Preview of HCF: Robert Mills house
BEAT ANY ESCAPE ROOM- 10 proven tricks and tips
10 tips to dominate any Escape room- Prepare your brain for the Escape room using Brilliant.org. First 200 people get 20% off!!
EXTRA INF0-
-Check out Dr. Nicholson's website here for more juicy stuff-
-8 roles for players-
-This is the escape room I filmed in. They were awesome to work with. If you live in Silicon Valley this is the perfect spot (not all Escape Rooms are created equal)-
-This is the harder room that looked like a castle-
MUSIC-
0:07- New Shoes- Blue Wednesday -
1:23- Spark- Maxwell Young-
2:08- The Ocean- Andrew Applepie-
6:33- Cereal Killa- Blue Wednesday -
8:30- Breakfast- Andrew Applepie-
10:57- Q- Blue Wednesday -
11:49- Too Happy to be cool by Notebreak-
Summary: I visited Dr. Scott Nicholson in Brantford, ON Canada since he is the world expert in Escape Room design. After meeting with him for a day here are the 10 tips I came away with to beat any escape room:
1. Think simple
2. Searching
3. Organize your stuff
4. Focus on what is stopping you
5. Team roles
6. Lock types
7. Code types
8. Written clues
9. Look for patterns
10. Your guide is your friend
MERCH-
They are soft-
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Preston-Hampton mansion survives the Burning of Columbia
230 Dawsons Park Lexington SC Home for Sale
For more details click here:
230 Dawsons Park
Lexington, SC 29072
$99,999, 2 bed, 2.0 bath, 1,120 SF, MLS# 331486
Welcome to Dawson's Park, a planned townhouse community located minutes from downtown Lexington, South Carolina, on Hwy 1. 230 Dawsons Park Drive has been loved and cared for by its current owner. This townhome has two bedrooms and two bathrooms. It features stainless steel and black appliances including dishwasher, range, built-in microwave over the range and refrigerator, dark wood stained cabinets with bronze knobs and handles and 3cm dark granite countertops/breakfast bar. This home has 9' smooth ceilings and 2 faux wood blinds throughout. The master bedroom is spacious and has a walk-in closet, large private bath with linen closet, granite counter and garden tub/shower. The family room boasts a beautiful ceiling fan and stunning gas log fireplace with dark granite surround and wide white wood mantle. The family room opens to a patio, storage room and private back yard. The front yard has a sprinkler system and the modest $50/month homeowners association fee covers front yard maintenance as well as common areas.
230 Dawsons Park Drive is a short walk from the shops at Scarborough Place and the fine Mexican cuisine at San Jose restaurant. In Lexington, as well as nearby Columbia, one can explore a multitude of local and national merchants with unique shops, boutiques, cafes and restaurants of all types. Live entertainment and educational opportunities are also plentiful at the Koger Center, the Colonial Life Arena, Riverbanks Zoo and Gardens, the State Museum and EdVenture Children's Museum.
Access to Lake Murray, a 50,000 acre recreational lake with over 600 miles of shoreline is minutes away. Lake Murray is truly a sight to behold. Beautiful property nestled within a peaceful lake setting makes it appealing to vacationers and residents alike. The area has more than 20 golf courses open year round for public play. Lake Murray is also home to many annual events including professional bass fishing tournaments, sailing regattas, powerboat races, the annual Tour of Homes, and many fabulous boat parades and holiday fireworks displays. With an average temperature ranging from 56 degrees in January to 92 degrees in July, Lake Murray residents enjoy a perfect climate for year-round outdoor recreation. Enjoy hiking, swimming, boating, fishing and more!
Presented By:
Sallie C. Chester, EXIT Real Estate Consultants
803-707-8595
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JCCC Board of Trustees Meeting for December 12, 2019
This is the monthly meeting of the JCCC Board of Trustees, which was held on December 12, 2019.
For more information on this and other happenings at the college, visit
Cash, weapons, Lamborghini seized in major drug bust in Queens, Brooklyn
Four suspects were arrested in Queens and Brooklyn overnight Wednesday in what is being described as a major drug bust.
The bust was the result of a long-running investigation that began with two overdose deaths involving fentanyl-laced heroin -- one in Bay Ridge in 2016 and one in Kew Gardens in May of 2017.
The alleged ringleader was identified as 35-year-old Dionne Sharrow (AKA Slay), who was arrested at his apartment in a luxury high-rise on 51st Avenue in Long Island City. Among the property seized there was a loaded firearm, approximately $500,000 in cash and a Lamborghini parked in the building's garage.
