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United States Air Force Lockheed MC-130P Hercules, 65-0993.
C/n 382-4156.
Shannon 16th September 2014.
ZIPPO 22 from 9SOS after landing on Rwy 06.
Français/French.
VL2011-0265-007.
20 octobre 2011.
Courcelette, QC.
Deux militaires membres du Royal 22e Régiment s’affrontent dans un jeu de pugilat lors d'une journée sportive organisée le jeudi 20 octobre 2011 à Courcelette, QC, dans le cadre du 97e anniversaire du Royal 22e Régiment.
Tous les athlètes des trois bataillons et les 22 du Centre d’instruction du Secteur du Québec de la Force terrestre (SQFT) ont fourni d’excellentes performances dans leurs disciplines respectives. C’est lors de la toute dernière finale que fut déterminé le gagnant. Pour la première fois, depuis que ces jeux existent, le 2e R22eR est reparti avec la victoire. C’est donc partie égale puisque le 1er R22eR avait gagné l’an dernier et le 3e R22eR l’année précédente. Les prochains jeux risquent d’être très intéressants.
Photo par: Sergent Jean-François Néron.
Section Imagerie Valcartier.
Copyright © 2011 MDN-DND.
- - - - -
English/Anglais.
VL2011-0265-007.
20 October 2011.
Courcelette, QC.
Two soldiers from the Royal 22e Régiment compete in a fighting/boxing game at a sports day held Thursday, October 20, 2011 in Courcelette, QC, to celebrate the 97th anniversary of the Royal 22nd Regiment.
All athletes of the three battalions and 22 from the Land Force Quebec Area Training Centre have provided excellent performance in their respective disciplines. It was during the very last final that the winner was determined. For the first time since those games have been started, the 2nd R22eR walked away with the victory. So it's equal parts as the 1st R22eR won last year and the 3rd R22eR won two years ago. The next games will be very interesting.
Photo by: Sgt Jean-François Neron.
Valcartier Imaging Section.
Copyright © 2011 DND-MDN
Harriet A. Washington, an award-winning medical writer and editor, will speak on her book “Medical Apartheid: The Dark History of Medical Experimentation on Black Americans from Colonial Times to the Present” on Thursday, September 22, from 5:30 until 8 p.m. in Dillard Auditorium of the Anderson Conference Center on the campus of Winston-Salem State University (WSSU).
The program, which is free and open to the public, is being sponsored by WSSU’s Center of Excellence for the Elimination of Health Disparities (CEEHD), School of Health Sciences, Center for Community Safety and the Northwest Community Care Network. To reserve a seat for the program, call 779-7361 or e-mail asstchan@wssu.edu by September 12.
“The past health and healthcare history of African Americans has had its impact on the unrelenting health disparities that are evident today,” said Dr. Sylvia, A. Flack, director of the CEEHD. “We know that the mortality rate for African Americans is higher than whites and that African Americans experience higher rates of most diseases including diabetes, obesity, strokes, and cancer. While we focus our efforts on eliminating health disparities that lead to these and other health statistics, Dr. Washington has done an excellent job of chronicling the history that has brought us to this point.”
“Medical Apartheid” is the first social history of medical research affecting African Americans and was chosen one of Publisher’s Weekly’s Best Books of 2006. Written while Washington was a Research Fellow in Ethics at Harvard Medical School, the book also acknowledges that African Americans were not the only group that has been exposed to medical experimentation in the early history of medicine in this country. Yet, she sees that blacks were harmed to a greater extent because of slavery and racism.
“We know that access to medical care, particularly preventive care, is extremely important if we are to eliminate heath disparities, and that there is a level of distrust among African Americans in particular because of the history Washington recounts in this book,” Flack added. “Having her with us to provide a historical background on this issue will certainly be enlightening and I believe an interesting presentation.”
The Center of Excellence for the Elimination of Health Disparities
The Center of Excellence for the Elimination of Health Disparities is an interdisciplinary, intra-institutional applied health services and research center. Its mission is to improve minority health outcomes and eliminate health disparities within the community, state and nation through research, education and community outreach activities.
