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Explainer video for M-Gov Awards in UAE.

its a picture i took of a picture I took on a wall I painted. Its zeke

Explaining Ministry Partner Development

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American strategic bombers B-52H Stratofortress practiced airstrikes against Russia during the Allied Sky exercise on 28 August. Sergei Surovikin, Commander-in-Chief of the Russian Aerospace Forces (VKS), spoke about this at a briefing for foreign military attachés on September 11. Celestial … Readmore

  

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Do you need a Breaking News spokesperson video? Look no further than Liza Jandolf. Liza is a professional actor with many years of experience and she can star as your Breaking News video spokesperson. If you want your breaking news spokesperson video, contact Liza Jandolf at www.lizajandolf.com/ or email: info@lizajandolf.com

One of the most Important part of the creative process behind making a explainer video, is the storyboard. A good storyboard will give everybody on the team a clear vision of how the animation will look and work in production. The time spent in this stage ironing out the sequences and defining the actions in the animation will insure a smooth and refined story when the animator stats to make the graphics move and there wont be any big surprises when the first draft is ready for review.

On a few visits to the marsh recently I have noticed what appeared odd behaviour from the Little Grebes.

 

Only one of the pair would be visible at any one time and they would fish for a while and eat any large Sticklebacks they had caught but as soon as they had a very small fish, they would steam of at speed behind the island in front of the hide.

 

I suspect they have nested and are now starting to feed their young.

 

Great if this is the case since as far as Jim D knows, they have not nested here on previous years.

 

;0)

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Owen and Bob explaining how a FCV works

From the top of Richmond Casle

 

Richmond Castle sits high on a cliff overlooking the River Swale in North Yorkshire, England. It was most likely built following the Battle of Hastings in 1066 by Alan Rufus, Alan the Red, of Penthièvre in the 1070s. The lands were granted to him by King William for his service and to maintain control in Northern England. Alan was awarded a vast amount of land, more than 400 manors in eleven different shires. His Yorkshire estates included Swaledale, and it was here that he built Richmond Castle as his principal residence. The land and property granted to Alan became known as the Honour of Richmond.

Alan constructed long stretches of the curtain wall, Scolland's Hall, and the archway of the keep, or Great Tower, in the 1080s, which survive today as England's most remarkable 11th century architecture of this size. After Alan died in 1093, the castle passed to his two younger brothers, Alan the Black and Stephen. Stephen's son, also Alan, held the castle by 1136.

Alan's son Conan inherited the Dukedom of Brittany in 1164 and held Richmond Castle from 1146 to 1171. It was at this time that the keep was expanded and later completed under King Henry II, who controlled the castle after 1171 as guardian of Conan's nine-year-old daughter Constance. In addition to completing the keep, towers, walls, and the gateway of the cockpit were built. A barbican with a drawbridge was also built in front of the keep.

The castle remained the crown's property through the end of King John's reign in 1216. Simon de Montfort rebelled against King Henry III during the Civil Wars of the 1260s. He ordered his supporters to lay siege to Richmond Castle in 1265, but there are no records that indicate this siege ever occurred.

Henry III and Edward I oversaw more growth at Richmond Castle, likely inserting the vault in the basement of the keep, upgrading Scolland's Hall, and extending the range along the east wall. Edward or one of the 14th century dukes also added apartments to the Robin Hood Tower and Gold Hole Tower and constructed the Southwest Tower. Duke John of Brittany would oversee the last building campaign at the castle when new chambers and the chapel were added to the north end of Scolland's Hall.

In 1313, the duke's second son, John of Brittany and Earl of Richmond, received money to construct a town wall as the area was subject to a Scottish raid after the English were defeated at Bannockburn in 1314. The town was raided, but the castle was spared. Richmond Castle was attacked in 1340 when a band of locals besieged the castle and injured some of the duke's servants.

By this time, the castle was in decline, and at the inquest into the duke's death in 1341, it was noted that the castle was in ruins and the buildings within required significant repair. The castle continued to lapse into a ruined state. In 1525, Henry VIII made his son, Henry Fitzroy, Duke of Richmond, but the castle was no longer of any military value. A survey in 1538 indicates roofless buildings and fallen walls at the castle.

Richmond Castle would remain a ruin for 300 years until the 3rd Duke began repairing the keep in the 1760s. In 1854, the Duke of Richmond leased the castle, and it became the headquarters of the North York Militia. The Barrack block was added against the west curtain wall the following year, and the keep became a military depot. A detention block of eight cells was also added just inside the castle entrance.

In 1907, the castle became the headquarters of the Northumbrian Division of the Territorial Army and was continuously used through World War I. During World War I, the castle was occupied by the Northern Non-Combatant Corps, a unit of men who had asked for exemption from military service but could contribute to the war effort in non-combatant roles. In 1916, some of these men refused to take part in any work involving the war effort and were then held in cells at Richmond Castle. Some of these conscientious objectors, who became known as the Richmond Sixteen, were sent to France in May 1916, where they were court-martialed and put on trial for refusing to obey orders and sentenced to be executed by firing squad. This sentence was immediately commuted to ten years of penal servitude. They were released in April 1919 following the Armistice of 11 November 1918. After the war, the Victorian Barrack block was demolished in 1931.

Richmond Castle was pressed into service again during World War II when the roof of the keep was used to watch for enemy aircraft activity in the area, and the keep itself was used as an air raid shelter. In the 1940s, the cells again detained prisoners, although these were foreign soldiers and not conscientious objectors.

Richmond Castle has been in the care of English Heritage since 1984.

[Great-Castles.com]

  

Taken in Richmond

 

Founded in 1071, Richmond is a town that grew out of the protected market beside the keep; in later centuries the town benefited from first the wool and then lead mining industries.

President and Mrs. Kaler listened to a CEHD sophomore explain her perspective on engaging in a class that challenged her to apply new skills and knowledge to address real-world issues like poverty.

 

Kate explains to Michael that it is actually OK to look.

so what the hell happened

Cory explains the site to the Mississippi Market team members.

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