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Cadet Kurstin Kinder, University of Tennessee Knoxville, assigned to Delta Company, 6th Regiment, Advanced Camp, moves to put on her gas mask during Chemical, Biological, Radiological and Nuclear training on Fort Knox, Ky., July 11, 2025. CBRN training teaches Cadets to correctly wear equipment and build confidence in defending against biological and chemical threats. | Photos by MacKenzie Rogers, Murray State University, CST Public Affairs Office
Cadet Cole Anderson, Western Illinois University, receives the AUSA Leadership Excellence Award at the 11th Regiment, Advanced Camp graduation, Fort Knox, Ky., Aug. 18, 2022. This award is presented to the Regiment’s top Cadet, as determined by the regimental Cadre board. | Photo by Julia Galli, CST Public Affairs Office
Like something out of Grease and American Graffiti, this Chevy Pickup from the early 50's certainly would have made a difference from all the Land Rovers and flaky Austins roaming the place.
Take stock also of the fact that the hood ornament is a wrench, and the car has been fitted with bullhorns to ward off pesky cyclists.
Clearly this is the true vehicle for London, plenty of space in the back for all the stuff you bought at Harrods, and bullhorns on the front to do battle with interfering pedestrians!
After learning the fine art of improvisation, students from the Oberlin College Advanced Improv ExCo exhibited their skills on stage. The night also included performances by the Oberlin troupe Primitive Streak, and the visiting troupes Baby Wants Candy and Upright Citizen's Brigade.
Photograph by Ben Garfinkel '14
The left of the photograph is dominated by a shelter. This shelter is made of sandbags and has a very wide door less entrance. On the ground outside are two rows of duckboards. There are pieces of equipment leaning up against the wall and dangling from the lintel of the doorway. There is a soldier standing in the doorway and another at the end of the wall. Two soldiers are walking passed carrying a stretcher between them. There is no-one in the stretcher instead it is stacked with blankets. In front of the shelter is an untidy wasteland with bits of fencing and equipment piled up.
This photograph shows that regardless of the nationality of the army, most of the soldiers' experiences of war were similar. Jobs and situations were universal across the Western Front.
[Original reads: 'OFFICIAL PHOTOGRAPHS TAKEN ON THE BRITISH WESTERN FRONT. Portuguese in the trenches. Advanced dressing station.']
APS film (short for “Advanced Photo System”) was marketed as the next big thing in film photography in 1996. An innovative 24mm film, APS was able to deliver sharper images despite its smaller size due to the “information exchange” process in which the camera recorded data directly on the film; this would simplify cropping prints to a desired aspect ratio and potentially could provide photofinishers with exposure data to optimize print quality*, and its cassette housing eliminated common loading errors. But by 2011, it had been discontinued. To understand why the leading film and camera brands bet on APS and lost, we’ll take a look at the APS timeline, from concept to grave.
Read On: filmphotographyproject.com/aps-film-the-90s-format-meant-...
2nd Regiment, Advanced Camp, completed CBRN, Chemical Biological Radiological Nuclear, training June 17, at Fort Knox, Ky. during Cadet Summer Training. Photo by: Madison Thompson
A (prepainted to a high standard) miniature from the X-Wing miniatures game from Fantasy Flight Games.
The shot isn't technically perfect, I used the kit lens with macro converter in order to have a wide angle macro - for a more dramatic effect in the pose of the miniature. The minimum focusing range of that combo didn't let me focus quite what I wanted, but nearly so. And f/22 gave me a genuinely huge depth of field, but also introduced a lot of diffraction.
Shot with RC flash from the left, and a reflector from the right.
The background is a Hotz Mat felt gaming mat, speckled with stars, and actually what these miniatures are on during play.
SHARED VISION: A few of the Thayer professors who work on imaging gather in the Advanced Imaging Center at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center. Clockwise from lower left, veterinarian Jack Hoopes (who conducts animal studies for the technologies), Brian Pogue, John Weaver, Ryan Halter, Paul Meaney, Keith Paulsen, and Shudong Jiang (who evaluates the effectiveness of neoadjuvant treatments of metastatic cancer).
Photograph by John Sherman.
This photo appeared in "Engineering in Medicine" in the Summer 2009 issue of Dartmouth Engineer magazine.
ARTS 314 at Wellesley College. Students working on a series of drawings from a three-dimensional model as reference.
A disused art deco public toilet in Leicester is set to be transformed into a cafe and delicatessen.
The building in St Margaret's Way, near Abbey Park, was put up for sale in May by the city council for £20,000 – having been empty for several years. Now, three city businessmen have bought the 80-year-old building and lodged plans to convert it into an eaterie and extend it.
Peter Silk, who is one of the partners in the project, said in the planning application: "The site is unoccupied and in a state of disrepair. "It is the intention to rejuvenate the structure and provide a more functional use that would better serve the community."
The council received several offers for the run down building which is daubed in graffiti – but the total paid for it has not been revealed.
The three businessmen are planning to build a single-storey extension on the site, which is 10 minutes walk from the city centre.
The conversion has been welcomed heritage experts and visitors to Abbey Park and the nearby sports pitches. Stuart Bailey, chairman of the Leicester Civic Society, said: "I think the cafe idea is a very good use for the building. "Myself and the society would support it being brought back into use rather than becoming more derelict or even lost."
Knighton historian and art deco enthusiast Keith Dickens said: "I welcome the move to open a cafe in the building. Its proximity to the playing fields could make it a viable business. "I expect there will have to be major internal alterations but I hope the external character is restored and retained."