View allAll Photos Tagged Associate.
Associate Justice of the Arizona Supreme Court Clint Bolick speaking with attendees at the 2017 Constitution Day Lecture at the University Club at Arizona State University in Tempe, Arizona.
Please attribute to Gage Skidmore if used elsewhere.
Walmart associates had worked for days to wrap and display hundreds of gifts for Lacey’s House and its residents. They included a new grill (we couldn’t wrap that!), bicycles, a new high-tech vacuum, entertainment games, household staples and other items.
With all the hype associated with the recently released HP-15C Limited Edition calculator, it is worth remembering that the original HP-15C was released in the 1980's and many of them are still in active service among engineers and scientists around the world. Many of these look like the one in this photo!
This HP-15C (manufactured in 1983) has had a very hard and continuous working life, showing obvious signs of wear, but still works perfectly.
I am not sure that the HP's made today will last quite as well.
For some strange reason, this is one of the most viewed item in my photostream! Despite all the amazing and rare things I have in my collection, this beaten up old 15C is one of the most popular?!! Go figure ...
Associates : Sulk
Front cover
Associates/Beggars Banquet (1982)
ASCL 1
Artwork : Alan MacDonald / Associates
Photography : Peter Ashworth
Premier Member of Landscape Design Advisor
Mark Scott and his team design some of the most elegant landscapes and homes in Southern California and beyond.
For more on this member, visit us at www.landscape-design-advisor.com and be sure to follow
While I'm not a fan of hotels with women names I like them better than those containing traditional words - Park, City, Square and likes.
This were one of few shots from Rollei Prego 30 with film I unloaded from Minox 35 midroll after I discovered my repair attempt isn't too successful and shutter isn't closing (but I still got some pictures before problem returned). My Prego 30 overexposes - I learned this from previous rolls so I modified DX code of Paradies 100 (Kodak Gold?) film to ISO200 and think this is the way to use it.
Loads of fun to get to touch the primary controls of a C-17 Globemaster III. An experience I won't forget and much appreciate, thanks much Joint Base Lewis-McChord.
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Well I figure since it's Jet-uary 2017 around here, ought to as well post some C-17 pictures from Joint Base Lewis-McChord Airshow & Warrior Expo or JBLMAWE for short. With a wingspan of 169 feet 10 inches or 51.75 meters to winglet tips, a height to the top of the tail of 55 feet 1 inch or 16.79 meters, a 174 foot or 53 meter length - this is one big cargo jet. The Boeing C-17 Globemaster III also has four engines - each Pratt & Whitney F117-PW-100 turbofan engine capable of 40,440 pounds of thrust per engine. It's an incredible piece of kit, and awesome that it's at Joint Base Lewis-McChord.
I've got a Joint Base Lewis-McChord Airshow & Warrior Expo (JBLMAWE) album for you to see my other photos as I have time to develop: flic.kr/s/aHskFP6ZUh . Please check out the album for more event photos as I develop through the 2016-2017 winter!
PHOTO CREDIT: Joe A. Kunzler Photo, AvgeekJoe Productions, growlernoise-AT-gmail-DOT-com
Walmart associates gathered in the Hyper Building on the University of Arkansas campus to practice dance moves, enjoy activities and spend time together. The associates traveled to Fayetteville, Ark. to attend the 2011 Walmart Shareholders' Meeting. To watch the replay of the event, view videos, and join the conversation, visit www.walmartstores.com/shareholdersmeeting
Moore Offenhauser Racing Associates Special (1961) Engine 4100cc S4 Offenhauser
Entrant: The Louwman Collection
Driver: Static display
By the early 1960's the Indianapolis Roadster had evolved into a sleek and powerful racer. The driver sitting low and canted lay down engines.
This car was driven by Roger McCluskey, making his Indianapolis debut in 1961. McCluskey went on to compete in the 18 consequative Indianapolis 500 races.
The days of the front engined Roadster was limited, in 1961 Jack Brabham debuted a Cooper the first post war rear engined. 1961 was also the 50th anniversary of the race and the first race to run on the completly (except for the single yard of bricks, deliberatly left exposed) ) on asphalt
Goodwood Ref: 12-82
Shot at The Goodwood Festival of Speed 01:07:2011 Ref: 76-457
Please do not forget to visit the Flag Counter on the link above to record a visit from your country. So far 53 countries (last new country Luxembourg and 32 US states last new State Michigan) Last new overseas visitor USA last new US state visitor Massachusetts
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Tomoki Fujii, Associate Professor, Singapore Management University
Presentation: Poverty decomposition by regression: Application to Tanzania and Côte d’Ivoire
Ann Jeffers, Associate Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering chats with other Michigan Engineering faculty at a reception hosted by the ADVANCE Program and the Dean's Advisory Committee on Female Faculty (DACFF) celebrating women in leadership positions in the College of Engineering at the Ford Library on North Campus of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, MI on September 5, 2018.
