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Programa Saúde Mais Perto realiza mutirão de cirurgias, exames, atendimentos odontológicos e serviços de atendimento ao cidadão (SAC), no município de Santo Amaro.
Foto: Fernando Vivas/GOVBA
Student volunteers from Thomas Nelson Community College biology classes spend their Saturday morning participating in International Coastal Cleanup day at Dandy Haven Marine in Hampton, VA on Oct 18, 2019.
Virginia Institute of Marine Science's Marine Advisory Program and Virginia Sea Grant are proud partners in the Virginia Clean Marina Program, which recognizes marinas that voluntarily take measures to prevent or reduce pollution at their facilities.
(Photo by Aileen Devlin | Virginia Sea Grant)
Students in the Jewish Museum's Teen Intern Program tour "Scenes from the Collection."
The Teen Intern Program offers students the opportunity to gain work experience by assisting professional educators in the Museum’s art studio and galleries, while simultaneously exploring art and Jewish culture, and developing their own creative interests. Photos by Matthew Carasella.
Governador Jerônimo Rodrigues e ministro da justiça, Flávio Dino entregam viaturas, inauguram sala de videomonitoramento do 18º batalhão da polícia militar e lançam o PRONASCI 2 (Programa Nacional De Segurança Pública Com Cidadania), no Centro Histórico.
Foto: Joá Souza/GOVBA
Character LCD controlled by Programmable XBee S2B module from Digi International.
e-prototypes.blogspot.com.es/2012/10/connect-character-lc...
2013 Grand-Am of the Americas by Gainsco & Total
Circuit of the Americas - Austin, TX
Grand-Am Rolex Sports Car Series
VS Aero Front Spoiler
VS Aero Rear Boot
Wheels:
20" VFE-404 Front
21" VFE-404 Rear
Finish
Brushed Dark Shadow Tint - gloss
The Annual Program Review is an internal workshop to facilitate open dialogues around strategic topics that are central for the implementation of CIAT strategy. CIAT, Palmira, Colombia, August 28th - September 1st, 2017.
Credit: ©2017CIAT
Please credit accordingly and leave a comment when you use a CIAT photo.
For more info: ciat-comunicaciones@cgiar.org
2011 - A presentation given to the Juan Soria Elementary After School Program by The Reptile Family.
Here are some luggage tags I recieved at my introduction meeting for the Disney College Program. They aren
t really that interesting, but I just got my digital camera I am taking with me to Florida, so I'm trying it out.
Members of the World Beat drumming group trace how traditional African music traveled the United States and influenced jazz and rock and roll music
So here's how it works:
> Turning the aperture ring raises the "Diaphragm Bar" behind the lens. At f/2.8 it's completely below the lens opening, and at f/22 it's just below the lens centerline.
> When the mirror rises, it drags this panel up with it; the odd shaped hole in the middle is the shutter opening. The mirror/shutter rises just as fast as its spring can whack it, and returns at the same speed as soon as it reaches the top.
> At f/2.8, the shutter is open for the entire distance of travel shown in green above - it takes about 1/60 second to cover this distance. But at f/22, with the DIaphragm Bar up where the purple line indicates, the shutter doesn't open until it reaches that line, and it closes as soon as it passes that line on the way down. The entire movement takes the same time as before, but the open time is only the time that it takes to travel the distance shown by the purple arrows. Assuming that the speed at f/2.8 was 1/60, this works out to about 1/500 second.
> The aperture at f/22 (and at all other settings except for f/2.8) is in the shape of a triangle with its point at the top - the top 2 sides are the edges of the "roof" part of the shutter opening, and the bottom side is provided by the Diaphragm bar.