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Symposium of Architectural History The Whiteness of 19th Century American Architecture
This symposium examines the racial discourses that subtended American Architecture movements during the long nineteenth century. Explore this site to learn more about the specific themes, case studies and speakers that will be featured at this event. The Whiteness of American Architecture is organized by Charles Davis II, UB assistant professor of architecture.
About the symposium
“The Whiteness of 19th Century American Architecture” is a one-day symposium in architectural history organized by the School of Architecture and Planning at the University at Buffalo. This symposium is an outgrowth of the Race + Modern Architecture Project, an interdisciplinary workshop on the racial discourses of western architectural history from the Enlightenment to the present.
Participants
- Professor Mabel O. Wilson, Columbia GSAPP
- Dianne Harris, senior program officer at the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation
- Joanna Merwood-Salisbury, architectural historian
- Kathryn ‘Kate’ Holliday, architectural historian
- Charles Davis, assistant professor of architectural history and criticism at the University at Buffalo
Race + Modern Architecture Project
Race + Modern Architecture logo
The “Whiteness & American Architecture” symposium continues the research that began with the Race + Modern Architecture Project, a workshop conducted at Columbia University in 2013. The forthcoming co-edited volume, Race and Modern Architecture presents a collection of seventeen groundbreaking essays by distinguished scholars writing on the critical role of racial theory in shaping architectural discourse, from the Enlightenment to the present. The book, which grows out of a collaborative, interdisciplinary, multi-year research project, redresses longstanding neglect of racial discourses among architectural scholars. With individual essays exploring topics ranging from the role of race in eighteenth-century, Anglo-American neoclassical architecture, to 1970s radical design, the book reveals how the racial has been deployed to organize and conceptualize the spaces of modernity, from the individual building to the city to the nation to the planet.
Sponsors
- Temple Hoyne Buell Center for the Study of American Architecture - Columbia University
- Darwin D. Martin House Complex - Buffalo, NY
- School of Architecture - Victoria University of Wellington
- UB Humanities Institute - University at Buffalo, SUNY
- School of Architecture and Planning - University at Buffalo, SUNY
Purpose and Themes
Our symposium will outline a critical history of the white cultural nationalisms that have proliferated under the rubric of American Architecture during the long nineteenth century. This theme will be explored chronologically from the late-nineteenth to the mid-twentieth century and regionally from representative avant-garde movements on the East Coast to the regionalist architectural styles of the Midwest and West Coast. Such movements included the neoclassical revivals of the Chicago World’s Fair in 1893, the Chicago School of Architecture and the Prairie Style, the East Bay Style on the West Coast, the Arts & Crafts movement across the continent, and various interwar movements that claimed to find unique historical origins for an autochthonous American style of building.
The five architectural historians in attendance have been charged with providing some preliminary answers to the central question of these proceedings:
What definitions of American identity have historically influenced the most celebrated national architectural movements of the long nineteenth century, and how was this influence been manifested in the labor relations, ideological commitments and material dimensions of innovative architectural forms?
Homes For Sale: 4750 Camp Roosevelt Drive, Chesapeake Beach, MD 20732 | Calvert County
For Sale: 4750 Camp Roosevelt Drive, Chesapeake Beach, Maryland
$875,000.00
4 Bed | 3.5 Bath | 5.02 Acres
Stately brick colonial located in Historic Camp Roosevelt with 5 luscious acres. Many upgrades including hardwood flooring, two staircases, conservatory, gourmet kitchen with granite, island, Woodmode cabinets, stainless upgraded appliances. Exclusive water privileged community includes breathtaking views of the Chesapeake Bay from a pristine beach with 300' community pier.
Presented by Jennie Melvin with Better Homes and Gardens Real Estate The J. Melvin Group.
For more information about this property or similar Calvert County homes and property listing, please contact Jennie at:
Tel: 443.223-2771
Email: jennie@jjmelvin.com
Website:
Calvert County Maryland #MDRealEstate
Video recorded, edited and produced by Robert Hix with Hixvideo in Ellicott City, Maryland.
Credits: Aerial footage by William Easley and Don Herring
Insiders Guide to Vancouver Island 2018 - Full Length Feature in HD
Explore Vancouver Island in British Columbia with travel and nature videographer Les McDonald. This intimate insiders guide will take you to the MUST SEE attractions on the Pacific West Coast.
Experience Victoria, Butchart Gardens, the Empress Hotel, Tofino, Ucluelet, Port Hardy, Telegraph Cove, and much more! Also, enjoy exclusive footage of grizzly bear and whale watching brought to you by the experts in their fields where you will see Grizzy Bears hunting wild salmon, Orca Killer Whales, Humpback Whales, Seals, Sea Lions, Dolphins and more!
