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This is an illuminated leaf from a Pontifical that was produced in France sometime during the fifteenth century.
The text is from the ritual that is the solemnities for the ordination of those from the four minor Orders and in particular the ordination of acolytes (the four minor Orders are acolyte, exorcist, lector and porter).
The size of the leaf is 346mm x 230mm (13 7/10ins. x 9ins.).
Purchased from PBA Galleries, 133, Kearny Street, San Francisco, California 94108, USA, lot number 122 in their sale number 534 on 5th. June 2014.
OTHER LEAVES: -
Only one other leaf from this Pontifical has so far been identified. It has been in several Phillip J. Pirages catalogues, including Catalogue No. 60 (2010), Item 423, at $1,100, and included text from the ritual “De cleric faciendo”, or the conferring clerical status.
GENERAL COMMENTS: -
Leaves from Pontificals are only infrequently offered foe sale.
A Pontifical is the grandest of medieval service books in that it comprises those offices and rituals that can only be conducted by a bishop. Whilst a portion of the bottom margin has been cut away (probably to repair another manuscript) and there are remnants of hinges on the verso, this is still a superb leaf of large dimensions written by an accomplished scribe with fine illumination.
President Cyril Ramaphosa bestows the Order of Ikhamanga in Silver to Yvonne “Chaka Chaka” Mhinga at the Sefako Makgatho Presidential Guesthouse in Pretoria. (Photo: GCIS)
President Cyril Ramaphosa bestows the Order of Ikhamanga in Silver to Yvonne “Chaka Chaka” Mhinga at the Sefako Makgatho Presidential Guesthouse in Pretoria. (Photo: GCIS)
Too lazy to take pics of the real things!
The white stockings and white wig are yet to arrive!!
They are all bought from ebay
the lovely shoes are from Mimiwoo
The waves were dwindling in size as the day ended, but the surfers in the water were still waiting for that last one.
Click here to see the original uploaded resolution.
With 2024 drawing to a close, airlines have already made some last minute announcements from aircraft orders to investor presentations... Air Canada is one such airline that has recently published their Investor Day presentation on 17th December 2024 a week before Christmas 2024.
The Investor Day presentation as published by Air Canada outlines their plans leading up to the next decade, and the presentation certainly revealed some interesting details about their fleet plans, the most interesting being their Boeing 737 MAX 8 fleet.
Prior to the Investor Day presentation, rumours were swirling that Air Canada were looking into reorganising their narrow-body fleet; young second-hand Airbus A320s and Airbus A321s have been introduced into the fleet alongside an ever growing collection of Airbus A220-300s. The Boeing 737 MAX 8s were initially ordered to replace the oldest Airbus A319/A320s in Air Canada's fleet, the majority have since been scrapped.
In mid-2024, Air Canada announced they would be acquiring 13 Boeing 737 MAX 8s through dry-lease agreements, the majority of the airframes being acquired from not taken up examples following the collapse of Canadian low-cost carrier, Lynx Air (their existing airframes now in service with WestJet).
Confirmed in the Investor Day presentation was the redistribution of all Boeing 737 MAX 8s from Air Canada over to their lower-cost leisure subsidiary, Air Canada Rouge. All aircraft are expected to make the transfer over to Air Canada Rouge by 2028, replacing the eldest Airbus A319/A320s, with Air Canada going back to operating an all-Airbus narrow-body fleet. I wouldn't be surprised if the Airbus A321s with Air Canada Rouge make the transfer to Air Canada in the following years.
Currently, Air Canada operates 41 Boeing 737s, all of which are Boeing 737 MAX 8s. Air Canada have 12 Boeing 737 MAX 8s on-order.
Golf Echo Juliet Lima is one of 41 Boeing 737 MAX 8s operated by Air Canada, delivered new to the flag-carrier on 4th March 2019 and she is powered by 2 CFM International LEAP-1B27 engines.
Boeing 737-8 MAX C-GEJL on final approach into Runway 25L at Los Angeles (LAX), California on AC775 from Montréal-Pierre Elliott Trudeau (YUL), Québec.
Mayne Framing Employee Checking Orders in Huntington WV
Shot on Fujifilm Superia X-tra 400 with a Yashica FX-3 50mm, f2.
