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May 3, 2012, Albany - Governor Andrew M. Cuomo and Legislative leaders announces the membership of the NY Works Task Force, bringing together leading finance, labor, planning, and transportation professionals to coordinate a statewide infrastructure plan that will more effectively and strategically allocate New York’s capital investment funding and create thousands of jobs.

 

The Governor also announced that up to $750 million will be available as part of a second Regional Economic Development Council competition to support economic development, strategic plan implementation and job creation across the state. In addition, the Governor announced that 101 project contracts to repair state highways, bridges, and parks, consisting of more than $133 million in infrastructure investments, have been opened for bidding.

DJIBOUTI (June 25, 2012) - Soldiers from Task Force Raptor, 3rd Squadron, 124th Cavalry Regiment, Texas Army National Guard participate in a Spur Ride held in the Horn of Africa. The two-day event is a time-honored right of passage for Cavalry Troops which tests the participants' knowledge on weapons, basic medical care, and land navigation skills; finishing up with and early morning 6 mile ruck march. (U.S. Army photo by Staff Sgt. Malcolm McClendon).

A competitor at the Army Reserve Best Warrior competition at Fort McCoy, Wis. moves to his next waypoint on the Land Navigation event on Tuesday, June 21, 2011. A driving rain and strong winds added an additional element of difficulty to the event that started at 3 a.m. and finished six hours later. (Timothy L. Hale/Army Reserve Public Affairs)

Just.......

  

Monkeying around

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Steal 5 different coasters from 5 different places

NORTH ARABIAN GULF, Kuwait — U.S. Navy Sailors assigned to the Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyer USS Higgins (DDG 76), communicate with UH-60 Black Hawk pilots assigned to the 449th Combat Aviation Brigade on an Ultra High Frequency Radio during Deck Landing Qualifications in the North Arabian Gulf April 1, 2018. DLQ training familiarizes Soldiers and Sailors with operations that can be used to transport cargo to remote locations over water. This training also strengthens interoperability operations between the U.S Army and the U.S Navy supporting the Operation Spartan Shield mission. (U.S. Army photo by Staff Sgt. Leticia Samuels)

The teenage children attending the New Mexico Army National Guard's 'Task Force Thunder' youth camp raft and kayak at Lake Cochiti July 9.

Members of U.S. Naval Special Warfare Task Unit Europe (NSWTU-E) prepare to conduct an over the beach (OTB) exercise alongside Croatian Zapovjedništvo Specialjalnih Snaga (ZSS) in Split, Croatia, April 14, 2022. For the Croatian ZSS, Joint Combined Exchange Training, or JCET with partner nations is not uncommon. The ZSS were founded in 2000 as the Special Operations Battalion and since then, its operators have participated in multiple operations, including stints in Afghanistan as part of NATO’s International Security Assistance Force (ISAF). (U.S. Army photo by Sgt. Patrik Orcutt)

Malie Tasker wears an adorable yukata-style outfit.

Combined Task Force Dragoon Soldiers received their deployment awards on Kandahar Airfield, Afghanistan. The Soldier's are returning home after a 9-month deployment in support of Operation Enduring Freedom.

University of Alaska Fairbanks cadet completing the obstacle course at the 8th Brigade Army ROTC Task Force West Ranger Challenge competition, Oct. 22, Camp Rilea, Oregon. During the challenge, nine teams from Alaska, Hawai'i, Guam, Washington, and Oregon competed in several events attempting to finish in top spots. The top two teams will continue to compete in the 8th Brigade Ranger Challenge Competition hosted at Joint Base Lewis-McChord in January. | Photo by Kailyn Heck, 8th Brigade HQ Marketing and Digital Media.

fast shutter speed

I don't remember what she did to this guy. Was it the "Kiss a bald man's head" assignment?

Ralph Alswang Photographer

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railheads WOE

Cadets completing the One-Rope Bridge event on the first day of 8th Brigade Army ROTC Task Force South Ranger Challenge competition, Nov. 4, 2022, Fort Hunter Liggett, California. During the challenge, twelve teams from California and Nevada competed in several events attempting to finish in top spots. The top two teams will continue to compete in the 8th Brigade Ranger Challenge Competition hosted at Joint Base Lewis-McChord in January. | Photo by Kailyn Heck, 8th Brigade HQ Marketing and Digital Media.

The Joint Task Force - National Capital Region hosts interagency partners from across the National Capital Region for the 59th Inauguration Appreciation Luncheon at Conmy Hall, Joint Base Myer-Henderson Hall, Virginia, April 27, 2021. (U.S. Army photo by Spc. Gabriel Bacchus)

Maker: Edouard Baldus (1813-1889)

Born: Germany

Active: France

Medium: heliogravure

Size: 6 in x 9 3/4 in

Location: Paris

 

Object No. 2020.018ao

Shelf: L-5

 

Publication: Palais du Louvre et des Tuileries. Motifs de décoration intérieure et extérieur, 3 vols. Paris: Baldus and Vve. A. Morel, 1869–1875

 

Other Collections:

 

Notes: A plate from Palais du Louvre et des Tuileries. Motifs d'architecture et de decoration ensembles et details tires des constructions executees au nouveau Louvre et au Palais des Tuileries, sous la direction de M. Lefuel. Paris: J.E. Ogier, 1869 (in three parts). This was Baldus first publication of his own photographic work in photogravure form. Originally trained as a painter and having also worked as a draughtsman and lithographer before switching to photography in 1849, Édouard Baldus (1813–1889), became a central figure in the early development of French photography and acknowledged in his day as a pioneer in the still-experimental field, was widely acclaimed both for his aesthetic sensitivity and for his technical prowess. Establishing a new mode of representing architecture and describing the emerging modern landscape with magnificent authority, he enjoyed high patronage in the 1850s and 1860s. Yet, despite the artist's renown during his lifetime, his name is all but unknown today, his work savored only by connoisseurs. Baldus made his reputation with views of the monuments of Paris and the south of France, with dramatic landscapes of the Auvergne, with photographs of the New Louvre, and with a poignant record of the devastating floods of 1856. But it is his two railroad albums—the first commissioned in 1855 by Baron James de Rothschild for presentation to Queen Victoria, the second in 1861 by the Paris-Lyon-Mediterranee railroad company—that are his greatest achievement. Here he brought together his earlier architectural and scenic images with bold geometric views of the modern landscape—railroad tracks, stations, bridges, viaducts, and tunnels—to address the influence of technology (of which both the railroad and the camera are prime examples). In so doing, Baldus anticipated the concerns of Impressionist painters a decade later and those of many artists of our own day, meeting his task with a clarity and directness not since surpassed. Beginning in the mid 1860s with this publication, and lasting until the early 1880s, Baldus primary commercial activity centered on the production of photogravures, a process he first explored in 1854. This work had nothing to do with promoting artistic photography or his own photographic work; instead it was an industrial application of photography that brought credit and financial gain to Baldus as an inventor and entrepreneur rather than an artist. (source: MET). Beginning in the mid 1860s, and lasting until the early 1880s, Baldus primary commercial activity centered on the production of photogravures, a process he first explored in 1854. This work had nothing to do with promoting artistic photography or his own photographic work; instead it was an industrial application of photography that brought credit and financial gain to Baldus as an inventor and entrepreneur rather than an artist.

 

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