View allAll Photos Tagged STUDENT
Temporary structure built by a student of the school at Frank Lloyd Wright’s Taliesan West outside of Phoenix, Az USA.
Leidsestraat | Prinsengracht 06/06/2016 16h51
Keeping in balance...
More AmsterdamPeople (album with candid and non-candid shot of people in Amsterdam)
NASA has announced the winners of the 2016 NASA Student Launch challenge, held April 13-16 near NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama.
Vanderbilt University of Nashville, Tennessee, won first place and took home the top prize of $5,000, offered by Orbital ATK, of Promontory, Utah, longtime corporate sponsor of the challenge.
The University of Louisville, in Kentucky, won second place, and Cornell University of Ithaca, New York, placed third. The Rookie of the Year award was presented to the University of Cincinnati in Ohio.
Nearly 50 middle and high school, college and university teams from 22 states demonstrated advanced aerospace and engineering skills related to real-world activities and programs on NASA’s journey to Mars. Teams spent eight months building and testing rockets designed to fly to an altitude of one mile, deploy an automated parachute system, and land safe enough for reuse, while some teams also designed scientific payloads for data collection during flight.
For more images from this year's Student Launch, click here.
For more information about Student Launch, click here.
To read the full article, click here.
wearing a modern version of the traditional Korean dress (called Hanbok in the South but Joson-ot in the North)
Group of students in Silay City, Philippines. The lady in the centre
had called me and then tried without success to persuade the others to pose.
Looking for Steve Frazier's main photography website? Visit stevefrazierphotography.com
Contact him at stevefrazierphotography@gmail.com
As I was walking along the shoreline of the California Maritime Academy in Vallejo, California, I captured this shot of two students who were practicing their sailing skills on the San Pablo Bay near sunset. in the distance, the ConocoPhillips oil terminal can be seen where tankers and tug boats can be seen with Mount Tamalpais in the background.
Some of my Flickr friends commented that these two photos were panoramas... and rightfully so. However, these were not stitched together from several photos. Instead, they are cropped images. I used to never cropped photos in this manner but have done a few recently to get a more pleasing image. I guess it is indicative of a change in my philosophy and a willingness to try something different.
By the way--the title is a play on words. Here in the US, many people who have small children put small signs on their cars' back windshields that say "Baby On Board" in an effort to warn other drivers to be careful around them. In the case of my picture, I hope that other boaters and ships are always careful around our young sailors!
IMG_7089
© Stephen L. Frazier - All material in my photo stream may NOT be reproduced, copied, edited, published, transmitted or uploaded in any way without my permission. My photos are Copyrighted "Stephen L. Frazier" and All Rights Reserved.
"In the early years, universities had their own jurisdiction. When students acted up, the university had the ability to incarcerate them. One of the common offenses had to do with getting drunk and releasing the pigs of the farmers into the town. Squealing and defecating pigs running through the streets was not appreciated. However, public drunkenness was probably a more common offense, as well as disrespect for public officials. To amuse themselves the students created their own graffiti on the walls. Although periodically whitewashed, the most recent layer of 19th century wall art has remained."
I was walking in Berbera old town when a man came to me. I had to answer for the 500th times to the questions "what are you doing, from where do you come, are you a journalist..". The man was a teacher, and he accepted to let me take pictures of the students.
He is supposed to send me his mail to receive the pics..
© Eric Lafforgue
More than 800 students from across the U.S. and Puerto Rico launched nearly 50 high-powered, amateur rockets April 15, near NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, during the Agency's annual rocket competition.
For the past nine months prior, teams of middle school, high school, college, and university students were tasked to design, build, and launch a rocket and scientific payload to an altitude between 4,000 and 6,000 feet, while making a successful landing and executing a scientific or engineering payload mission.
Student Launch is one of NASA's eight Artemis Student Challenges - a series of activities providing students access to the Artemis program. Through Artemis, NASA will return humans to the Moon for long-term exploration, including landing the first woman and first person of color on the lunar surface, missions that will help pave the way for future missions to Mars.
The 2023 launch event and award ceremony are available to view on NASA's Marshall YouTube and Student Launch Facebook pages.
For more information, visit: NASA Student Launch.
#nasa #NASAMarshall #MSFC #MarshallSpaceFlightCenter #education #space #studentlaunch
IMAGE CREDIT: NASA
This shot (and most of the roll) was damaged when the exposed roll of 120 film unwound a bit before development. These are students on their way to tour a museum. Times are very difficult in Cuba, but there is light in the eyes of youngsters. I hope their future can be as bright.
Fuji GF670W, Kodak Portra 800, Bellini chemical kit.
Since last night, this Ellesse jacket has been thrown in the bin too. There is someone loading up a car moving out so all this stuff must be what they couldn't take. Have left it for now as they were watching me, but I'll hopefully get everything on the way back, including some of the stuff I couldn't take last night. Fingers crossed I am able to save more of this from the waste incinerator.
A small exhibition of photographs by students of Malvern College being displayed in the Malvern Theatres.