View allAll Photos Tagged ORGANIZATIONS

As a business man I have been fascinated by military theoreticians - from Clausewitz to Sun Tze. Indeed, nobody has influenced business strategies and marketing more than the military.

 

I have learned that organizations cannot survive without clear marketing objectives and that achieving organizational goals depend on strategy (which is indeed a long-term plan to achieve objectives such as, for example, becoming the market leader by minimizing costs to a level beating low-cost competitors).

 

It is important to distinguish between strategy and tactics. Chinese military strategist Sun Tzu, highlights the interrelation between the two: “Strategy without tactics is the long road to victory. Tactics without strategy is the noise before defeat.”

 

Tactics consist of ploys, patterns or maneuvers or techniques you develop and implement to drive and support your strategy, and to get you closer to your objective. In the military (in particular in the West), tactics are defined as “the techniques for using weapons or military units in combination for engaging and defeating an enemy in battle” (source: Wikipedia – Military tactics) while in business tactics is about reaching your target market or getting a customer or to stopping customers from going to a competitor.

 

These terms originate from military use (e.g. military strategy is the general policy overview of how to defeat the enemy before and during a military campaign).

 

In Vietnam I felt honored and highly impressed when meeting the legendary General Vo Nguyen Giap, a military genius (see www.flickr.com/photos/felix_abt/9447142821).

 

I also met Dang Van Viet, the Viet Minh commander who inflicted the first big and deadly defeat on the French colonial army. I played tennis with him and, amazingly, even at 90 years of age he was still a good tennis player.

 

Dang Van Viet stems from a prestigious family of mandarins. His ancestors were generals from the Tran dynasty which defeated the Mongolians in the 13th century. Family members were scholars and ministers during different dynasties. His father was appointed minister by President Ho Chi Minh in his first government. As a fierce patriot, Dang Van Viet gave up his studies at the faculty of medicine in Hanoi to join the Viet Minh in 1943 at the age of 23 in order to fight the foreign intruders and he quickly became the youngest lieutenant colonel. The legendary General Vo Nguyen Giap under whose command the Vietnamese military defeated the invading French, Japanese and U.S. armies entrusted him with some of the most difficult military tasks. Colonel Viet was put in charge of the regiment of the Vietnamese People’s Army that inflicted the first great defeat in 1950 to the French colonial army (according to Yves Gras’s "Histoire de la guerre d’Indochine", Denoël 1992) along the colonial number four highway at the Chinese border. During this border campaign more than 5.500 French soldiers were wiped out in seven days.

 

Dang Van Viet led his regiment into more than 120 battles and lost just five. As a brave and exemplary military leader he always stood in the front line with his soldiers and got injured many times and escaped death several times. Colonel was the highest rank he could achieve due to his family history. Soldiers from formerly oppressed peasants’ and workers’ classes had first priority to rise to the highest military ranks in the people’s army of Vietnam. Dang Van Viet has always been a devoted soldier and a loyal member of the communist party. He shared and fully supported Ho Chi Minh’s vision of a united, independent and socially just Vietnam. After successfully fighting the French he turned to the civilian sector and helped rebuild his country as a senior civil engineer.

 

Dang Van Viet was not only an important actor on historic battlegrounds but also an esteemed witness of the Vietnamese anti-colonial struggle. He documented this historical event in a book called “The Flaming Number Four Highway” (available in English). His commander General Vo Nguyen Giap wrote about Viet’s book: “The memoir 'The Flaming Number Four Higway' by Dang Van Viet depicts in a realistic way some of the most important and most unforgettable events at the historic battlefields of the anti-French war. It’s the main reason that makes this memoir an impressive work which I enjoyed so much.”

