View allAll Photos Tagged EXPERTS

You can protect your online privacy on Google by “fake browsing”. Here’s a look at the steps by which you can trick Google and Internet Service Providers. Read more here bit.ly/2nlLLLd

 

National experts inspire innovation. The Healthy Worksite Summit brings wellness coordinators and other professionals together for a day of exhibits, panel discussion and interactive workshops to promote idea sharing.

 

For more information visit: www.awcnet.org/TrainingEducation/Conferences/HealthyWorks...

Ambassador Francisco Madeira, the Special Representative of the Chairperson of the AU Commission (SRCC) for Somalia, poses for a photograph with Bahame Tom Mukirya Nyanduga, the United Nations Independent Expert on the situation of human rights in Somalia, in the capital, Mogadishu, on 23 July 2019. AMISOM Photo

Anatoly Chubais, CEO of Russian Corporation of Nanotechnologies and former Chairman of Board of Directors of RAO Unified Energy System of Russia.

Get more details about ColdFusion here: www.cfDevshop.com/ To build a dynamic site in this present world is simple yet to keep up it is a bit hard job. An expert and master Coldfusion designer will make the assignment easier however it is not so easy to find an expert but they are real sagas in technology. Hiring a ColdFusion Developer to get highly effective web applications is a vibrant and successful thought.

 

Celebrating our EMC Community Experts program on Monday, May 10, at EMC World in Boston, MA.

Sgt. 1st Class Jessica Lam qualified expert at the M9 range at Camp Williams on June 21.

Soldiers from the 3rd Infantry Brigade Combat Team, 1st Armored Division and the 5th Brigade Combat Team, 1st Armored Division, complete a 12 mile ruck march in under three hours as part of their final task in receiving their Expert Infantryman Badge at Fort Bliss.

 

Photo by Samantha Reho

Fort Bliss Public Affairs

 

February 2010

Story and Photos by Sgt. Landis Andrews

444th MPAD

New Jersey Army National Guard

 

After high intensity training under the Fort Indiantown Gap sun, and nights spent trekking through the woods and over the hills of western Pennsylvania, New Jersey has awarded eight soldiers with the Expert Infantry Badge, one of the highest prizes an infantryman can earn.

 

On day one of the competition, 40 soldiers from all over New Jersey had eyes on the badge. However, as each event came to an end, so did the hopes of some candidates.

 

“It’s called the Expert Infantry Badge for a reason,” said 1st Sgt. Brian Townsend, the president of the committee that organized EIB 21. “The thing that knocked most people out was the small details. It’s not the Everybody Infantry Badge. It’s the Expert Infantry Badge.”

 

This particular expert infantry competition returns to New Jersey with brand new feel.

 

In previous EIB competitions, candidates displayed their warrior competence in a round-robin fashion, with each of the 40 events being timed.

 

In EIB 21, there are fewer events to complete, however, it is now done in a combat setting, adding a completely new element to the process.

 

“When the blood got pumping and the adrenaline was flowing, it made it more difficult to execute the tasks that you’re sure you know how to do,” said newly minted EIB recipient 1st Lt. Andrew Stevens of HHC 1/114th. “With the amount of preparation I put in to this, it was all muscle memory, but the combat element made it a bit more difficult.”

 

Though difficult, it did not stop Stevens from enjoying the tasks.

 

“The lanes were my favorite part,” he said. “Once we got passed the preparation, I had a really good time.”

 

Preparation was a huge part of EIB 21.

 

When the day was over and all of the competitors gathered for dinner, normal chow chatter was nowhere to be found. Instead, tips for the next day’s event feverishly bounced off the walls. Terms like left and right limit, call for fire, SALUTE report, check for shock and SPORTS filled the dining facility, leaving little room to discuss anything else. It sounded like these soldiers just stepped off of the battlefield.

 

That is what the planning committee intended.

 

“In the old style, you didn’t get as much battle field experience, but it was a little harder,” Townsend said. “But the EIB 21 adds the element of combat stress to make it more challenging.”

 

That new level of stress was felt prior to each event.

“Everyone was nervous before the lanes,” said Cpt. Timothy Sorrentino, commander of HHC 1/114th and EIB recipient. “Doing all of the tasks over and over again prior to the competition was easy. But, executing them under the pressure situation was different.”

 

Sgt. Thomas Fisk, EIB 21 staff and trainer, said this is how soldiers of today should be learning.

 

“It’s good that they see a scenario and it’s battle focused,” he said. “They know what they are supposed to do with their training and can immediately incorporate it with their mission.”

 

Fisk enjoyed this opportunity to teach soldiers skills needed to earn the prestigious badge that he received several years prior.

 

“I like to teach younger guys, any of the soldiers coming up,” the Neptune City native said. “That way, when they get to be sergeants, they can teach the guys coming up. That way we can have a better Army for the future.”

 

The future is something that Townsend is also looking toward.

 

“We wanted something to build from since this is the first time we are running EIB 21,” he said. “We mirrored a lot of what was going on at Fort Benning. What I wanted to do was give the state something to build off of, so we can make this competition something great for the state.”

 

Sorrentino expects a number of his soldiers to take part in next year’s event.

 

“It’s something that every infantryman should have,” the commander said, a sentiment that all infantrymen at competing at FIG echoed.

Story and Photos by Sgt. Landis Andrews

444th MPAD

New Jersey Army National Guard

 

After high intensity training under the Fort Indiantown Gap sun, and nights spent trekking through the woods and over the hills of western Pennsylvania, New Jersey has awarded eight soldiers with the Expert Infantry Badge, one of the highest prizes an infantryman can earn.

