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Post by knave on Feb 7, 2020 9:10:03 GMT -5
The dispatcher for the south branch has this on her office window
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Post by knave on Feb 11, 2020 22:56:21 GMT -5
The Room Temperature Room
found this again and it cracks me up!
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Post by knave on Feb 13, 2020 10:12:17 GMT -5
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Post by knave on Feb 13, 2020 10:15:26 GMT -5
The Room Temperature Room found this again and it cracks me up! TheRock jamesp you should check this out, you would like it.
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Post by 1dave on Feb 15, 2020 9:44:25 GMT -5
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Post by rockpickerforever on Feb 15, 2020 20:49:53 GMT -5
I just heard on the news that the highly endangered pangolin is now in even more peril. People think that they are somehow connected to? Carry? the Corona virus, and officials are concerned that enimsls may be killed for this reason. So I went online and found out more information about them. Check them out: linkWhile searching, I also found out that today 2-15-20 is World Pangolin Day. link. How about that? They are some strange and amazing critters. Sad that they may soon become extinct.
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Post by joshuamcduffie on Feb 15, 2020 21:15:07 GMT -5
Perhaps people should stop eating pangolins.
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Post by parfive on Feb 15, 2020 21:41:57 GMT -5
A little poetic justice, perchance . . . givin’ the f’ers a taste of their own medicine.
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Post by parfive on Feb 15, 2020 21:47:55 GMT -5
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Post by rockpickerforever on Feb 15, 2020 22:03:51 GMT -5
Perhaps people should stop eating pangolins. No kidding! Like there's not plenty of other things to eat, they have to kill endangered animals?? I don't understand how some people think.....
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Post by Pat on Feb 15, 2020 23:38:05 GMT -5
A daughter named her pet squirrel “Pangolin “. Last year. Yep. Really. 😲
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Post by parfive on Feb 16, 2020 2:54:15 GMT -5
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Post by 1dave on Feb 17, 2020 9:57:35 GMT -5
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Post by 1dave on Feb 17, 2020 12:53:44 GMT -5
Yakutsk - Where the Most Woolly Mammoths are found.
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Post by 1dave on Feb 19, 2020 17:44:17 GMT -5
"Jerry Anderson was born in Las Vegas, Nevada in 1935. He spent much of his boyhood traveling around the west with his father who was a well-driller. Those experiences opened his eyes to the world around him and sparked his life-long infatuation with the people, the history and the ways of the old west. That interest intensified as he later worked as a miner and then as a ranch-hand on a Utah cattle ranch. Since beginning his full-time pursuit of fine art quickly climbed the ladder of success. His works have been featured in many major art publications and he is a multiple award winner at some of the most prestigious Western and other art shows. He has twice won 'Best of Show' in sculpture at the prestigious Western Artists of America Annual Exhibition; 'Best of Show' at the American/Canadian Classic in Billings, Montana; First Place and 'People's Choice' at the Death Valley 49er's Show in California and many more. His work can be found in collections from coast-to-coast, including the prestigious Favell Museum collection in Oregon, where he was given the 'Western Heritage Award' in 1989. Jerry Anderson is an Artist in Residence at Southern Utah University where several of his most popular monuments are placed. The classic 'Old Sorrel' is the Founder's monument on campus. The giant, dramatic bronze depicts the legendary horse which helped settlers build Cedar City. One of the most moving pieces stands at the south edge of the campus at Southern Utah University. As is the case with all of his sculptures, there is a vivid story underpinning the monument. This is a statue f the young and wholesome pioneer girl, Nellie Unthank, who at the age of nine, crossed the plains, witnessed the death of her parents, nearly froze to death herself, and endured the agony of the amputation of her feet without anesthesia. She lived her adult life and raised her children in Cedar City without resorting to dependence. Anderson captured the joy and freedom of youth in the little girl as she skips with her shoes ironically hanging over her shoulder. Another of the dramatic monuments placed in front of the campus at Southern Utah University is 'The Centurion.' This magnificent creation preserves the values of twelve of mankind's men and women who depict great thinkers over the centuries represented; people who forged new and better paths for future generations. 'The Centurion' includes: Aristotle, Plato, Marie Curie, Socrates, John Stuart Mills, William Shakespeare, Thomas Jefferson, Germaine De Stail, Albert Einstein, Leonardo Da Vinci, Isaac Newton and Gallileo Gallei. Anderson was awarded Southern Utah University's 'Medallion of the Southern Utah Honors' in 1989. Anderson's work has been exhibited at the MONAC show in Spokane, Washington; the Charles Russell Show in Great Falls, Montana; at the AICA in San Dimas, California; the George Phippen Memorial in Prescott, Arizona; the Death Valley 49er's Show in California; the International Western Wildlife Show in North Dakota and the Art Expo in Dallas, Texas, to name a few. Every new art piece is an adventure for Anderson to create. No two are remotely alike. He is equally adept at bear and elk as he is at sculpting cute, little girls and cowboys. one of his most popular pieces ever, 'Showdown,' captures a cowboy with rifle in hand, dismounting his horse. Early buyers of the limited edition of 'Showdown,' of thirty pieces, paid $4,500 for the piece. Later in the edition, the price increased to $15,000. Now that it is sold out, one collector was offered $30,000 for the piece. Meanwhile, Anderson works away in his studio. There's always a new piece in progress. Down the street at the Wells Fargo Museum in Silver Reef, Utah, which Anderson helped restore, people file through to admire his works of art. Off to the southeast, the walls of Zion Canyon tower on the horizon. On many days, Anderson still sets out for the canyon to unwind. He climbs the reef near his home, where claim jumpers once carried pistols and solved their disputes with fists. Then he returns to go to work again, molding clay into life; turning his ideas into history. Some people ask him, "what keeps you coming back to your studio?" His response, "I still haven't done my best piece." -"
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Post by knave on Feb 20, 2020 10:22:57 GMT -5
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Post by 1dave on Feb 20, 2020 11:37:52 GMT -5
Jerry Anderson's most famous work - "Come Unto Me."
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Post by knave on Feb 21, 2020 13:31:04 GMT -5
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Post by 1dave on Feb 25, 2020 14:09:29 GMT -5
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Post by 1dave on Feb 25, 2020 15:45:47 GMT -5
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