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PreviousBARRABAND, Jacques (1767-1809). Le Petit Vaza, Pl. 82, from Histoire Naturelle des Perroquets, c. 1805. NextBARRABAND, Jacques (1767-1809). La Perruche Sparman, Pl. 66, from Histoire Naturelle des Perroquets, c. 1805.
Jacques Barraband's engravings of birds are masterpieces of French ornithological illustration. These stunning portraits were done for the distinguished ornithologist Francois Levaillant, who commissioned the artist to illustrate his landmark works on African ornithology, including the lavish and striking Histoire Naturelle des Perroquets. Images of African birds were popular in early 19th-century France both for their exoticism and for the interest in Africa that Napoleon's campaigns were generating. The collaboration of Levaillant and Barraband represented a departure from previous ornithological texts in its emphasis on beauty and luxury, with sumptuously colored and flawlessly rendered birds. The project was a massive undertaking, which required over 300 finished watercolors. Apart from their undoubted beauty, they display a scientific accuracy that few ornithological artists have matched since. Still, the meticulous hand-colored engravings in Levaillant's publications could not match the delicate modulations of tone and color, the fine lines and perfect draftsmanship of Barraband's original watercolors, which are exceptional in their richness and tonal variation. Each feather is described by dozens of parallel lines, providing remarkable detail and naturalistically textured color. Engraving with original hand color. Published by Levrault Frères in Paris, c. 1805. 21 x 13 1/2 Inches.
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During May 2003 I paid a visit to my family and friends in Taunton. I took a few photos, so here they are.
I also visited (but did not photograph) The Anchor, Hillfarrance; The Victory, Allerford; The Lamb and Flag, Blagdon; The Queens Arms, Pittminster; and Brazz, Taunton. Of all of these pubs, the Lamb and Flag is the nicest and most "local pub" type, and the Queens Arms is full of comedy parody type characters.
The Parade, Taunton. This is now a roundabout around the war memorial (the stone cross thing) and outside The Market House (the big building. It's a pub, but a bit of a meat market - hence the name?) which is all cobbled and unfriendly to traffic. Unfortunately this is the centre of town, there is no bypass, and Taunton has nowhere else for traffic to go.
Castle Bow - looking through the portcullis by the entrance to Brazz, through to the battlements on the top of The Winchester Arms. Yes, Taunton is old, pretty, and full of pubs. Nothing else though.
We went to a substation so I could photograph pylons. Here's one photo. Won't bore you with the rest - if you want them, see my pylons site.
It's held in an old theatre hall, which has been converted quite well and retains the original (very gaudy!) decor. Please note that not everyone in attendance is old.
The room is dotted with fruit machines, to fleece you for more cash. They also play "line games" on boards built into the tables, in between "real" games.
The numbers which were called are shown on this board, along with the type of game being played and the amount of money for winning. However I could only photograph the board when I wasn't busy playing so it's not lit! Also there is a (cheap) bar, and (horrid) food counter.
Here are the books you play with. You have to listen for which book is in play, and then which page (the yellow page in the bronze book, etc.) Then you have to get the line, two lines or full house on the same ticket on that page. There are six tickets to a page, so every single number is on the page somewhere. If you win you shout out. According to the leaflet you can shout anything you like. It's probably as well I haven't won yet.
We also investigated a phenomenon where, when you stand under electricity lines holding a fluorescent tube, the electromagnetic current induces the tube to glow in your hand. We did this right by the substation, where you can hear the wires crackling 24/7 as it is.
And here's the glowing tube. It was actually a lot more impressive, but my camera doesn't pick it up well in the dark. A real light sabre moment!
I slept on a mattress on top of a desk in the garage. The washing machine beeped several times every minute when it finished a cycle, and I needed steps to mount the bed. Apart from that it was reasonably comfortable.
My bed was on the other side of an outside window, for that "Amsterdam" feel... Wonder what the neighbours thought?
