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Oregon Spring Game 2014

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ParalympicsGB Rower, Benjamin Pritchard aged 27, from Swansea, competing in the PR1 Single Sculls - Men event, at the Tokyo 2020 Paralympic Games.

 

ParalympicsGB is the name for the Great Britain and Northern Ireland Paralympic Team that competes at the summer and winter Paralympic Games. The Team is selected and managed by the British Paralympic Association, in conjunction with the national governing bodies, and is made up of the best sportsmen and women who compete in the 22 summer and 4 winter sports on the Paralympic Programme.

 

For additional Images please visit: www.digitalcontentdownload.com/paralympicsgb_2020/

 

For more information please contact the ParalympicsGB Press Office via press@paralympics.org.uk

 

If you require a higher resolution image or you have any other photographic enquiries, please contact imagecomms on +44 (0)20 7160 6282 or email hello@imagecomms.com

This image is copyright imagecomms 2021©.

 

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100 Cars Compete in the Largest Optima Ultimate Street Car Invitational Ever

 

Mooresville, NC - goo.gl/S9UbRh The 2014 @OUSCI was a bit different in many ways than years past. First off, the event took place at Las Vegas Motor Speedway and secondly, the event was turned into a 2-day event. The two days turned out to be just what the doctor ordered as there were over 100 cars competing in the event.

 

@DetroitSpeedInc brought out the DSE 1970 #Camaro Test Car driven by Kyle Tucker and the DSE 2012 "White Monster" Camaro Test Car driven by Ryan Mathews. The two cars were stationed at Optima Alley during the @SEMAshow preparing for the event that took place the two days after SEMA.

 

There was a large contingent of DSE "Equipped" cars at this year's event. Everything from modern muscle to old 1960's original muscle were on hand ready to put the Detroit Speed suspension to the test during two grueling days of cone carving and high speed road course action.

 

The Optima Ultimate Street Car Invitational is a points based competition that is looking for the top street car in the country. The competition consists of the Detroit Speed sponsored "Road Rally," the speed-stop challenge, the autocross, the design and engineering challenge as well as the @BFGoodrichTires Hot Lap Challenge.

 

Saturday was the first day of the competition and started out with the autocross and speed-stop challenge. The competition was fierce and non-stop as competitor after competitor staged and prepared to lay it all on the line to be named the ultimate street car. Following a full day of action, the Detroit Speed Road Rally kicked off and cruised to Shelby American, Inc.

 

Sunday was the BFGoodrich Hot Lap Challenge. The challenge was broken into 3 classes of competition, the novice, the advanced and finally the expert class. Each class was chalk full of DSE "Equipped" cars. It was a thrill to look up and down the staging area and see the DSE "Equipped" decal on so many amazing street machines. Ryan and Kyle ran hard in this event with Ryan finishing in 2nd place. Ryan and Bryan Johnson had their usual battle of 5th gens. It is great to see two DSE "Equipped" cars running up front in 2nd and 3rd place. The competitiveness between these two gentlemen is undeniable. The respect they have for one another is truly admirable and it shows out on the track as they battle neck and neck at virtually every event.

 

This has been by far the best OUSCI yet and we look forward to competing in the years to come. Congratulations to Danny Popp for his overall victory, Brandon Ranvek for his 2nd place finish and to Betim Berisha for finishing 3rd. We would also like to congratulate Bryan Johnson on capturing Detroit Speed's "Fastest Fifth Gen" award and for finishing in 4th place. DSE's own Ryan Mathews captured 5th place while Mark Stielow captured the Detroit Speed "Fastest American Iron Pre-1980" award in his amazing DSE Equipped Hellfire Camaro. Mark's Hellfire is an amazing build that he isn't afraid to get dirty. That's our kind of builder and vehicle, performance driven and track proven.

 

OUSCI 2014 Highlights

• This was the largest OUSCI ever with over 100 cars competing in the new 2-day format

 

• Bryan Johnson finished 4th overall and captured the Detroit Speed "Fastest Fifth Gen" Award in his DSE Equipped 2013 Camaro

 

• Mark Stielow won the Detroit Speed "Fastest American Iron Pre-1980" award in his DSE Equipped Hellfire 1969 Camaro

 

• Ryan Mathews finished 2nd in the BFGoodrich Hot Lap Challenge and 5th overall in the DSE 2012 "White Monster" Camaro Test Car

 

• Congratulations to Jakey Sampson for putting down two great road course times for being only her second time on a road course

 

DSE “Equipped” Competitors at the 2014 OUSCI

 

Ryan Mathews - DSE 2012 "White Monster" Camaro Test Car

Kyle Tucker - DSE 1970 Camaro Test Car

Bryan Johnson - 2013 Camaro

Billy Utley - 1972 Nova

Mark Stielow - 1969 Camaro

Jake Rozelle - 1969 Camaro

Jordan Priestley - 2011 Camaro

Bob Bertelsen - 1969 C10

Cheryl Herrick - 1967 Nova

Sam Farrington - 1966 Chevelle

Brandy Phillips - 1972 C10

Deb Farrington - 1964 Chevelle

Tim Strange - 1969 Camaro

Dave Tucci - 1970 Mustang

Jakey Sampson - 2010 Camaro

 

#bfgoodrichtires #BFGRacing #DSEEquipped #Camaro #Chevy #detroitspeed #Chevelle #OUSCI #DriveUSCA

 

Assinatura de protocolo entre a Ordem e COMPETE 2020, na sede da OCC, em Lisboa.

German-American couple brings troops together for competition

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By Rick Scavetta, U.S. Army Garrison Kaiserslautern

 

KUSEL, Germany – Raising her German Army patrol cap, Heidi Lehmann smiled as she watched her American husband join fellow U.S. Army Garrison Kaiserslautern Soldiers on the firing line.

 

Lehmann, 31, an oberfeldwebel – equivalent to a U.S. Army sergeant first class – recently spent two days translating for eight garrison Soldiers as they competed for the Schützenschnur, a coveted German Army’s weapons proficiency badge. She and her husband, Sgt. Esse Agnegue, a U.S. Army Garrison Kaiserslautern chaplain’s assistant, brought their units together for the training.

 

“It’s a nice experience for me to see my husband and the German Soldiers are happy to have the Americans here,” Lehmann said.

 

The couple met online when Agnegue, 31, was deployed to Iraq in 2007. He added her as a fan to his hip-hop music site. Later they realized their mutual love of motorcycles and travelling. They now have a one-year-old son.

 

Each morning, they put on camouflage fatigues of their respective armies and head off to separate bases – Lehmann to her transportation unit in Kusel and Agnegue to Pulaski Barracks in Kaiserslautern. Then they thought of a way to train together – though a shooting competition.

Garrison soldiers spent one day getting familiar with the German weapons using an indoor trainer.

The second day, they joined German troops on an outdoor range, firing a rifle, a pistol and a machine gun.

 

The Schützenschnur is awarded like the Olympics, in gold, silver and bronze. Of the seven garrison Soldiers who competed, three earned gold and four won bronze. U.S. Soldiers can wear the badge with their dress uniform.