 

I enjoyed listening to this great man who speaks fluent French. Dang Van Viet taught me a lot of interesting things. I learned from him that the Vietnamese have defeated and repelled 20 foreign invasions: the Chinese 13 times, the Mongolians 3 times, the French 2 times, the Japanese and the Americans each once. He proudly explained me that the Vietnamese, throughout their long history, succeeded in maintaining their territorial integrity and their own culture. He also said that Vietnam developed distinct military strategies serving its own needs best which are not copies of Chinese military strategies (Sun Tzu) or European military theories (Clausewitz). He is working on a book on Vietnamese military history where he will explain this in more detail and I will be the first to buy it when it’s published!

 

Photo: Dang Van Viet and Felix Abt

 

Summary of some military history facts regarding Vietnam:

- Vietnam was invaded 20 times in its history. It defeated and got rid of the invaders. No other country has been invaded so often.

- Its invaders were stronger and had resources many times those of Vietnam. But smaller countries can defeat stronger invading countries if they have the right strategies and tactics, as Dang Van Viet says.

- Amongst the 30 biggest military battles on earth two were fought in Vietnam according to military historians: the colonial highway No. 4 battle in 1950 (under the command of Dang Van Viet) and the battle in Dien Bien Phu 1954 which led to the end of the French colonial rule in Vietnam.

 

Sons of Liberty, secret organizations formed in the American colonies in protest against the Stamp Act (1765). They took their name from a phrase used by Isaac Barré in a speech against the Stamp Act in Parliament, and were organized by merchants, businessmen, lawyers, journalists, and others who would be most affected by the Stamp Act. The leaders included John Lamb and Alexander McDougall in New York, and Samuel Adams and James Otis in New England. The societies kept in touch with each other through committees of correspondence, supported the nonimportation agreement, forced the resignation of stamp distributors, and incited destruction of stamped paper and violence against British officials. They participated in calling the Continental Congress of 1774. In the Civil War, the Knights of the Golden Circle adopted (1864) the name Sons of Liberty.

 

For the American "armchair historian," this American Revolutionary organization conjures up a myriad of confusing images. But, what of this "secret" organization that played such an integral part in advancing the idea of American independence from Great Britain? What were the Sons of Liberty? Who were its members and how widespread was its support among the thirteen colonies comprising British America? What was the ideology and degree of political affiliation within the organization?

 

Shrouded in secrecy, the origins of the Sons of Liberty are in dispute. Some historical sources claim that the movement began in New York City in January 1765. A more popular claim is that the movement began in Boston, Massachusetts through the leadership of one Samuel Adams (a well known American Revolutionary firebrand) in early 1765. It is quite likely that the Boston and New York City chapters of the Sons of Liberty were organized and developed simultaneously. Tradition has it that the Boston chapter gathered beneath the Liberty Tree for meetings while the New York City chapter met beneath the Liberty Pole for its meetings. For reasons of safety and secrecy, Sons of Liberty groups tended to meet late at night so as not to attract attention and detection of British officials and the American Loyalist supporters of the British Crown.

 

This secret patriotic society had its roots in the Committees of Correspondence. The "Committees" were colonial groups organized prior to the outbreak of the American War for Independence and were established for the purpose of formally organizing public opinion and coordinating patriotic actions against Great Britain. These original committees were loosely organized groups of private citizens formed in the New York, Massachusetts, and Rhode Island colonies from 1763-1764.

 

It was the Boston Committee of Correspondence that directed the Boston Tea Party action of December 16, 1773.1 Upset with the lack of redress concerning the new tax on tea established by the British government for importation of tea to Boston, a small band of the Boston Committee of Correspondence members (approximately fifty in number) lead by Samuel Adams, proceeded to empty three ships worth and 342 chests of tea into Boston Harbor in protest.2

 

Was this an early terrorist action or a patriotic action. Surely, the answer lies with perspective. If you were a British official, this action was treasonous and punishable by death. If you were an American colonial citizen, this event would be seen as a glorious action of the freedom fighters worthy of praise, pride, and acclaim.

