View allAll Photos Tagged Moderate
Moderate snowfall on the sand dunes, sea buckthorn and salt marsh beyond.Copyright Natural England/Peter Roworth10th February 2012.
Jennifer Dungs moderating a session on how transport project appraisal can help ensure accessibility and makes cities more liveable. The session "How to capture accessibility benefits in transport planning" takes place during the International Transport Forum's 2023 Summit on "Transport Enabling Sustainable Economies" in Leipzig, Germany on 25 May 2023.
Secretary Walker moderated an engaging panel discussion on the Future of STEM in Health Care during the STEM Council’s STEM Symposium on May 2 at Delaware State University in Dover. “I see STEM everywhere and in everything,” Dr. Marsha Horton, dean for DSU’s College of Education, Health and Public Policy, told the more than 150 students in the audience. Across the country, there are more than 4.5 million unfilled STEM positions in all fields.
“Most people think of health care in a hospital as doctors or nurses … however, there is a support mechanism that cares for your family and friends,” said Michael Maksmow, vice president and chief information officer for Beebe Healthcare. And information technology is behind much of that support – from keeping the lights and HVAC systems working, to analyzing clinical data, to biomedical engineering.
Secretary Walker, who is a board-certified family physician, told the students that she and Regina Sims Wright, associate dean for diversity at UD’s College of Health Sciences, both participated in FAME, a Delaware nonprofit that prepares and motivates students, especially minorities and girls, to pursue college degrees and careers in STEM. Because of FAME, Secretary Walker said she got a full scholarship to UD to study chemical engineering and spent summers working at Merck. “Chemical engineering is not the easiest way to get to med school,” the Secretary said.
Dean Wright said her PhD is in psychology and she has used that degree to pursue research, including cardiovascular health and cognitive function in older adults. She urged the students to consider STEM-related research and teaching as potential careers. “Diversity is really important,” Secretary Walker added. She said there weren’t enough minority professors for her to look up when she was in college, medical school and graduate school.
Dean Horton said the look and the process of health and allied sciences are changing, and a different skill set will be needed in the next generation. As an example, she asked Dr. Chris Mason to tell the students about research he is doing with Dr. Von Homer on biomechanics and motion analysis and applying it to professional athletes to help reduce injuries. The researchers demonstrated how they are collecting data using sensors that connect to a subject’s legs and feet and that mirror the person’s movements onto a nearby computer.
To read more about DSU’s Kinesiology program:
cehpp.desu.edu/departments/public-allied-health-sciences/...
To read more about FAME:
To read more about the Delaware STEM Council:
** Moderated by Gary Jones (Walter Harriman) with Ben Browder(Cameron Mitchell), Amanda Tapping (Samantha Carter), Christopher Judge (Teal'c), Robert Cooper (executive producer/writer) and Martin Wood (Director/Supervising Producer) **
Check out my Blog on info of my Comic Con trip.
** Moderated by Gary Jones (Walter Harriman) with Ben Browder (Cameron Mitchell), Amanda Tapping (Samantha Carter), Christopher Judge (Teal'c), Robert Cooper (executive producer/writer) and Martin Wood (Director/Supervising Producer) **
Check out my Blog on info of my Comic Con trip.
** Moderated by Gary Jones (Walter Harriman) with Ben Browder(Cameron Mitchell), Amanda Tapping (Samantha Carter), Christopher Judge (Teal'c), Robert Cooper (executive producer/writer) and Martin Wood (Director/Supervising Producer) **
Check out my Blog on info of my Comic Con trip.
** Moderated by Gary Jones (Walter Harriman) with Ben Browder(Cameron Mitchell), Amanda Tapping (Samantha Carter), Christopher Judge (Teal'c), Robert Cooper (executive producer/writer) and Martin Wood (Director/Supervising Producer) **
Check out my Blog on info of my Comic Con trip.
Moderate growth rate, sensitive coral. Little tendency to encrust. Prone to RTN. Not for beginners. Strong light for best color. Very delicate, thin branches even in high water flow/light.
