View allAll Photos Tagged assistant
Went to a festival and watched a guy swallow swords and do some pretty cool tricks. His daughter was his assistant. :) Here she is posing for photos after doing a few tricks of her own.
Raven, my assistant started working with me at around age 14 or 15. Over the years as he worked with me he became a very serious photographer. At events such as weddings, corporate shoots, and studio work he became my second shooter. He went on to study Photo Journalism at College, and had some of his photographic work published in the Ottawa Citizen. He is also a musician and now lives in British Columbia.
Photography: Shiro Ang
Photo Assistant: Poka & Marcus Montague
Makina: Etine Kyra
Facebook | World Cosplay | Twitter | Instagram
Feel free to share or repost my photo, as long you provide credit and tag/link back to my Facebook page.
But do not modify, reproduce my work in any way without my written permission.
© Shiro Ang
Please respect copyrights.
Administrative assistants at W&J were honored for their years of service during a breakfast Wednesday, March 28, 2017.
Occupational Therapy Assistant students had their pinning ceremony in the Hatheway Gallery on Dec. 14. Photo by L&C student Jennifer Kelley
The virtual presenter is actually a digital projection on human silhouette made of plexiglass, which can capture attention, creating the illusion of a real person.
Lingjia Tang, assistant professors of electrical engineering and computer science at Michigan Engineering, is a co-founders of Clinc, an A.I. personal assistant startup in Ann Arbor, MI.
Photo: Evan Dougherty, Michigan Engineering, Communications & Marketing
This program prepares students for employment in dentistry. Students study ways to control and prevent dental disease. They also learn how to teach their patients preventive care. Trained to expose and process dental X-ray films, students also master a variety of chairside skills and expanded functions delegated by the State Board of Dentistry.
Skirt made from the hide of a young golden unicorn, hair accessory from the forearm of an enemy, hair dye from the black heart of her former lover. Her ultimate wardrobe was coming together nicely.
This course prepares students to assist dependent elderly persons, home-care clients and hospital patients with their personal care needs. This course combines home health aide content with the nursing assistant course. The Minnesota State Certification examination is administered following course completion.
Jeanette Iljon
That’s Entertainment (The Conjuror’s Assistant), 1979
35’, 16mm
That’s Entertainment (The Conjuror’s Assistant) is footage of a children’s entertainer at a party, which has been re-filmed, re-arranged, slowed down and repeated. ‘The manipulation of the film stock through the optical printer acts as a visual reminder of how images are subjectively ordered and transformed, with isolated moments of faces being held for longer before they dissolve into the chemical substrate of the film, as they dissolve into the relentless elasticity of consciousness. These privileged moments of the film, a close-up normally indexed to high drama or epiphany, appear over and over in the film, with one of the children's faces presented and re-presented in moments of awe, confusion, elation, discomfort, reacting to the magician's act. Each time the close-up looks slightly different, and the image quality also brings with it specific contexts - once it looks like a photo from an archive, sometimes it looks like a still of lost star in an irrevocably decayed 1920s film, sometimes a clip of a baffled victim in candid news footage of a disaster, each type of socially demarcated image trailing another set of affective elements for the viewer. The mutability of the image is like the instability of a truth or the indexical relation of image to fact that we reflexively assign to footage marked as 'documentary'. Here it's enacting a vital trope of structural filmmaking. It is rendering visible or overt the plasticity of the image and arbitrary nature of assemblage, with the visual matter of the magic act foregrounding this tension between veracity and illusion.’ Marina Vishmidt.
Courtesy of LUX
www.luxonline.org.uk/artists/jeanette_iljon/thats_enterta...
shown at www.s1artspace.org/homepage.htm
see archive link
Assistant Secretary of State Victoria Nuland meets with Czech Foreign Minister Lubomír Zaorálek, February 5, 2014. (photo Czech MFA) More about the visit bitly.com/1fqxy1w
Náměstkyně amerického ministra zahraničí Victoria Nulandová jedná během své návštěvy České republiky 5. února 2014 s českým ministrem zahraničí Lubomírem Zaorálkem. (foto MZV) Více o návštěvě 1.usa.gov/LRua5c
Assistant Dean of Undergraduate Students Lisa Thum (left) presents the Ray Smith award to Liana Chase '11. Established in 1959, the award goes to a student "who has made a significant and distinctive contribution to the stature of the College."
A Rufus Choate Scholar and James O. Freedman Presidential Scholar, Chase has served as a volunteer for the Tucker Foundation Nicaragua Cross-Cultural Education and Service program and as an intern for the Boston Center for Refugee Health and Human Rights. Next year, as a Fulbright Scholar, Chase will be living in a network of Bhutanese refuge camps in Nepal. (photo by Joseph Mehling '69)
There are few wasted moments in Kelley Earnhardt-Miller’s life.
Whether she’s in the boardroom negotiating million-dollar sponsorships or perched in a deer stand at daybreak, the oldest daughter of racing legend Dale Earnhardt knows only one speed.
“Life is all about that dash in between — from time you’re born until you die,” she said.
She is a lot of things to a lot of people: a co-owner of JR Motorsports, a trusted sister to Dale Earnhardt Jr., a wife, a mother of two — with another one due by Friday — a racer and shrewd businesswoman.
But more than anything else, she’s an Earnhardt.
Unlike her father and younger brother, Kelley generally avoids the public eye. She rarely goes to the race track, but she’s a regular at school functions as well as Madison Avenue. But, like her father and younger brother, she refuses to be defined solely by financial windfalls and race wins.