The hind end on a train of coal cars receives it's orders from the op at Buckhannon in November of 1978.
Pedidos por mensaje privado o Etsy
Orders by private message or Etsy
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SOUTHERN ILLINOIS HOSPITALS SPEND MILLIONS TREATING NURSING HOME INJURIES
In 2010, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reported that nationwide about 123,600 nursing home residents were sent to an emergency room within a 90-day period for injuries they sustained while residing in nursing homes. This staggering statistic reveals a serious problem with American nursing homes. According to the CDC report, an incredible 40 percent of those ER visits were completely preventable.
So, who pays for these nursing home mistakes? Well, in most cases, taxpayers end up footing the bill through Medicare payments. The New York Times did a report on this issue back in 2015, which revealed just how serious this problem is. Experienced nursing home injury lawyers know this problem all too well, because it is a common subject that comes up during lawsuits against southern Illinois nursing homes that try to avoid liability for injuries to residents.
Medicare Payments for Nursing Home Injuries
Remarkably, about 22 percent of nursing home residents who stayed in a facility for 35 days or less suffered an injury due to medical malpractice at the nursing home. An additional 11 percent of these Medicare beneficiary nursing home residents experienced temporary injuries at nursing homes.
The cost to Medicare is enormous. In a 2014 report by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the Inspector General discovered that Medicare paid approximately $2.8 billion (with a capital “B”) paying for injuries caused by nursing homes in 2011 alone. While more recent numbers are not available, given the increased cost of care, one can only assume that this number is skyrocketing.
Why is Medicare Paying for Nursing Homes’ Mistakes?
It’s all about greed – plain and simple. The majority of Illinois nursing homes today are owned and operated by private corporations. Unlike most southern Illinois hospitals, they are not non-profits. Nursing homes have four ways to get paid for care:
Long-term care insurance. Residents with long-term care insurance are rare. But these insurance policies are limited to about 1 or 2 years of payments. They also do not pay the full cost in most instances.
Private Pay. This is pretty straightforward. Some patients with the means to pay cash simply pay the full “rack rate” for nursing home care. These are a dream for nursing homes, but these types of residents are a tiny fraction of all patients in rural communities. Most cannot afford the nearly $8,000 average cost per month.
Medicaid. Illinois Medicaid is the primary payor for the vast majority of nursing home residents. When people age and require skilled nursing services, they usually spend their money until they qualify for Medicaid. Then the state takes over paying the bill, but at a much lower rate. In most cases, Medicaid pays about 15-20 percent of the total cost, if that. As one might imagine, this is not ideal for nursing home corporations.
Medicare. As DHHS revealed in the 2014 report, Medicare pays about 84 percent more than Medicaid. That’s a huge difference in revenue. But Medicare is not designed to pay for long-term stays. In fact, Medicare only pays for the first 100 days (with gradually declining rates), but it only pays if all the following conditions apply.
Conditions Required for Medicare to Pay
Medicare Part A is available to all Americans who have reached 65 without charge. But Part A coverage has strict limitations and requirements:
It only covers up to 100 days of nursing home care per event
The Medicare beneficiary must go to the nursing home within 30 days of hospitalization
The hospitalization must have lasted at least 3 days (not counting the date of discharge), so outpatient does not count
The nursing home care must be directly related to the reason for hospitalization
The care received in the nursing home must not be available in-home, and it must be delivered per the orders of a physician (MD), physician’s assistant (PA), or nurse practitioner, and the care must be provided on a daily basis
Once the nursing home or a licensed physician determines that the resident is unlikely to recover or will need longer admission, Medicare stops
If at any point it becomes clear the resident will not be able to return home within 30 days, Medicare will stop
Where Things Typically Go Wrong
The Center for Medicare Advocacy reported that from 2003 to 2008, staffing problems remained one of the biggest reasons for nursing home injuries. Here’s how this plays out in many cases.
A resident is admitted to a nursing home for a chronic medical condition, following a lengthy hospitalization or surgery. Upon admission, the nursing home begins receiving Medicare dollars at first, then upon Medicare stopping payments, Medicaid kicks in. At some point during the nursing home admission, the resident suffers a serious injury. They are transferred to a hospital for treatment, where Medicare then begins paying for this “new event or illness.” The resident receives treatment that is paid for by Medicare, and then returns to the nursing home for long-term care, again temporarily being paid for by Medicare until Medicaid kicks in again. As you can see, each time the resident is injured, the nursing home actually profits!