 

American Soldiers in Baumholder recently held a seminar in English for German noncommissioned officers, said German 1st Lt. Sebastian Schmidt. That event, plus the marksmanship competition, forces German troops to exercise their language skills, Schmidt said, to prepare for NATO missions in Afghanistan.

 

“It’s an opportunity for our soldiers to practice English,” Schmidt said. “We have different experiences on missions and in training. We can fill a gap – where we can give our skills to the Americans get some skills from them.”

 

U.S. Soldiers often work with coalition counterparts – to include the German Army – while deployed overseas, said Capt. Tom Lukins, commander U.S. Army Garrison Kaiserslautern’s Headquarters and Headquarters Detachment.

 

“This event strengthens the bond we have and builds partnerships for future training,” Lukins said.

 

Originally from Togo, Agnegue said meeting people and travelling is one of the best benefits of serving in the military, especially when it means sharing ideas through events like the Schützenschnur competition.

 

“The Army gave me so many opportunities to do things and this is one of those opportunities,” Agnegue said. “We’re working together, building camaraderie and that’s a great thing.”

 

U.S. Army Garrison Kaiserslautern site

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German-American couple brings troops together for competition

Check us out on Facebook!

 

By Rick Scavetta, U.S. Army Garrison Kaiserslautern

 

KUSEL, Germany – Raising her German Army patrol cap, Heidi Lehmann smiled as she watched her American husband join fellow U.S. Army Garrison Kaiserslautern Soldiers on the firing line.

 

Lehmann, 31, an oberfeldwebel – equivalent to a U.S. Army sergeant first class – recently spent two days translating for eight garrison Soldiers as they competed for the Schützenschnur, a coveted German Army’s weapons proficiency badge. She and her husband, Sgt. Esse Agnegue, a U.S. Army Garrison Kaiserslautern chaplain’s assistant, brought their units together for the training.

 

“It’s a nice experience for me to see my husband and the German Soldiers are happy to have the Americans here,” Lehmann said.

 

The couple met online when Agnegue, 31, was deployed to Iraq in 2007. He added her as a fan to his hip-hop music site. Later they realized their mutual love of motorcycles and travelling. They now have a one-year-old son.

 

Each morning, they put on camouflage fatigues of their respective armies and head off to separate bases – Lehmann to her transportation unit in Kusel and Agnegue to Pulaski Barracks in Kaiserslautern. Then they thought of a way to train together – though a shooting competition.

Garrison soldiers spent one day getting familiar with the German weapons using an indoor trainer.

The second day, they joined German troops on an outdoor range, firing a rifle, a pistol and a machine gun.

 

The Schützenschnur is awarded like the Olympics, in gold, silver and bronze. Of the seven garrison Soldiers who competed, three earned gold and four won bronze. U.S. Soldiers can wear the badge with their dress uniform.

 

American Soldiers in Baumholder recently held a seminar in English for German noncommissioned officers, said German 1st Lt. Sebastian Schmidt. That event, plus the marksmanship competition, forces German troops to exercise their language skills, Schmidt said, to prepare for NATO missions in Afghanistan.

 

“It’s an opportunity for our soldiers to practice English,” Schmidt said. “We have different experiences on missions and in training. We can fill a gap – where we can give our skills to the Americans get some skills from them.”

 

U.S. Soldiers often work with coalition counterparts – to include the German Army – while deployed overseas, said Capt. Tom Lukins, commander U.S. Army Garrison Kaiserslautern’s Headquarters and Headquarters Detachment.

 

“This event strengthens the bond we have and builds partnerships for future training,” Lukins said.

 

Originally from Togo, Agnegue said meeting people and travelling is one of the best benefits of serving in the military, especially when it means sharing ideas through events like the Schützenschnur competition.

 

“The Army gave me so many opportunities to do things and this is one of those opportunities,” Agnegue said. “We’re working together, building camaraderie and that’s a great thing.”

 

U.S. Army Garrison Kaiserslautern site

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I'm soooo proud... Cami's first solo performance this competition season. More details on my blog here...

German-American couple brings troops together for competition

Check us out on Facebook!

 

By Rick Scavetta, U.S. Army Garrison Kaiserslautern

 

KUSEL, Germany – Raising her German Army patrol cap, Heidi Lehmann smiled as she watched her American husband join fellow U.S. Army Garrison Kaiserslautern Soldiers on the firing line.

 

Lehmann, 31, an oberfeldwebel – equivalent to a U.S. Army sergeant first class – recently spent two days translating for eight garrison Soldiers as they competed for the Schützenschnur, a coveted German Army’s weapons proficiency badge. She and her husband, Sgt. Esse Agnegue, a U.S. Army Garrison Kaiserslautern chaplain’s assistant, brought their units together for the training.

 

“It’s a nice experience for me to see my husband and the German Soldiers are happy to have the Americans here,” Lehmann said.

 

The couple met online when Agnegue, 31, was deployed to Iraq in 2007. He added her as a fan to his hip-hop music site. Later they realized their mutual love of motorcycles and travelling. They now have a one-year-old son.

 

Each morning, they put on camouflage fatigues of their respective armies and head off to separate bases – Lehmann to her transportation unit in Kusel and Agnegue to Pulaski Barracks in Kaiserslautern. Then they thought of a way to train together – though a shooting competition.

Garrison soldiers spent one day getting familiar with the German weapons using an indoor trainer.

The second day, they joined German troops on an outdoor range, firing a rifle, a pistol and a machine gun.

 

The Schützenschnur is awarded like the Olympics, in gold, silver and bronze. Of the seven garrison Soldiers who competed, three earned gold and four won bronze. U.S. Soldiers can wear the badge with their dress uniform.

 

American Soldiers in Baumholder recently held a seminar in English for German noncommissioned officers, said German 1st Lt. Sebastian Schmidt. That event, plus the marksmanship competition, forces German troops to exercise their language skills, Schmidt said, to prepare for NATO missions in Afghanistan.

 

“It’s an opportunity for our soldiers to practice English,” Schmidt said. “We have different experiences on missions and in training. We can fill a gap – where we can give our skills to the Americans get some skills from them.”

 

U.S. Soldiers often work with coalition counterparts – to include the German Army – while deployed overseas, said Capt. Tom Lukins, commander U.S. Army Garrison Kaiserslautern’s Headquarters and Headquarters Detachment.

 

“This event strengthens the bond we have and builds partnerships for future training,” Lukins said.

 

Originally from Togo, Agnegue said meeting people and travelling is one of the best benefits of serving in the military, especially when it means sharing ideas through events like the Schützenschnur competition.

 

“The Army gave me so many opportunities to do things and this is one of those opportunities,” Agnegue said. “We’re working together, building camaraderie and that’s a great thing.”

 

U.S. Army Garrison Kaiserslautern site

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Link with us on Twitter...

 

German-American couple brings troops together for competition

Check us out on Facebook!

 

By Rick Scavetta, U.S. Army Garrison Kaiserslautern

 

KUSEL, Germany – Raising her German Army patrol cap, Heidi Lehmann smiled as she watched her American husband join fellow U.S. Army Garrison Kaiserslautern Soldiers on the firing line.