  

Essentially, the Sons of Liberty organized into patriotic chapters as a result of the Stamp Tax imposed by the British government on the American colonists in 1765. As a result of the heavy debt incurred from the French and Indian War (1754-1763) and the resulting burden of increased British possessions in the Americas gained as a result of victory in the war (Canada, Louisiana land area known as "New France," and several former French islands of the West Indies), British Parliament decided to station British "regular" troops in the American colonies to keep the French from attempting to recapture Canada and to defend the colonies against the Native American Indians.3 It should be noted that the vast majority of Native Americans sided with the French in the North American Theater of the Seven Years War (1756-1763) and had a notorious record of carrying out terrifying raids against British colonists in the frontier regions of the New York, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, Virginia, Maryland, and Carolina colonies dating back to the middle seventeenth century.

 

The Stamp Act of March 1765 was instituted to help defray the costs of maintaining British troops in the American colonies by issuing tax stamps for a wide range of public documents including: customs documents, newspapers, legal papers, and licenses. The British government believed that this stamp tax passed specifically for the American colonies was quite fair and just as a means to help pay their share of the huge national debt incurred from the Seven Years War. After all, reasoned Parliament, had not the colonies directly benefited from the war and the expulsion of the French threat from Canada? While Parliament felt that the American colonies should pay their fair portion of the war debt, the colonists responded with outrage and indignation.

 

The Stamp Act like the Sugar Act before it, reasoned the colonists, was yet another example of Parliament trampling on the colonial legislature's right to tax their own people. Actions and attitudes of colonists regarding perceived British monetary atrocities against their well being formed the foundation for the rallying cry of American patriots across the land namely, "no taxation without representation." The American colonists had no physical representation or voice in London Parliament, nor did they ever wish to, assert many historians. With actual American representation in Parliament, there would be no need for seeking independence.4

 

The Sons of Liberty organizations responded to the Stamp Act of 1765 in various ways. The New York Sons of Liberty declared in December 1765 that they would "go to the last extremity" with their lives and fortunes to prevent the enforcement of the Stamp Act. This declaration included the use of violence if necessary. Acts of rebellion against the Stamp Tax in New York City included an incident from January 9, 1766 in which ten boxes of parchment and stamped paper were delivered to City Hall and immediately confiscated, unpacked, and burned by secret leaders of the New York Sons group.5 Some merchants simply refused to pay the stamp excises. Printers, lawyers, laborers and small shopkeepers simply ignored paying the duty and carried on business as usual.6

  

Sometimes, the actions and reactions of the Sons of Liberty to the Stamp Act took a violent turn as recorded in a local New York City merchant's diary in April, 1765. Violence broke out with the arrival of a shipment of stamped paper to the Royal Governor's residence. Cadwallder Colden, the acting Royal Governor of the New York colony and scholarly correspondent of Benjamin Franklin and Dr. Samuel Johnson, was extremely frightened of the patriotic group and so locked himself up securely inside Fort George immediately after he received the stamped paper from British officials. A few hours after receiving the official papers, a raucous mob captured the governor's gilded and spectacular coach and reduced it to a pile of ashes. From here the mob (consisting largely of extremist elements of the New York Sons of Liberty) raced uptown to the home of Fort George's commander, smashing numerous windows and breaking into the wine cellar to sustain their "patriotism" before descending on the rest of the house in a convulsion of vandalism.7 Tarring and feathering Loyalists-- those individuals who sympathized and were supportive of the British Crown, royal tax collectors, and other officials-- was a common practice carried out by the more radical elements of the organizations.

  

Ironically, the Sons of Liberty ultimately took their name from a debate on the Stamp Act in Parliament in 1765. Charles Townshend, speaking in support of the act, spoke contemptuously of the American colonists as being "children planted by our care, nourished up by our indulgence...and protected by our arms." Isaac Barre, member of Parliament and friend of the American colonists, jumped to his feet in outrage in this same session to counter with severe reprimand in which he spoke favorably of the Americans as "these Sons of Liberty."8 American colonists had several friends supportive of their views on the tax situation including: William Pitt (the Elder), Charles James Fox, Edmund Burk, and others.