Disproportionate Impact on Rural Illinois Communities
In rural parts of central and southern Illinois, the effects of this systemic problem can be felt in a very real way. The majority of small community hospitals in Illinois are nonprofits that operate on lean budgets. Further, Medicaid patients make up the lion’s share of revenue for these hospitals. When low-income patients are repeatedly treated for nursing home injuries, these hospitals bill Medicare for treatment. However, Medicare also has a policy of not paying for healthcare-acquired conditions, also known as “never events.”
If a resident suffers one of these never events, there’s a good chance Medicare will deny payments. Even if Medicare does pay, it’s often at a significant reduction in typical charges. To put this in perspective, Johns Hopkins University reports that U.S. hospitals spend upwards of $34 billion on fall-related treatment alone in any given year.
Common Injuries for Southern Illinois Nursing Home Residents
Among the many ways nursing homes can mess up care, there are about 5 primary injuries that cost the most to treat:
Falls & Fractures. At Jerome, Lindsay & Salmi, LLP, we regularly fight to hold nursing home companies accountable for their neglect and abuse of southern Illinois seniors. In one rural nursing home, we learned that out of a random selection of 10 patient charts, the State of Illinois discovered 6 of them had experienced a fracture at the facility within the last 30 days. That strongly suggests that in just one small rural nursing home, upwards of 60 percent of residents were suffering from preventable injuries at any given time. The typical hip fracture costs more than $100,000 to treat, and some reports suggest that as many as 20 percent of all seniors with a fractured hip die within a year of suffering their injuries.
Bedsores & Wounds. Medicare considers preventable wounds and pressure ulcers (aka bedsores) to be a “never event,” meaning they should never occur in a healthcare environment. But many nursing home residents throughout our region suffer from painful, disfiguring and life-threatening skin ulcers, most of which are due to poor hygiene, lack of staffing, and a general disregard for proper patient care.
Infections. Some infections are due to known medical conditions, while many others are acquired in the facility because of poor hygiene and bad infection control procedures. Nurses who are not trained or properly supervised may cross-contaminate wounds, not use sterile instruments, or fail to notify physicians of signs and symptoms until it’s too late.
Medication Errors. Sadly, medication errors are extremely common. Many family members never even find out that their loved one died from a medication error until years later. Nursing homes have failed to give medications, given the wrong ones to the wrong patients, or overdosed patients. When dealing with already vulnerable and weakened immune systems, it only takes one error to be fatal.
Deaths. Ultimately, all humans die. But they should not die prematurely due to failed nursing home care. Likewise, taxpayers and local community hospitals should not bear the burden of paying for the mistakes of wealthy private corporations that are not even located in our region.
Who Are Nursing Home Companies?
This is perhaps the most startling aspect of the problem. Many people in southern Illinois assume that the local nursing home down the street is owned and operated locally. This is almost never the case. Instead, hundreds of Illinois nursing homes are owned and managed by large corporations outside of the state altogether.
One large New York nursing home conglomerate operates dozens of rural facilities throughout our state. In fact, chances are good that if you are reading this from southern Illinois, one of their nursing homes is within an hour of you. Another large corporate nursing home company is located in Bloomington, from where they remotely manage facilities all over downstate. Likewise, a major California corporation runs a lot of facilities in the metro-east St. Louis area.
Taking Action to Protect Your Loved Ones
For families who are fed up with the poor quality of care and want to fight back, there’s only one way to hold these big companies accountable. The Illinois Nursing Home Care Act is a complex statutory scheme that gives you the right to fight back and seek compensation. Suing a nursing home is tough work, but at Jerome, Lindsay & Salmi, LLP, we take pride in years of excellent results. If you have a loved one in a nursing home, and you believe they are being abused or neglected, you should contact our firm immediately to discuss it further.