Drum Explodes During Welding, Killing Worker
A worker welding on an empty acetone drum is killed when residual acetone in the drum ignites and explodes.
WATCH LIVE: CBC Vancouver News at 6 for Sept. 13 — Mill Closures, Ride-Hailing, Broken Elevator
Watch CBC Vancouver News at 6 with hosts Anita Bathe and Mike Killeen for the latest on the most important news stories happening across B.C. They're joined by meteorologist Johanna Wagstaffe who brings you the most up to date weather forecasts and added expertise on what's trending in the world of science.
Spinosaurus fishes for prey | Planet Dinosaur | BBC
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John Hurts tells the stories of the biggest, deadliest and weirdest Dinosaurs ever to walk the Earth. Massive carnivorous hunter Spinosaurus hunts the giant fresh water fish Onchopristis.
Planet Dinosaur tells the stories of the biggest, deadliest and weirdest creatures ever to walk the Earth, using the latest fossil evidence and immersive computer graphics. Narrated by John Hurt.
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Marijuana Minors
Watch the first episode of SMOKEABLES: How to Make a Gravity Bong -
For more episodes of Weediquette, click here:
Medical marijuana is legal in 20 states and the District of Columbia, but there are still use cases that are very controversial, like medical marijuana for children. Some claim it's a wonder drug for epilepsy, severe autism, and even to quell the harsh side effects of chemotherapy, while others decry pumping marijuana into still-growing bodies. We went to the small town of Pendleton, Oregon, where medical marijuana is legal, to visit Mykayla Comstock, an eight-year-old leukemia patient who takes massive amounts of weed to treat her illness. Her family, and many people we met along the way, believe not only in the palliative aspects of the drug, but also in marijuana's curative effect—that pot can literally shrink tumors.
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The 58th Presidential Inauguration of Donald J. Trump (Full Video) | NBC News
Donald Trump was sworn in as the 45th president of the United States on Friday, outlining his forceful vision of a new national populism and echoing the same America first mantra that swept him to victory last November.
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The 58th Presidential Inauguration of Donald J. Trump (Full Video) | NBC News
The Peanut Butter Falcon | Official Featurette Zack's Story
The story behind how Zack Gottsagen, an actor with Down syndrome, came to star in The Peanut Butter Falcon with interviews from Shia LaBeouf, Dakota Johnson, John Hawkes, Bruce Dern, Thomas Haden Church, Jon Bernthal, Yelawolf, Jake “The Snake” Roberts, and Mick Foley.
Hurricane Michael 2018 full coverage and updates
Hurricane Michael has killed at least one person as it continues to move inland over the Southeast. The storm made landfall on the Florida Panhandle Wednesday afternoon as one of the most powerful storms to ever hit the U.S. The intense Category 4 hurricane was packing maximum sustained winds of 155 mph when it crashed ashore near Mexico Beach, a lightly populated tourist town about midway along the Panhandle.
The National Hurricane Center (NHC) described Michael as potentially catastrophic. Debris is strewn across miles of Florida's coastline: Roofs and awnings peeled back from buildings, pieces of homes scattered amid snapped trees and downed power lines, chunks of beaches washed away.
Follow our live blog:
Forecasters mark landfall as the place and time when the center of the eye strikes land. Minutes earlier, Michael's eyewall came ashore between Panama City and St. Vincent Island, and the hurricane center warned everyone inside the relative calm of the eye not to venture outside.
Hurricane-force winds extended outward up to 45 miles from the center. Those winds were tearing some buildings apart in Panama City Beach.
One beachfront structure under construction could be seen collapsing, and metal roofing material flew sideways across parking lots amid sheets of rain.
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CBSN is the first digital streaming news network that will allow Internet-connected consumers to watch live, anchored news coverage on their connected TV and other devices. At launch, the network is available 24/7 and makes all of the resources of CBS News available directly on digital platforms with live, anchored coverage 15 hours each weekday. CBSN. Always On.
Why Timber is the Construction Material of the 21st Century
The College of Natural Resources was honored to welcome Ryan Smith, Associate Professor of Architecture at the University of Utah, as the 2017 lecture speaker.
We are experiencing a wood construction revival. Steel and concrete were the material innovations of the industrial revolution. Wood, used to build houses for centuries, is the commercial construction innovation of the 21st century. Long valued for its affordability, timber is being embraced by building developers due to recent advances in engineered wood products, robotic machine manufacturing, and wood's inherent environmental benefits. The 2017 SJ Hall Lecture features Ryan E. Smith, Associate Professor of Architecture at the University of Utah who speaks on increasing the value of under utilized timber through the development of innovative wood products for the construction market.
