Tumgik
#Castello Hansen
eksopolitiikka · 11 months
Text
Kirja: Saucers, Spooks & Kooks
kirjoittanut Jack Brewer Adam Gorightlylta on tullut kirja Saucers, Spooks and Kooks: UFO Disinformation in the Age of Aquarius. Hän on UFOihin liittyviin hömppähuijauksiin perehtynyt kirjoittaja ja tutkija, ja suosittelen lukemaan hänen uusimman Daily Grail Publishingin kustantaman teoksen. Kirjassa sukelletaan UFO-genren usein kyseenalaisiin tarinoihin, ja siinä käsitellään erityisesti New Mexicon Dulcessa sijaitsevan väitetyn maanalaisen avaruusolentotukikohdan […] https://eksopolitiikka.fi/ufot/kirja-saucers-spooks-kooks/
2 notes · View notes
dettaglihomedecor · 5 years
Photo
Tumblr media
La casa di Knud Erik Hansen: un castello del XVII secolo con arredi esclusivi
0 notes
craft2eu · 7 years
Text
Flóra Vági & Castello Hansen: Idar-Oberstein vom 04.04. bis 18.06.2017
Flóra Vági & Castello Hansen: Idar-Oberstein vom 04.04. bis 18.06.2017
Im Rahmen des Ausstellungsprogramms “Idar-Oberstein schmückt sich” wurde die  Ausstellung “Flóra Vági & Castello Hansen” in der Villa Bengel eröffnet. Flora Vagi stammt aus Ungarn, Castello Hansenist in Dänemark geboren. Eine Künstlerin und ein Künstler, die zunächst scheinbar gegensätzlicher nicht sein könnten, stellen gemeinsam aus: Vagi arbeitet hauptsächlich in Holz und Papier; Hansen vor…
View On WordPress
0 notes
Photo
Tumblr media
#Repost @sofia_platina ・・・ ÖGONSTENAR / Apple of my Eye 33 pieces in 33 different materials by 33 artists Welcome to the opening on Saturday 20th of October 14.00 – 16.00 The exhibition ÖGONSTENAR / Apple of my Eye is a collaboration between Sofia Björkman PLATINA Stockholm, Pia Stael von Holstein and Staffan Bengtsson from Gallery Kammaren in Lund. Artists: Karin Roy Andersson, Rut-Malin Barklund, Lena Bergestad Jonsson, Dovile Bernardisiute, Lisa Björke, Sofia Björkman, Rebecca Deans, Jenny Edlund, Sonja Ekman, Linnea Eriksson, Adam Grinovich, Karin Gyllerfelt, Castello Hansen, Daniela Hedman, Hanna Hedman, Aud Charlotte Ho Sook Sinding, Catarina Hällzon, Agnes Larsson, Mia Larsson, Hanna Liljenberg, Helena Johansson Lindell, Helena Lindholm, Agnieszka Knap, Åsa Lockner, Anna Norrgrann, Lena Olson, Chatrine Rinman, Margareth Sandström, Sanna Svedestedt Carboo, Ulrika Swärd, Mona Wallström, Annika Åkerfelt, Amanda Åkermo #smyckekonst #artjewelry #smyckekonstnär #platinastockholm #artjewellery #jewelryaddict #jewelryexhibition https://www.instagram.com/p/Bo-_BlRArYG/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=ne8x5yfiyt1f
1 note · View note
fashioncurrentnews · 6 years
Text
Portopiccolo, Trieste: va in scena il design
Immaginate di avere il meglio del design a portata di mano. Dimenticate però il caos delle fiere e anche la frenesia confusionaria del Salone del Mobile milanese. Pensatevi invece immersi in un rilassante paesaggio marino: una piccola insenatura nel golfo di Trieste.
Siete a Portopiccolo, a Sistiana, un borgo di mare con architettura a impatto zero e una posizione geografica unica, incastonata tra il Castello di Miramare e il Castello di Duino. Qui il prossimo weekend si svolge Portopiccolo DesignZone, una manifestazione dedicata al design declinato in tutte le sue manifestazioni: progetti, ma anche food, automobili, arte e moda.
Questa terza edizione dell’evento, organizzato da Margherita de Eccher, si concentra sul territorio del Nord Est con 20 marchi protagonisti, seguiti da aziende di Milano e Firenze, a sottolineare l’importanza sempre crescente del made in Italy.