Likewise, most families don’t discover a problem until after their loved one has passed away. If you have lost a parent or spouse in a downstate nursing home, don’t wait too long to inquire. Call our firm today. We can set up a time to speak privately about the matter. We will never charge you a consultation fee, and all calls are strictly confidential. You and your family may be entitled to substantial monetary compensation. More importantly, however, you may be in a great position to hold these owners and their negligent staff accountable for their wrongdoing. By making it costly for the nursing home, you are doing your part to improve care and force nursing homes to change their ways.
by JAYE R. LINDSAY
One part combat veteran, one part former firefighter/EMT and truck driver, and 100% devoted to helping clients achieve the results they desire.
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Reproduction of a postcard of the Farmers Bank of Canada building in Springbrook, Ontario, with the Independent Order of Foresters No. 36 hall on the upper floor. Negative made by Richard Lumbers from a postcard loaned by Ida Smith of Springbrook.
All Utopias Fell, by Michael Oatman, at Mass MoCA, North Adams. It's an Airstream trailer/satellite, with a library inside, and a laboratory, with solar panels and parachutes, and maybe some secret code. massmoca.org/event_details.php?id=547
President Cyril Ramaphosa bestows the Order of Ikhamanga in Silver to Benjamin Pogrund at the Sefako Makgatho Presidential Guesthouse in Pretoria. (Photo: GCIS)
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left fabric: redish orangish canvas
middle fabric: imperial collection by robert kaufman
right fabric: black twill
Ivy: I would like please: 6 personal pizzas, 3 baked ziti, 4 eggplant heros with extra cheese, 4 orders of garlic bread, stuffed mushrooms, stuffed artichokes and 7 salads.
Man: That will be $113.00 please.
Ivy: !!! that is so reasonable!!! Just bill it to the Cranky Residence. What time do you close? After our snack we want to come back for dinner.
Man: I see no account for anyone named Cranky.
Ivy: Well that is not his real name. It is a nickname we call him.
Man: I need his real name.
Ivy: Ok I will write it down. Now what about cannolli? You have cannolli?
See My entire photostream at:
www.flickr.com/photos/spookykittencouture
View my items for sale, or convo me for a custom item:
I custom draft patterns for fit and style, and can base your design on a photograph, sketch, or combine multiple inspiration ideas into one great garment!
Please feel free to contact me at either site above, I usually respond within 24 hours.
Some frequently asked questions:
Yes, I do international shipping orders
yes, I source/find/purchase/provide the materials for your garment, unless you have some that you would like used
Yes, I make items in ALL sizes. Every single one. I can custom design something no matter what your height/weight/bra-size etc. I even have experience working with non-average figures including loss of appendages (arms, legs, etc.) and accommodating a severe disability/unusual shape.
Yes, i respond to everyone. I will always reply! (if you don't hear from me, i either didn't get the message, or am on a freak internet break)
Yes, I can do rush orders, please convo as soon as you can about planning
Yes, i can do payment plans for larger projects, convo me
Yes, I am a real person in California USA, I am not an assembly line/sweatshop/slavedriver. Me and my family work on every item start to finish.
Yes, I love Project Runway, but no, i don't want to be on it!
Yes, I love the odd/strange/weird projects, but I also love the impeccably simple bridal gown as well.
No, I do not have a minimum. Small projects are welcome.
Yes, I help with the total package. I can help you find the accessories you need to complete the look, and all the underpinnings and other garments you may need to get the right shape for the garment. I like to make sure you are happy with the end result as much as I am.
If you have a question not on here, please feel free to convo me at the above sites.
Thanks for viewing!
Our tour group was taken to Buckfast Abbey in the morning.
The first Abbey was founded on this site in 1018 and absorbed into the Cistercian order in 1147. It grew throughout the middle ages until it's closure in 1539 by King Henry VIII.
The buildings were converted and allowed to fall into ruin, but in 1882 a group of Benedictine monks, exiled from France, settled at Buckfast and eventually set about rebuilding the Abbey.
It is incredible that a team of no more than 6 monks completed the work in 30 years, and only one - Brother Peter had any experience as a builder.
Today Buckfast Abbey is the only English medieval monastery to have been regranted and used again for it's original purpose.
Going into the abbey church I was told to take my baseball cap off, which I did.
