View allAll Photos Tagged COMMUNICATION
this isn't a new one in terms of engrish (their signs are all over tokyo) but i like the reflections on the plastic in this one.
The Media and Communication department at Emory & Henry College awarded students and acknowledged graduating students at the Spring Celebration on Friday, April 1 at the Board of Visitors Lounge in Van Dyke Hall. Visit www.ehc.edu/mcom for more information.
FSU's Student Life Cinema is one of the nation's leading campus movie programs, featuring five to six nights a week of everything from the most recent blockbuster movies to documentaries, indies, and foreign films in addition to restored cinema classics. Movies are selected by an all-student committee and are free to currently enrolled FSU students.
The Media and Communication department at Emory & Henry College awarded students and acknowledged graduating students at the Spring Celebration on Friday, April 1 at the Board of Visitors Lounge in Van Dyke Hall. Visit www.ehc.edu/mcom for more information.
The Media and Communication department at Emory & Henry College awarded students and acknowledged graduating students at the Spring Celebration on Friday, April 1 at the Board of Visitors Lounge in Van Dyke Hall. Visit www.ehc.edu/mcom for more information.
The Media and Communication department at Emory & Henry College awarded students and acknowledged graduating students at the Spring Celebration on Friday, April 1 at the Board of Visitors Lounge in Van Dyke Hall. Visit www.ehc.edu/mcom for more information.
The Media and Communication department at Emory & Henry College awarded students and acknowledged graduating students at the Spring Celebration on Friday, April 1 at the Board of Visitors Lounge in Van Dyke Hall. Visit www.ehc.edu/mcom for more information.
The Media and Communication department at Emory & Henry College awarded students and acknowledged graduating students at the Spring Celebration on Friday, April 1 at the Board of Visitors Lounge in Van Dyke Hall. Visit www.ehc.edu/mcom for more information.
In a picturesque setting beside the crossing of the River Eamont in Cumbria, Brougham Castle was founded in the early 13th century. This great keep largely survives, amid many later buildings - including the unusual double gatehouse and impressive 'Tower of League'.
Both a formidable barrier against Scots invaders and a prestigious residence, the castle welcomed Edward I in 1300. A complex of passages and spiral stairways makes Brougham a fascinating castle to explore, as well as an ideal picnic setting for a family day out.
The top of the keep provides panoramic views over the Eden Valley.
The site of Brougham Castle has been fortified since the Romans erected the fort of Brocavum at the intersection of three Roman roads. With the rivers Eamont and Lowther flowing nearby and meeting to the west, the site had natural defences and the area was fertile and easy to cultivate. A civilian settlement grew around the fort. When Angles arrived in the area they named the place Brougham, meaning "the village by the fort". Between the end of Roman rule in the early 5th century and the Norman Conquest in the late 11th century, Cumbria was a turbulent area. Although the site was a defendable position, there is no evidence that Brougham was refortified during this time. In 1092, William II (also known as William Rufus) captured Cumbria south of the Solway Firth and established a new border far north of Brougham. The site at Brougham remained unfortified. Carlisle Castle secured the border, and castles at Appleby and Brough, both south east of Brougham, protected the line of communication from Carlisle to Yorkshire. In 1203, the Barony of Westmorland – containing Appleby, Brough, and Brougham – was granted to Robert de Vieuxpont by King John. A favourite of John's, Vieuxpont was one of only a few lords loyal to him in northern England, whose inhabitants became so discontented with the king's rule that they eventually rebelled. Around 1214, Vieuxpont asserted control over more land, including half the manor of Brougham. It was in this atmosphere of unrest that Brougham Castle was founded.
The abandoned Communication Cable site on Cape Breton, Nova Scotia, Canada was one of the first places on land to hear Titanic's distress calls on April 14th and 15th, 1912.
As the buildings are too large to photograph in one shot, these are a collection of stitched-together panoramas.
Lomo Zenith LC-A
Kodak Elite Chrome 100
ISO 100
Shot at box speed, cross processed
Process & scan by The Vault Imaging, 1 Dorset Place, Brighton, East Sussex BN2 1STi
Taken on lomokev’s hot shots
course
Kodak Elite Chrome 100.Roll 01-24.Lomo LC-A.2012-06-16
The Media and Communication department at Emory & Henry College awarded students and acknowledged graduating students at the Spring Celebration on Friday, April 1 at the Board of Visitors Lounge in Van Dyke Hall. Visit www.ehc.edu/mcom for more information.
The Media and Communication department at Emory & Henry College awarded students and acknowledged graduating students at the Spring Celebration on Friday, April 1 at the Board of Visitors Lounge in Van Dyke Hall. Visit www.ehc.edu/mcom for more information.