“That’s not what my dad wanted,” she said. “It’s not about winning; it’s about not compromising who you are. That’s something we don’t do. We are who we are and we don’t compromise that.
“Our dad would be proud.”
KEPT ON TRACK
Dale Earnhardt Jr. has been voted as the most popular driver in the Sprint Cup Series for nine consecutive years. He sells more souvenirs than any other driver, and the demands of his time are overwhelming. The only person who keeps him on track is his sister.
Earnhardt-Miller negotiates most of his deals. Whether it’s for their No. 7 and No. 88 Nationwide Series Chevrolets or picking a buffalo wing recipe for their Whisky River restaurants, Kelley has complete authority to promote her brother’s brand.
“I was always the caretaker for anything he needed,” Earnhardt-Miller said. “I was always the mother hen.
“He leans on me to do all the front-end work. We’ve been like that since we were kids. We formed that kind of trust when we were kids. Sometimes that makes it tough because sometimes he doesn’t want to lend as much opinion as I might need.”
With so many people pulling from so many directions, Dale Jr. has learned to trust few people. If Kelley thinks it’s a good deal, he generally agrees without going through the details.
It’s a trust that started long before he ran his first race.
AN EARLY BOND
They were the children of Dale Earnhardt’s second of three wives. They lived with their mother in Virginia before returning to North Carolina to be closer to their father, but they were sent to military school. He remained at Oak Ridge Military Academy after she went away to college.
“We learned to grow up fast,” she said. “We became what I call a survivor.”
And she’s still taking care of her little brother.
“I really don’t get involved in my negotiations too much because I’m too nice,” Earnhardt Jr. told the Charlotte (N.C.) Observer last year. “I had to send my sister in there because she is a shark about it. I just want everybody to be happy and everybody to go on down the road and get back to work and move in the right direction and all that good stuff.
“If I had to jump in there, I really don’t know if I could put up the fight. I’m just not that kind of guy and would likely come out with the short end of the stick, so I’m probably glad I’ve got her around.”
The business world has a different view of her. They are impressed with her direct approach and her honest business savvy.
“She is the most impressive businesswoman we’ve ever worked with,” said Daniel Eubanks, the assistant director of growth for Rhodes Financial Services and TaxSlayer.com. “She has an incredible ability to look at both sides of a deal. She’s extremely honest and she won’t do something unless it works for both sides.
“Everyone out there is ready to take your money. That’s not what they’re about.”
FOLLOWING THE PLAN
While Earnhardt-Miller has a degree in business administration, most of her decisions involve “your gut feelings.” It’s not a perfect plan — their Alabama Motorsports Park and Infield Parking social network didn’t pan out — but it’s a plan that continues to make them one of the most successful business people in all of sports.
They will have Danica Patrick in one of their cars this year running for the Nationwide Series championship, a move that certainly will elevate the company brand to new levels.
“She’s got some strong blood in her, for sure,” Patrick said of Earnhardt-Miller.
According to Forbes, Dale Earnhardt Jr. made $28.5 million in salary and endorsements last year. That’s not bad for someone who hasn’t won a Sprint Cup race since 2008.
“There’s a lot of talk about him not winning,” Kelley said. “In all honesty, that’s not what my dad wanted. He wanted us to be happy; he wanted us to be true to ourselves.”
Her most cherished memories of her father usually don’t include race wins or championships. What she remembers most is the man he was and how he made other people feel.
“I hope we do the same,” she said.
She found a quote recently and she posted it on her Facebook page. She believes it says it best:
“Work for a cause, not for applause. Live life to express, not to impress. Don’t strive to make your presence noticed, just make your absence felt.”
While not wasting any time in the dash called life.
Read more at Jacksonville.com
Bringing teeth brushing outdoor because you are so late for work and breakfast :D
Realising another shoot that I had always wanted to achieve.
Big credits to Melissa for her bleeding gums and her assistant Daniel who had to bear the scorching sun. Also thanks to Datson for helping out with his strong arms!
see LARGER
Assistant Professor Stuart Sarbacker helps a student with his yoga position during a class at OSU. Date: May 10, 2011 (photo: Theresa Hogue)
284/365 Anita was my Assistant Knight at this year's Riverside Ramble, a local show with information booths from local businesses/services & market stall holders.
Anita (to my surprise) proved to be the most popular Assistant Knight so far. She was even called a princess.
Major General Allen Harrell, Assistant Deputy Commanding General for National Guard Affairs, U.S. Army Materiel Command observed reserve component support mission operations and met with Soldiers during inventory and supply support operations at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point on September 18, 2018. (U.S. Army photo by Bryan Ilyankoff)
Dark Knight assistant Batmans Ward Robin Dick Grayson 1966 about to do battle action comic book movie film toy hot toys NYC Blue Grey Yellow red green Black Costume Gray 2014 Sideshow figure 1960s 60s TV show Television comedy DC Comics National Detective Comics Bat Man space spaceman Batman figure
Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs Kurt Campbell, Office of the Secretary of Defense South/Southeast Asia Principal Director Brigadier General Richard Simcock, and Pacific Fleet Commander Admiral Patrick Walsh meet with U.S. Army Specialist H.B. Bermanis and his father at Pohnpei International Airport in Palikir, Pohnpei, on July 1, 2011. SPC Bermanis was injured while serving in Iraq in 2003. [State Department photo/ Public Domain]