Cambridgeshire's Callum Guest (No 4) stoically sees out the first day's play, at Tynemouth Cricket Club, in a NCCA Championship Eastern Division Two fixture with Northumberland. Guest's 84 not out (off 186 balls) helped the visitors to a lead of 188.
After winning an important toss on a cloudy morning, the visitors capitalised on a very helpful pitch, which overnight had sweated profusely beneath covers, to skittle Northumberland for less than a hundred, before going on to build a decent lead. Fortunate with the weather, which became progressively sunnier and enabled a full day's play.
Ashleigh Cox (6-26 from 11 overs) cut a swathe through the Northumberland batting. Ben Clilverd took 3-22 from 9.1. Andrew Jones (20) and captain-wicketkeeper Stuart Poynter (19) stood between the hosts and serious embarrassment.
Replying, Cambridgeshire lost a batter to the second ball of the innings and another to the last. In between, Northumberland's bowlers had a pretty torrid time. The visitors recovered strongly from 77-4, thanks chiefly to the ultra-cautious Guest. He figured in useful partnerships with Dan Andrew (36) and Cox (32). Guest and Andrew added 67 for the fifth wicket, Guest and Cox 65 for the seventh. No 3 Yousuf Choudhary hit 32. Jones's figures, the pick for Northumberland, were 15-65-3.
Match statistics
Northumberland versus Cambridgeshire @ Tynemouth Cricket Club
National Counties Cricket Association [NCCA] Championship, Eastern Division Two, day one of three (maximum 110 overs, 11am start, 7pm finish)
Admission: free. Programme: £2 (12 pages). Attendance: 74 (h/c). Cambridgeshire won the toss and elected to field. Northumberland 93 off 31.1 overs (Andrew Jones 20, Ashleigh Cox 6-26, Ben Clilverd 3-22) trail by 188 runs Cambridgeshire 281-8 off 78 overs (Callum Guest 84 not out, Dan Andrew 36, Andrew Jones 3-65). Umpires: Ian Warne, Barbir Noor
[on day two, Cambridgeshire (330-8 declared off 88.3 overs) went on to win, by an innings and 38 runs. They were awarded 24 points, Northumberland (93 and 199 off 58.5 overs) three]
33012 on rear ( with 20142 / 20227 on front ) 1Z33 10.22 from Harrow-on-the-Hill after reversing at Claydon L&NE Jn.
29/04/18
We presented our Time Machine at Marinovators 2017, an annual showcase for young makers in Marin County.
Our Time Machine was created by the Maker Art class taught by Fabrice Florin and Edward Janne at the Lycée Français in Sausalito in winter 2017. Our 4th and 5th graders designed and built their own scenes from the past, present and future -- from the age of dinosaurs to the 50th century. This interactive art exhibit combines art, technology and storytelling -- using Arduino, motions, lights and sounds.
Many of our students and their parents were on hand to demonstrate this innovative after-school project to dozens of visitors of all ages. Everyone seemed to enjoy their experience, and it was a great opportunity for the kids to get the recognition they deserve. This innovative after-school project helps children develop their creative and collaborative skills -- and the confidence that they can help change the world.
We hosted this exhibit with Tam Makers, our makerspace in Mill Valley, where many of the artifacts for the Time Machine were fabricated, based on the children’s designs. We also invited visitors to make their own Tam Makers badges with LEDs, laser cut shapes, and color markers. They created some ingenious badges, and wore them proudly at the show.
It was a great way to celebrate art and science and encourage children to build a better world.
Marinovators took place on Saturday, April 22, from 10am to 3pm, at the College of Marin in Kentfield. Our Tam Makers booth was in Room #245 in the new Academic Center.
Learn more about our Time Machine: bit.ly/time-machine-lycee-2017
Learn more about our Maker Art classes: fabriceflorin.com/2016/02/14/teaching-maker-art/
Learn more about Tam Makers: www.tammakers.org/
Learn more about Marinovators: marinovators.org/
Comet 41P/Tuttle-Giacobini-Kresak passes Galaxy NGC3556 and planetary nebula NGC 3587 2017-03-22 from Mayhil NM
In Park street, Taunton on the 22 from Wellington. It's next run will be town service 15.