Photo: Joseph Xu/Michigan Engineering, Communications & Marketing
As of 9/7/07, 98 / 100 of the first Google results for 'Kent Bye' (without quotes) are actually relevant to me.
That's quite different from just a few years ago where searching for my name would yield a ton of non-relevant results including lots of tournament brackets w/ players of last names of "Kent" getting bye rounds as well as people saying bye bye to a person named Kent in their salutation.
Now I'm posting this here because every now and again I do an egosearch. And I've noticed how it's changed a lot almost every time I look at it. Stuff that is at the top I wouldn't have thought of -- like the vlog post on the five things people don't know about me.
Who knows, this picture could get a ton of links and all of a sudden this could be the number one slot. I'll never be able to predict it.
But I think it's an interesting testament to three things.
1.) How Google's search has gotten so much better over the last 5 years -- I'm surprised w/ how many one-off comments I've made show up in the results.
2.) How I've increased the amount of information I've put out there associated w/ my name.
3.) How SEO-friendly my name is. As far as I can tell, there's not a lot of other "Kent Bye's" out there
What will this look like in 5 years? I have no idea. But maybe I'll do this every so often to keep a visual record of it to be able to quickly look back on it.
There's archive.org to look at old websites, but there's no Google Search archive where you can do a Google search and look at the results from 3 years ago. I'm still waiting for The Google Search Archive.
METHODOLOGY:
* I changed my Google search preferences to show the first 100 results instead of 10
* I saved the HTML file of the first 100 results to my desktop.
* Then I opened file:///Users/kent/Desktop/search.html in Paparazzi! screencap program
Walmart associates gathered in the Hyper Building on the University of Arkansas campus to practice dance moves, enjoy activities and spend time together. The associates traveled to Fayetteville, Ark. to attend the 2011 Walmart Shareholders' Meeting. To watch the replay of the event, view videos, and join the conversation, visit www.walmartstores.com/shareholdersmeeting
Corian molded parts seamed over marine plywood structural frames.
Fabrication by Associated Fabrication.
Design by Pedestrian Studio + Inform Design.
Designed by Fred Pojezny, Jr.
1956
The front of this building has zig zags everywhere, from the cement and brick planters, to the tinted glass on the left to the clear glass on the right.
Although Conner & Pojezny had gone their separate ways by 1956, I think that they must have still been a great influence on each other. As evidence, see this church that Conner designed at the same time:
flickr.com/photos/25726169@N03/2553727470/in/set-72157605...
GVSHP unveiled a historic plaque to mark the site of The New York Infirmary for Women and Children, the first hospital for women, staffed by women, and run by women, founded by Dr. Elizabeth Blackwell. Blackwell was the first woman in America to receive a degree in medicine, blazing the trail for the entry of women into medicine and focusing her work on public health efforts for the poor and working classes. The hospital provided free care for women and children, and instruction for women studying for their medical degree.
Speakers were
:
Andrew Berman, Executive Director of GVSHP
Carey Bloomfield, the great, great niece of Elizabeth Blackwell. Carey continues the family engagement in social and philanthropic causes with her thirty-year professional career in non-profit fundraising and active membership in the Association of Fundraising Professionals (AFP), the Council for Advancement and Support of Education (CASE), and Women in Development. She was President of Group I Directors of Development, League of American Orchestras, and is a Trustee of the Dana Hall School and Vice President of the Board of Trustees of the Episcopal Chaplaincy at Harvard.
Jen Weintraub is a digital archivist and librarian at the Schlesinger Library at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study Harvard University where she coordinates work with born-digital materials while expanding the already robust work to digitize the Library's collections. She served as the chairperson of the Schlesinger library's 2016 exhibition Women of the Blackwell Family: Resilience and Change. She has also held digitization-focused positions at Yale University Library, among others. She holds an MLIS from University of Michigan and a BA from University of Chicago.
Betty Bayer is an expert on the intersections of women's history, psychology, science, religion and spirituality, Bayer has explored the abolitionist and women's rights movements, and their common history in central New York. Recognized for her outstanding teaching, Bayer received the Colleges' Distinguished Faculty Teaching Award in 2004 and the Community Service Award in 2009. She has served as the chair of the Hobart and William Smith Colleges Women Studies Program since 2001 and directed the Fisher Center for the Study of Women and Men from 2002 to 2009. A former senior fellow at the Martin Marty Center for the Study of Religion at the University of Chicago, Bayer earned her Ph.D., M.A. and B.A. in psychology from Carleton University, Ottawa, Canada.