 

Lehmann, 31, an oberfeldwebel – equivalent to a U.S. Army sergeant first class – recently spent two days translating for eight garrison Soldiers as they competed for the Schützenschnur, a coveted German Army’s weapons proficiency badge. She and her husband, Sgt. Esse Agnegue, a U.S. Army Garrison Kaiserslautern chaplain’s assistant, brought their units together for the training.

 

“It’s a nice experience for me to see my husband and the German Soldiers are happy to have the Americans here,” Lehmann said.

 

The couple met online when Agnegue, 31, was deployed to Iraq in 2007. He added her as a fan to his hip-hop music site. Later they realized their mutual love of motorcycles and travelling. They now have a one-year-old son.

 

Each morning, they put on camouflage fatigues of their respective armies and head off to separate bases – Lehmann to her transportation unit in Kusel and Agnegue to Pulaski Barracks in Kaiserslautern. Then they thought of a way to train together – though a shooting competition.

Garrison soldiers spent one day getting familiar with the German weapons using an indoor trainer.

The second day, they joined German troops on an outdoor range, firing a rifle, a pistol and a machine gun.

 

The Schützenschnur is awarded like the Olympics, in gold, silver and bronze. Of the seven garrison Soldiers who competed, three earned gold and four won bronze. U.S. Soldiers can wear the badge with their dress uniform.

 

American Soldiers in Baumholder recently held a seminar in English for German noncommissioned officers, said German 1st Lt. Sebastian Schmidt. That event, plus the marksmanship competition, forces German troops to exercise their language skills, Schmidt said, to prepare for NATO missions in Afghanistan.

 

“It’s an opportunity for our soldiers to practice English,” Schmidt said. “We have different experiences on missions and in training. We can fill a gap – where we can give our skills to the Americans get some skills from them.”

 

U.S. Soldiers often work with coalition counterparts – to include the German Army – while deployed overseas, said Capt. Tom Lukins, commander U.S. Army Garrison Kaiserslautern’s Headquarters and Headquarters Detachment.

 

“This event strengthens the bond we have and builds partnerships for future training,” Lukins said.

 

Originally from Togo, Agnegue said meeting people and travelling is one of the best benefits of serving in the military, especially when it means sharing ideas through events like the Schützenschnur competition.

 

“The Army gave me so many opportunities to do things and this is one of those opportunities,” Agnegue said. “We’re working together, building camaraderie and that’s a great thing.”

 

U.S. Army Garrison Kaiserslautern site

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Free for editorial use image, please credit: imagecomms

 

ParalympicsGB Cyclists, Sophie Unwin aged 27, from Honiton, Jenny Holl aged 21, from Stirling, competing in the Tandem B - 3km Pursuit - Women event, at the Tokyo 2020 Paralympic Games.

 

ParalympicsGB is the name for the Great Britain and Northern Ireland Paralympic Team that competes at the summer and winter Paralympic Games. The Team is selected and managed by the British Paralympic Association, in conjunction with the national governing bodies, and is made up of the best sportsmen and women who compete in the 22 summer and 4 winter sports on the Paralympic Programme.

 

For additional Images please visit: www.digitalcontentdownload.com/paralympicsgb_2020/

 

For more information please contact the ParalympicsGB Press Office via press@paralympics.org.uk

 

If you require a higher resolution image or you have any other photographic enquiries, please contact imagecomms on +44 (0)20 7160 6282 or email hello@imagecomms.com

This image is copyright imagecomms 2021©.

 

This image has been supplied by imagecomms and must be credited imagecomms. The author is asserting his full Moral rights in relation to the publication of this image. Rights for onward transmission of this image or file is not granted or implied. Changing or deleting Copyright information is illegal as specified in the Copyright, Design and Patents Act 1988. If you are in any way unsure of your right to publish this image please contact imagecomms on +44 (0)20 7160 6282 or email hello@imagecomms.com

German-American couple brings troops together for competition

Check us out on Facebook!

 

By Rick Scavetta, U.S. Army Garrison Kaiserslautern

 

KUSEL, Germany – Raising her German Army patrol cap, Heidi Lehmann smiled as she watched her American husband join fellow U.S. Army Garrison Kaiserslautern Soldiers on the firing line.

 

Lehmann, 31, an oberfeldwebel – equivalent to a U.S. Army sergeant first class – recently spent two days translating for eight garrison Soldiers as they competed for the Schützenschnur, a coveted German Army’s weapons proficiency badge. She and her husband, Sgt. Esse Agnegue, a U.S. Army Garrison Kaiserslautern chaplain’s assistant, brought their units together for the training.

 

“It’s a nice experience for me to see my husband and the German Soldiers are happy to have the Americans here,” Lehmann said.

 

The couple met online when Agnegue, 31, was deployed to Iraq in 2007. He added her as a fan to his hip-hop music site. Later they realized their mutual love of motorcycles and travelling. They now have a one-year-old son.

 

Each morning, they put on camouflage fatigues of their respective armies and head off to separate bases – Lehmann to her transportation unit in Kusel and Agnegue to Pulaski Barracks in Kaiserslautern. Then they thought of a way to train together – though a shooting competition.

Garrison soldiers spent one day getting familiar with the German weapons using an indoor trainer.

The second day, they joined German troops on an outdoor range, firing a rifle, a pistol and a machine gun.

 

The Schützenschnur is awarded like the Olympics, in gold, silver and bronze. Of the seven garrison Soldiers who competed, three earned gold and four won bronze. U.S. Soldiers can wear the badge with their dress uniform.

 

American Soldiers in Baumholder recently held a seminar in English for German noncommissioned officers, said German 1st Lt. Sebastian Schmidt. That event, plus the marksmanship competition, forces German troops to exercise their language skills, Schmidt said, to prepare for NATO missions in Afghanistan.

 

“It’s an opportunity for our soldiers to practice English,” Schmidt said. “We have different experiences on missions and in training. We can fill a gap – where we can give our skills to the Americans get some skills from them.”

 

U.S. Soldiers often work with coalition counterparts – to include the German Army – while deployed overseas, said Capt. Tom Lukins, commander U.S. Army Garrison Kaiserslautern’s Headquarters and Headquarters Detachment.

 

“This event strengthens the bond we have and builds partnerships for future training,” Lukins said.

 

Originally from Togo, Agnegue said meeting people and travelling is one of the best benefits of serving in the military, especially when it means sharing ideas through events like the Schützenschnur competition.

 

“The Army gave me so many opportunities to do things and this is one of those opportunities,” Agnegue said. “We’re working together, building camaraderie and that’s a great thing.”

 

U.S. Army Garrison Kaiserslautern site

Check us out on Facebook!

Link with us on Twitter...