 

The two original Sons of Liberty organizations (New York City and Boston) quickly established correspondence and communications with ever emerging Sons of Liberty groups in New England, the Carolinas, Virginia, and Georgia. Typically, members of this organization were men from the middle and upper classes of American colonial society. Although the movement began as a secret society, for reasons of safety and anonymity, the organization quickly sought to build a broad, public base of political support among the colonists. Frequently, cooperation with undisciplined and extralegal groups (city gangs) set off violent actions. Even though the Sons seldom looked for violent solutions and eruptions, they did continue to elicit and promote political upheaval that tended to favor crowd action.

 

While British officials accused the Sons organizations of scheming to overthrow the true and legitimate government of the American colonies, the Sons of Liberty viewed their official aims in more narrow terms, organizing and asserting resistance to the Stamp Act. Outwardly, the Sons of Liberty proclaimed their unfaltering loyalty and allegiance to King George III of Great Britain and emphasized their support of the English Constitution against the usurpation of royal officials.9 For eleven years, 1765 to 1776, American colonists saw British Parliament as the collective "bad guy," not the king!

 

The Sons of Liberty as a viable movement first broke up with the repeal of the Stamp Act in 1766. However, the organizational network was revived in 1768 in response to the Townshend Acts (a series of excise duties on glass, lead, paints, paper, and tea imported into the colonies.) From 1768 until the end of the American Revolution, Sons of Liberty groups remained in active correspondence with one another throughout the thirteen American colonies and each group took charge of organizing and effecting resistance movements against what they perceived as unfair British taxation and financial strangulation within their respective colonies. The Sons of Liberty as an active movement disbanded in late 1783.10

 

In the end, no universal conclusions, judgments or definitive statements can be made about the Sons Of Liberty. Were they a terrorist organization? The British certainly believed they were. After all, the Sons were advocating overthrow of the status quo government and independence for the thirteen colonies. Were they a patriotic organization? Many American colonists certainly believed they were. The Sons represented to them the American freedom fighter personified, fighting for their rights and ultimate independence. It should be noted that the Loyalists also had their version of Committees of Correspondence and Sons of Liberty namely: the United Empire Loyalists.

 

One thing is certain about the Sons of Liberty organization: it gave American colonists a voice and vital chance to actively participate in the independence movement.

 

Finally, the decision on the Sons of Liberty comes down to a variation on an old saying "one man's terrorist is another man's patriot." The ultimate conclusion must be left to the individual.

  

www.nonprofitlists.com/ - For tiny organizations and nonprofit organizations that don't have the spending budget, making a fan page is a excellent way to get their name out there.

 

This is the after shot of what our front closet looks like. I didn't think to take a before shot until I was about 1/2 way through emptying it out.

From left to right:

Dante Negro, Director of the OAS Department of International Law

Denys Toscano Amores, Counselor, Alternate Representative of Ecuador to the OAS

Mauricio Montalvo, Undersecretary of International Superregional Organizations, Ecuador

José Miguel Insulza, OAS Secretary General

 

Date: December 7, 2012

Place: Washington, DC

Credit: Juan Manuel Herrera/OAS

A simple solution to a minor problem: How to organize your Lego bricks for efficient building.

 

Read more here.

A simple solution to a minor problem: How to organize your Lego bricks for efficient building.

 

Read more here.

National Organization for Marriage (NOM) MARCH FOR MARRIAGE arrival at the US Supreme Court on First Street between Maryland Avenue and East Capitol Street, NE, Washington DC on Tuesday morning, 26 March 2013 by Elvert Barnes Protest Photography

 

US Capitol Police / Motorcycle Unit

 

MARRIAGE EQUALITY OPPONENTS Counter Demonstration

 

Visit National Organization for Marriage (NOM) Tuesday, 26 March 2013 MARCH FOR MARRIAGE website at www.marriagemarch.org/

 

Visit Elvert Barnes PROTEST PHOTOGRAPHY docu-project at elvertbarnes.com/protestphotography

Girl dropouts are a major problem fighting poverty in Malawi, as giving girls and women a better position and better education remains maybe the best way of all to bring change and a better future to Malawi.