 

On day one of the competition, 40 soldiers from all over New Jersey had eyes on the badge. However, as each event came to an end, so did the hopes of some candidates.

 

“It’s called the Expert Infantry Badge for a reason,” said 1st Sgt. Brian Townsend, the president of the committee that organized EIB 21. “The thing that knocked most people out was the small details. It’s not the Everybody Infantry Badge. It’s the Expert Infantry Badge.”

 

This particular expert infantry competition returns to New Jersey with brand new feel.

 

In previous EIB competitions, candidates displayed their warrior competence in a round-robin fashion, with each of the 40 events being timed.

 

In EIB 21, there are fewer events to complete, however, it is now done in a combat setting, adding a completely new element to the process.

 

“When the blood got pumping and the adrenaline was flowing, it made it more difficult to execute the tasks that you’re sure you know how to do,” said newly minted EIB recipient 1st Lt. Andrew Stevens of HHC 1/114th. “With the amount of preparation I put in to this, it was all muscle memory, but the combat element made it a bit more difficult.”

 

Though difficult, it did not stop Stevens from enjoying the tasks.

 

“The lanes were my favorite part,” he said. “Once we got passed the preparation, I had a really good time.”

 

Preparation was a huge part of EIB 21.

 

When the day was over and all of the competitors gathered for dinner, normal chow chatter was nowhere to be found. Instead, tips for the next day’s event feverishly bounced off the walls. Terms like left and right limit, call for fire, SALUTE report, check for shock and SPORTS filled the dining facility, leaving little room to discuss anything else. It sounded like these soldiers just stepped off of the battlefield.

 

That is what the planning committee intended.

 

“In the old style, you didn’t get as much battle field experience, but it was a little harder,” Townsend said. “But the EIB 21 adds the element of combat stress to make it more challenging.”

 

That new level of stress was felt prior to each event.

“Everyone was nervous before the lanes,” said Cpt. Timothy Sorrentino, commander of HHC 1/114th and EIB recipient. “Doing all of the tasks over and over again prior to the competition was easy. But, executing them under the pressure situation was different.”

 

Sgt. Thomas Fisk, EIB 21 staff and trainer, said this is how soldiers of today should be learning.

 

“It’s good that they see a scenario and it’s battle focused,” he said. “They know what they are supposed to do with their training and can immediately incorporate it with their mission.”

 

Fisk enjoyed this opportunity to teach soldiers skills needed to earn the prestigious badge that he received several years prior.

 

“I like to teach younger guys, any of the soldiers coming up,” the Neptune City native said. “That way, when they get to be sergeants, they can teach the guys coming up. That way we can have a better Army for the future.”

 

The future is something that Townsend is also looking toward.

 

“We wanted something to build from since this is the first time we are running EIB 21,” he said. “We mirrored a lot of what was going on at Fort Benning. What I wanted to do was give the state something to build off of, so we can make this competition something great for the state.”

 

Sorrentino expects a number of his soldiers to take part in next year’s event.

 

“It’s something that every infantryman should have,” the commander said, a sentiment that all infantrymen at competing at FIG echoed.

A CTEC lift from Salt Lake City, Utah - a reminder of home!

Roulage Avenir Moto 05 Septembre 2021 - Experts

I see him every day when I come back from school, sitting on a little ledge next to an old dry cleaning shop on Bazaar Road in Bandra (west). He sits there from 10 till 1 pm every day, squinting at the piece of cloth draped over his, stitching deftly. Sometimes he looks up, straightens his back and shrugs his shoulders. He is a darner – that is, he mends torn clothes. This skill is known as rafoo – the delicate and very old art of hand-mending torn clothes, using tiny, almost invisible stitches.

 

He has a handpainted sign behind him advertising his services. When asked him what his name was he said “Just call me Rafoowaale Chacha (Rafoo Uncle), that’s how everyone knows me.” He told me he has done this for as long as he can remember. “I think I am sixty or sixty seven years old. And I have been doing this for more than fifty years. And I will continue till my eyesight’s fine.” He lives in JJ Colony and walks at least a kilometer every day.

 

With him, he brings a bag full of scraps of cloth. He unravels the cloth pieces to get thread of different colours for rafoo. He says this is how the best rafoo is done – either with thread from the original fabric itself or from scraps. He has a very thin needle with him so as to not leave any marks of repairing. “It should look like it has never been torn.” He makes between Rs100 to Rs200 per day.

Students from the HOME group went to other tables where they became EXPERTS on specific parts of the material.

Then they returned HOME to share.

Excellent strategy when you need all students to cover all material.

Roulage du 13 juin 2021 Groupe Experts

Before radar, these experimental concrete sound mirrors were used to try and detect planes crossing the channel.

Single male Leopard seen in Chitwah Chitwah game reserve. He was an expert hunter with 2 kills (impala) secreted in a nearby tree.

 

Limpopo

South Africa

February 2013

L'expert du Kamasutra

An old auto body shop in Calgary, I think I've heard recently that it will be torn down soon...

Roulage du 13 juin 2021 Groupe Experts

Expert on American elections Jessica N. Grounds held in Prague and Brno eight presentations focused on women’s political participation and the U.S. presidential election process held on March 1-4, 2016.

Gia, our local guide is from Kakheti himself. Churchkhela was delicious!

Roulage du 13 juin 2021 Groupe Experts

Sgt. Francis Aque, C Co., 1-38 Inf., calls in a nine-line MEDEVAC during testing to earn the Expert Infantry Badge April 9 to 13 at Joint Base Lewis-McChord.

The top of Static Cling, Sun Peaks. Steeper than it looks.

expert launch bunch of grapes kite

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