 

Athletes compete during the swimming competition at the Cadet Athletic Gym Natatorium during the 2018 Department of Defense Warrior Games at the Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs, Colo. June 08, 2018. The Warrior Games are a Paralympic-style annual competition, established in 2010, to provide adaptive sports opportunities for wounded, ill and injured service members from all U.S. branches of service and this year include teams from the United Kingdom Armed Forces, Australian Defence Force and Canadian Armed Forces. (DoD photo by John Leyba)

Dekalb County Prairie Runners Track Club competing at Dupage Track Meet 2013

To compete with the heavy SPAD fighters and the newer German Fokker D.VII, Nieuport began development of the Nieuport 28--essentially a strengthened Nieuport 17 with a bigger engine. The French were not impressed, preferring the SPADs, though the US Army Air Service, entering the war at the same time as the Nieuport 28 entered service, ordered a number of them to serve as trainers.

 

The lack of SPADs and teething troubles with the USAS led the latter to press the Nieuport 28 into service as a fighter after all. Pilots appreciated the typical nimbleness of the Nieuport design, but disliked its propensity for landing gear failures, upper wing failures, and fuel tank fires. Not many tears were shed when the Nieuports were replaced by SPAD S.XIIIs at the soonest opportunity, though the Nieuport had provided the USAS with valuable experience. Several American aces, including Edward Rickenbacker, the top US ace of World War II, started off in Nieuports.

 

This Nieuport 28 at Seattle's Museum of Flight is one of the few originals left in the world (though quite a few survived the war to become movie stunt planes). This aircraft was restored in 1999 in the markings of Quentin Roosevelt, one of President Theodore Roosevelt's sons. Quentin was killed in a simiilar Nieuport 28 in July 1918. It carries the kicking mule emblem of the 96th Aero Squadron.

Dorms compete at the 2016 Hogolympics featuring contests as varied as a slow bike race, frisbee toss, 3-legged race and water balloon toss. For the record, this year's winners were Lower North Crossley on the boys' side, with Rikert taking out the girls' competitions. Photographs by Glenn Minshall.

AND + W2 is a four day programme of debates and artworks, constituting the only Games time cultural collaboration between the Vancouver 2010 and London 2012. It is produced by W2 and is thematically structured around the Abandon Normal Devices (AND) festival of new cinema and digital culture. AND is a Legacy Trust funded programme in England’s Northwest. Produced in association with FACT, Tenantspin and Dada for Vancouver 2010 and the London 2012 Cultural Olympiad programme in England’s Northwest.

 

What does it mean to be human in the 21st century? How are definitions of disability and ability being transgressed in art and sport? What is the role of science, technology and new media in establishing new norms? What are the characteristics of our new biotechnological economy? Speakers from the UK, Canada, Netherlands, and USA present daily debates, film screenings and parties on these three themes.

 

Feb 20, 2010 7pm-9pm.

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COMPETE: Faster, Higher, Stronger .

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The Olympic Games are measures of human excellence but what happens when those measures are disrupted by self-augmentation and body modification? Our biological apparatus is in flux, vulnerable, yet re-imagined by technology. What will ability and disability mean in an era of genetically modified athletes and surgically sculpted children? How are artists contributing to this research and debate? For example, genetically screening for ‘perfect pitch’ may produce ideal singers, but whose ideal? Alternatively, what will the integration of future technology within biology mean for how humans communicate with each other via performances (dance, music or sport)? .

 

Panel presentation featuring Amber Case (USA) and Dr. Jim Rupert (Canada) with interrogation by Ruth Gould (UK) and Andy Miah moderating.

Assinatura de protocolo entre a Ordem e COMPETE 2020, na sede da OCC, em Lisboa.

Belgium Bodypaint Competition 2017

Pictures taken at the "Butterfly Arc Montegrotto (PD)"

Afghanistan Olympic Athletes Begin Competing

 

|On Monday Afghan Boxer Ajmal Faisal will face an opponent from France. The country's lone female athlete in London, Tehmina Kohistan, a sprinter, will compete on August 3.

 

The next day Masood Aziz, another Afghan runner, will compete. She is only the third female to represent her country at the Olympics. At the 2004 games in Athens Robina Muqim Yar, a sprinter, and Frida Razayee, a Judo athlete, competed.

 

“The high hope of Afghanistan for winning a medal is in the taekwondo competition, where Rohallah Nekpa and Nisar Ahmed Bahawi are both considered serious contenters. Both of these taekwondo players are experienced and have had special preparations for the competition,” said Arif Paiman, the spokesman for the National Olympics Committee of Afghanistan.

 

So far Afghanistan has won only a single medal in Olympics. That was in 2008 in Beijing, when Rohullah Nekpa, taekwondo athlete in the flyweight class, brought home a bronze medal. Nekpa is competing again this year. The other Taekwondo player, Nisar ahmed Bahawi, 29, who was also Afghanistan’s flag-carrier during the opening ceremony, will face an opponent on August 10 in the under-80 kilo class. Since Nekpa's performance in Beijing, taekwondo has blossomed throughout Afghanistan. These days there are more than 500 taekwondo clubs throughout the country.

 

This years event marks the third time that Afghanistan has sent athletes to the summer Olympics since the fall of the Taliban. In 1999 the country was briefly suspended from competing at the Olympics because of the the Taliban's treatment of women. The first time Afghanistan competed at an Olympics was at the 1936 competition in Berlin, when athletes competed in athletics and in hockey.

 

Written By: shah17

 

Photo: Jawad Jalali / UNAMA

Free for editorial use image, please credit: imagecomms

 

ParalympicsGB Wheelchair Basketball Team Men, Harrison Brown aged 27 from Halifax, competing at Men’s Preliminary Round Group B event, Great Britain vs Algeria, the Tokyo 2020 Paralympic Games.

 

ParalympicsGB is the name for the Great Britain and Northern Ireland Paralympic Team that competes at the summer and winter Paralympic Games. The Team is selected and managed by the British Paralympic Association, in conjunction with the national governing bodies, and is made up of the best sportsmen and women who compete in the 22 summer and 4 winter sports on the Paralympic Programme.

 

For additional Images please visit: www.digitalcontentdownload.com/paralympicsgb_2020/

 

For more information please contact the ParalympicsGB Press Office via press@paralympics.org.uk

 

If you require a higher resolution image or you have any other photographic enquiries, please contact imagecomms on +44 (0)20 7160 6282 or email hello@imagecomms.com

This image is copyright imagecomms 2021©.

 

This image has been supplied by imagecomms and must be credited imagecomms. The author is asserting his full Moral rights in relation to the publication of this image. Rights for onward transmission of this image or file is not granted or implied. Changing or deleting Copyright information is illegal as specified in the Copyright, Design and Patents Act 1988. If you are in any way unsure of your right to publish this image please contact imagecomms on +44 (0)20 7160 6282 or email hello@imagecomms.com

100 Cars Compete in the Largest Optima Ultimate Street Car Invitational Ever

 

Mooresville, NC - goo.gl/S9UbRh The 2014 @OUSCI was a bit different in many ways than years past. First off, the event took place at Las Vegas Motor Speedway and secondly, the event was turned into a 2-day event. The two days turned out to be just what the doctor ordered as there were over 100 cars competing in the event.

 

@DetroitSpeedInc brought out the DSE 1970 #Camaro Test Car driven by Kyle Tucker and the DSE 2012 "White Monster" Camaro Test Car driven by Ryan Mathews. The two cars were stationed at Optima Alley during the @SEMAshow preparing for the event that took place the two days after SEMA.

