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Phillip Hughes has been taken to hospital after a sickening blow to the head left him motionless on the SCG pitch on day one of the Sheffield Shield match between New South Wales and South Australia.
Three ambulances and a medivac helicopter took care of 25-year-old Hughes after he was struck...
www.moraldefinition.com/hughes-hospitalised-after-blow-to...
Leyland Tiger / Alexander - DP51F - new in Dec 1987 to Grimsby Cleethorpes (27) - ex P & O Lloyd - with Phillips since June 2008.
Believed scrapped May 2012
Name: PHILLIPS, JOHN
Initials: J
Nationality: United Kingdom
Rank: Sergeant (Flt. Engr.)
Regiment/Service: Royal Air Force
Unit Text: 77 Sqdn.
Date of Death: 22/06/1943
Service No: 643976
Casualty Type: Commonwealth War Dead
Grave/Memorial Reference: Row H. Coll. grave 7-11.
Cemetery: EDE GENERAL CEMETERY
Director Phillip Noyce on the Salt panel at the 2010 San Diego Comic Con in San Diego, California.
Please attribute to Gage Skidmore if used elsewhere.
Riding around Foster Road, I found this Phillips Roaster locked up in front of a bike shop. Single speed, rod brakes. Love the bottle generator and headlamp. And check out the coils on the saddle.
Antonia Phillips is a Dorset artist and has done some fantastic seascapes and wildlife paintings. Her website is www.antoniaphillips.co.uk/index.htm . Bought from the artist. Image size 8.5inch x 7inch
Phillip James (Jim) Flower was a National Serviceman with the Australian Army. He served as an infantry soldier in Vietnam with 4RAR (4th Royal Australian Regiment) from 13th May until 1st December 1971. Jim was based at Nui Dat.
Standing on a high rock edge watching the waves crash in this 3 minute long exposure. The image is a two image pano which allowed me to get a wider angle without introducing too much distortion.
Walter Phillips was born in Lincolnshire, England in 1884. Trained at the Birmingham School of Art, he was a successful watercolour artist in England before he and his wife, Gladys, emigrated to Winnipeg in 1913. In 1940, Phillips was asked to be artist in residence at the Banff School of Fine Arts. He moved to Calgary in 1941 where he taught at the provincial Institute of Technology and Art.
Although watercolour remained his primary medium, the wood block print was an enduring interest which brought his work to a wider audience. Among his best-known and loved images in watercolour and woodblock print are those which depict family holidays on Lake of the Woods from the teens until 1925.
Walter J. Phillips died in 1963, leaving a legacy of uniquely Canadian art. He is recognized today as a master of the watercolor and the woodblock print medium and his work is eagerly collected. His works are housed in galleries across Canada, including The National Gallery of Canada, The Winnipeg Art Gallery and the Whyte Museum of the Canadian Rockies as well as collections abroad in London, Washington D.C., New Jersey, Japan, and private collections internationally.
Georgian era advertising; Goldsmith's Lane, Stamford, Lincolnshire, England. Taken on August 24, 2013.
Sgt. Phillip Jungman is a marksmanship instructor/competitive skeet shooter with the U.S. Army Marksmanship Unit Shotgun Team. In 2020, this Soldier qualified and earned a spot on Team USA for the Olympic Skeet event. With the delay in the Games due to COVID-19, Jungman will now compete in the 2021 Olympics in Tokyo.
Phillips timeline wall. Display by/from Phillips Archive. In tunnel under Keeler Ave. towards FPTC and parking lot. This display was removed after the Conoco-Phillips merger.
Phillips students used words like love, respect and thank you while creating original cards for Des Moines police.
Phillip creek flows towards Buttle lake in Strathcona Provincial Park as the setting sun illuminates peaks in the distance.
This is the Memorial Bell Tower located at Phillips Academy in Andover Ma. This was on a warm foggy November night.
You can read more about my $2 Portrait Project here.
I met Phillip on O'Farrell Street just past Mason Street earlier today while shooting the Tenderloin. "Hey," said Phillip when he saw me. I remember you from yesterday on Market Street when you were taking a picture. Can you take my picture for $2 too. Sure I said.
What are you going to do with the picture asked Phillip. I told him about my $2 Portrati Project and that I'd include his in the project online. I asked him if he wanted to see the Project and he said yes, so I whipped out the iPhone and loaded up the set on Flickr.
You know any of these people I asked. Oh yeah he said. I know him and him and him, he started pointing to the people. Here's the photo of Sarah that I took yesterday I showed him. Oh yeah, that's Sarah he said.
Phillip told me that he was 21 and had been homeless for four years. He said he sleeps in the shelters. He said was actually going to college down in San Jose at San Jose City College but that things didn't work out and he ended up on the street. He said he hoped that he could get back to college someday. I asked him if knew what he wanted to study and he said he didn't know.
I asked Phillip if he ever worked and he said that he did sometimes at a market. Phillip said that he was born and raised in San Francisco and that he had two brothers that were still here.
I asked Phillip if he had any kids. Yeah, he said, I've got a son, Christian's his name. I asked Phillip if he was still with his son's mom and he said no. He said that he tries to send all of the money he can to her though and said that he sees his son once a week.
After I took Phillip's photos he asked to see them. I showed him them on the camera. We both agreed that the best ones were the ones of him smiling. Hey, can I see the picture on the internet he said, sure I said back and got one of my cards to give him. You like color or black and white better I asked him. Oh black and white he said.
And with that Phillip and I parted ways, me up O'Farrell and into the Tenderloin and him the other way towards Union Square.