NRC Chairman Gregory Jaczko (near right) moderates a session in Madrid at an international workshop on crisis communications organized by the Nuclear Energy Agency. The two-day event drew approximately 180 experts, observers and reporters to discuss crisis communications in the wake of the Fukushima accident. The panelists are from Spain, India, Ireland and Japan. In the foreground participating international delegates and translators.
Photographed are (left to right) Eliot Brenner, US NRC, USA; Marina Calvo, Communication Advisor, CSN, Spain; S.S. Bajaj, Chairman, AERB, India; Gregory Jaczko, Chairman of the US NRC, USA; Ann McGarry, Chief Executive, PRII, Ireland,
Watch webcast archives of the OECD/NEA Workshop at
scpro.streamuk.com/uk/player/Default.aspx?g=22cb77d8.
Visit the Nuclear Regulatory Commission's website at www.nrc.gov/.
To comment on this photo go to public-blog.nrc-gateway.gov/2012/04/01/nrc-moves-its-publ....
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Privacy Policy: www.nrc.gov/site-help/privacy.html.
A moderated discussion with David Lipton, First Deputy Managing Director of the IMF with Rana Foroohar, covering key issues and risks facing the global economy, including trade tensions, fintech, and how well-prepared governments are for the next downturn. How should policy makers be thinking about these new challenges and their potential impact? This New Challenges Facing the Global Economy seminar was at the IMF Headquarters during the 2019 IMF/World Bank Spring Meetings April 11, 2019 in Washington, DC. IMF Staff Photograph/Stephen Jaffe
BBC journalist Mishal Husain moderates a panel on "Digital Architecture - The Soft Infrastructure of the Global Market" at the WIPO Conference on the Digital Market, which met in Geneva from April 20 to 22, 2016.
At the Conference, public and private sector leaders as well as creators discuss the creative content economy, which has seen radical change to access and business models for more than a decade.
Copyright: WIPO. Photo: Emmanuel Berrod. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 IGO License.
Moderate Energy Circalittoral Rock within the upper circalittoral zone. Morte Platform MCZ. Credit: © Crown Copyright
Dillard University Students Kalaya Sibley and Amaya Ronczyk moderate the Next Generation Leadership Institute Black Women Political Takeover panel discussion with New Orleans Mayor LaToya Cantrell, The Power Coalition for Equity and Justice Director of Programs & Policy Power Coalition for Equity and Justice Janea Jamison, New Orleans Attorney & Entrepreneur Nia Weeks, Office of Rep. Troy Carter Congressional Staffer Kaylan Tanner, Office of Rep. Nikema Williams Correspondent Layla Brooks and In Our Own Voice: National Black Women’s Reproductive Justice Agenda President & CEO Marcela Howell on March 29, 2022. (Photo by Sabree Hill/ Dillard University Photographer)
Canon 'New F1' moderate scan Fujuchrome 100ASA transparency. (still in my drybox)
Leopards are seldom seen being beautifully camouflaged nocturnal solitary hunters. So when this one suddenly emerged late afternoon in front of our jeep I had very little time to react. Fortunately I was not only carrying a Canon F1 camera with a 300 ml lens-which would been useless at such close range-but another mounted with a 50 ml which was ideal. The dappled light suits the subject and importantly catches the highlight of its eyes..The leopard quickly took refuge in a tree and it was not long before it was surrounded by other vehicles taking the more usual photos (as I did too) of it resting among the branches.
The leopard is a more flexible hunter than the other big cats; it can pursue its prey even among the branches. This is hard to capture on camera but I finally found stunning footage of a successful leopard hunt. It is the Virungas episode of the Off the Fence production “Wildest Africa” It follows a leopard’s high speed pursuit and capture of a baboon attempting to flee through the trees of the African rainforest. Even more amazingly it is filmed at night. Presumably several cameras were manned as some distance is covered. It makes the usual film of terrestrial lion and cheetah hunts look simple by comparison though of course they too cinematographic achievements.