This spell allows the caster to pick up an object, concentrate, and gain a “vision” of what happened in connection with this object. Essentially what happens is that objects “record” events that have happened to them; a sort of psychic imprint is left on the object. The object acts as camera in a sense, showing a visual image in the mind of the caster of what happened around the object. The image will not show anything beyond the object. For example, if the caster casts the spell on a dagger found on the floor and picks it up, he can see who the dagger stabbed or how it was dropped or maybe even see the dagger being carried by a person from one location to another. This spell only gives vision from the perspective of the dagger and won’t be able to show the whole contents of a room for example. It is almost as if the dagger had a small camera attached to it. No sound is provided with this spell: only visuals.
This spell is very much up to the game master’s discretion and it can be useful for letting players in on clues in connection to an adventure. It can also be used to feed them useless information or distract them from the real course of a story.
The based MP cost is 4 for this spell. It can be reduced by increments to as low as 2 MP.
New Auditing Online Program teaches fundamentals of auditing.
Vubiz is excited to announce the launch of a new elearning program that teaches the fundamentals of auditing in today’s changing technological environment. This new online course is called about The Auditing Series and features four modules to help organizations learn the fundamentals of auditing.
Module 1 teaches the steps to establish an internal audit function, the phases of a complete audit cycle, the methods for documenting and evaluating internal controls and various approaches for reporting audit results. The second module gives tools to audit information systems and ensures the effectiveness of organization and management controls, system security administration and access controls, disaster recovery plans and the controls governing the relationship with service bureaus. Module 3 discusses the different uses for audit workpapers and how to accurately document and file workpapers and develop a risk-based annual audit plan. The fourth module provides internal auditors with the tools to ensure that the necessary policies, procedures, processes and controls at an organization are in place to detect and prevent fraud.
The goal of this four-module elearning program is to teach the fundamentals of auditing. To help meet that goal, the courses in this program contain audio, video and interactive activities to confirm understanding of the materials discussed. Each module has a final exam and certificate.
The outputs of the /help command are no longer paginated in the new command system. This has benefits and drawbacks; all commands are on one page, but in the case of chat and other messages, the items at the top can be quickly obscured.
Granted, the new command suggestions completely make this a moot point, but for users who have them disabled, the help output would be useful.
Launch 1.12.2 and type /help, observe the output.
Launch 1.13 and type /help, observe the output.
Both do the same function but in different ways.
This would likely have an impact on the help command itself, to distinguish page numbers from command literals. Perhaps /help, /help command <command>, /help page <page>, and /help page <page> command <command> could remedy this issue.
I have installed the concurrent version of emulators/i386-wine and so far Wine itself runs fine. I want to play the original Fallout via Wine and downloaded the current version from gog.com. Installation went fine, but at the end of the installation it throws some strange error codes, but nevertheless finishes "successfully".
When I then start the game it's launcher looks fine, but the game itself looks somewhat monochromatic / negative. Beside that it runs fine. I've discovered a config tool inside Fallouts installation directory and there you can switch graphics vendor from DirectX9 to DirectDraw 7 or "Basic". I've switched it to DirectDraw and then the graphics look fine and as intended.
Any idea why DirectX9 isn't working? According to winehq.org someone successfully tested Fallout with wine on FreeBSD 6 (!).
Last issue is that when I quit the game I get instantly logged out from X and/or X itself crashes. Could this be an issue with Xorg configuration and/or the driver. I have the current package of x11-drivers/xf86-video-intel installed.
Update: Yesterday I've installed the Lumina DE and here X isn't automatically logging me out after quitting a game via Wine - with XFCE the problem persists.
If you say you're not having that problem with Lumina, then probably XFCE is the problem. But in any case, I would not recommend emulators/i386-wine, as it is version 1.6 and therefore very old. Use emulators/i386-wine-devel instead. Also make sure you have your packages up to date, you might want to perform # pkg upgrade once in a while. I myself have no trouble with wine and KDE4, you might want to try that, too.