Venire a DesignZone significa prima di tutto dedicarsi al design puro, visitando alcune delle residenze del borgo (da notare che sono tutte, ma proprio tutte, vista mare) arredate dallo studio  Zinelli & Perizzi, con il contributo, tra gli altri, di brand come Edra, Cassina, Vitra, Carl Hansen & Son, e con pezzi di Mendini, Stark, e dei fratelli Campana. Basta seguire le frecce gialle disseminate per il borgo per accadere agli appartamenti allestiti.
Passare il prossimo weekend a Portopiccolo vuol dire però anche assistere a speciali show cooking in Piazzetta, provare a guidare una Maserati sulle strade intorno al porticciolo, oppure guardare una sfilata di moda in riva al mare (il 20 maggio con Portopiccolo Fashion Night).
Inoltre, un’iniziativa speciale è dedicata all’architettura: su invito dello studio Super Luna, alcuni giovani progettisti hanno lavorato sull’idea di “Una stanza sul mare”, costruita su una piattaforma galleggiante. I visitatori possono così osservare i disegni e i modellini di queste “camere sull’acqua”, per sognare e immaginare di vivere il mare in una prospettiva diversa da quella abituale.
Il capitolo arte è affidato infine al laboratorio In-perfetti che studia progetti creativi e al lavoro più sperimentale dell’artista Franco Durante: la sua mostra “Arte Design Interaction: a colored life” inaugura sabato 19 maggio.
Portopiccolo DesignZone è aperta al pubblico e gratuita. Si consiglia la registrazione sul sito designzoneportopiccolo.com
L'articolo Portopiccolo, Trieste: va in scena il design sembra essere il primo su Vogue.it.
from Vogue.it https://ift.tt/2L1gmFa from Blogger https://ift.tt/2GjDlry
0 notes
there-are-the-stars · 8 years
Text
@doctorwho-the-fuck-are-you​ tagged me <3
Name: Sophie Ancestry: well my dads side of the family comes from an island off the coast of cornwall which is wales. So welsh Zodiac: Scorpio Where do you live: Australia How are you feeling today? V tired. Do not want to go to work tonight Favourite song right now: Something from Dear Evan Hansen.  Play any instruments? Uke and piano Are you craving anything? original doritos. not the extra cheesy shit (which I do love) What’s your signature scent? I dont think I have one???? Sound you love: Rain, light piano soundtracks, turning pages of books, full orchestras, my friends laughter Sounds you hate: fingernails on chalk boards AND on dried water colours, alarm clock beeping, porcelain plates on plates, unnecessary tapping, anything screeching
 I’m tagging: @mystic-mermaid-spiral @cats-and-castello @eastviks @sunshineandsongtime
2 notes · View notes
Photo
Tumblr media
Via. @carlos.silva_pt Kaori Juzu + Castello Hansen 👉🏼Opening tomorrow, March 20 at 6pm @galeria.reverso • • #kaorijuzu #castellohansen #galeriareverso #reversogallery #jewelleryexhibition #opening #exhibitions #lisboacool #lisboa #contemporaryjewellery #contemporaryjewelry #joyeriacontemporanea #joalheriacontemporanea #gioiellocontemporaneo #bijoucontemporain #AJF #ajfishere #klimt02 #TJA #jewelleryactivist #thejewelleryactivist
0 notes
athertonjc · 7 years
Text
Perennial Royalty: It’s Inbred by Allen Bush
Jack Schultz, News-Herald photo.
There are few families in American horticulture with four generations of successful nursery crops. There are even fewer nursery legends with a story so well remembered as that of Jack Schultz, the 88-year-old Schultz family patriarch and founder of Springbrook Gardens, wholesale perennials growers, in Mentor, Ohio.
Jack’s dad, Elmer, started Wayside Gardens in 1916 as a road stand.  Sales were good.  J.J. Grullemans became a partner in 1920. Grullemans focused on sales while Elmer Schultz preferred production. In the beginning the business was principally wholesale. The partners shuttled back and forth between production fields in Perry and Mentor, Ohio.
Jack started pulling weeds for Wayside Gardens as an 11-year-old in 1939. He liked the work. By the age of 13 he was running a crew of 20 kids. Jack said, “ Dad told me I could get more work out of them than any man could.”
In the early days, an estimated 60% of the Wayside wholesale production was shrubs. Schultz and Grullemans had a large contract with C.W. Stewart of New York for “20,000 of this AND 20,000 of that.” They grew 500-600 varieties of woody plants and perennials.
Wayside Gardens stayed afloat during the Depression.  “They went into the red one year,” Jack said. And that required cutting wood and doing anything to keep the crew working.