From right, U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Local and Regional Food Systems Policy Advisor Tricia Kovacs, moderates a discussion about ‘How is USDA Measuring Impact of Local Food Investments?’ with Agricultural Marketing Service (AMS) Transportation and Marketing Program Deputy Administrator Arthur Neal, National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA) Nutrition/Extension Division National Program Leader Jane Clary Loveless, National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS) Census and Survey Division Director Barbara Rater, Food and Nutrition Service Community Food Systems Director Erin Healy, and Rural Development Rural Business-Cooperative Service Business Programs Deputy Administrator Claudette Fernandez, during the Local Food Impacts Conference, Monday, April 3, 2017, at George Washington University (GWU) in Washington DC. The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Agricultural Marketing Service (AMS), in partnership with GWU hosts the Local Food Impacts Conference. Congressionally authorized grant and loan programs to support local food systems have expanded in recent years. Quantifying and evaluating the impacts of these programs is critical. Attendees can explore how to best measure the impacts of local food investments, improve coordination across USDA agencies, and evaluate the extent to which disparate local food investments are complementary and reinforcing. Beyond metrics, this conference provides an opportunity to share local food stories with new stakeholders. For more information, please see localfoodsimpact.org/. USDA Photo by Lance Cheung.
Secretary Walker moderated an engaging panel discussion on the Future of STEM in Health Care during the STEM Council’s STEM Symposium on May 2 at Delaware State University in Dover. “I see STEM everywhere and in everything,” Dr. Marsha Horton, dean for DSU’s College of Education, Health and Public Policy, told the more than 150 students in the audience. Across the country, there are more than 4.5 million unfilled STEM positions in all fields.
“Most people think of health care in a hospital as doctors or nurses … however, there is a support mechanism that cares for your family and friends,” said Michael Maksmow, vice president and chief information officer for Beebe Healthcare. And information technology is behind much of that support – from keeping the lights and HVAC systems working, to analyzing clinical data, to biomedical engineering.
Secretary Walker, who is a board-certified family physician, told the students that she and Regina Sims Wright, associate dean for diversity at UD’s College of Health Sciences, both participated in FAME, a Delaware nonprofit that prepares and motivates students, especially minorities and girls, to pursue college degrees and careers in STEM. Because of FAME, Secretary Walker said she got a full scholarship to UD to study chemical engineering and spent summers working at Merck. “Chemical engineering is not the easiest way to get to med school,” the Secretary said.
Dean Wright said her PhD is in psychology and she has used that degree to pursue research, including cardiovascular health and cognitive function in older adults. She urged the students to consider STEM-related research and teaching as potential careers. “Diversity is really important,” Secretary Walker added. She said there weren’t enough minority professors for her to look up when she was in college, medical school and graduate school.
Dean Horton said the look and the process of health and allied sciences are changing, and a different skill set will be needed in the next generation. As an example, she asked Dr. Chris Mason to tell the students about research he is doing with Dr. Von Homer on biomechanics and motion analysis and applying it to professional athletes to help reduce injuries. The researchers demonstrated how they are collecting data using sensors that connect to a subject’s legs and feet and that mirror the person’s movements onto a nearby computer.
To read more about DSU’s Kinesiology program:
cehpp.desu.edu/departments/public-allied-health-sciences/...
To read more about FAME:
To read more about the Delaware STEM Council:
Since a week I am the new moderator of the group Bionicle without the Bionicle. It's a group about Bionicle MOCs, but without Toamods and humanoïd robots, to show an other face of Bionicle moccing. If you're not a member of this group yet, I encourage you to join it ;) : www.flickr.com/groups/1412762@N23/
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Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken participates in a moderated conversation on Rising to the Pandemic Challenge at the @america Center in Jakarta, Indonesia, on December 14, 2021. [State Department photo by Ron Przysucha/ Public Domain]
Mingle Media TV and Red Carpet Report host, Linda Antwi, were invited to cover the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences's Evening with “Game of Thrones,” at the TCL Chinese Theater in Hollywood. The live stream panel was moderated by Rob McElhenney, Star and Creator of “It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia.” The sold out event hosted by the Academy of Television gave Academy members and their guests a special, behind-the-scenes look inside HBO’s award-winning fantasy series with creator George R. R. Martin on hand along with the HBO Executive Producers David Benioff and D.B. Weiss and several of the cast members.