Grade II* Listed Building
Church of St Mary (Buckfast Abbey)
Description
BUCKFASTLEIGH
SX7467 BUCKFAST ROAD, Buckfast
1011-1/5/29 Abbey Church Of St Mary
10/01/51
(Formerly Listed as:
BUCKFAST ROAD, Buckfast
St Mary's Church, Buckfast Abbey)
GV II*
Abbey church. Built 1907-1932, on the foundations of the
medieval Cistercian abbey church (except the east end). FA
Walters. For the Benedictine monks who established a house
here in 1882. Most of the building work was carried out by a
small group of monks working under a master mason. Snecked
local grey limestone with Ham Hill dressings; copper roof.
Style "mixture of English Cistercian and French early Gothic"
(Pevsner). 1965 east end Blessed Sacrament chapel to the
designs of Paul Pearn.
Plan: church with 8-bay lean-to aisles plus galleried western
bay; central crossing tower; transepts with chapels; 3-bay
choir with choir aisles; east end Blessed Sacrament chapel
with undercroft.
EXTERIOR: west end of nave with flanking projecting buttresses
containing stairs to gallery, rising as pinnacles with broach
spire roofs, bases and pinnacles decorated with blind
arcading. Round-headed west doorway with shafts, left and
right shafts with cushion capitals and carved gable.
Doorway has 3 orders of zigzag, billet and chevron moulding on
engaged shafts; 2-leaf door with elaborate ironwork. Above the
doorway a recessed 3-centred blind moulded arch containing 2
round-headed windows with shafts and a roundel window above.
Above the archway blind arcading decorates the gable. West
ends of lean-to aisles have smaller versions of the buttresses
flanking the nave and paired round-headed openings (one blind)
with roundels above.
North side of 9-bay nave has pilasters and a corbelled
parapet. Round-headed triforium windows linked by string
rising as continuous hoodmould. Nave with parapet and
round-headed windows, the hoodmould string interrupted by the
pilasters. Small gabled porch in second bay from the west with
set-back buttresses, parapet and round-headed outer doorway
with shafts and chevron-carved arch. Easternmost 2 bays of
aisle with taller roof and blind arcading above the windows.
North end of north transept with tall paired arches containing
4 tiers of glazed blind and glazed windows, either
round-headed or roundels. East side of transept has one-bay
chapel. The choir continues in the same style with lean-to
choir aisle roofs. 1965 concrete east end chapel on 4 columns
with shallow gabled roof.
Tower with 3 stages above nave roof. Clasping pilasters;
corner pinnacles with 2 tiers of blind arcading and broach
spires, crow-stepped parapet. Lower stage has lancet windows
in round-headed recesses, middle stage has small lancet
windows in moulded arched recesses; 2-light plate-traceried
louvred belfry windows.
INTERIOR: Stone-vaulted, the aisles with transverse vaults.
Arcades with piers with engaged shafts and chamfred and
moulded arches. Nave rib vault with red sandstone infill.
Triforium has a pair of 2-light pointed arches to each bay
with super-ordinate round-headed blind arch. Aisle walls
decorated with blind round-headed recesses containing triple
round-headed arches on shafts with moulded bases and carved
capitals. Stone-vaulted west end gallery on piers with canted
bays to parapet. Tower arches on short paired shafts with
moulded bases and carved capitals. Crossing has corbelled
stone gallery; transepts have simple galleries on moulded
corbels with cast-iron railings.
Choir has similar detail to nave but carved, not moulded
capitals and stone infill to the vaulting of choir and choir
aisles. East end of sanctuary has 2 round-headed arches and 2
round-headed windows above the triforium with a central shaft
rising to a carving of the Coronation of the Virgin.
The furnishings, floors, painted decoration and stained glass
are unexpectedly lavish, particularly the outstanding
metalwork, which is mostly 1928-1932 by Bernhard Witte of
Aachen, inspired by German Romanesque metalwork and described
in some detail in Pevsner. The stained glass is a remarkable
collection, mostly still in the medievalising Victorian
tradition and of the highest quality. In addition the church
contains a C16 ivory crucifix donated by the Clifford family
of Ugbrooke, the leading Roman Catholic family in Devon. 1965
Blessed Sacrament chapel by Paul Pearn conceived as a setting
for ambitious mosaic stained glass designed by Father Charles
Norris, one of the Buckfast Abbey monks.