Thursday 1 Jan. 2015
This was collected from a single afternoons walk at Pt Prime.
Range from a 13 mm Anti Tank bullet, .303 Arms to ..22 from locals hunting rabbits in years gone by.
There is one silver .303, not sure what that was used for. Lot's of .303 shells that are corroding from the salt in the area.
A couple of bent .303 bullets that hit something very hard.
Most of these are from around WWII.
.303 cac vi 12 16 Rifle
(CAC Colonial Ammunition Co., Auckland, NEW ZEALAND or
CAC Colonial Ammunition Co. Melbourne, AUSTRALIA)
7.62x52r 7n1 Sniper rifle
p s remington magnum rifle (Pointed Soft?)
PMC (Sidewinder .22LR Ammunitiion .22 Long Rifle)
federal 38 special revolver
W-W 45 AUTO hand gun
FN 50 9mm ? Flat nose? hand gun
Builder 3rd Class Nicholas T. Emmons (left) and Builder 2nd Class Anthony M. Herrera, both Seabees from Naval Mobile Construction Battalion 3, Port Hueneme, Calif., prepare to install a desk Dec. 27, 2010, at Kandahar Airfield, Afghanistan. Emmons, 22, from Selmer, Tenn., and Herrera, 27, from San Diego, are members of a naval camp maintenance detachment deployed in support of Combined Joint Special Operation Task Force – Afghanistan. (U.S. Army photo by Staff Sgt. Jeremy D. Crisp / Special Operations Task Force – South).
Sanded it down some (not to the point of being perfect, but at least enough so the primer would bite) and applied a coat of automotive primer.
For the "Art Goes Bowling" show, organized by Zombo Gallery and Arsenal Lanes.
Show Info:
ART GOES BOWLING
Opening: Aug 22 from 6-9pm
Big Closing Party: Labor Day 8pm-Midnight
Where: Arsenal Bowling Lanes in Lawrenceville.
What : 100 Bowling Pins - 100 Artists.
100 of Pittsburgh's Coolest Artists will each get one used bowling pin to:
Paint, Carve, Airbrush, Decopauge Photos or Collages, mosiac, etc on their bowling pin. Pick up starts Friday June 27th from 5-7:30pm and Sunday the 29th at 6pm during the closing of the Tattoo Art show.
The pins will be displayed at Arsenal lanes in their bowling alley during the opening and closing parties. The pins can be sold for $25 each with the artist getting all the money. If they don't sell, the artists can have the pin back.
Some artists can volunteer to do a second pin for the free giveaway raffles at the alley during the show. Pins can be picked up/dropped off at Zombo Gallery any Friday from 5-7:30pm or Saturday at Noon - 4pm.
There will be no cover charge at the alley for the opening and closing.
Music and Hosting provided by DJ Zombo.
21 and over
PACIFIC OCEAN (Dec. 9, 2011) - Lt. Brian Gaffney signals as he prepares to launch an F/A-18F Super Hornet assigned to Strike Fighter Squadron (VFA) 22 from the flight deck of Nimitz-class aircraft carrier USS Carl Vinson (CVN 70). Carl Vinson and Carrier Air Wing (CVW) 17 are currently underway on a Western Pacific deployment. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist Seaman Nicolas C. Lopez)
** Interested in following U.S. Pacific Command? Engage and connect with us at www.facebook.com/pacific.command and twitter.com/PacificCommand and www.pacom.mil/
We presented our Time Machine at Marinovators 2017, an annual showcase for young makers in Marin County.
Our Time Machine was created by the Maker Art class taught by Fabrice Florin and Edward Janne at the Lycée Français in Sausalito in winter 2017. Our 4th and 5th graders designed and built their own scenes from the past, present and future -- from the age of dinosaurs to the 50th century. This interactive art exhibit combines art, technology and storytelling -- using Arduino, motions, lights and sounds.
Many of our students and their parents were on hand to demonstrate this innovative after-school project to dozens of visitors of all ages. Everyone seemed to enjoy their experience, and it was a great opportunity for the kids to get the recognition they deserve. This innovative after-school project helps children develop their creative and collaborative skills -- and the confidence that they can help change the world.