Get the Story from the Red Carpet Report Team - follow us on Twitter and Facebook at:
www.facebook.com/RedCarpetReportTV
About “Game of Thrones”
Based on the bestselling fantasy book series by George R.R. Martin, GAME OF THRONES. Created and executive produced by David Benioff and D.B. Weiss, GAME OF THRONES is an epic story of treachery and nobility. Set on the continent of Westeros, where summers and winters can last years, GAME OF THRONES follows the men and women of Westeros in their bloody struggle for the coveted Iron Throne. The Emmy®- and Golden Globe-winning series returns for its ten-episode third season SUNDAY, MARCH 31 (9:00-10:00 p.m. ET/PT). www.facebook.com/GameOfThrones
For more of Mingle Media TV’s Red Carpet Report coverage, please visit our website and follow us on Twitter and Facebook here:
www.facebook.com/minglemediatvnetwork
www.facebook.com/RedCarpetReportTV
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Moderated by
Bob Schieffer
Chief Washington Correspondent, CBS News;
Anchor, CBS News' “Face the Nation”
Panelists
The Honorable Kurt Campbell
Assistant Secretary of State for East Asia and the Pacific
Richard McGregor
Washington Bureau Chief, Financial Times;
Author, The Party: The Secret World of China's Communist Rulers
Christopher K. Johnson
Senior Adviser and Freeman Chair in China Studies, CSIS
csis.org/event/schieffer-series-chinas-leadership-transit...
Moderate seeing today, but doesn't matter: AR2339 is still big enough! Other interesting groups and faculae are in the offing...
In the Green Truck Summit plenary session The Future of Sustainability for Work Trucks, a panel of nine OEM experts - moderated by the Honorable Gregory A. Ballard, Mayor of the City of Indianapolis - presented strategies and solutions for incorporating alternative fuels and advanced technologies into their future product offerings to meet fleets' needs for reduced fuel costs, greater efficiency and increased productivity. Speaking to the decision-making process and the breadth of alternative fuels and technologies now available, Ford Motor Company's Jon Coleman, PhD, fleet sustainability and technology manager, said, "If you're wondering what solution wins, it's up to you," based on regional conditions and the needs of the fleet. Andrew Douglas, national sales manager, Kenworth Truck Company, indicated that there is no clear path to moving heavy weights with anything other than gaseous liquid and fuel. Brian Daniels, product manager vocational and alternative fuels, Daimler Trucks North America, expects that natural gas will supply 10% of the industry by 2020.
Following the moderate success of the Hawker Sea Hawk naval attack aircraft, Hawker began work on a version with a more powerful engine and swept wings, the P.1052, in 1948. While promising, work on the P.1052 and the more advanced P.1081 never progressed beyond the prototype stage. Hawker saw potential in the design and famous British aircraft designer Sydney Camm began reworking it as the P.1067 to fufill the RAF’s requirement for a day interceptor. This first flew in July 1951 as the Hunter, and subsequent prototypes used either the Rolls-Royce Avon or Armstrong-Siddeley Sapphire engine.
