Travel to the designated village where Lurco is waiting for you. There will be a battle in this village and archers won't be very useful. What will be useful are units with Skills that target multiple units. You can find a chest left of Lurco on the back of a house.
In this mess
You can request food or information. If you request food, he will ask for something in return. I don't know about the consequences of this decision, but it seems that asking for food might be the better choice. After speaking to him, the quest will be over. To obtain the next quest, capture at least 5 sectors and wait for a world event that will unlock the next quest, the End of The Aedui.
I am now the mother of 5 kids (1 girl followed by 4 little boys in a row) cooking in my own kitchen in Southern Utah. We live on a beautiful hobby farm of 12 acres that look over our beloved white mountains.I grow a massive garden, can the produce I grow, cook from scratch daily, homeschool the kids, and run Bless this Mess with my husband Thomas.
The school-to-prison pipeline is the result of zero-tolerance policies and practices that push children out of school and into the juvenile or criminal justice system. Zero-tolerance policies are rooted in the belief that removing students from schools when they when they misbehave makes schools safer. These policies forget we are talking about children and fail to treat each student as an individual by looking at their individual circumstances and learning challenges. This results in harsh school policies and reliance on the use of police and punitive actions such as suspensions, expulsions, and school-arrests to deal with student misbehavior. Contrary to what most people believe, this is not the way schools have always operated, and there is no educational data or research to support this is helping our schools or children. The school to prison pipeline also ends up discriminating against children of color.
For years, many of us have downplayed the true messiness of project work. We omit that topic from conversations that we have with the students who enroll in our courses, the companies that sign on to engage student teams, and the administrators who want to hear how satisfied students are with their projects and their high-priced MBA educations.
Incorporate learning into existing activities. Most programs have orientation phases where they deliver content about effective teaming. At this stage, enthusiasm is generally high, so it is an ideal time to introduce student teams to the cycle of emotions in project work (see the graphic below).
Some LEPE schools devise premortem exercises that prompt students to think about past teams they have been part of or observed. Students are asked what went awry on those projects and what might go awry on this one. Such exercises create powerful and memorable frameworks that prepare students for what they inevitably will face during the project lifecycle. When emotional events are not a surprise, students are able to accept the bumps along the way as integral parts of the learning process.
All the heartiness of a baked potato comes together in this rich and fast-as-can-be Instant Pot Loaded Baked Potato Soup, topped with shredded cheddar, crispy bacon bits, green onion, and sour cream.
There are some soups out there that I could eat by the bucket full, and this happens to be one of them. I absolutely love the comfort food kings that are baked potatoes, and any chance that I can make a remixed variation of them (or even the regular, old, classic version), count me in.
Soups are some of my favorite dishes to enjoy, but they often take a lot of time to make, between chopping up a bunch of vegetables and letting the batch simmer for an hour or two to get the flavor just right. But this Instant Pot Loaded Baked Potato Soup comes together in well under an hour thanks to -- you guessed it -- the Instant Pot!
Because there's not much chicken broth added to this soup, it actually thickens quite nicely on its own without adding any thickeners. The starchiness of the potatoes as they cook under pressure contributes to the thickness. Plus, adding a cup of cream at the end also gives it a nice silky and rich texture.
Getting messy in the sheets has been a taboo we've wanted to bust for a while. Whether you love it or hate it, do it with someone or with yourself we're here to empower your sexy choices + help save those sheets!
Ohio alt-country singer Arlo McKinley recently announced a tour and revealed that a followup to 2020's great Die Midwestern was on the way, and today the album has been announced. It's called This Mess We're In, and it comes out July 15 via Oh Boy Records, the label co-founded by the late John Prine, who was personally won over by Arlo's music before passing. Like Die Midwestern, the new album was produced by Matt Ross-Spang (Margo Price, Jason Isbell, etc), and Arlo's band for it included former Wilco drummer Ken Coomer, Lucero keyboardist Rick Steff, and Will Sexton on guitar. A string section was brought in this time too.
Arlo cites Nick Cave and Nick Drake as influences on this album, and you can hear that coming through in lead single "Stealing Dark From The Night Sky," which has a darker, more melancholic vibe than most of Die Midwestern without abandoning his usual rustic twang. Arlo says:
Tamson Pietsch: [00:01:59] Cecil George Harris used a penknife to scratch 16 words into the fender of his tractor. Those words changed the way courts across the common law world think about what can be accepted as a document and what makes a valid legal will. Helping us to make sense of this is one of our well-loved collaborating historians, Katherine Biber.
Katherine Biber: [00:11:17] The courts create all these kind of criteria and checklists in order to try and govern their thinking through what is otherwise an incredibly emotional minefield. You can see that these are grieving parties. These are often parties in dispute. These are often people who are left to take care of a mess after a person has died. And the court needs to wade through all of that grief and anger and pain and inconvenience and come up with a technical legal answer.
Katherine Biber: [00:27:31] So his wife, Julie, whilst she accepted that the text message, did have some testamentary features. She also argued that he never sent it. She argued that by not sending it, that meant he had not made his mind up.
Voice Actor: [00:37:24] To be divided equally by agreed market value amongst all of the above named beneficiaries of this will. If any items in this method of choice are disputed, then such items shall go to the beneficiary demonstrating the greatest financial need.
The YWCA of Pueblo honored over 30 women Thursday night at its 14th annual Tribute to Women event -- a dinner that honors exceptional women in Pueblo who have made a significant impact in their field of work, community or in personal endeavors. The dinner, held at the Pueblo Convention Center, attracted hundreds of people who got to enjoy cocktails, a meal and a speech from keynote speaker Vicki Lawrence. Lawrence, an entertainer and comedian who is best known as a cast member of "The Carol Burnett Show," spoke with The Pueblo Chieftain before taking the stage at the dinner. She said her message to the audience was going to be a simple one, and one that has served her well her entire life. "My message will be to laugh," she said. "I think it's the key to life and I think it's important." Lawrence lives in Long Beach, Calif., now and said she travels to Colorado often to visit her daughter who is an associate professor at Colorado State University-Fort Collins. Lawrence said Thursday was her first time visiting Pueblo. Lawrence tours across the country mainly doing her own show, "Vicki Lawrence and Mama: a Two-Woman Show" and sometimes doing speaking engagements such as what she did for the Tribute to Women event. "I don't speak as much as I'm on the road with my one-woman show," she said. "But I enjoy speaking to audiences. It's kind of cathartic because I find out we're all in this mess together." Lawrence spoke about her time working on "The Carol Burnett Show," which she joined right out of high school, fondly. "I was very lucky to grow up there and train there," she said. "We just had a blast." Thirty-one community women were honored at the dinner in four different categories including community service, professional achievement, triumph over adversity and young leader. The YWCA of Pueblo offers critical domestic violence services and empowers 3,500 individuals annually in Pueblo through securing shelter, promoting self-sufficiency and providing education. ryans@chieftain.com 2ff7e9595c
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