Mark teaches band, choir, symphony orchestra and theatre at Vancouver Technical Secondary School, where he has spent most of his career. He also teaches orchestra at Saint James Music Academy, an after-school orchestra program for vulnerable children living in Canada’s most impoverished neighbourhood.
He was recognised nationally as the 2013 MusiCounts Teacher of the Year for his commitment to inclusive classrooms, comprised of students with a variety of cognitive, psychosocial, and emotional challenges. Mark has shown leadership on provincial and national levels in professional associations and development conferences and also through published learning resources and volunteer work.
His innovative music teaching approach borrows instructional techniques from teaching children to read, by building on students’ prior experience and creativity in the area. Mark has developed a purpose-built music theory and musicianship program that is now in use at two other schools. His students have performed diverse music from all over the world, sometimes using authentic instruments when possible.
Mi Kamocha Am Yisrael? It was exactly a week ago when the public learnt about the tragic murder of Rabbi Ari Fuld HY”D who died al Shem Kiddush Hashem when despite his mortal wounds, he heroically neutralized his own murderer before the terrorist could harm or kill anyone else.
Less than a week later, Ari’s father and children were writing the final letters on the Sefer Torah that was donated (one of 23) in his memory by the Rennert family at an event that was held in the office of Rav Aharon Bina shlit”a at Yeshivat Netiv Aryeh. Ari was a talmid of Rav Bina, and every Thursday night for the past 15 years without fail Ari would come to the Yeshiva to learn, teach and sing.
Secular mastery. The scroll for the many who have pitiful feelings about the holocaust. Its harsh I know, but leave the whole Torah to a sefer and a sefer only. Our feelings secularize when we have the wrong motion to write on a permanent scroll for rabbinical use when we are not sefer’s. It is astute a wrong of this era.
Am I alone on my insight on why Jews who might be not even kosher might have a poke and even a child yet to be called to Torah is ready with a bet? Its funny, but I do not see a tradition but a fad. This is dangerous.
ELH tried this matter in Bloomington before Arbitrator Falcioni on October 13, 2005 and November 14, 2005. The Arbitrator ruled in favor of the Respondent with respect to all issues in all cases. The Arbitrator refused to accept the Petitioner’s allegation that she suffered an accidental injuries arising out of and in the course of her employment. He further denied benefits on the basis of causal relationship. No benefits were awarded in any of the cases.
Through effective cross-examination of the Petitioner, Ed Hennessy established the specific time, place and occurrence of alleged accident. Then, with compelling security camera videotape and other information gathered by company investigators, proved conclusively that the alleged accident did not occur where, when and how the Petitioner said it did. The Arbitrator specifically found the Petitioner not to be credible at her testimony to be “completely controverted by the evidence in the record”.
Ed Hennessy tried this matter in 2007. Arbitrator Fratanni adopted his argument in all respects and denied compensation in its entirety. In her Order she concluded that the Petitioner failed to prove that she sustained accidental injuries which arose out of and in the course of her employment, that she further failed to prove that she gave Respondent timely notice and that she failed to prove that her condition of ill-being is causally related to any accidental injury allegedly sustained at work.
Tried in 2007; Arbitrator O’Malley incorporated all arguments asserted by Ed Hennessy in his decision. As proposed, the Arbitrator denied the petitioner’s claim for wage differential under Section 8(d)1, he denied more than 28 weeks of demanded TTD, he awarded medical as proposed (allowing credit for medical expenses paid by group insurance) and he denied the claim for penalties and fees.
Ed Hennessy successfully defended Petitioner’s claim for permanent total disability benefits and further limited Respondent’s liability for TTD and PPD benefits substantially. Established with videotape and testimonial evidence, that the Respondent offered a reasonable accommodation and that the Petitioner’s failure to comply with a bid process demonstrated the Petitioner’s lack of diligence in attempting a return to work.