While abysmally short-ranged, the Hunter displayed superb maneuverability and transonic speed, and so was placed in production as the Hunter F.1 (Avon engine) and F.2 (Sapphire engine). Some problems were quickly identified: besides its short range, the intakes did not pull in enough air for the Avon engine (the Sapphire did not share these problems) and it had a tendency to flame out. Both versions shared problems with ejected shells striking and damaging the fuselage at high speed, canopy fogging, and problems with the ventral airbrakes. Hawker went back to the drawing board and produced the Hunter F.3, with an improved Avon, revised airbrakes, and a more pointed nose for improved aerodynamics; this was followed by the F.4 with a slightly larger wing, more fuel capacity, and blisters under the nose to collect spent shells. Finally, the design culminated with the Hunter F.6, which incorporated all the improvements of the F.4, had a redesigned wing with dogtooth leading edges for improved performance, and finally fixed the Avon’s problems with a new compressor and fuel system.
The Hunter F.6—subsequently modified as the FGA.9 to carry air-to-ground ordnance, as the English Electric Lightning replaced it as an interceptor—proved to be every bit as successful as Camm had hoped. Fast and very maneuverable, even if the range problem was never wholly solved, the Hunter was also reliable and rugged. 23 air forces would eventually adopt the Hunter. The RAF used it in Aden (Yemen) against separatist insurgents, while Pakistani-flown Iraqi Hunters and Jordanian Hunters proved to be the only real challenge to Israeli Mirage IIIs before and during the Six-Day War of 1967. The air force using the Hunter most extensively was India’s, who used it in both the 1965 and 1971 Indo-Pakistani Wars, mainly in the ground attack role, where it excelled.
The Hunter also was exceptionally long-lived, remaining in service into the 21st Century with a few air forces. India did not retire their Hunters until 2002, while Swiss Hunters (refitted to carry both AIM-9 Sidewinders and AGM-65 Maverick missiles) stayed in frontline service until replaced by the F/A-18 Hornet in 1996. As recently as 2007, Lebanon put its stored Hunters back into service. The RAF, the original customer, still flies three Hunters as research aircraft. Finally, there are 36 Hunters flying with private companies as warbirds, research aircraft, and aggressors.
Though technically not a FGA.9, this is a Hunter Mk. 58 built for the Swiss Air Force; Swiss Hunters, as mentioned above, were modified to essentially FGA.9 standard. Delivered in 1959, J-4035 served its entire career with Fliegergruppe 11 at Payerne. It was retired in 1994 and sold to the Planes of Fame Museum at Chino, California, which kept it in flyable condition until 2007, when it was donated to the Pima Air and Space Museum.
The Hunter is probably my favorite British aircraft (though the deHavilland Mosquito is a very close second); it looks fast standing still. J-4035 is in superb condition, wearing the semi-glossy Swiss tactical camouflage carried by their Hunters and deHavilland Vampires.
Fred Wegman, Professor of Road Safety at University of Technology Delft, Netherlands and Chairman of IRTAD moderates the "Shared Road to Safety - A Global Approach to Safer Motorcycling" Side Event organised by the International Motorcycle Manufacturers Association (IMMA) at the 2014 Annual Summit of the International Transport Forum “Transport for a Changing World”
on 21 May 2014 in Leipzig, Germany
May 6, 2015 - North East of Carleton Nebraska US
A moderate threat for severe storms in south central Nebraska this day. It was a true chase day in Nebraska as storms were already developing in north central Kansas and pushing over the Nebraska Border by 2:00pm.
Shortly after the Carelton Nebraska Tornado, I had to move north to see If I could catch it again if i had redeveloped to the northwest.
The storm did reproduce a wall cloud, but I didn't get another tornado out of this cell.
Another good set of captures as I was now ahead of the cell once again.
*** Please NOTE and RESPECT the Copyright ***
Copyright 2015
Dale Kaminski @ NebraskaSC Photography
All Rights Reserved
This image may not be copied, reproduced, published or distributed in any medium without the expressed written permission of the copyright holder.
#ForeverChasing
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Moderator moderated by Sheila Watson (FIA Foundation) reveals how well ITF member countries fare in efforts to enable walking and cycling in cities. The press conference entitled "Walking and cycling: Are ITF member countries delivering on active mobility goals?" takes place during the International Transport Forum's 2023 Summit on "Transport Enabling Sustainable Economies" in Leipzig, Germany on 25 May 2023.