 

At Matunduzi school we saw how the IM-funded project GESI addressed one of the causes of girl dropouts - girls falling behind in their studies due to problems doing their homework due to all the tasks they are asked to do at home.

 

At Matundizi school, and dozens of similar school, new reading techniques have been introduced and teachers educated in new pedagogical skills.

 

The reading class seen on these photos were engaging and active to the extreme... Not the least I loved seeing how much space the girls demanded, they were not rated below boys and not discriminated.

 

Having trained on different reading techniques by GESI, teachers at the school have used the methods to supplement primary school curriculum. One STD 2 teacher introduced supplementary readers from old curriculum books to enhance a reading culture. Through such, most pupils in Standard 2 have acquired Chichewa (Malawis majority language) reading mastery. A rare occurrence in primary schools rocked by myriad challenges.

 

Meanwhile, on a regular basis, mother groups, that are also getting support and organizational advice from GESI, meets with girls at the school to discuss issues for their retention and achievement. ‘We feel obliged to support our girls so that they should not experience the difficulties we have now due to lack of education.”

 

Mother group members raise funds for need girls, they give advice and they visit parents who withdraw their girls from schools.

 

Girls Education Support Initiative (GESI), is funded by IM and run by Malawian NGO Creccom. GESI is an integrated approach to address challenges facing girl children through community mobilization including meeting girls’ post-primary education cost.

 

The complexities are enormous and intertwine poverty and male dominated culture and put restraints on girls’ education.

 

IM and Creccom has pledged to promote girls education and fight these constraints.

 

Photo and copyright: Erik Törner, IM Individuell Människohjälp www.manniskohjalp.se

Yesterday, Mr Chiots and I spent most of the day cleaning out the garage. It had gotten a little out of control. Since we’re going to starting building our little teardrop camper soon, we needed to tackle it first. We have a large side workshop attached to our garage which was packed full of stuff. I moved some wooden shelves down from our attic to give me space to store all of my terra-cotta pots, burlap and other supplies.

 

chiotsrun.com/2011/05/16/breathing-a-sigh-of-relief/

My friends wanted me to make a character, Axel. Just a doodle.

A photograph showing the Shriners' emblem on the lawn of the Shrine Club on Bridge Street West in Belleville, Ontario.

Funny. I didn't remember, but found out via my map, that I've shot this same wall in june 2006, when I was new to Flickr.

A special event open to the public to honor top musicians and artists in over 60 categories performing and creating music in the Great Lakes Bay area. Featuring guest performances and collaborations by 'The ORGANization' (Michael Michael Brush, Dan Sliwinski, Jim Fulkerson, Bryan Rombalski, Michael O' Brien) doing '2B's or Not 2B's - a Tribute to the Hammond B3 organ; The Ladies of the Michigan Jazz Trail (featuring Molly McFadden, Julie Mulady, Lauren Thomas & Dacia Mackey, Rocktropolis Progrock, Greta Van Fleet, Jeff Yantz, Spitzer, Dani Vitany & 10 Hands Tall, Bluesmobile, and The Hipakritz.

 

Tickets are $10.00 advance and $15.00 at the door. Ticket Locations are as follow: SAGINAW: Review Magazine, White's Bar, Records & Tapes Galore, Thunderbrew Coffee Co, Cork n Ale, Mac's Bar. BAY CITY: Lumber Barons and Stables, Dockside Restaurant, Bemo's Bar, Herter Music. MIDLAND: Mid Michigan Music, Fulkerson Music, Tim Boychuck's State Farm Insurance.Giving well-deserved recognition to local artists in the Great Lakes Bay Region since 1986