 

There was a large contingent of DSE "Equipped" cars at this year's event. Everything from modern muscle to old 1960's original muscle were on hand ready to put the Detroit Speed suspension to the test during two grueling days of cone carving and high speed road course action.

 

The Optima Ultimate Street Car Invitational is a points based competition that is looking for the top street car in the country. The competition consists of the Detroit Speed sponsored "Road Rally," the speed-stop challenge, the autocross, the design and engineering challenge as well as the @BFGoodrichTires Hot Lap Challenge.

 

Saturday was the first day of the competition and started out with the autocross and speed-stop challenge. The competition was fierce and non-stop as competitor after competitor staged and prepared to lay it all on the line to be named the ultimate street car. Following a full day of action, the Detroit Speed Road Rally kicked off and cruised to Shelby American, Inc.

 

Sunday was the BFGoodrich Hot Lap Challenge. The challenge was broken into 3 classes of competition, the novice, the advanced and finally the expert class. Each class was chalk full of DSE "Equipped" cars. It was a thrill to look up and down the staging area and see the DSE "Equipped" decal on so many amazing street machines. Ryan and Kyle ran hard in this event with Ryan finishing in 2nd place. Ryan and Bryan Johnson had their usual battle of 5th gens. It is great to see two DSE "Equipped" cars running up front in 2nd and 3rd place. The competitiveness between these two gentlemen is undeniable. The respect they have for one another is truly admirable and it shows out on the track as they battle neck and neck at virtually every event.

 

This has been by far the best OUSCI yet and we look forward to competing in the years to come. Congratulations to Danny Popp for his overall victory, Brandon Ranvek for his 2nd place finish and to Betim Berisha for finishing 3rd. We would also like to congratulate Bryan Johnson on capturing Detroit Speed's "Fastest Fifth Gen" award and for finishing in 4th place. DSE's own Ryan Mathews captured 5th place while Mark Stielow captured the Detroit Speed "Fastest American Iron Pre-1980" award in his amazing DSE Equipped Hellfire Camaro. Mark's Hellfire is an amazing build that he isn't afraid to get dirty. That's our kind of builder and vehicle, performance driven and track proven.

 

OUSCI 2014 Highlights

• This was the largest OUSCI ever with over 100 cars competing in the new 2-day format

 

• Bryan Johnson finished 4th overall and captured the Detroit Speed "Fastest Fifth Gen" Award in his DSE Equipped 2013 Camaro

 

• Mark Stielow won the Detroit Speed "Fastest American Iron Pre-1980" award in his DSE Equipped Hellfire 1969 Camaro

 

• Ryan Mathews finished 2nd in the BFGoodrich Hot Lap Challenge and 5th overall in the DSE 2012 "White Monster" Camaro Test Car

 

• Congratulations to Jakey Sampson for putting down two great road course times for being only her second time on a road course

 

DSE “Equipped” Competitors at the 2014 OUSCI

 

Ryan Mathews - DSE 2012 "White Monster" Camaro Test Car

Kyle Tucker - DSE 1970 Camaro Test Car

Bryan Johnson - 2013 Camaro

Billy Utley - 1972 Nova

Mark Stielow - 1969 Camaro

Jake Rozelle - 1969 Camaro

Jordan Priestley - 2011 Camaro

Bob Bertelsen - 1969 C10

Cheryl Herrick - 1967 Nova

Sam Farrington - 1966 Chevelle

Brandy Phillips - 1972 C10

Deb Farrington - 1964 Chevelle

Tim Strange - 1969 Camaro

Dave Tucci - 1970 Mustang

Jakey Sampson - 2010 Camaro

 

#bfgoodrichtires #BFGRacing #DSEEquipped #Camaro #Chevy #detroitspeed #Chevelle #OUSCI #DriveUSCA

 

Teams compete in various events on Friday, April 29, 2022 during the annual Sandhurst Military Skills Competition at the U.S. Military Academy in West Point, N.Y. (U.S. Army Photo by John Pellino/USMA)

Teams compete in various events on Friday, April 29, 2022 during the annual Sandhurst Military Skills Competition at the U.S. Military Academy in West Point, N.Y. (U.S. Army Photo by John Pellino/USMA)

101104-F-1020B-013.jpg Kabul - More than 4,560 candidates take a test to compete for 600 available National Military Academy of Afghanistan slots in the class of 2015 at the academy in Kabul Nov. 4, 2010. The academy issued invitations to the top three percent of recent high school graduates to attend a three-day selection process which consists of a physical fitness and written exam. (U.S. Air Force photo by Staff Sgt. Sarah Brown/RELEASED)

 

Competing in the M1 race

VFS Makeup Design for Film & Television grads compete in the student competition at the 2009 Canadian Makeup Show, placing 3rd in the Glamour category and winning the Grand Prize in the SFX/CSI Theme category.

 

Read about the event here: www.vfs.com/blog/2009/04/08/grand-prize-winner-at-the-can...

 

Learn more about VFS's one-year Makeup Design for Film & Television program here: vfs.com/makeupdesign

The pullover dress of border eyelet has an eyelet neck, ruffles at the back and back button closing, elbow length puffed sleeves with elasticized lower edge and eyelet trim.

 

All eyelet bodice ruffles, beading and ribbon trim, under skirt has eyelet hemline ruffle. The contrasting sash is inserted under the beading. Purchased applique or ribbon at center front neckline.

 

McCall's 8398

Toddlers cut to size 5 (So you could use size 4 or 5)

Little Darling Enchanted Forest

Cut and In-compete. The sash is missing. #6

Dorms compete at the 2016 Hogolympics featuring contests as varied as a slow bike race, frisbee toss, 3-legged race and water balloon toss. For the record, this year's winners were Lower North Crossley on the boys' side, with Rikert taking out the girls' competitions. Photographs by Glenn Minshall.

"He's competing with the sun for the center of the universe." -- Jay from Lords of Dogtown

 

Processing -- b&w conversion, custom framing, selective color, vignette, and level adjustments.

 

Permission MUST be sought and granted for use.

All images used must contain the following © Robin Ervolina, funkyfotography. Please follow the link for terms of use in order to avoid violation of copyright.

Specific copyright information here

Cornwall "Nippers" Surf Lifesaving Stillwater Championships

German-American couple brings troops together for competition

Check us out on Facebook!

 

By Rick Scavetta, U.S. Army Garrison Kaiserslautern

 

KUSEL, Germany – Raising her German Army patrol cap, Heidi Lehmann smiled as she watched her American husband join fellow U.S. Army Garrison Kaiserslautern Soldiers on the firing line.

 

Lehmann, 31, an oberfeldwebel – equivalent to a U.S. Army sergeant first class – recently spent two days translating for eight garrison Soldiers as they competed for the Schützenschnur, a coveted German Army’s weapons proficiency badge. She and her husband, Sgt. Esse Agnegue, a U.S. Army Garrison Kaiserslautern chaplain’s assistant, brought their units together for the training.