Judy Tung, M.D., is the chair of the department of medicine at NewYork-Presbyterian Lower Manhattan Hospital and associate professor of clinical medicine at Weill Cornell Medicine. She also serves as the section chief of ambulatory internal medicine at Weill Cornell Medicine. Committed to providing high-quality, comprehensive care, Dr. Tung’s philosophy of practice prioritizes communication and continuity. Her clinical interests are in women's health and preventive medicine.
Virginia Reath, RPA MPH, has been a practicing clinician, educator, and activist in the fields of gynecology, sexual and reproductive health care for the past 30 years. She was the recipient of the ACLU Reproductive Rights Project Award for her work and activism in women's sexual reproductive health & justice. She has lived in the neighborhood since 1975.
Ronald Reagan was inaugurated for as President of the United States on January 20, 1980.
The American Presidency: A Glorious Burden, an ongoing exhibition, plores the personal, public, ceremonial and executive actions of the 43 men who have had a huge impact on the course of history in the past 200 years. More than 900 objects, including national treasures from the Smithsonian’s vast presidential collections, bring to life the role of the presidency in American culture.
The National Museum of American History (NMAH), administered by the Smithsonian Institute, collects, preserves and displays American heritage in the areas of social, political, cultural, scientific and military history. The museum, which first opened in 1964 as the Museum of History and Technology, is located on the National Mall in one of the last structures designed by McKim, Mead & White. It was renamed in 1980, and closed for a 2-year, $85 million renovation by Skidmore, Owings & Merrill LLP from 2006 to 2008.
The Smithsonian Institution, an educational and research institute and associated museum complex, administered and funded by the government of the United States and by funds from its endowment, contributions, and profits from its shops and its magazines, was established in 1846. Although concentrated in Washington DC, its collection of over 136 million items is spread through 19 museums, a zoo, and nine research centers from New York to Panama.
Walmart associates and shareholders from around the globe gather during the 2011 Walmart Shareholders' Meeting. To watch the replay of the event, view videos, and join the conversation, visit www.walmartstores.com/shareholdersmeeting
Associate Chief Lenise Lago, District Ranger Mark Sando (Globe Ranger District, Tonto NF), District Ranger Mike Atkinson (Kiowa and Rita Blanca National Grasslands, Cibola NF) and District Ranger Matthew McGrath (Flagstaff District Ranger, Coconino National Forest) participate in a Risk Management 101 exercise. (Forest Service photo by Patricia E. Johnson)
Walmart associates enjoyed lunch at Fast Lanes in Northwest Arkansas during an eventful week at the 2011 Walmart Shareholders' Meeting. To join the conversation visit www.walmartshares.com/shareholdersmeeting
Each year our associates in Cincinnati, Ky. attend the "Mardi Gras for Homeless Children" event which benefits several Greater Cincinnati agencies that serve homeless, runaway and crisis youth. The event is organized by the Northern Kentucky Restaurant Association.
Adriana Martinez works in her backyard garden in Long Beach, Calif. Wednesday, March 11, 2009. With the recession in full swing, many Americans are returning to their roots, cultivating vegetables in their backyards to squeeze every penny out of their food budget. (AP Photo/Nick Ut)
news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090315/ap_on_re_us/recession_garden...
Technology for Advanced Neural Prostheses
Dr. Philip Troyk, Illinois Institute of Technology
Dr. Troyk is Associate Dean of Engineering, and a Professor of Biomedical Engineering at the Illinois Institute of Technology; he has a broad range of research interests related to neuroprostheses. Neuroprosthetic devices are implantable electronic modules that interface with the biological nervous system for the purpose of compensating for deficit, or disease, by mimicking normal sensory or motor function. Examples are neuromuscular stimulators for functional electrical stimulation (FES), implantable sensors for FES control, and cortical interfaces in which hundreds or thousands of electrodes sense and stimulate neurons within the central nervous system. The research work is highly interdisciplinary, using engineering principles and technology from electrical, computer, materials, mechanical, and chemical engineering. Design and fabrication of reliable implantable neuroprosthetic devices requires advancements in packaging of implantable electronics (hermetic and polymeric), VLSI integrated circuit design, transcutaneous magnetic coupling of power and data, as well as defining system architectures. His active research projects include development of implantable myoelectric sensors (IMES) for control of prostheses, and wireless transmission of ECoG signals for diagnosis of epilepsy. He is leader of a large multi-institutional team working to develop an intracortical visual prosthesis for individuals with blindness, as well as founder and CEO of Sigenics, Inc – an ASIC design company located in Chicago and Irwindale, CA.
