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SORRY FOR THE LOW LIGHTING. But whilst I was skipping school, I finished the ending of Ray Bradbury's "Boys! Raise Giant Mushrooms in Your Cellar!" for my sci-fi class assignment. My monitor is the sucky kind.
The last of my first DILO. Woo.
General Conference 2012
April 24-May 4, 2012
Tampa, FL
Rev. Bill Wilson helps coordinate the monitoring ministry at General Conference 2012.
It says P447 in the middle of the board. Covered by the blue wire in the center of this shot. What the heck is that thing that looks like a red shirt-pocket-screwdriver stuck into a pot? I didn't notice that when I took the pics.
134 funcionarios de distintos servicios y unidades del establecimiento recibieron certificación para desempeñarse como monitores de emergencia del Hospital Dr. Gustavo Fricke
savannah monitors are stoutly built, with relatively short limbs and toes, and skulls and dentition adapted to feed on hard-shelled prey. Maximum size is usually between 105 to 155 cm (3.5 to 5.0 ft) in length, although most specimens collected in the wild ranged from 60 to 76 cm (2 to 2.5 ft) with females being considerably smaller. The pattern of coloration of the skin varies according to the local habitat substrate. The body scales are large, usually less than 100 scales around midbody, a partly laterally compressed tail with a double dorsal ridge and nostrils equidistant from the eyes and the tip of the snout