 

“It’s a nice experience for me to see my husband and the German Soldiers are happy to have the Americans here,” Lehmann said.

 

The couple met online when Agnegue, 31, was deployed to Iraq in 2007. He added her as a fan to his hip-hop music site. Later they realized their mutual love of motorcycles and travelling. They now have a one-year-old son.

 

Each morning, they put on camouflage fatigues of their respective armies and head off to separate bases – Lehmann to her transportation unit in Kusel and Agnegue to Pulaski Barracks in Kaiserslautern. Then they thought of a way to train together – though a shooting competition.

Garrison soldiers spent one day getting familiar with the German weapons using an indoor trainer.

The second day, they joined German troops on an outdoor range, firing a rifle, a pistol and a machine gun.

 

The Schützenschnur is awarded like the Olympics, in gold, silver and bronze. Of the seven garrison Soldiers who competed, three earned gold and four won bronze. U.S. Soldiers can wear the badge with their dress uniform.

 

American Soldiers in Baumholder recently held a seminar in English for German noncommissioned officers, said German 1st Lt. Sebastian Schmidt. That event, plus the marksmanship competition, forces German troops to exercise their language skills, Schmidt said, to prepare for NATO missions in Afghanistan.

 

“It’s an opportunity for our soldiers to practice English,” Schmidt said. “We have different experiences on missions and in training. We can fill a gap – where we can give our skills to the Americans get some skills from them.”

 

U.S. Soldiers often work with coalition counterparts – to include the German Army – while deployed overseas, said Capt. Tom Lukins, commander U.S. Army Garrison Kaiserslautern’s Headquarters and Headquarters Detachment.

 

“This event strengthens the bond we have and builds partnerships for future training,” Lukins said.

 

Originally from Togo, Agnegue said meeting people and travelling is one of the best benefits of serving in the military, especially when it means sharing ideas through events like the Schützenschnur competition.

 

“The Army gave me so many opportunities to do things and this is one of those opportunities,” Agnegue said. “We’re working together, building camaraderie and that’s a great thing.”

 

U.S. Army Garrison Kaiserslautern site

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Link with us on Twitter...

 

100 Cars Compete in the Largest Optima Ultimate Street Car Invitational Ever

 

Mooresville, NC - goo.gl/S9UbRh The 2014 @OUSCI was a bit different in many ways than years past. First off, the event took place at Las Vegas Motor Speedway and secondly, the event was turned into a 2-day event. The two days turned out to be just what the doctor ordered as there were over 100 cars competing in the event.

 

@DetroitSpeedInc brought out the DSE 1970 #Camaro Test Car driven by Kyle Tucker and the DSE 2012 "White Monster" Camaro Test Car driven by Ryan Mathews. The two cars were stationed at Optima Alley during the @SEMAshow preparing for the event that took place the two days after SEMA.

 

There was a large contingent of DSE "Equipped" cars at this year's event. Everything from modern muscle to old 1960's original muscle were on hand ready to put the Detroit Speed suspension to the test during two grueling days of cone carving and high speed road course action.

 

The Optima Ultimate Street Car Invitational is a points based competition that is looking for the top street car in the country. The competition consists of the Detroit Speed sponsored "Road Rally," the speed-stop challenge, the autocross, the design and engineering challenge as well as the @BFGoodrichTires Hot Lap Challenge.

 

Saturday was the first day of the competition and started out with the autocross and speed-stop challenge. The competition was fierce and non-stop as competitor after competitor staged and prepared to lay it all on the line to be named the ultimate street car. Following a full day of action, the Detroit Speed Road Rally kicked off and cruised to Shelby American, Inc.

 

Sunday was the BFGoodrich Hot Lap Challenge. The challenge was broken into 3 classes of competition, the novice, the advanced and finally the expert class. Each class was chalk full of DSE "Equipped" cars. It was a thrill to look up and down the staging area and see the DSE "Equipped" decal on so many amazing street machines. Ryan and Kyle ran hard in this event with Ryan finishing in 2nd place. Ryan and Bryan Johnson had their usual battle of 5th gens. It is great to see two DSE "Equipped" cars running up front in 2nd and 3rd place. The competitiveness between these two gentlemen is undeniable. The respect they have for one another is truly admirable and it shows out on the track as they battle neck and neck at virtually every event.

 

This has been by far the best OUSCI yet and we look forward to competing in the years to come. Congratulations to Danny Popp for his overall victory, Brandon Ranvek for his 2nd place finish and to Betim Berisha for finishing 3rd. We would also like to congratulate Bryan Johnson on capturing Detroit Speed's "Fastest Fifth Gen" award and for finishing in 4th place. DSE's own Ryan Mathews captured 5th place while Mark Stielow captured the Detroit Speed "Fastest American Iron Pre-1980" award in his amazing DSE Equipped Hellfire Camaro. Mark's Hellfire is an amazing build that he isn't afraid to get dirty. That's our kind of builder and vehicle, performance driven and track proven.

 

OUSCI 2014 Highlights

• This was the largest OUSCI ever with over 100 cars competing in the new 2-day format

 

• Bryan Johnson finished 4th overall and captured the Detroit Speed "Fastest Fifth Gen" Award in his DSE Equipped 2013 Camaro

 

• Mark Stielow won the Detroit Speed "Fastest American Iron Pre-1980" award in his DSE Equipped Hellfire 1969 Camaro

 

• Ryan Mathews finished 2nd in the BFGoodrich Hot Lap Challenge and 5th overall in the DSE 2012 "White Monster" Camaro Test Car

 

• Congratulations to Jakey Sampson for putting down two great road course times for being only her second time on a road course

 

DSE “Equipped” Competitors at the 2014 OUSCI

 

Ryan Mathews - DSE 2012 "White Monster" Camaro Test Car

Kyle Tucker - DSE 1970 Camaro Test Car

Bryan Johnson - 2013 Camaro

Billy Utley - 1972 Nova

Mark Stielow - 1969 Camaro

Jake Rozelle - 1969 Camaro

Jordan Priestley - 2011 Camaro

Bob Bertelsen - 1969 C10

Cheryl Herrick - 1967 Nova

Sam Farrington - 1966 Chevelle

Brandy Phillips - 1972 C10

Deb Farrington - 1964 Chevelle

Tim Strange - 1969 Camaro

Dave Tucci - 1970 Mustang

Jakey Sampson - 2010 Camaro

 

#bfgoodrichtires #BFGRacing #DSEEquipped #Camaro #Chevy #detroitspeed #Chevelle #OUSCI #DriveUSCA

 

Athletes and coaches compete in the last two weeks of Friday Night Lights, the fitness competition held at CrossFit Scottsdale. Competitors from all over the valley (including Matt Lucas from CrossFit Southwest who earned third place overall in Men’s RX) put their strength, speed, endurance, power, flexibility and even accuracy to the test during the workout routines. The athletes with the most training, nutrition, and an elite level of physical fitness prevailed. Coach Luke Kayyem won the Rx Division for the men while Coach Melissa Einbinder won for the females. Several athletes qualified for the Southwest Regional competition, the next path to the Reebok Sponsored CrossFit Games.