What a great honor it was to win this award for Best Rock Guitarist 2014 by the Review Music Awards. Thank you Robert Martin for all you have done in the community. It was a pleasure to play the ceremony their was a lot of great talent and amazing people! Al Lindberg Will be missed greatly, I never had the pleasure of going into Watermelon sugar but had the pleasure of having Al run sound for me a few times in my carrier. He always had a great warmth about him and was someone you just wanted to be around and its such a great thing when you meet someone for a short period of time but they have a big impact in your life. These are truly great people and will always be remembered* and Mike Kowalski you are greatly missed by us all the time! I got your message last night, Thank you* I know your up there with Al Lindberg, Sue and the rest of the great people that have touched my hart along the way. RIP 2014 Alan Nelson I love you my brother, I know you would be proud of me* Thank you Sam Metropoulos "DAD" For everything in my life with out all the great things you have done for me I'd probably be a bum* lol Thank you for being an awesome DAD , Band Mate and Best Friend all my life* Marc Stemmler Love you tons you are my Family, Friend and Band Mate, This ride we have gone threw has been quite the wild one huh? It was such an honor writing, recording and playing with you Marc!! There will be a lot more great years to come** Thank you Fire Hyena Recording Studio / Christopher Lewis for everything, Your friendship means the world to me and you're a true friend* Its funny how God will bring people together when you need them the most Life is a funny ride and we never know where we truly will be but hard work and patients will always pay off. Wish you the best for 2014 and on:) Taya Wilcox-Lewis Thank you for showing your support at the show and putting up with us at the studio all the time lol! I feel like its a second home at times** Madeline Meixner and Susan Lewis Thank you for all the support you gave me at the show its great to have you guys as friends! Sarah Lewandowski I love you so MUCH thank you for all the support over the years. We have something very very special*XOXOXO* 2014 Is looking very busy for me very excited about all the tour dates and releases that are about to come out* Please Like my New bands page New World Order and Please like my other pages as well and thank you to everyone for this award what an Honor THANKS!!!!!

Rocktropolis (R)

Pete Metropoulos - Rocktropolis

Rocktropolis Fan Club

Took the time to finally organize my iTunes, not finished but getting there ...

Not a real Organization member, obviously. We just love my crazy wig and keep trying to think of excuses to use it. Really just showing off the crazy huge zipper on the coat here, tho. (& don't mind the man-butt, please.)

  

More examples, projects & info = giantzippers.com

In 1921 the Central Yiddish School Organization (Tsentrale Yidishe Shul Organizatsye – often known by the acronym TSYSHO) was founded in Warsaw to advance and administrate a network of secular Yiddish schools. As numerous founders of the TSYSHO were affiliated with the Jewish Labor Bund and left Poalei Zion the schools were home to a blend of Yiddish culture and socialist politics. While the central office for TSYSHO was in Warsaw, the central education committee was in Vilna (as this stamp attests) – and the TSYSHO schools in Vilna tended to be less overtly political than the schools in Poland. TSYSHO was not simply involved in advocated for and promoting Yiddish education, the organization was a strong force in the development of such education which TSYSHO achieved by devising curriculums, publishing textbooks as well as relevant journals, training teachers, and hosting conferences. The curriculum involved a mixture of subjects that one would expect to find at standard public schools, though TSYSHO schools also emphasized Jewish history and culture – with all classes being taught in Yiddish. With the onset of the Second World War many teachers affiliated with TSYSHO in Poland fled east to Lithuania where they enjoyed a temporary continuation of their projects in the TSYSHO branches in Vilna; however, the Soviet annexation of Lithuania in 1940 brought TSYSHO’s activities to an abrupt end – though many of the teachers involved went on to participate in underground educational activities, including in the ghettoes. The ignominious end to the TSYSHO schools which began under the Soviets was furthered with violent effect by the Nazis.

 

This book stamp is from a book looted by the Nazis and sorted by Colonel Seymour Pomrenze, one of “the Monuments Men,” at the Offenbach Archival Depot.