Elmer Schultz sold his share of Wayside Gardens to J.J. Grullemans in 1945 for $100,000. Son Jack stayed on. He loved nursery life. One day he was working with a crew, and his dad came along and said, “What are you working so hard for?”
Jack said. “Holy Christ, you never told me that before. It’s my job.”  His dad wanted him to quit, but Jack was happy with the work. “I was making 75 cents an hour.” When his dad sold his Wayside shares, Jack said, “I went to Grullemans and said, ‘I want a buck an hour.’ And they gave it to me real quick.”
Elmer, determined to get his son out of the nursery business, packed Jack off to the Greenbrier Military School in Lewisburg, West Virginia in 1945. Jack was 16.  While he was away his dad started growing plants around the house in Mentor, which became the start for Springbrook Gardens. “I only went to Greenbrier one year. I couldn’t stand it. I liked the military; I hated school,” Jack said.
Jack came home. He and his dad incorporated Springbrook Gardens in 1946. The property in Mentor grew to 20 acres and eventually to 53 acres. The land was bountiful. Elmer Schultz drilled Delphinium hybrid seed into the fertile soil. “We cut 10,000 flowering stems off that patch!” Jack said proudly. And mysteriously, “I could never do it again,” Jack added. “I don’t know why.”
The one—and only—bumper crop of Delphinium cut flowers in 1947 was wonderful in another important sense. Jack Schultz met his bride-to-be while he was peddling the flowers to local florists. Castello’s Florist became a favorite stop. “There she was. She came out of the office, wearing a plaid shirt that was tied in front of her. A picture of beauty,” Jack recalls. Mary Jane Castello was 19; Jack Schultz was 19. He was smitten. “That’s my wife,” he said. They courted for three years and were married in 1950.
Jim Wosley (L) and Jack Schultz (R) at Springbrook Gardens 1946.
Springbrook Gardens, including the 3rd generation of Schultz boys—John, Jim and Dave— began to grow their family business in the 1970s. The family stayed connected with Wayside Gardens. They contract grew for Wayside and also picked up Spring Hill and White Flower Farm. “We were doing a million poppies for Spring Hill every year,” Jack said.  “When we were shipping poppies it was 80 or 90 hours of work a week,” Dave said.
“We also signed a contract with Wayside for somewhere between $60,000-75,000 a year,” his dad added. “That was a lot of money back then.”
Wayside Gardens eventually became the largest retail, mail-order nursery in the country.  By 1960, the catalog stretched to 252 pages.  Wayside Gardens was sold to George W. Park Seed Company in Greenwood, South Carolina, in 1975.  The original flagship Wayside Gardens in Ohio had nurtured young nurserymen who later started their own nurseries— Bluestone Perennials, Bentley Nursery, Antioch Farm and Beardslee Nursery.  Over the years between the 1980s into the late 1990s, notable horticulturalists including John Elsley, Viki Ferreniea, Bill Funkhouser and Chris Hansen contributed their expertise to Geo. W. Park-owned Wayside Gardens in Greenwood, South Carolina.
Schultz family vacations were sometimes spent traveling to Litchfield, Connecticut, to see Bill Harris, the founder of White Flower Farm. Harris wrote the company catalog under the pseudonym Amos Petingill. Harris was an eccentric, but he liked Jack Schultz. Harris invited the Schultz family to stay at his home at White Flower Farm. “Nobody believed I was going to stay in his house. He was eccentric,” Jack said.
Harris told the kids that there wasn’t anything wrong with pot. “Mr. Harris, please,” the protective dad said.
The family turned in for the evening and was shortly awakened when they heard a whistle blowing outside.  “This is what they do in New York if you’re in trouble,” Jack explained. He looked out the window and saw Harris dressed in a nightgown and cap, holding a butcher’s knife. The next morning they learned he was sharpening a knife to make breakfast. “We were frightened, to say the least,” Dave said.
The Springbrook business grew steadily. The original nursery rows were 30” wide. Son Dave remembers when they’d mark rows with a string and plant 200’-500’ rows—by hand. “And then I’d move the string,” Dave said. Row after row. Eventually, the rows were tightened to 20” spacing and finally to beds with 10” spacing between the rows. Son Jim developed a tractor-drawn, five-row planter. Bare root crops were dug with a bed digger.