Historical note: the rebuilding of the abbey church by the
Buckfast monks was well-publicised in the national and local
press and one of the monks with an interest in photography
recorded much of the work: the archive is held by the abbey.
Buckfast Abbey became an important focus for Roman Catholicism
in Devon in the late C19 and C20 with the monks serving
private chapels in the area, including Ugbrooke in Chudleigh
for the Clifford family and Dundridge in Harberton for the
wife of Sir John Harvey.
(Buildings of England: Pevsner N: Devon: London: 1989-:
222-226).
Listing NGR: SX7414767411
Seen from the Physic Garden.
125th Panzergrenadier Regiment, Battalion II, 5th Kompanie. Some where in France 1944
Textures By:
Nester,
Brenda Starr,
Tim_in_Ohio
On the 8th November 2018 the small container ship 'Allegro' (2004, 11,388DWT) passes Terneuzen to the Antwerp anchorage. Hopefully some good weather will allow the crew to finish the painting.
Bishop Olmsted ordains diocese’s newest priest
By Ambria Hammel | June 2, 2012 | The Catholic Sun
Bishop Thomas J. Olmsted ordained Dan Vanyo to the priesthood June 2 at Ss. Simon and Jude Cathedral.
He joins 254 diocesan and religious priests who serve the Phoenix Diocese by offering the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass, conferring the sacraments and overseeing aspects of parish life. Many of them were on hand to offer congratulations to their newest brother.
That included a handful of local priests and some from St. John Vianney Theological Seminary in Denver who played key roles in Fr. Vanyo’s discernment. Fr. Vanyo, 43, began discerning his call to the priesthood at age 32 when a friend through a local Catholic singles group was discerning religious life.
“I never discerned anything,” Fr. Vanyo said. He researched some religious orders, but it wasn’t until a day for prospective diocesan seminarians that he reached a peaceful conclusion.
“They need help here,” Fr. Vanyo, then a hospice nurse, recalled thinking. “That’s when I gave the Lord my fiat. If you open the door, I’ll walk through it.”
He ran into Fr. Chauncey Winkler, who he knew from the local Catholic Retreat for Young Singles group and told him, “I think this is where I could be of some help.”
He entered the seminary in 2005 and was among a reported 487 ordinands nationally who will join the ranks of priesthood this year. Bishop Olmsted read from the Ordination Rite during Mass.
He reminded the crowd, including family and friends who filled the first row on both sides, that Jesus chose certain disciples to carry out publicly in His name, a priestly office. He reminded the diocese’s newest priest of his roles of Christ the teacher, priest and shepherd.
“Carry out the ministry of Christ the priest with constant joy and love,” the bishop said. He also challenged Fr. Vanyo to bring the people together in one family. That’s a challenge the priest plans to meet in his new home, Queen of Peace Parish in Mesa. He will serve as parochial vicar starting July 1.
“I am most excited that I will be able to hear people’s confessions. When the Holy Spirit touches the hearts of the penitents with His grace in the confessional, I will be blessed to be a witness to it,” Fr. Vanyo said.
In addition to a parish presence, Fr. Vanyo will serve as chaplain at Seton Catholic Preparatory High School in Chandler. Fr. Vanyo will offer his first liturgy, a Mass of Thanksgiving, at his home parish Holy Cross in Mesa, at 10 a.m. June 3.
More: www.catholicsun.org
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Pre-orders are now live for some of the new Super Mario games announced yesterday. Normally, we’d poopoo on not pre-ordering any games but the limited nature of some of them like Super Mario 3D All-Stars combined with the holiday season fast approaching makes it almost a necessity. Super Mario 3D All-Stars This is a limited-time […]
www.fbtb.net/video-games/nintendo-switch/2020/09/04/pre-o...
President Cyril Ramaphosa bestows the Order of Ikhamanga in Silver to Achmat Davids(Posthumous) represented by Shahim Davids at the Sefako Makgatho Presidential Guesthouse in Pretoria. (Photo: GCIS)
Artist: Ollie Batterham
Title: Doctor's Orders
Materials:
BA Degree Shows 2017
June 2017
Norwich University of the Arts (NUA)
Norwich, Norfolk, England, UK