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مؤتمر الكويت للتدقيق الداخلي
30th November to 1st December 2016
Hilton Kuwait Resort, Al Dorra Ballroom
Children reach for candies being distributed during a relief operation conducted by the local government and the Peace and Development Advocates (PDAs) in Barangay Mudseng, Midsayap, Cotabato Province. The children are among those displaced as a result of the armed conflict that has affected eight barangays of Midsayap. The PDAs, many of whom are members of the Moro National Liberation Front doing volunteer work for peace and development, are among the partners of the GoP-UN's ACT for Peace Programme in sustaining peacebuilding initiatives in Southern Philippines. (Photo by Froilan Gallardo/MindaNews/March 8, 2007)
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if she only knew
that i am human
passionately
possessed
not a robotic response
you have rightly guessed
with the chimera
of her personality
totally obsessed
my fate washed
me to the
shores of her
destiny
my life
she has
messed
into the
corridors
of her mind
she denies
me access
page cannot
be displayed
internal server
error
wrong address
barefeet blogger
poorly dressed
Most abandoned factories seems to contain car wrecks. I thought this to be something of a Swedish thing (where car customizing is popular, especially in the rural areas) but it looks as the Azores is not an exception.
[Abandoned whale factory at Capelas, Azores]
Edit: Contrast increased, warm tone added, grain added.
Hybridized by Richardson, released in 1994
Photographed at White Rock Gardens, Benton, Arkansas, a private daffodil, iris, and daylily display garden
It was a tough day at work where little got accomplished. Was so frustrated that taking refuge in something creative was my only recourse.
مؤتمر الكويت للتدقيق الداخلي
30th November to 1st December 2016
Hilton Kuwait Resort, Al Dorra Ballroom
The impressive Georgian church of All Saints next to Nuneham Courtney House has long ceased to be used for services and is currently vested in the Churches Conservation Trust.
Indeed it is almost impossible to imagine this bulding functioning as a parish church, having more the appearance of a family Mausoleum for the Harcourt family who formerly owned the estate.
There was a medieval church roughly on this site until 1762 when it was demolished and replaced by this building. All that now survives from the old church is an imposing (though sadly weathered) monument to the Pollard family c1577, oddly standing in the churchyard to the east of the present church under a protective structure.
Inside the church is impressively light and airy and contains much woodwork brought from elsewhere in the seating that runs the perimeter of the church, giving it a collegiate feel. Various monuments are dotted about, some of the later ones having been brought from the Victorian church in the village that was built to replace this one, but which now itself is redundant and converted to a mineral store by Oxford University (to whom the Harcourt Family sold the estate when they left it in 1948).