In the 1980s, Jack installed a geothermal heat pump in the greenhouse. “We were the first ones,” Jack said. The annual cost for propane had been running around $18,000-20,000 per year. “And we didn’t heat very warm.” The new geothermal unit brought the heating bill down to $3,000. Springbrook recovered the cost of the geothermal investment in “one year and three months,” Jack Schultz remembers.
It was quality that mattered most. Dave remembers they would be packing an order for 25 bare-root perennials of one variety and he’d get a radio call, “’Bring me one more.’ Everything had to be done right.”
Dave Schultz left the family business in 1998 to run Kurt Bluemel’s Florida growing operation. Disney World’s Animal Kingdom needed ornamental grasses—lots of them. Millions of grasses were planted. Then the hippos and elephants were turned into their new African savannah and quickly started grazing on the new plantings. No problem. There were plenty more ornamental grasses where they came from—Floraland Farms.
Floraland Nursery, St. Cloud, Florida.
Dave Schultz bought Floraland Farms in 2016. Disney remains a big customer. The Schultzes grow 100 different plants. Ornamental grasses top the nursery’s inventory items. They don’t do any flashy sales gimmicks. (Neither did Springbrook.) We’re going to always keep up quality. We’ll let the plants do the talking,” Dave said.
“I give Dave all the credit in the world for coming down here and running Bluemel’s Florida operation and eventually buying Floraland,” Jack said.
Hurricane Irma damage.
The Springbrook Gardens property was sold in 2014. The farm had become encircled by development. The City of Mentor bought the place with plans to turn it into a park.
That’s a very happy ending for one chapter of the Schultz nursery story, but it isn’t the end. Another generation has come along. Dave son’s Jason has been working at Floraland for ten years.
Jason, Jack and Dave Schultz 2017.
Hurricane Irma paid an unwelcome visit this past September. Trees were downed and buildings badly damaged. Plants were tossed around.
The nursery still waits on FEMA financing approval to rebuild barns, but the plants and nursery have survived.
The Schultzes don’t quit. “It’s inbred,” Dave said.
Perennial Royalty: It’s Inbred originally appeared on Garden Rant on November 29, 2017.
from Garden Rant http://gardenrant.com/2017/11/perennial-royalty-its-inbred.html
0 notes
turfandlawncare · 7 years
Text
Perennial Royalty: It’s Inbred by Allen Bush
Jack Schultz, News-Herald photo.
There are few families in American horticulture with four generations of successful nursery crops. There are even fewer nursery legends with a story so well remembered as that of Jack Schultz, the 88-year-old Schultz family patriarch and founder of Springbrook Gardens, wholesale perennials growers, in Mentor, Ohio.
Jack’s dad, Elmer, started Wayside Gardens in 1916 as a road stand.  Sales were good.  J.J. Grullemans became a partner in 1920. Grullemans focused on sales while Elmer Schultz preferred production. In the beginning the business was principally wholesale. The partners shuttled back and forth between production fields in Perry and Mentor, Ohio.
Jack started pulling weeds for Wayside Gardens as an 11-year-old in 1939. He liked the work. By the age of 13 he was running a crew of 20 kids. Jack said, “ Dad told me I could get more work out of them than any man could.”
In the early days, an estimated 60% of the Wayside wholesale production was shrubs. Schultz and Grullemans had a large contract with C.W. Stewart of New York for “20,000 of this AND 20,000 of that.” They grew 500-600 varieties of woody plants and perennials.
Wayside Gardens stayed afloat during the Depression.  “They went into the red one year,” Jack said. And that required cutting wood and doing anything to keep the crew working.
Elmer Schultz sold his share of Wayside Gardens to J.J. Grullemans in 1945 for $100,000. Son Jack stayed on. He loved nursery life. One day he was working with a crew, and his dad came along and said, “What are you working so hard for?”
Jack said. “Holy Christ, you never told me that before. It’s my job.”  His dad wanted him to quit, but Jack was happy with the work. “I was making 75 cents an hour.” When his dad sold his Wayside shares, Jack said, “I went to Grullemans and said, ‘I want a buck an hour.’ And they gave it to me real quick.”
Elmer, determined to get his son out of the nursery business, packed Jack off to the Greenbrier Military School in Lewisburg, West Virginia in 1945. Jack was 16.  While he was away his dad started growing plants around the house in Mentor, which became the start for Springbrook Gardens. “I only went to Greenbrier one year. I couldn’t stand it. I liked the military; I hated school,” Jack said.