 

There are two scrapbooks of archival markings from the books sorted at the Offenbach Depot in the Seymour Pomrenze Collection held by the American Jewish Historical Society (Call number P-933) There is a finding aid for the collection here The digitized scrapbooks are available here and here.

 

For more information on this project check the Center’s blog: 16thstreet.tumblr.com/tagged/Offenbach-Depot

 

Dr. Mitch Fraas, Acting Director of the Digital Humanities Forum at the University of Pennsylvania Libraries' Special Collections Center is working on a similar project for the German book stamps based on NARA microfilm of the volumes the American Jewish Historical Society currently holds. See viewshare.org/views/mfraas/offenbach-bookplates/

 

The Center for Jewish History would like to acknowledge the following: The American Jewish Historical Society, who graciously allowed the use of their archival materials and digital content; Mitch Fraas, Acting Director of the Digital Humanities Forum at the University of Pennsylvania Libraries' Special Collections Center, for his data and technical assistance in this project; David Rosenberg, Reference Services Research Coordinator, and Melanie Meyers, Senior Reference Services Librarian for Special Collections, for managing and creating the digital map; and Reference Services Intern Ilya Slavutskiy for his work on translating and mapping.

 

For copyright information, click here

 

As part of UCA Welcome Week, the UCA Greek community held the All Greek Stroll Off at the amphitheater on Monday. The capacity crowd watched as Greek organizations performed step routines prior to Midnight Madness in the student center.

Showing the new giant zipper in one of Saeru's custom Organization XIII coats. (This is a larger size coat pictured here.) Beads and chain to go on next.

 

More examples, projects & info = giantzippers.com

logo design for an organizational company. she coaches, and trains people to be more organized (with time and with their spaces).

 

the time management thing is a new aspect that she's doing more of.

 

i'd like feedback on both taglines, as well as layouts.

Reorganizing my fabric storage. Blogged.

After spending far too much time sifting through larger bins looking for the right hair piece/facial expression/hat, I decided to subdivide the minifig parts into smaller compartments. I've done the same with the minifig tools/utensils, small foliage, animals, etc. (Clear storage containers obtained at a crafting store in the beads section).

Instead of just putting the stuff away, I'm unpacking EVERYTHING onto the floor and countertops to see what and how much I have, divide it into collections and decide if it will fit, where it should go in the triangle, and if it doesn't fit... WHERE THE HELL IS IT GOING TO GO?

Craft room desk organization - making the space my own. More details at www.cookcleancraft.com/2013/01/craftoffice-desk-organizat...

Organizations and elements from across Humphreys joined together to support the Juneteenth in South Korea's Juneteenth celebration here, June 19. The celebration featured remembrance reflections, a softball tournament, a leadership dunk tank, youth activities, and other events which brought the community together to commemorate the emancipation of enslaved African-Americans.

Organizations and elements from across Humphreys joined together to support the Juneteenth in South Korea's Juneteenth celebration here, June 19. The celebration featured remembrance reflections, a softball tournament, a leadership dunk tank, youth activities, and other events which brought the community together to commemorate the emancipation of enslaved African-Americans.

World Health Organization in Geneva, Switzerland

 

U.S. Mission Geneva/ Eric Bridiers;

We thank all the organizations, institutions and designers who have allowed, in this way, to collect in this series of 60 images, an art that is disappearing, but that I love deeply and that with this advertisement I want to revive because I feel particularly involved. in the role and I'm a pin up!

The pin up woman is me!

Thank you all for allowing this gallery which is meant to save an art.

  

Si ringraziano tutte le organizzazioni, enti e disegnatori che hanno permesso, in questo modo, di raccogliere in questa serie di 60 immagini, un'arte che sta scomparendo, ma che amo profondamente e che con questa pubblicità desidero far rivivere perchè mi sento particolarmente coinvolta nel ruolo e io sono una pin up!

La donna pin up sono io!

Grazie a tutti per aver permesso questa galleria che ha lo scopo di salvare un'arte.

 

1 2 ••• 4 5 7 9 10 ••• 79 80