We hosted this exhibit with Tam Makers, our makerspace in Mill Valley, where many of the artifacts for the Time Machine were fabricated, based on the children’s designs. We also invited visitors to make their own Tam Makers badges with LEDs, laser cut shapes, and color markers. They created some ingenious badges, and wore them proudly at the show.
It was a great way to celebrate art and science and encourage children to build a better world.
Marinovators took place on Saturday, April 22, from 10am to 3pm, at the College of Marin in Kentfield. Our Tam Makers booth was in Room #245 in the new Academic Center.
Learn more about our Time Machine: bit.ly/time-machine-lycee-2017
Learn more about our Maker Art classes: fabriceflorin.com/2016/02/14/teaching-maker-art/
Learn more about Tam Makers: www.tammakers.org/
Learn more about Marinovators: marinovators.org/
A USAF CV-22 from the 7th Special Operations Squadron or the 352nd Special Operations Wing based at RAF Mildenhall, runs through a demo of the aircraft capabilities at the Royal International Air Tattoo at RAF Fairford.
Cotuit Kettleers 3rd Baseman, Brian Harrision 22, from Furman. Photo by Rick Heath (harrison,brian22-b)
War memorial - Church of St.Michael the Archangel, Halam, Nottinghamshire
In the evening of 10th April 1943 Lancaster Ed823 took off from RAF Winthorpe as part of a six week course in training pilots of lighter aircraft to handle heavier ones - 8 miles out from the airfield it crashed at Halam with the loss of all 7 crewmen.
Flight Sergeant Leonard Wentworth Lean Pilot aged 22 from Sydney Australia, buried at Newark
Sergeant Frank Dunkin, Flight engineer aged 21 from NSW Australia, buried at Newark
Flying Officer Edward Lambert, navigator, aged 34 from Bolton Lancs aged 34, buried in Fleetwood cemetary
Sergeant Henry Utley Oxspring, Bomb aimer, aged 27 buried in Hoyland Nether cemetery Barnsley
Wireless operator William Shearer Lindsay (Jack) Graham from Glasgow aged 20, buried in Glasgow western necropolis
Flight Sergeant Raymond David Lewis from Saskatchewan Canada, aged 22 buried at Newark
Sergeant William Stephenson aged 21 , 2nd gunner from Leicester, buried in Gilroes cemetery.
Harriet A. Washington, an award-winning medical writer and editor, will speak on her book “Medical Apartheid: The Dark History of Medical Experimentation on Black Americans from Colonial Times to the Present” on Thursday, September 22, from 5:30 until 8 p.m. in Dillard Auditorium of the Anderson Conference Center on the campus of Winston-Salem State University (WSSU).
The program, which is free and open to the public, is being sponsored by WSSU’s Center of Excellence for the Elimination of Health Disparities (CEEHD), School of Health Sciences, Center for Community Safety and the Northwest Community Care Network. To reserve a seat for the program, call 779-7361 or e-mail asstchan@wssu.edu by September 12.
“The past health and healthcare history of African Americans has had its impact on the unrelenting health disparities that are evident today,” said Dr. Sylvia, A. Flack, director of the CEEHD. “We know that the mortality rate for African Americans is higher than whites and that African Americans experience higher rates of most diseases including diabetes, obesity, strokes, and cancer. While we focus our efforts on eliminating health disparities that lead to these and other health statistics, Dr. Washington has done an excellent job of chronicling the history that has brought us to this point.”
“Medical Apartheid” is the first social history of medical research affecting African Americans and was chosen one of Publisher’s Weekly’s Best Books of 2006. Written while Washington was a Research Fellow in Ethics at Harvard Medical School, the book also acknowledges that African Americans were not the only group that has been exposed to medical experimentation in the early history of medicine in this country. Yet, she sees that blacks were harmed to a greater extent because of slavery and racism.
“We know that access to medical care, particularly preventive care, is extremely important if we are to eliminate heath disparities, and that there is a level of distrust among African Americans in particular because of the history Washington recounts in this book,” Flack added. “Having her with us to provide a historical background on this issue will certainly be enlightening and I believe an interesting presentation.”