Ed Hennessy tried this matter in Bloomington before Arbitrator Falcioni in June of 2004. The case involved an altercation between co-employees. At issue was whether the altercation had its origin in the work or the manner in which it was to be performed and whether the Petitioner could be characterized as the aggressor. Arbitrator Falcioni held the injury to be compensable and awarded permanency for a left ankle fracture and over $11,000.00 in medical expenses. The Respondent challenged the decision on review. Although the Commission affirmed Arbitrator’s findings as to accident, causal relationship and permanency, it remanded the matter to the Arbitrator for determination of whether the record would support the award for medical expenses. Respondent contended that the evidence offered by the Petitioner at trial was insufficient to establish medical expense liability pursuant to Section 8(a) on the basis of reasonableness, necessity or causal relationship. Ed Hennessy negotiated a compromise of the disputed sum in a settlement contract subsequent to the remand.
This individual underwent invasive surgery referable to the shoulder and to the lower spine in connection with injuries that he allegedly sustained on three different dates. Ed Hennessy tried and won this matter before Arbitrator Lee in August 2006 in defense of Petitioner’s allegation that he is permanently and totally disabled and in defense of the Petitioner’s demand for more than 2 1/2; years of accrued TTD benefits.
Ed Hennessy tried this matter before Arbitrator White in Urbana on February 16, 2005. Arbitrator White decided in favor for the Respondent, denying compensation on the basis that the Petitioner did not sustain an accident arising out of and in the course of her employment. Arbitrator White ruled that the Petitioner failed to trace her injury or condition to a definite time, place or cause. Further, no reliable medical evidence was offered to plausibly explain how any work she performed for the Respondent could have caused or aggravated her underlying herniated disc problem.
Arbitrator Lee heard this matter pursuant to Section 19(b) of the Act and limited his rulings to accident, causal relationship and award for TTD and medical. Arbitrator Lee ruled in favor of the Petitioner on issues of accident and causal relationship. Necessarily, he awarded TTD that accrued as well as medical expenses of $765.39. In awarding the benefits, the Arbitrator ignored evidence at the Petitioner had worked for three subsequent employers before proceeding with thumb surgery. The matter was resolved on a compromised basis contractorily after the Respondent elected not to pursue an appeal.
Ed Hennessy tried this matter before Arbitrator Lee on March 15, 2006. Arbitrator Lee adopted Respondent’s proposed decision in its entirety, awarding 30% loss of the right hand and acknowledging a credit owed to the Respondent in the amount of $9,328.52 for overpaid TTD. The Petitioner secured modification on appeal, but Respondent retained credit for over $5,000.00.
Petitioner’s attorney pressed for a Section 19(b) trial of this case before Arbitrator Lee on September 2, 2005. Although Arbitrator Lee ruled against the Respondent and additionally awarded penalties, Petitioner’s attorney committed many mistakes, one in particular potentially costing his client more than $22,000.00 in medical expenses. Of particular significance, Petitioner’s attorney failed to introduce evidence at the first Section 19(b) trial. Petitioner’s attorney attempted to offer the records in the second 19(b) trial, but the arbitrator sustained our objection on the basis of res judicata. Based upon that leverage, we were able to reach a reasonable settlement with Petitioner’s attorney, which did not include the awarded penalties.
The Petitioner in this case suffered from a congenital spine condition which caused her brain stem to slip into her neck. Despite evidence offered to the contrary, the Arbitrator found that the Petitioner’s job aggravated her underlying conditions resulting in significant permanency. The award though was kept in terms of permanency rather than permanent total disability as was included in the Petitioner’s prayer. The Respondent elected to pay the award and close the case. The Petitioner also chose not to appeal.
Highly favorable outcome in 2007, achieved largely from very careful factual investigation and the assembly of reliable witnesses. Petitioner reluctantly agreed on the date of trial to close the case pertaining to a van accident that the Respondent had denied based upon numerous inconsistencies.
