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BURNABY, BC_FEBRUARY 24_2015: Three business pitches to a panel of judges at BCIT's Townsquare D in building SE 2. Images of the presenters, judges and attendees. (Photo by Kim Stallknecht)
The judging panel including Ben Ramsden from Pants to Poverty, Celia Richardson from Social Enterprise UK and Helen Loveless, Enterprise Editor of The Mail on Sunday. Celia said ‘Today was a real eye-opener for me about just how savvy young people are these days about business and the effect of business behavior on communities and on society. Sometimes it’s difficult to get the social enterprise message across, but these people got it straight away. They were awe-inspiring and I am so excited to see how the winners get on during their trip to India.’
The first community in this vicinity began as a Baptist church settlement founded in 1900. The vast ranch land of the area was divided into lots beginning about 1905. Early settlers called the community "Double Gates" because there were two gates on the road between the nearby towns of Coleman and Brady. A watering hole near the road also attracted travelers.
L. L. Shield built a general store and post office, and the community was named for him. The infant son of J. T. and L. A. (Dillingham) Gilbreath died in June 1908 and became the first person to be interred on land set aside for a Shield community cemetery. One acre of land including the grave was donated to County Judge T. J. White, trustee, in December of that year. The cemetery gradually took on the name Shields.
The earliest graves here are a testimony to the difficulty of pioneer life: almost half the 37 people interred during the first ten years of the cemetery's operation were children younger than three years of age, two more were teenagers and four were under the age of twenty-five. Only one person more than fifty years of age was buried during this period: Susan Winkler McGinnis Godwin died in 1913 at age eighty-two.
Veterans of the Civil War, World War I, World War II, and the Korean War are interred here. Six graves in the northwest corner of the cemetery are believed to be those of Catholic Mexican Americans. The Shield community thrived for a time, and many of its most influential citizens are interred on this site. Though the community declined after World War II, Shields Cemetery remains as a chronicle of its people. (1999) (Marker No. 11813)
Frozen Head State Park and Natural Area encompasses more than 24,000 acres of wilderness area and is named for a 3,324-foot peak in the Cumberland Mountains, the top of which is often shrouded in ice or snow in the winter months. The impressive entrance leads visitors into a vestige of densely forested, unspoiled mountain splendor — once common throughout the Cumberland Plateau.
@ Wrecking Ball (day 1)
The Masquerade, Atlanta GA
copyright Sarah Jessica Dunn / Sarah Shoots People
Municipal Court Judge Patrick F. Dugan, looks up from behind the bench to congratulate the defendants in veterans court for graduating from the program Dec. 10, 2010. Dugan, a veteran himself, along with Judge Joseph C. Waters adjudicates Philadelphia's Veterans Court, a type of treatment court that meets the specific needs of veterans. This was the courts second graduation since its conception in January 2010. (NYU/Jessica Bell)
In the 4-H Table Setting Contest at the 2013 Lancaster County Super Fair, youth selected a theme and displayed one place setting, including table covering, dishes, glassware, silverware, centerpiece and menu. Youth chose one of the following categories: formal, casual, picnic or birthday.
In the 4-H Table Setting Contest at the 2013 Lancaster County Super Fair, youth selected a theme and displayed one place setting, including table covering, dishes, glassware, silverware, centerpiece and menu. Youth chose one of the following categories: formal, casual, picnic or birthday.
This years judges discuss the perfomances at Rockin' Docs 2008 at Tulsa's historic Cain's Ballroom. Judges include: Earl Clark, Mack Ross and Chuck Stikl. Benefiting the Tulsa Area United Way.
Governor Hogan Swears in Judge Hotten by Joe Andrucyk at House Chamber, Maryland State House 100 State Circle, Annapolis Maryland, 21401
Thousands of activist, protesters, survivors and potential voters gathered at the US. District Courthouse and marched to the Supreme Court to oppose the nomination of Judge Brett Kavanaugh to the Court. The rally was part of nationwide protests to encourage Senators to vote against his confirmation.