The Center of Excellence for the Elimination of Health Disparities
The Center of Excellence for the Elimination of Health Disparities is an interdisciplinary, intra-institutional applied health services and research center. Its mission is to improve minority health outcomes and eliminate health disparities within the community, state and nation through research, education and community outreach activities.
Arriva 1595, a 2015 Wright Streetlite DF Max Micro Hybrid, reg no NK15AAU, seen on 20/3/18 entering Durham Bus Station, whilst operating Service 22 from Sunderland. The vehicle is allocated to Durham Belmont Depot.
Reg.no: NL15AAU
Fleet No: 1595
Chassis and Body: Wright Streetlite DF Max Micro Hybrid
Seating: B44F
Company: Arriva North East
Depot: Durham Belmont
Year in Service 2015
Location: Entering Durham Bus Station
Arriving on RWY 22 from Tarbes (LDE).
Operator: Ryanair UK
Aircraft: Boeing 737-8AS(WL)
Registration: G-RUKH
Callsign: Blue Max 523 // RUK523
Location: London (STN / EGSS)
Arriving at Stand 22 from Edinburgh (EDI), to take me to Rotterdam (RTM).
Operator: BA CityFlyer
Aircraft: Embraer ERJ-190SR
Registration: G-LCYO
Callsign: Flyer 57J // CFE57J
Location: London (LCY / EGLC)
Maj. Gen. Walter E. Piatt, 10th Mountain Division (LI) and Fort Drum commander, Command Sgt. Maj. Samuel J. Roark, command sergeant major of 10th Mountain Division, and Dr. Laurie Rush, Fort Drum Cultural Resources manager, placed a wreath Nov. 2 at the grave of an Italian soldier buried at the Prisoner of War (POW) Cemetery outside of Fort Drum, New York.
Pvt. Rino Carlutti died Oct. 17, 1944 at the age of 22 from injuries sustained in an automobile accident. He was born in the village of Daniele del Friuli, Udine, located northwest of Venice.
The wreath-laying was scheduled in conjunction with National Unity Day and Armed Forces Day in Italy, which is observed annually on Nov. 4. It commemorates the victory of Italy over Austria-Hungary in 1918 during World War I.
The POW Cemetery, located off Route 26 between Evans Mills and Great Bend, just outside Fort Drum's Gas Alley Gate. Adjacent to Sheepfold Cemetery, the POW Cemetery is the burial site for six German POWs and one Italian POW.
U.S. Army Photo by Staff Sgt. Michael Reinsch
Faisal Shaikh (senior, Physics, age 22, from Saudi Arabia) is photographed for the #WeAreChico series on Wednesday, August 29, 2018 in Chico, Calif. When asked: What inspired you to get into physics? "My dad inspired me since I was a kid. He used to work with airplanes, fixing electrical equipment. Aviation was very heavily physics-related. He'd bring me to work, and looking at all the big planes always wowed me. That was the main thing that got me interested in physics.
I feel like I want to take it somewhere else - I really want to get into geophysics and geosciences. But that was my original inspiration."
(Jason Halley/University Photographer/CSU Chico)
Cotuit Kettleers 3rd Baseman, Brian Harrision 22, from Furman. Photo by Grace Archambeault (IMG_0368)
"Something exciting is happening at the corner of 6th and 15th Street in Manhattan! If you are in the New York City area looking for the art of Burning Man and the like, visit Imagine Gallery, an art zone co-created by the visionary real estate company, Stonehenge in partnership with three New York artist Burners: Shannon Shiang, Peter Ruprecht and Yarrow Mazzetti. From Feb.19th to March 4th, we join the ongoing group exhibition as guest artists, showing both original solo paintings, collaborations that were live-painted on stages around the world, plus precious and giant reproductions. On Saturday, Feb. 22, from 6 - 10 pm we will be there at Imagine Gallery signing Net of Being books and CoSM Journals. At 7pm on Saturday, we'll offer an illustrated talk about Visionary Culture with an update on our most exciting upcoming project, the building of Entheon, CoSM's sanctuary of visionary art."
