what this draft horse is thinking.
I was thinking how I did not like the barbed wire, nor the rub marks of the bridle showing on the face of this beautifully gentle creature. These horses do not have ANY shelter and stay outdoors year round..in terrible hail storms, and below zero weather. Summers are in the upper 90s...or above. I am mad at this place for not building them a shed or wind break.
This was taken at Wagner Farm in Glenview IL. Its a museum ....not a real farm.