Free for editorial use image, please credit: imagecomms

 

ParalympicsGB Table Tennis athlete, Joshua Stacey aged 21, from Cardiff, competing in the Singles Class 9 - Men event, at the Tokyo 2020 Paralympic Games.

 

ParalympicsGB is the name for the Great Britain and Northern Ireland Paralympic Team that competes at the summer and winter Paralympic Games. The Team is selected and managed by the British Paralympic Association, in conjunction with the national governing bodies, and is made up of the best sportsmen and women who compete in the 22 summer and 4 winter sports on the Paralympic Programme.

 

For additional Images please visit: www.digitalcontentdownload.com/paralympicsgb_2020/

 

For more information please contact the ParalympicsGB Press Office via press@paralympics.org.uk

 

If you require a higher resolution image or you have any other photographic enquiries, please contact imagecomms on +44 (0)20 7160 6282 or email hello@imagecomms.com

This image is copyright imagecomms 2021©.

 

This image has been supplied by imagecomms and must be credited imagecomms. The author is asserting his full Moral rights in relation to the publication of this image. Rights for onward transmission of this image or file is not granted or implied. Changing or deleting Copyright information is illegal as specified in the Copyright, Design and Patents Act 1988. If you are in any way unsure of your right to publish this image please contact imagecomms on +44 (0)20 7160 6282 or email hello@imagecomms.com

had these entered and was pleased with the results

see

bristolbonushour.com for the galleries with entries

the site will update with winners shortly

THE COMPETION WAS TO get as many of the 1 in 8 people who nights and the day of the competition the clocks "fall" back so making their day an extra hour

Hanzel Calderon, swimmer from Costa Rica, competed in the 2014 Special Olympics Southern California Inviitational Games. The D marked on his arm indicates he has a hearing impairment.

German-American couple brings troops together for competition

Check us out on Facebook!

 

By Rick Scavetta, U.S. Army Garrison Kaiserslautern

 

KUSEL, Germany – Raising her German Army patrol cap, Heidi Lehmann smiled as she watched her American husband join fellow U.S. Army Garrison Kaiserslautern Soldiers on the firing line.

 

Lehmann, 31, an oberfeldwebel – equivalent to a U.S. Army sergeant first class – recently spent two days translating for eight garrison Soldiers as they competed for the Schützenschnur, a coveted German Army’s weapons proficiency badge. She and her husband, Sgt. Esse Agnegue, a U.S. Army Garrison Kaiserslautern chaplain’s assistant, brought their units together for the training.

 

“It’s a nice experience for me to see my husband and the German Soldiers are happy to have the Americans here,” Lehmann said.

 

The couple met online when Agnegue, 31, was deployed to Iraq in 2007. He added her as a fan to his hip-hop music site. Later they realized their mutual love of motorcycles and travelling. They now have a one-year-old son.

 

Each morning, they put on camouflage fatigues of their respective armies and head off to separate bases – Lehmann to her transportation unit in Kusel and Agnegue to Pulaski Barracks in Kaiserslautern. Then they thought of a way to train together – though a shooting competition.

Garrison soldiers spent one day getting familiar with the German weapons using an indoor trainer.

The second day, they joined German troops on an outdoor range, firing a rifle, a pistol and a machine gun.

 

The Schützenschnur is awarded like the Olympics, in gold, silver and bronze. Of the seven garrison Soldiers who competed, three earned gold and four won bronze. U.S. Soldiers can wear the badge with their dress uniform.

 

American Soldiers in Baumholder recently held a seminar in English for German noncommissioned officers, said German 1st Lt. Sebastian Schmidt. That event, plus the marksmanship competition, forces German troops to exercise their language skills, Schmidt said, to prepare for NATO missions in Afghanistan.

 

“It’s an opportunity for our soldiers to practice English,” Schmidt said. “We have different experiences on missions and in training. We can fill a gap – where we can give our skills to the Americans get some skills from them.”

 

U.S. Soldiers often work with coalition counterparts – to include the German Army – while deployed overseas, said Capt. Tom Lukins, commander U.S. Army Garrison Kaiserslautern’s Headquarters and Headquarters Detachment.

 

“This event strengthens the bond we have and builds partnerships for future training,” Lukins said.

 

Originally from Togo, Agnegue said meeting people and travelling is one of the best benefits of serving in the military, especially when it means sharing ideas through events like the Schützenschnur competition.

 

“The Army gave me so many opportunities to do things and this is one of those opportunities,” Agnegue said. “We’re working together, building camaraderie and that’s a great thing.”

 

U.S. Army Garrison Kaiserslautern site

Check us out on Facebook!

Link with us on Twitter...

 

Army Staff Sgt. Dirk Omerzo, an instructor with the Pennsylvania Army National Guard’s 3rd Battalion, 166TH Regiment (Regional Training Institute), navigates an obstacle while competing in the 2016 Army National Guard Best Warrior Competition at Joint Base Cape Cod, Mass., Wednesday, June 22, 2016. The competition is a mentally and physically challenging three-day event that tests Soldiers on a variety of tactical and technical skills to determine the Army Guard’s Soldier and noncommissioned of the year. The winners move on to compete in the Department of the Army Best Warrior Competition, battling it out with Soldiers from throughout the Army to be named the Army’s Soldier and NCO of the year. (U.S. Army photo by Sgt. 1st Class Jon Soucy)

Athletes compete in the wheelchair basketball at Clune Arena during the 2018 Department of Defense Warrior Games at the Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs, Colo. June 09, 2018. The Warrior Games are a Paralympic-style annual competition, established in 2010, to provide adaptive sports opportunities for wounded, ill and injured service members from all U.S. branches of service and this year include teams from the United Kingdom Armed Forces, Australian Defence Force and Canadian Armed Forces. (DoD photo by John Leyba)

Journalists compete in more than 50 different categories; AGAHI Awards encourages best content in print, television, radio and online journalism.

  

Pakistan’s most prestigious journalism “Agahi Awards 2013” celebrated today at PNCA Islamabad. The Awards have been organized in collaboration with leading press clubs, local and international media development institutions, regulatory authorities, civil society organizations, private sector and other stakeholders. Puruesh Chaudhary Founder & President, AGAHI and Amir Jahangir Chief Executive Officer, Mishal Pakistan founded these awards in 2012.

The Agahi Awards are an annual series of awards for journalism in Pakistan, developed under the umbrella of the Credibility Lab at Mishal for creating an appreciation methodology for ethical and quality content. The evaluation methodology and criteria of the awards have been designed on the pillars of Media Development Indicators of UNESCO, in collaboratiosn with the Center for International Media Ethics (CIME) and UNESCO headquarters in Paris. The Awards were inaugurated in March 2012 and have become the most prestigious awards for the journalism in Pakistan.

  

The Awards have created appreciation for journalism in fifty different categories including business and economy, conflict, corruption, crime, education, infotainment, the nexus between water, energy and food security, gender and governance, health, extremism and terrorism, peace, interfaith, dignity; thus creating media diversity across print, television, radio and the online media.

