Trundle beds (or truckle beds) are usually considered a pair of beds, one slightly smaller than a twin bed that is on rollers or casters so that it may be put beneath the upper twin bed for storage. Trundle beds allow for two separate beds to be available when necessary, but do not require […]
Archive for August, 2007
Colluvium is the name for loose bodies of sediment that have been deposited or built up at the bottom of a low grade slope or against a barrier on that slope, transported by gravity. The deposits that collect at the foot of a steep slope or cliff are also known by the same name. Colluvium […]
An assise (from the Fr., derived from Latin assidere, “to sit beside”), is a geological term for two or more beds or strata of rock united by the occurrence of the same characteristic species or genera.
References
betterRest: betterRest: Waterbeds & Waterbed Accessories a betterRest, betterRest: Colorado Springs, Waterbeds, Air & Adjustable Beds, Waterbed Sheets, Memory […]
Valley Hospital a for-profit hospital is owned and operated by Universal Health Services. This 409 bed hospital is located in Las Vegas, Nevada.
History
The hospital was founded in 1972.
Established Southern Nevada’s first air ambulance service, Flight for Life, which was owned by Metro Aviation, in 1980. On September 11, 2003, Valley Hospital ended its contract […]
Lake Chalco was an endorheic lake formerly located in the Valley of Mexico and was important for human development in central Mexico. The lake was named after the city of Chalco on its eastern shore.
Lake Chalco and the other Mexican great lakes (the brackish lakes Texcoco, Zumpango and Xaltocan and the freshwater Xochimilco) formed […]
Clay Sampson (born February 24, 1976) is an Australian rules footballer who played in the Australian Football League and the South Australian Football League.
Career
Melbourne: 1995-96, 13 games, 1 goal.
Adelaide: 1997-98, 24 games, 16 goals.
Richmond: 1999-2000, 27 games, 18 goals.
South Adelaide Football Club
Player Honours
1997 Premiership Player AFC
2003-2006 South Adelaide Captain
2001 South Adelaide […]
Broadmoor Hospital is a high security psychiatric hospital at Crowthorne in Berkshire, England. It is the best known of the three high-security psychiatric hospitals in England, the other two being Ashworth and Rampton. Scotland has a similar institution, located at Carstairs, officially known as The State Hospital; also called Carstairs Hospital.
The Broadmoor complex houses […]
Clay Walker is the self-titled debut album by country singer Clay Walker . It was released in 1993 and produced by James Stroud.
Track listing
“Dreaming With My Eyes Wide Open” (Tony Arata) – 3:30
“What’s It to You” (Robert Ellis Orrall/Curtis Wright) – 2:46
“The Silence Speaks For Itself” (Chris Waters/Clay Walker/Tom Shapiro) – 4:20
“How to Make a […]
Your Saving Grace is the fourth album by American rock band The Steve Miller Band, released in 1970.
Track listing
“Little Girl” (Miller)
“Just a Passin’ Fancy in a Midnite Dream” (Miller/Sidran)
“Don’t Let Nobody Turn You Around” (Miller)
“Baby’s House” (Miller/Hopkins)
“Motherless Children” (Trad. arr. Miller)
“The Last Wombat in Mecca” (Turner)
“Feel So Glad” (Miller)
“Your Saving Grace” (Davis)
Waterbeds, Waterbed Sheets, […]
Heatter-Quigley Productions was an American television production company that was launched in 1960 by two former television writers, Merrill Heatter and Bob Quigley.
In 1966, they created the classic game show The Hollywood Squares, and they sold their company to Filmways.
On many of H-Q’s most popular game shows, beginning with Video Village, a key element of […]
Banket, a South African mining term, applied to the beds of auriferous conglomerate, chiefly occurring in the Witwatersrand gold-fields. The name was given to these beds from their resemblance to a pastry, known in Dutch as banket, resembling almond hard-bake. The word is the same as banquet, and is derived ultimately from bank or bench, […]
Lynn Barber (born 22 May 1944) is a British journalist, currently writing for The Observer.
Barber is from Bagshot, Surrey, and studied English Language and Literature at the University of Oxford.
Barber worked for Penthouse magazine for seven years, then for the Sunday Express, The Independent on Sunday, Vanity Fair, The Sunday Times, The Daily Telegraph and […]
A plinth is the base of a cabinet in cabinet making.