Rocky Jewell (4th year, Mechanical Engineering, age 22, from Sacramento, CA) is photographed for the #WeAreChico series on Thursday, March 29, 2018 in Chico, Calif. "The large workload of school, how it comes in waves, can be quite stressful. Managing your time is really hard. You have four projects, and two papers, taking six classes, and it's easy to feel like you're going crazy. I wake up early, have a cup of coffee, think about my day and try to plan on how I'll get through it.
But it's a lot to balance. Dealing with family life, trying to stay healthy and eating the right food, trying to feel safe and be a part of the community, getting homework and projects done on time, that's really stressful. I live with my girlfriend, and she's stressed out about school. She's pre-med, and she needs straight As. I want straight As and I get a good GPA, but sometimes I feel like I can't take on the stress that comes with it. When she's stressed out, I feel stressed out too, but I don't feel like I can be. I want to be balanced for her. We've worked out a balance where we really back each other up when the other one is dealing with more at the time.
The biggest help is that I have a strong relationship with her and my friends, and I'm able to communicate with people. I can complain about professors who are piling on, or vent about how my workload sucks. Having a group of people I can go to helps me calm down. I keep a daily journal and I keep track of what happened. It helps to go back on weeks that were easier and find motivation, or to look at challenges and how I got through them."
(Jason Halley/University Photographer/CSU Chico)
CHICAGO (Perspectives Charter Schools) -- Perspectives Mentor Breakfast on Tuesday, October 22 from 8:00-10:00am at Perspectives High School of Technology.
Every year hundreds of juniors from across the Perspectives network participate in a five-week internship throughout the Chicagoland area. The program aims to provide every student with the opportunity to form a healthy relationship with a professional role model, help them develop awareness of career choices, and to introduce them to the culture of the business arena. Over the years, hundreds of companies and organizations have provided this valuable experience, where students work in the offices of their mentors on Wednesdays from 9 am to 3 pm for five weeks during the winter.
Photo credit: David Terry
Made about 1818-22 from rosewood, mahogany, brass, marble and other stones by Isaac Vose and Son, Boston.
VMC Image acquired on 04-12-2020 at 01:59:45 at an altitude of 474.77 km above Mars, on Mars Express orbit number 21392. Image #18 out of 22 from this observation.
Credit: ESA - European Space Agency, creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/igo/ CC BY-SA 3.0 IGO
59005 'KENNETH J PAINTER' heads past Norton Bavant with train 7O48 , 09:22 from Merehead to Hamworthy Junction.
[12-04-2007]
Warren Gans (24) from Newlands and Shaun Wakelin (22) from Pinelands attempt to unofficially be the first people to slackline on Table Mountain. Warren was successful on his first attempt to cross the 20m line across Union Ravine. Shaun gave up after two falls from the line. This groundbreaking event launched the lead up to the BANFF Mountain Film World Tour 2009, sponsored by Cape Union Mart in partnership with K-Way, Black Diamond, Hi-Tec and Deuter” . Pictures by Greg Beadle. Worldwide Copyright 2009 - www.gregbeadle.com
CHICAGO (Perspectives Charter Schools) -- Perspectives Mentor Breakfast on Tuesday, October 22 from 8:00-10:00am at Perspectives High School of Technology.
Every year hundreds of juniors from across the Perspectives network participate in a five-week internship throughout the Chicagoland area. The program aims to provide every student with the opportunity to form a healthy relationship with a professional role model, help them develop awareness of career choices, and to introduce them to the culture of the business arena. Over the years, hundreds of companies and organizations have provided this valuable experience, where students work in the offices of their mentors on Wednesdays from 9 am to 3 pm for five weeks during the winter.
Photo credit: David Terry
Cotuit Kettleers 3rd Baseman, Brian Harrision 22, from Furman. Photo by Grace Archambeault (IMG_0367)
29.09.22. From the rear window of 105N trailer 534 between Kazimierz Gorniczy Petlas and Sosnowiec Glowny. They show the fascinating mix of wrong road working because of new track being laid, single track roadside reservations and private rights-of-way through the countryside.
(See in the correct order in the Album "Tramwaje Śląskie route 27")