Entrance to the Cinecittà studios
Cinecittà (pronounced [ˌtʃinetʃitˈta]; Italian for Cinema City) is a large film studio in Rome, Italy. With an area of 400,000 square metres, it is the largest film studio in Europe, and is considered the hub of Italian cinema. The studios were constructed during the Fascist era as part of a scheme to revive the Italian film industry.[1]
World-renowned filmmakers such as Federico Fellini, Roberto Rossellini, Luchino Visconti, Sergio Leone, Bernardo Bertolucci, Francis Ford Coppola, Martin Scorsese, and Mel Gibson have worked at Cinecittà . More than 3,000 movies have been filmed there, of which 90 received an Academy Award nomination and 47 of these won it.[2] In the 1950s, the number of international productions being made there led to Rome being dubbed "Hollywood on the Tiber."
The studios were founded in 1937 by Benito Mussolini, his son Vittorio, and his head of cinema Luigi Freddi under the slogan "Il cinema è l'arma più forte" ("Cinema is the most powerful weapon").[3] The purpose was not only for propaganda, but also to support the recovering Italian feature film industry, which had reached its low point in 1931.[1] Mussolini himself inaugurated the studios on 21 April 1937.[4] Post-production units and sets were constructed and heavily used initially. Early films such as Scipio Africanus (1937) and The Iron Crown (1941) showcased the technological advancement of the studios. Seven thousand people were involved in the filming of the battle scene from Scipio Africanus, and live elephants were brought in as a part of the re-enactment of the Battle of Zama.[5]
The studios were bombed by the Western Allies during the bombing of Rome in World War II. Following the war, between 1945 and 1947, the studios of Cinecittà were used as a displaced persons' camp for a period of about two years, following German occupation and Allied bombing that destroyed parts of the studio.[6] An estimated 3,000 refugees lived there, divided into two camps: an Italian camp housing Italians as well as displaced people from colonized Libya and Dalmatia, and an international camp, including refugees from Yugoslavia, Poland, Egypt, Iran, and China.[7]
After rebuilding in the postwar years, the studios were used once again for their post-production facilities. In the 1950s, Cinecittà , described as Hollywood on the Tiber, was the filming location for several large American film productions, like Roman Holiday (1953), Beat the Devil (1953), The Barefoot Contessa (1954), Ben-Hur (1959), and some low-budget action pictures starring Lex Barker, who also starred in Federico Fellini's La Dolce Vita (1960).[8] The studios were for many years closely associated with Fellini.[9][10]
Later, the studios were used for further international productions such as Francis of Assisi (1961), Cleopatra (1963), The Agony and the Ecstasy (1965), Zeffirelli's Romeo and Juliet (1968), Fellini's Casanova (1976), La Traviata (1982) and many other productions.
After a period of near-bankruptcy, the Italian Government privatized Cinecittà in 1997, selling an 80% stake.[11] On August 9, 2007, a fire destroyed about 3000 m² (32,000 sq. ft.) of the Cinecittà lot and surroundings. The historic part that houses the sets of classics such as Ben-Hur was not damaged; however, a good portion of the original sets from the HBO/BBC series Rome was destroyed.[12] In July 2012, another fire damaged Teatro 5, the vast studio where Fellini filmed La Dolce Vita[13] and Satyricon (1969).[14][11]
Since the 1990s, films have included Anthony Minghella's The English Patient (1992), Martin Scorsese's Gangs of New York (2002),[13] Wes Anderson's The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou (2004) and Mel Gibson’s The Passion of the Christ (2004).
In 2009, SUPERVALU sold the majority of their Albertsons locations in Utah to wholesaler Associated Food Stores.
Macey's, former Albertsons and Fresh Market, on East Main Street in American Fork, Utah.
Walmart associates gathered in the Hyper Building on the University of Arkansas campus to practice dance moves, enjoy activities and spend time together. The associates traveled to Fayetteville, Ark. to attend the 2011 Walmart Shareholders' Meeting. To watch the replay of the event, view videos, and join the conversation, visit www.walmartstores.com/shareholdersmeeting
I found this empy sleve for a 7" single at the thrift. Strangely, John Urie & Associates seems to have been a production company based in Los Angeles that made TV commercials in the 60's. Maybe this was some sort of promitional material for the company or a Christmas present for the employees. The illustration is marked only (c) 1960, but it looks awfully like Joseph Low to me.
Walmart associates gathered in the Hyper Building on the University of Arkansas campus to practice dance moves, enjoy activities and spend time together. The associates traveled to Fayetteville, Ark. to attend the 2011 Walmart Shareholders' Meeting. To watch the replay of the event, view videos, and join the conversation, visit www.walmartstores.com/shareholdersmeeting
Walmart associates and shareholders from around the globe gather during the 2011 Walmart Shareholders' Meeting.To watch the replay of the event, view videos, and join the conversation, visit www.walmartstores.com/shareholdersmeeting