Howard County, MD: Farms to our Forks
Filmed in Howard County, Maryland, this short film features local farmers and food businesses, focusing on how they have adapted with changes in the demographics, business environment and land usage over the years. Learn about how they are responding to the increased public interest in local foods and agriculture.
Woman on the Run (1950) [Film Noir] [Crime]
If you like this movie and our channel, please subscribe: | The movie Woman on the Run is a 1950 film noir crime film directed by Norman Foster starring Ann Sheridan and Dennis O'Keefe. The film was based on the April 1948 short story Man on the Run by Sylvia Tate and filmed on location in San Francisco, California.
Plot: As the film opens, a man, Frank Johnson (Ross Elliott), is walking his dog in the city at night. He witnesses a man in a car talking about a crime. The man then gets shot. But whoever shot that man then sees Frank and shoots at him. The shot misses, however, because it is mistakenly aimed at Frank's shadow. The killer then flees in the car.
When the police arrive it is explained that the shooting victim was going to testify in a court case against a gangster. Since Frank saw the shooter, the cops now want Frank to testify. They plan to take him into protective custody. But Frank, while the police inspector (Robert Keith) has momentarily turned away, gives police the slip, leaving his dog (named Rembrandt because his owner is a painter) behind. The police think he is running to escape possible retaliation from the mob. So they contact Frank's wife, Eleanor (Ann Sheridan) to solicit her help in finding him. But she suspects he is actually running away from their unsuccessful marriage.
Later learning that her husband has a heart condition, Eleanor gets the needed medicine and goes looking for him, aided by a newspaperman, Danny Leggett (Dennis O'Keefe) who says he is looking for an exclusive story. The two conduct their own investigation, giving only limited aid to the police. But the police remain determined, since they need a trial witness. Eleanor is aided in her search by Frank's efforts to contact her. In a letter left with a mutual contact he gives her cryptic instructions on how they can secretly meet. The instructions require that she remember a significant event from their life together. But she has trouble doing so.
As the search continues it is gradually revealed to the audience that Danny the newspaperman is really the killer. He is simply using Eleanor to find Frank. Once Eleanor figures out the cryptic reference, she and Danny go to a beachside amusement park at night and there manage to locate him. Wanting time alone with Frank, ostensibly to get his newspaper story and pay Frank $1,000 for it, Danny puts Eleanor on the roller coaster. As she rides she suddenly realizes what Danny has really been up to. But she is trapped until the ride ends in what becomes the frantic climax of the film.
As Eleanor finally gets off the roller coaster, Danny is on the verge of killing Frank. The two fight and shots ring out. Eleanor breathlessly arrives on the scene to discover that the police inspector has just shot the killer. She rushes to her husband and the two embrace.
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Directed by Norman Foster, produced by Howard Welsch, screenplay by Alan Campbell, Norman Foster and Ross Hunter (dialogue), based on the short-story Man on the Run by Sylvia Tate, starring Ann Sheridan as Eleanor Johnson, Dennis O'Keefe as Daniel Leggett, Robert Keith as Inspector Martin Ferris, John Qualen Mr. Maibus, Frank Jenks as Detective Shaw, Ross Elliott as Frank Johnson, Jane Liddell as Messnger Girl, Joan Shawlee as Blonde (as Joan Fulton), J. Farrell MacDonald as Sea Captain, Steven Geray as Dr. Arthur Hohler
Victor Sen Yung as Sam, Reiko Sato as Suzie (as Rako Sato), Syd Saylor as Sullivan and Tom Dillon as Joe Gordon (as Thomas P. Dillon)
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Source: Woman on the Run Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Wikimedia Foundation, Inc.. 18 February 2017. Web. 24 April 2017.
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White Water Rafting with a difference...
White Water Rafting in Squamish, BC with Power To Be, a non-profit offering inclusive adventures in nature for people living with a barrier or disability. Year-round programs are offered in Victoria and Vancouver, and include activities such as kayaking, canoeing, camping and more. To learn more, visit powertobe.ca
Also, a big thanks to Canadian Outback Rafting for hosting us all. What a fantastic team and river!
For live behind-the-scenes updates, follow me on Instagram: @DownieLive
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First of all, the underwear I swear by!
My Favourite Camera Backpack EVER!
DownieLive is a canadian behind-the-scenes adventure channel, hosted by me, Michael Downie. Thanks for watching (and reading all the way to the bottom). As always, I don't know where I'm going next, but I know I want you there with me.
See you in the next one.
-Mike