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You get your tickets yet, bro?
This is on my Dad's arm… Semper Fidelis.
"May thy knife chip and shatter."
Re-drawn identity for Green Mantis Kung-Fu.
Filipinos like to party—WITH JEWELRY.
"To read is to live."
This took way too long for what I was paid, but a good time was still had by all.
This is permanently displayed on my cousin's forearms.
I give these away… If you've found one around town in an inappropriate place I do apologize.
Try thinking with the reptilian part of your brain.
Even if you win the race, you're still a rat.
Identity for my good friend Nader Abushhab over at NBMA Photography.
is the AZ state motto… As seen on a lapel near you.
Do what this t-shirt says and nobody will get hurt.
Clean & elegant with exquisitely sophisticated finish with nose of grapes, flowers and strawberries.
Clean & elegant, a very plush sake loaded with fruit basket flavors with notes of honey dew and apple.
Delicate & impeccably balanced flavor with very smooth finish.
Rich, full of fragrance, very smooth with a satisfying mellow Umami finish.
Light & mild, very smooth and easy going with lower than average alcohol rate (12% alc).
Clean, crisp, modestly sweet finish after subtle floral hint.
Well-balanced, brilliant fragrance that delivers an impression of Oka (cherry blossom).
Deep & rich, pleasantly biting with higher than average alcohol rate (18%).
Extra dry, adequately balanced acicity and smoothness.
Dry & higher in acidity, distinctive fragrance with notes of cucumber.
Medium dry & well balanced, very flavorful.
Typical all round sake, very well balanced, easy going.
Junmai Daiginjo sake made in Nigori style, nose of rose water, cream apple with subtle sweetness.
Sparkling Nigori, crisp and dry.
Mouth watering citrussy Yuzu with sweet finish.
A smooth finishing Ume-shu Japanese sour plum sake.
The curtain rises: a Kyōgen stage, an examination room at an eye specialist’s, a sushi counter. There are two people meeting here. Feelings of the most diverse kind, alternating between fear and fascination, between tenderness and sanctuary, flare up and are immediately put into practice. The feelings of the other are explored.
Don’t sweat the small stuff, we’re told. Personally, I’m a big fan of the small stuff. The little things that make a big difference. The little touches that show attention to detail, thoughtfulness and care.
When I was invited to Wyboston Lakes in Bedfordshire, I wasn’t sure what to expect. I’d heard the name, but despite it being located just outside the county, I never had a reason to go before. Now, I’ve got lots of reasons to go back, and it’s all because of those little things.
Let’s start with something big; the site. Set in 380 acres of countryside, the scale of the training and conference facilities took me by surprise. Two pretty lakes present an elegant backdrop to meals, and become part of the fun for team building activities. Large open areas offer plenty of space, while 406 bedrooms and 64 training rooms show Wyboston Lakes is serious about business.
The resort is family run and I came away with impression that all the staff I met enjoy being part of the team. Wyboston Lakes was ranked 28th in the Sunday Times Top 100 Best Companies to Work For in 2017 and from the warm welcome, smiles and knowledgeable staff we met, it’s clear they’re proud of what the venue has to offer.
Lakes are split over two purpose built venues. The Executive Centre and Training Centre cater to different audiences, but both offer excellent facilities across a range of spaces, from 10 person meeting rooms through to training rooms and two large conference rooms that comfortably seat up to 270 people.
There’s attention to detail here. Thought is given to the flow of people, particularly important for exhibitions, but equally so for moving guests between training sessions, breakout areas and meals. Options are provided around visitor registration, signage is good and the layout provides a central reception area that is always easy to find. The venues offer a surprising amount of outdoor space with attractive courtyard gardens, most attached directly to rooms for easy access. Bedrooms, restaurants and bars on-site at each venue keep guests together and provide everything they need during their stay.