  

Among the winners for this year’s “Agahi Awards 2013, the Journalist of the Year Award” were deigned in 50 categories. The award for business and economy was won by Naveen Mangi (Bloomberg), Maliha Naz Rana from Herald in Health and Primary Education, Shakeel Ahmad (DAWN News) Higher Education and Training, Zahir Shah Sherazi (DAWN News) in Infrastructure, Abdur Rauf (Express Tribune) for Institutions, Maimoona Saeed (GEO News) forLabor Market Efficiency, Ghulam Mohiuddin (AAJ TV) for Environment,Shabina Faraz (Jang) in Climate Change, Zahid Gishkori (Express Tribune) in Flood and Disaster Reporting, Sehrish Wasif (Express Tribune) in Disaster and Catastrophe, Xari Jalil (DAWN) in Governance, A.B. Arisar (DAWN) in Corruption, Asad Kharal (Express Tribune) forLaw &Order, Hanif Samoon (DAWN.com) in Health,Din Muhammad Watanpal (Daily Qudrat, Quetta) forChild Survival, Sarwar Baloch (VSH News) in Health&Nutrition, Ali Usman (Express Tribune) forNon Communicable Diseases, Zia ur Rehman (Friday Times) for Polio Immunization, Aslam Chandio (Online News Agency) forEnergy, Water &Food Security, Sarah Munir (Express Tribune) on Media Ethics,Syed Ali Shah (DAWN News) forMedia Safety, Ashraf Javed (The Nation)for Crime Reporting, Shahzada Irfan Ahmad (The News) forCorporate Social Responsibility, Zahir Shah Sherazi (DAWN News) in Democratic Values and Dignity, Bina Shah (Blogger) in Education, Zia ur Rehman (Friday Times) for Extremism and Terrorism,Shahzada Irfan Ahmad (The News) in Gender,A.B. Arrisar (DAWN) in Gender – Economic Opportunity, Abdul Shakoor (APP) in Gender – Health and Survival, Zia Ur Rehman (Friday Times) in Gender – Political Empowerment, Aamir Saeed (Pique Magazine) forHuman Rights,Fazal Khaliq (Express Tribune) in Child Protection, Kiran Nazish (DAWN.com) forChild Rights, A.B. Arisar in Gender – Domestic Violence, Zia ur Rehman (Friday Times) in Minorities &Marginalized Communities, Mehtab Haider (The News) in Political &Regularity Environment, Jawwad Rizvi (The News) in Market Environment, Faseeh Mangi (Bloomberg) in Infotainment,Mubashar Zaidi (DAWN.com) in Journalism for Peace,Muhammad Irfan Haider (Dawn) forConflict Reporting, Asad Kharal (Express Tribune) in Judiciary,Zeeshan Anwar (Daily Express) in Court Reporting, Zahir Shah Sherazi (DAWN.com) in Photo Journalism,Aslam Chandio (Online News Agency) in sports.

The awards ceremony was presented by Osama Bin Javaid, a Pakistani journalist based in the Middle East and Razeshta Sethna, par of the editorial team at a leading English language publication in Pakistan. The Awards also have special categories including“Current Affairs Anchor of the Year” and “News Channel of the Year” in Pakistan. These categories are on the basis of people’s choice, which includes voting for these two categories by reaching out to more than 6 million Pakistanis through social media engagement and 1.5 million via SMS campaign and direct feedback.

  

GEO NEWS won the Peoples’ Choice Award for the “Most Favourite News Channel” second year around.

The “Current Affairs Anchor of the Year” Award was for two emerging anchors; won by Iqrar ul Hassan (ARY News) and Alia Nazki (BBC Urdu), as “the Emerging Current Affair Anchor of the Year” in the male and female categories. “Investigative Journalist of the Year” award was won by Asad Kharal (Express Tribune).

Ejaz Haider from Capital TV awarded the “Most Credible Anchor” based on the Media Credibility Index developed in collaboration with more than 10 journalism schools in Pakistan.

To ensure diversity in content and more social issues to be highlighted in media, Mishal Pakistan in collaboration with Save the Childrencreated the health category further dividing them into six sub-categories. This has not only increased the quantum of health content in media, but has also encouraged journalists to write more on the socio-economic challenges in Pakistan.

This year AGAHI Awards received an overwhelming response by the journalist community, where more than 1500 nominations were received from all over the country across more than 50 different categories in print, television, radio and online content.

  

Academic partners for Agahi Awards 2013 from the disciplines of journalism and mass communication included;Fatima Jinnah Women University (Rawalpindi), AllamaIqbal Open University (Islamabad), BahauddinZakariya University (Multan), International Islamic University (Islamabad), Islamia University (Bahawalpur), University of Gujrat, National University of Science and Technology (Islamabad), Roskilde University (Denmark), Center for Media Pluralism and Media Freedom atEuropean University (Italy).

Press Clubs in Lahore, Peshawar, Karachi, Multan, and the National Press Club along with the Kashmir Press Club (Mirpur) and the Tribal Union of Journalists, Center for International Media Ethics, Ethical Journalism Network, Media Helping Media, Save the Children, Devex, International Center for Journalists (ICFJ), United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), Press Council of Pakistan, Internews Network, Center for Investigative Journalism (Bosina-Sarajevo), Transnational Crisis Project, Hayward Black Media, MediaShift, P@sha have partnered to ensure making the journalism awards at par with international standard of journalism.

 

Mishal Pakistan is the country partner Institute of the Center for Global Competitiveness and Benchmarking Networks at the World Economic Forum. Established in 2003, Mishal has been engaged with key stakeholders in Pakistan to improve the state of media through good governance initiatives.

   

Free for editorial use image, please credit: imagecomms

 

ParalympicsGB Cyclist, George Peasgood aged 25, from Saffron Walden, competing in the C4-5 - Road Race - Men event, at the Tokyo 2020 Paralympic Games.

 

ParalympicsGB is the name for the Great Britain and Northern Ireland Paralympic Team that competes at the summer and winter Paralympic Games. The Team is selected and managed by the British Paralympic Association, in conjunction with the national governing bodies, and is made up of the best sportsmen and women who compete in the 22 summer and 4 winter sports on the Paralympic Programme.

 

For additional Images please visit: www.digitalcontentdownload.com/paralympicsgb_2020/

 

For more information please contact the ParalympicsGB Press Office via press@paralympics.org.uk

 

If you require a higher resolution image or you have any other photographic enquiries, please contact imagecomms on +44 (0)20 7160 6282 or email hello@imagecomms.com

This image is copyright imagecomms 2021©.

 

This image has been supplied by imagecomms and must be credited imagecomms. The author is asserting his full Moral rights in relation to the publication of this image. Rights for onward transmission of this image or file is not granted or implied. Changing or deleting Copyright information is illegal as specified in the Copyright, Design and Patents Act 1988. If you are in any way unsure of your right to publish this image please contact imagecomms on +44 (0)20 7160 6282 or email hello@imagecomms.com

Teams competed in the one-rope bridge event Saturday, 3 November, 2018 during the U.S. Army JROTC Raider National Championships. | Photo by Brenadine C. Humphrey, U.S. Army Cadet Command Public Affairs

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