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Jeannette Kagame attends the closing function of the annual Holiday Camp, gathering over 680 students recipients of Imbuto's edified

generation scholarships' project / Nyanza 05 Dec. 2018

Includes missed calls, received calls, dialed calls, date and time, alarm!

 

Electronics design/ engineering by David Mellis, with a custom enclosure by me.

Harbour Kitchen @ Harbour Kitchen Waterfront Side, Ground Floor, NAB Building, 800 Bourke Street, Docklands 3008

please visit our homepage www.theharbourkitchen.com.au

a REALLY good pic of our band. Members (from left to right): Steve Krallis (drums), Joe Bucci (bass/vocals), Andrew Romen (guitar/vocals), Rick Chang (guitar/vocals), Marc Tadeja (keyboards).

Aadharshila GSEB School students celebrate the Funfair & Annual Function program in the school this year.

The borders around the function keys are 1 pixel wide and very sharp. This shows how much of the key the OLED screen fills. It's a little over 50% which might seem like a rip-off, but its not very noticeable. The space around the screen gives much needed breathing room, and a safe area to avoid distortions and reflections.

Aadharshila GSEB School students celebrate the Funfair & Annual Function program in the school this year.

check www.theharbourkitchen.com.au for more information or call us 0396706612

Fotograf / Photographer: Daniel Köhler

the concluding ceremony of the 7 day Gitamritam camp

www.gitamritam.com/2013b/

 

Annual Function at Nirali's School (December, 2011)

Title:

People:

Place:Panhala

Date:2012:01:30 18:40:52

File:DSC_7254.jpg

 

Finally got the basic functions of my Construction Tumbler finished. Still a few things to iron out but everything works good enough.

Aadharshila GSEB School students celebrate the Funfair & Annual Function program in the school this year.

The old church of St Mary at Kempley no longer functions as the parish church of the village being some distance from the main part of it (where a 20th century building now fulfils its role). It is now maintained by English Heritage as a site of national importance, which may seem puzzling when one is confronted by the humble exterior of this building, but is made much more apparent once one steps inside.

 

The church is a simple two-cell structure of nave and chancel, unchanged since the Norman period aside from a couple of later windows inserted into the side walls of the nave to lighten the interior. The squat tower at the west end is a 13th century addition (hiding the original Norman west doorway within) and doesn't rise much above roof level. The south wall has been given a coat of pink limewash in recent years, a reminder that many churches had such an external shelter coat in medieval times to protect the stonework.

 

One enters through the Norman doorway (with foliate tympanum) on the south side and finds oneself in the delightfully rustic space of the nave, the walls of which retain significant sections of medieval wall-painting. However this should be considered as a starter for the main course awaiting in the darker and more mysterious space beyond the chancel arch, for here the murals are much older and much more complete.

 

The chancel at Kempley is what makes this church justly famous, and is perhaps the most complete vision we have of what the interior decoration of a Norman church must have looked like. By good fortune the chancel was provided with a barrel vault which allowed the painting to spread seamlessly from wall to ceiling, with Christ in majesty surrounded by the four evangelists' symbols and the twelve apostles seated forming the main focus of the design, all against a warm red background. The colours have faded somewhat as have many of the faces of the figures but what survives is an impressive piece of Romanesque art and a remarkable glimpse back into the 12th century.

 

St Mary's is normally open to visitors and well worth seeing, I've not seen another church quite like it.

 

For more detail and open hours see below:-

www.english-heritage.org.uk/visit/places/st-marys-church-...

Loved how the flagpole is actually a tree. So classic, so perfect for the setting.

For some reason, these older works got deleted from my account. So, I'm putting them back up.

 

Playing with functions & simple forms. Made with Processing.

Sorry, mistake here. The C1 value is 47 nF not 47 pF.

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