Jack came home. He and his dad incorporated Springbrook Gardens in 1946. The property in Mentor grew to 20 acres and eventually to 53 acres. The land was bountiful. Elmer Schultz drilled Delphinium hybrid seed into the fertile soil. “We cut 10,000 flowering stems off that patch!” Jack said proudly. And mysteriously, “I could never do it again,” Jack added. “I don’t know why.”
The one—and only—bumper crop of Delphinium cut flowers in 1947 was wonderful in another important sense. Jack Schultz met his bride-to-be while he was peddling the flowers to local florists. Castello’s Florist became a favorite stop. “There she was. She came out of the office, wearing a plaid shirt that was tied in front of her. A picture of beauty,” Jack recalls. Mary Jane Castello was 19; Jack Schultz was 19. He was smitten. “That’s my wife,” he said. They courted for three years and were married in 1950.
Jim Wosley (L) and Jack Schultz (R) at Springbrook Gardens 1946.
Springbrook Gardens, including the 3rd generation of Schultz boys—John, Jim and Dave— began to grow their family business in the 1970s. The family stayed connected with Wayside Gardens. They contract grew for Wayside and also picked up Spring Hill and White Flower Farm. “We were doing a million poppies for Spring Hill every year,” Jack said.  “When we were shipping poppies it was 80 or 90 hours of work a week,” Dave said.
“We also signed a contract with Wayside for somewhere between $60,000-75,000 a year,” his dad added. “That was a lot of money back then.”
Wayside Gardens eventually became the largest retail, mail-order nursery in the country.  By 1960, the catalog stretched to 252 pages.  Wayside Gardens was sold to George W. Park Seed Company in Greenwood, South Carolina, in 1975.  The original flagship Wayside Gardens in Ohio had nurtured young nurserymen who later started their own nurseries— Bluestone Perennials, Bentley Nursery, Antioch Farm and Beardslee Nursery.  Over the years between the 1980s into the late 1990s, notable horticulturalists including John Elsley, Viki Ferreniea, Bill Funkhouser and Chris Hansen contributed their expertise to Geo. W. Park-owned Wayside Gardens in Greenwood, South Carolina.
Schultz family vacations were sometimes spent traveling to Litchfield, Connecticut, to see Bill Harris, the founder of White Flower Farm. Harris wrote the company catalog under the pseudonym Amos Petingill. Harris was an eccentric, but he liked Jack Schultz. Harris invited the Schultz family to stay at his home at White Flower Farm. “Nobody believed I was going to stay in his house. He was a crazy nut,” Jack said.
Harris told the kids that there wasn’t anything wrong with pot. “Mr. Harris, please,” the protective dad said.
The family turned in for the evening and was shortly awakened when they heard a whistle blowing outside.  “This is what they do in New York if you’re in trouble,” Jack explained. He looked out the window and saw Harris dressed in a nightgown and cap, holding a butcher’s knife. The next morning they learned he was sharpening a knife to make breakfast. “I thought he was coming to kill us,” Dave said.
The Springbrook business grew steadily. The original nursery rows were 30” wide. Son Dave remembers when they’d mark rows with a string and plant 200’-500’ rows—by hand. “And then I’d move the string,” Dave said. Row after row. Eventually, the rows were tightened to 20” spacing and finally to beds with 10” spacing between the rows. Son Jim developed a tractor-drawn, five-row planter. Bare root crops were dug with a bed digger.
In the 1980s, Jack installed a geothermal heat pump in the greenhouse. “We were the first ones,” Jack said. The annual cost for propane had been running around $18,000-20,000 per year. “And we didn’t heat very warm.” The new geothermal unit brought the heating bill down to $3,000. Springbrook recovered the cost of the geothermal investment in “one year and three months,” Jack Schultz remembers.
It was quality that mattered most. Dave remembers they would be packing an order for 25 bare-root perennials of one variety and he’d get a radio call, “’Bring me one more.’ Everything had to be done right.”
Dave Schultz left the family business in 1998 to run Kurt Bluemel’s Florida growing operation. Disney World’s Animal Kingdom needed ornamental grasses—lots of them. Millions of grasses were planted. Then the hippos and elephants were turned into their new African savannah and quickly started grazing on the new plantings. No problem. There were plenty more ornamental grasses where they came from—Floraland Farms.
Floraland Nursery, St. Cloud, Florida.
Dave Schultz bought Floraland Farms in 2016. Disney remains a big customer. The Schultzes grow 100 different plants. Ornamental grasses top the nursery’s inventory items. They don’t do any flashy sales gimmicks. (Neither did Springbrook.) We’re going to always keep up quality. We’ll let the plants do the talking,” Dave said.
