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Coach Eddie Sutton talks at halftime of the January 26, 2011, Texas/ OSU basketball game. This was the 10th anniversary of the plane crash. Halftime was dedicated to Remembering the 10 fallen Cowboys killed in the January 27, 2001 plane crash on the way back from a basketball game in Colorado.
We had Thanksgiving at my sister's house this year in Little Creek, Louisiana. My father grew up in this sleepy little town in LaSalle Parish. This lake, Hub Lake, deep in the woods, is where my Dad spent time as a kid, fishing and exploring. It was great to spend time with my Dad and get this shot of him looking out over the small lake. The best part was riding on the four-wheeler through the mud to get to this spot.
®2009 Bill Miles Photography | Hub Lake, Little Creek, Louisiana
Chaplains from the 2nd Infantry Division and U.S. Army Garrison Red Cloud and Area I hosted a 9.11 Remembrance Service for the community at the Warrior Chapel on CRC Sept. 11. During the ceremony Mr. Chon, Yong-ho rang the Firemen’s Bell in honor of the 412 emergency first responders that perished Sept. 11, 2001. - U.S. Army photo by Cpl. Lee, Seong-su
Ships and Rainbows the two most awesome things ever. Unfortuantely the ships are weapons of war, but we can ignore that fact... they were being surrounded by love and peace.
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The holiday is fast approaching, and there's lots to remember. I'm big on lists and everything is going on it!
The Run to Remember was started in 2008 at the request of the Chaplain for 1st Battalion, 10th Special Forces Group (Airborne). The race is dedicated to those brave men and women who have given their lives for our country in the post- 9-11 era. Community members were encouraged to submit names of friends, colleagues, and loved ones who have died in the line of duty since 9/11 for recognition during the opening ceremonies and printed on the race shirt. U.S. Army Photo by Kevin S. Abel (Released)
Actor Robert Pattinson (L) and actress Emilie de Ravin attend the premiere of "Remember Me" at the Paris Theatre on March 1, 2010 in New York City.
A cadet holds a solemn reminder for the viewers of ESPN SportsCenter of Veterans Day. ESPN broadcast live throughout the day from West Point as part of its week-long salute to veterans. (Photo by Master Sgt. Dean Welch/Dir. of Public Affairs & Communications)
Remember 1990, when my hair was tall?
This was some kind of experiment in first- or second-year physics, involving electromagnetism. I think. It's been decades...
(Photo in the science building; it's behind glass, which explains the crappy quality.)
Remember the time I tried to drown myself in the rain?
Well, the drainpour was not enough - nothing ever is.
i read this somewhere. i think it was the lyrics to a song, but i'm not really sure :S
i just thought it was great so i wrote it somewhere and then did this.
The Palladium. Worcester, MA. 3/13/11
To view more, click here
www.shockblastmedia.com/2011/03/2-days-to-remember-worces...
My first HD video. I filmed this video to my new Sony A77. The lens was 16-50 f/2.8.
The good old vinyl format is disappearing from people's lives so I wanted to refresh your minds about it. I have few excellent LP's at my music collection. Sometimes I like to go searching old soul vinyls at flea market.
The cinema complex Kinepolis in the city of Leuven requested the presence of Star Wars-cosplayers for the 1st days of screening "The Force awakens" so the fans could have a picture taken. And on the last day the photographer fell ill. So I had to rush in and finish the job.
Cosplayers: Vanessa, Alexis & Bert
Another autumn shot taken at Washington Park. After all the snow and the dreadful commute home yesterday, I'm fondly remembering the nice fall days from when this picture was taken. I'd gladly take any season but winter right now.
The Run to Remember was started in 2008 at the request of the Chaplain for 1st Battalion, 10th Special Forces Group (Airborne). The race is dedicated to those brave men and women who have given their lives for our country in the post- 9-11 era. Community members were encouraged to submit names of friends, colleagues, and loved ones who have died in the line of duty since 9/11 for recognition during the opening ceremonies and printed on the race shirt. U.S. Army Photo by Kevin S. Abel (Released)
GO BACK WITH ME FOR A MINUTE....
Before the Internet or the MAC, before semi automatics and crack
WAY BACK...
I'm talkin' bout hide and go seek at dusk.
Catchin' lightning bugs in a jar
Bedtime Prayers and Goodnight Kisses
Climbing trees, Runnin' till you were out of breath
Laughing so hard that your stomach hurt
Being tired from playin'.... Your first crush ....
It wasn't odd to have two or three best friends.
Scrapes and bruises were kissed and made better.
Lying on your back on the grass with your friends and saying things like "That cloud looks like a ... "
Being old, referred to anyone over 20............:)
The worst thing you could do at school was smoke in the bathrooms, flunk a test or chew gum.
Being sent to the principal's office was nothing compared to the fate that awaited a misbehaving student at home.
DIDN'T THAT FEEL GOOD???
And with all our progress ... don't you just wish, just once, you could slip back in time and savor the slower pace ... and share it with the children of today...
just to go back and say,.........Yeah, I remember that!
Ships and Rainbows the two most awesome things ever. Unfortuantely the ships are weapons of war, but we can ignore that fact... they were being surrounded by love and peace.
A good friend Ian died unexpectedly, he was a wonderful friend, even though I only really knew him through the online forum teachat. To explain why this photo is really a remembrance of him, the kyusu teapot was one of the nerikome of good will which he got 3 for super sale from good will, and distributed the two spares to others, one of which went to me. The cup matches the cup he used for his Avatar.
St Bartholomew the Less, London
This church is one of the City of London's best kept secrets, but the City has so many best-kept secrets that it is hard to wander around it without stumbling upon at least one of them. To find St Bartholomew the Less you will need to enter the gates of St Bartholomew's hospital, for this church is the hospital chapel. Until 2015 it was also a parish church, a unique combination in England, but the parish boundaries have been redrawn and St Bartholomew the Less now has the status of a chapel of ease within the parish of St Bartholomew the Great, whose church lies a hundred yards off.
The church had acquired parish status in the 1540s at the time of the Reformation, and was rebuilt in a pleasing Georgian octagonal shape by Thomas Hardwick in the 1820s, completing the plan and work of George Dance. The tower survives from the late medieval church.
Of all City churches, St Bartholomew the Less can be guaranteed to be open all day, every day, and so you will be able to step into its simple, pleasing and in some ways surprising interior. The floor is raised, a theatrical effect, and the sanctuary contributed by Hardwick gives the building focus. The linenfold woodwork is delightful. The jolly postwar glass (the church suffered blast damage) is by Hugh Easton, not always a safe pair of hands but here he was on top form.
Most of the memorials are to former surgeons and doctors associated with the church, but Easton's windows remember the nurses. Most unusually for the City of London churches, St Bartholomew the Less has brasses, and these contribute to the feel of a church which is quite different to any of its City compatriots.
On my last visit I was followed into the church by four Italian tourists, who quickly realised their mistake and headed back out to find St Bartholomew the Great. The only other visitor was a woman in a dressing gown who lit a candle and sobbed quietly. Sometimes you need this in the City to remind you what the churches are actually there for.
(c) Simon Knott, December 2015