Discussion moderated by Dave Karger, writer and editor for Entertainment Weekly Magazine.
On Nov 10, 2009, 92YTribeca and Borders were proud to join forces with Twentieth Century Fox, to present an evening of conversation with Wes Anderson (Director) and Jason Schwartzman (voice of "Ash").
In advance of the release of Fantastic Mr. Fox, Wes and Jason discussed working together on the film, a stop motion animated adaptation of the Roald Dahl novel. In addition to the moderated discussion, we had a sneak peek of clips from the film and the opportunity to participate in audience Q&A.
Read more on the 92Y Blog: blog.92y.org/index.php/weblog/item/what_you_missed_a_conv...
Fantastic Mr. Fox in select theatres Nov. 13, everywhere Nov. 25. For more information on the film and to view the trailer please visit www.fantasticmrfoxmovie.com
Follow 92YTribeca on Twitter: Twitter.com/92YTribeca
92YTribeca Talks and Classes Facebook: www.facebook.com/#/group.php?gid=38456170015&ref=ts
ionic,houses,prefabs,furniture,music,stage,deco,indie,drums,guitar,posters,home,gacha,mesh,
This store brings a cool soundtrack to your home shopping experience: browse through stylish houses, prefabs, furniture, and music stages, both indie and deco.
Moderated by
Bob Schieffer
Chief Washington Correspondent, CBS News;
Anchor, CBS News’ “Face the Nation”
Panelists:
-Thomas L. Friedman
Pulitzer Prize–winning Author and Columnist, New York Times
-Margaret Brennan
State Department Correspondent, CBS News
-Gerald F. Seib
Washington Bureau Chief, The Wall Street Journal
Author, Capitol Journal columnist
The Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) and TCU’s Schieffer School of Journalism invite you to the next session of The CSIS-Schieffer Series Dialogues
Made possible with support from the Stavros Niarchos Foundation
on
Foreign Policy Challenges for President Obama’s Second Term
In the Green Truck Summit plenary session The Future of Sustainability for Work Trucks, a panel of nine OEM experts - moderated by the Honorable Gregory A. Ballard, Mayor of the City of Indianapolis - presented strategies and solutions for incorporating alternative fuels and advanced technologies into their future product offerings to meet fleets' needs for reduced fuel costs, greater efficiency and increased productivity. Speaking to the decision-making process and the breadth of alternative fuels and technologies now available, Ford Motor Company's Jon Coleman, PhD, fleet sustainability and technology manager, said, "If you're wondering what solution wins, it's up to you," based on regional conditions and the needs of the fleet. Andrew Douglas, national sales manager, Kenworth Truck Company, indicated that there is no clear path to moving heavy weights with anything other than gaseous liquid and fuel. Brian Daniels, product manager vocational and alternative fuels, Daimler Trucks North America, expects that natural gas will supply 10% of the industry by 2020.
There was a packed house for the March 2009 Association for Women in Communications (AWC) Austin luncheon about social media, moderated by Sheila Scarborough and including panelists Steve Golab (FG Squared,) Eileen Smith (In the Pink Texas and Texas Monthly.com) and Michelle Greer (winner of the top Texas Social Media Award.)
*** www.awcaustin.org/mc/community/eventdetails.do?eventId=21...
Moderate growth rate, super strong, thick, and long branches, sometimes branches twist a bit, very hardy. Sometimes has green coralites under strong light.
Entry in Flickr Twitter Tuesday "#Panic" contest.
James Shemwell having fun during a photo shoot at the Bickelhaupt Arboretum.
My children love to act up when I put them in front of the lens and I roll with it. Photo shoots with them find us full of laughter with sore cheeks as a result. Flipping through the images later always brings forth a smile and more laughs.
Image by Lauri M Shemwell
"Wellpark" , laden down with a cargo of 30,000 tons of millet seed, noses into the Indian Ocean on her way from Bahia Blanca in southern Argentina to Kaohsiung, Taiwan, September 1978.