It's actually just a little more complicated than this. In the above description, the f/22 opening is not centered on the same axis as the f/2.8 opening, and in fact if the Diaphragm Bar actually went as high as the purple line it would block off the center of the lens. So, in addition to all of the above, at the smaller apertures, the mirror/shutter is actually stopping its upward travel earlier than it does at full aperture. How does it do this? In the view of the Diaphragm Bar at www.flickr.com/photos/rick_oleson/53225547915/in/dateposted/, there is a second, gold colored bar that's coupled to the Diaphragm Bar, with a bent-up tab at its tip. As the Diaphragm Bar rises, this gold bar comes down - the tab at the end is the stop that the mirror strikes against to stop its upward travel. The two bars are coupled together so that the mirror's stopping position produces a centered triangular aperture opening at all settings. Dang.
Whoever did this will probably never be famous - but he was good.
The Recreation program office is located in the Annex Building, located at the end of Loop Road below the Undergraduate Building. Here, you can sign up for fun trips and workshops and rent equipment for an outdoor adventure.
Photo: Laura Dutelle
The United States Air Force Band String Quartet held a special concert on May 8, 2016 for His Majesty King Norodom Sihamoni, Her Majesty Queen Mother Norodom Monineath Sihanouk, and other invited guests to commemorate a performance that took place on May 9, 1956 in Phnom Penh at the invitation of the late King Norodom Suramarit and Queen Sisowath Monivong Kossomak Nearireath Serei Watana.
Joined by two Cambodian artists, The United States Air Force Band String Quartet played a mix of American, European, and Cambodian music, including two pieces by King Sihanouk that premiered in 1956.
The musicians concluded the 60th Anniversary Concert with a special birthday message for HM King Norodom Sihamoni and a heart-warming encore performance of "Monika" in honor of HM Queen Mother Norodom Monineath Sihanouk.
[U.S. Embassy photo by Un Yarat]
2023-03-14: President of the African Development Bank Group, Dr. Akinwumi A. Adesina affably greets Lamin G. Barrow, Director General of the Nigeria Country Office for the African Development Bank during the Digital and Creative Enterprises Program (i-DICE) Program.
Canadian Army Sergeant Major, Chief Warrant Officer Alain Guimond, talks with members of the National Sentry Program about the the tasking they are on before they take their post at the national War Monument in Ottawa, Ontario on 1 November 2017.
Photo: Sgt D.G. Janes
Directorate of Army Public Affairs
Ignacio Cabrera Fernández, director general del Programa de Promoción Turística de la SRE, hizo referencia al Consejo de Diplomacia Turística, mediante el cual se promocionarán los atractivos turísticos de México en el exterior, en la reunión del Consejo Directivo de Concanaco.
Foto: Félix Zetina
The Ceramics Program, Office for the Arts at Harvard will present its annual Holiday Show and Sale December 7-10, 2017 in its state-of-the art facility at 224 Western Avenue, Allston, Massachusetts.
Nearly seventy artists will present an extraordinary selection of ceramic work in this annual exhibition. From functional dinnerware to sculptural masterpieces, this popular exhibition has something for everyone and attracts several thousand visitors each year. Free cups made by the exhibiting artists will be given away on a first-come, first-served basis during the festive Opening Reception on Thursday, December 7, from 4:00 – 8:00 pm. The Show and Sale continues Friday, Saturday, and Sunday, December 8, 9, and 10, from 10:00 am – 7:00 pm.
Gallery 224, the Ceramics Program’s dedicated exhibition space, will showcase works from artists participating in the Holiday Show and Sale.
The Ceramics Program Show and Sale runs concurrently with the Allston-Brighton Winter Market next door at the Harvard Ed Portal. Artists’ studios nearby at 119 Braintree Street will also be open on Saturday and Sunday for Allston Open Studios.
A touchstone for the arts within Barry’s Corner, Allston, the Ceramics Program, Office for the Arts at Harvard provides a creative studio and laboratory study environment for Harvard students, staff, and faculty, as well as designers, artists, scholars, and scientists from the greater Boston, national and international arenas. Courses, workshops, master classes and special events are offered in the program's 15,000-square-foot studio at 224 Western Ave., near the Harvard Stadium in Allston.
The Studio is wheelchair accessible. For more information or directions please call 617.495.8680 or visit www.ofa.fas.harvard.edu/ceramics