It is also a word used in the popular internet game word whomp.
In architecture, a plinth is the platform or base upon which a column, pedestal, statue, monument, or structure rests.<ref>
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Hoysala temple on plinth
Plinth of the Sign of the Kiwi, Dyers Pass, Port Hills, Christchurch […]
Halton Healthcare Services is a multi-site healthcare organization. It is composed of three community hospitals in Ontario, Canada. It serves the communities of Milton, Oakville, Clarkson and Halton Hills. The three hospitals serve over 200,000 residents. It is supported by more than 1,900 employees, 900 volunteers and 238 physicians.
Member Hospitals
The three community hospitals are:
Oakville-Trafalgar […]
Southlake Regional Health Centre (formerly York County Hospital) is a hospital located in Newmarket, Ontario, Canada.
A private hospital was founded in 1932 and on August 22 the province granted a Charter of Incorporation for the York County Hospital Corporation. In 1924, it became a public hospital. In 1946, the Margaret Johnson Davis Wing […]
Chionodoxa luciliae (also known as Glory of the snow) is a small (3-6″) flower which grows from a hardy bulb and produces one of the earliest flowers of spring. Originally from Turkey, it is hardy in zones 3-8, sun or part shade. Chiodoxa seeds itself and will spread in beds that will […]
Bachi (桴, 枹) (also batchi or buchi) is the name for the wooden sticks used to play Japanese taiko drums, and also (written 撥) the plectrum for stringed instruments like the shamisen and biwa.
Drum bachi are made in a wide variety of sizes and materials, as appropriate to the drum it will be used to […]
Muschelkalk (German for “shell limestone”) is the term in geology for the middle member of the German Triassic. It consists of a series of calcareous, many and dolomitic beds which lie conformably between the Buntsandstein and Keuper formations.
The name Muschelkalk (Fr., calcaire coquillier; concijylien, formation of D’Orbigny) indicates a characteristic feature in this series, viz, […]
The Leicester Royal Infirmary is a large National Health Service hospital in Leicester, England. It is located to the south-west of the city centre. It has Leicester’s accident and emergency department, and is part of the University Hospitals Leicester NHS Trust.
The hospital was originally founded in 1771 by Reverend William Watts hosting 40 […]
Renziehausen Park Rose Garden and Arboretum (258 acres) is a city park with rose garden and arboretum located on Eden Park Boulevard off Walnut Street, in the Pittsburgh suburb of McKeesport, Pennsylvania. It is open to the public daily without charge.
The rose garden contains some 1,200 rose bushes in 28 beds, plus an additional 3 […]
Moses H. Cone Memorial Hospital (part of Moses Cone Health System)
The Moses H. Cone Memorial Hospital, the flagship of Moses Cone Health System, was established in 1953 to serve the community by delivering high-quality health care. That mission continues today.
Located on a 63-acre campus, this 535-bed hospital is the largest medical center in its four-county […]
The Davis Waldorf School was founded in 1986 by a group of parents who wanted a local Waldorf school for their children.
In the fall of 1992, the school was able to move from its first rural site to its new campus in North Davis. The new classroom buildings were carefully designed to support the principles […]
Agate Fossil Beds National Monument is a U.S. National Monument near Harrison, Nebraska. The main feature of the Monument is a valley of the Niobrara River.
The area largely consists of grass-covered plains. Plants on the site include prairie sandreed, blue grama, little bluestem and needle and thread grass, and the wildflowers lupine, spiderwort, western wallflower […]
Mayor’s and City of London Court is a County Court in London, England. It is located at Guildhall Buildings, Basinghall Street. It was created in 1922 from the Mayor’s Court and the City of London Court.
External link
Court information
Flora London Marathon History of the event, charity details, merchandise, past results, news articles, registration and tourism information.
Transport […]
Sir Arnold Wienholt Hodson (1881 – 1944) was a British colonial administrator.
Hodson was born in Bovey Tracey, Devonshire, in 1881. He was the eldest son of Algernon Hodson and Sarah Wienholt.
Hodson was in Central Queensland 1900 to 1902 and was part of the Queensland Contingent for South Africa in 1902. He served in the Transvaal […]