“I give Dave all the credit in the world for coming down here and running Bluemel’s Florida operation and eventually buying Floraland,” Jack said.
Hurricane Irma damage.
The Springbrook Gardens property was sold in 2014. The farm had become encircled by development. The City of Mentor bought the place with plans to turn it into a park.
That’s a very happy ending for one chapter of the Schultz nursery story, but it isn’t the end. Another generation has come along. Dave son’s Jason has been working at Floraland for ten years.
Jason, Jack and Dave Schultz 2017.
Hurricane Irma paid an unwelcome visit this past September. Trees were downed and buildings badly damaged. Plants were tossed around.
The nursery still waits on FEMA financing approval to rebuild barns, but the plants and nursery have survived.
The Schultzes don’t quit. “It’s inbred,” Dave said.
Perennial Royalty: It’s Inbred originally appeared on Garden Rant on November 29, 2017.
from Garden Rant http://ift.tt/2AlJUv3
0 notes
soccerstl · 7 years
Text
Kurt Schumacher looks out from the clutch of teammates celebrating Peter Kickham’s goal on September 1, 2017
“It’s Schumacher’s Defense”. Those are the words that senior William “Billy” Hughes used on August 19th when I talked to him following the Jr. Billiken’s narrow 1-0 defeat of Chaminade in the season opener. I approached him post-game to discuss the ball he had cleared off the line behind his goalkeeper, Alec Meissner. It was one of two, with forward Will Rudder also contributing one following a set piece, to ensure the season opening win over the traditional rival that will also be their first hurdle during District play next month.
When I heard that from Goalkeeper Alec Meissner as well in the post-match discussion, I decided it was time to go to the source. I did that Friday, following another shutout win, this one over Glendale (Springfield) at home. Check out the audio link below, it’s only 3 minutes long.
http://soccerstl.net/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/SCHUMACHER-Kurt-SLUH-09-01-2017.mp3
As noted in the interview, Kurt’s been a starting centerback since his sophomore year at SLUH and has remained a constant since. With that track record, I’m not the first to take note of his importance, just the most recent. The first report I found discussed the work he and Alec Solverud offered in a key win over Webster Groves in 2015. Verzino joined the varsity last year and stepped into Solverud’s position, ensuring the team has the most experienced back line in the Conference this year. Check them out during the CBC Tournament this week.
2016 – 1st Team All-State
http://soccerstl.net/2016/11/18/2016-missouri-class-4-state-boys-soccer/
2016 also saw him recognized on the All Metro 3rd Team and All MCC 1st team with his centerback partner Cameron Verzino while Billy Hughes was 2nd Team. A couple of non-defenders – Louis Vacca and Pietro Nicastro – for SLUH were recognized on the Honorable Mention team.
2015 Kurt was All MCC Honorable Mention. There was a small group of sophomores recognized that year that are now leaders of their teams this year – Jack Edwards and Nick Dempster at CBC along with TJ Regnier and Steven Bibas from Vianney.
Underclassmen recognized on last year’s All Metro squad are listed below. Players to watch.
2016 All-Metro 1st TEAM Jack Edwards, M, CBC (2018) Joey Spotanski, F, Zumwalt South (2018)
2nd TEAM Caden Castello, D, Howell (2018) Corey Goede, M, Summit (2018) Nick Dempster, F, CBC (2018) Zach Barton, F, MRH (2019)
3rd TEAM Jake Hansen, MF, Marquette (2019) Steve Bibas, F, Vianney (2018) Braden Johnson, F, Zumwalt South (2019) Alec Mills, F, Edwardsville (2018)
#gallery-0-4 { margin: auto; } #gallery-0-4 .gallery-item { float: left; margin-top: 10px; text-align: center; width: 33%; } #gallery-0-4 img { border: 2px solid #cfcfcf; } #gallery-0-4 .gallery-caption { margin-left: 0; } /* see gallery_shortcode() in wp-includes/media.php */
Kurt Schumacher with Hughes, Verzino and Meissner on Aug 18, 2017
Kurt Schumacher vs Webster Groves in 2015
Kurt Schumacher vs Webster Groves in 2015
Kurt Schumacher vs Webster Groves in 2015
Kurt Schumacher Aug 18, 2017
Kurt Schumacher Aug 18, 2017
It’s Schumacher’s Defense "It's Schumacher's Defense". Those are the words that senior William "Billy" Hughes used on August 19th when I talked to him following the Jr.
0 notes