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James Hayes Shofner Cooper, aka Jim Cooper, is the U.S. Representative for Tennessee's 5th congressional district. He is a member of the Democratic Party and the Blue Dog Coalition.
The source image for this caricature of Congressman Jim Cooper is a photo in the public domain available via Wikimedia. The blue dog is based on a Creative Commons licensed photo from Elsie esq's Flickr photostream.
Bluedog Wire Stripper's Wire Stripping Machines integrate the most contemporary technology, enabling them to be changed from one application to an additional promptly and easily. You can draw from a full assortment of integratable add-on components to let your system grow right in addition to your requirements for optimal versatility and trusted procedure command! The Wire Stripping Machine has the potential to reduce 2 cables simultaneously. These Wire Stripping Machines are optimal for removing copper and light weight aluminum cables for recycling.Visit our site www.copper-wire-stripper.com for more information on Copper Wire Stripper
The City of North Charleston held its Fourth of July Festival at Riverfront Park on Thursday, July 4, 2013, an all-day event featuring live music, family-friendly activities, and local food vendors.
North Charleston’s Fourth of July Festival featured the largest show of fireworks in the Lowcountry and one of the largest in the State of South Carolina.
Photo by Ryan Johnson
Illustration 2012-06-21
I don't really like my old way of inking/colouring things anymore.. so I tried something with more blacks/gradients?!
Still not fully happy tho.. :7
I wonder if I should put more details into the eyes? Colour some parts of the outline?
(I tried giving the nose/pupils a purple outline but did enjoy the all-black better, after all...)
So hard to decideeeeeeeee.. :E
The City of North Charleston held its Fourth of July Festival at Riverfront Park on Thursday, July 4, 2013, an all-day event featuring live music, family-friendly activities, and local food vendors.
North Charleston’s Fourth of July Festival featured the largest show of fireworks in the Lowcountry and one of the largest in the State of South Carolina.
Photo by Ryan Johnson
The City of North Charleston held its Fourth of July Festival at Riverfront Park on Thursday, July 4, 2013, an all-day event featuring live music, family-friendly activities, and local food vendors.
North Charleston’s Fourth of July Festival featured the largest show of fireworks in the Lowcountry and one of the largest in the State of South Carolina.
Photo by Ryan Johnson
The City of North Charleston held its Fourth of July Festival at Riverfront Park on Thursday, July 4, 2013, an all-day event featuring live music, family-friendly activities, and local food vendors.
North Charleston’s Fourth of July Festival featured the largest show of fireworks in the Lowcountry and one of the largest in the State of South Carolina.
Photo by Ryan Johnson
The City of North Charleston held its Fourth of July Festival at Riverfront Park on Thursday, July 4, 2013, an all-day event featuring live music, family-friendly activities, and local food vendors.
North Charleston’s Fourth of July Festival featured the largest show of fireworks in the Lowcountry and one of the largest in the State of South Carolina.
Photo by Ryan Johnson
The City of North Charleston held its Fourth of July Festival at Riverfront Park on Thursday, July 4, 2013, an all-day event featuring live music, family-friendly activities, and local food vendors.
North Charleston’s Fourth of July Festival featured the largest show of fireworks in the Lowcountry and one of the largest in the State of South Carolina.
Photo by Ryan Johnson
The City of North Charleston held its Fourth of July Festival at Riverfront Park on Thursday, July 4, 2013, an all-day event featuring live music, family-friendly activities, and local food vendors.
North Charleston’s Fourth of July Festival featured the largest show of fireworks in the Lowcountry and one of the largest in the State of South Carolina.
Photo by Ryan Johnson
The City of North Charleston held its Fourth of July Festival at Riverfront Park on Thursday, July 4, 2013, an all-day event featuring live music, family-friendly activities, and local food vendors.
North Charleston’s Fourth of July Festival featured the largest show of fireworks in the Lowcountry and one of the largest in the State of South Carolina.
Photo by Ryan Johnson
The City of North Charleston held its Fourth of July Festival at Riverfront Park on Thursday, July 4, 2013, an all-day event featuring live music, family-friendly activities, and local food vendors.
North Charleston’s Fourth of July Festival featured the largest show of fireworks in the Lowcountry and one of the largest in the State of South Carolina.
Photo by Ryan Johnson
The City of North Charleston held its Fourth of July Festival at Riverfront Park on Thursday, July 4, 2013, an all-day event featuring live music, family-friendly activities, and local food vendors.
North Charleston’s Fourth of July Festival featured the largest show of fireworks in the Lowcountry and one of the largest in the State of South Carolina.
Photo by Ryan Johnson
The City of North Charleston held its Fourth of July Festival at Riverfront Park on Thursday, July 4, 2013, an all-day event featuring live music, family-friendly activities, and local food vendors.
North Charleston’s Fourth of July Festival featured the largest show of fireworks in the Lowcountry and one of the largest in the State of South Carolina.
Photo by Ryan Johnson
Poor dog can only look out now, making him very reflective on his view.
This is just one of a series of Blue Dog paintings by George Rodrigue, best known for his abstract expressionism of Cajun subjects, inspired by his roots.
Our main character here is a blue-hued dog, attributed to George's deceased dog named Tiffany and influenced by the Loup Garou legend. The Blue Dog was made popular by Absolut Vodka in 1992, when Rodrigue was honored as an Absolut Vodka artist, joining famous artists such as Andy Warhol and glass artist Hans Godo Frabel. The Blue Dog was used by both Absolut Vodka and the Xerox Corporation through national ad campaigns. The blue-hued, ghostly spaniel/terrier is often featured with a white nose and yellow eyes.
This print is part of my Inspirational Dog Series of prints. Featured is the Bull Terrier with a quote by Henry Ford.
Toy sculpture commission for a gallery Christmas show.
*PLEASE NOTE that all the toys I make and display here are my own, original designs and style and are COPYRIGHTED - they may not be copied in style or form without permission.*
CAMP CASEY, South Korea – Normally you wouldn’t associate Angry Birds with Hotdogs or Nachos and Coke. But add five rubber balls and It’s Not What You Think, and you have Camp Casey’s 5-on-5 Dodgeball Tournament, which occurred Oct. 13 at the Carey Fitness Center.
The team sport that most elementary through high school students do during physical education in the states isn’t just for kids anymore. Although the sport has been around for years, it had a resurgence after Vince Vaughn’s 2004 movie “DodgeBall: A True Underdog Story.”
Dodgeball has spread throughout the United States. Colleges have intramural leagues and local community sports centers – such as Washington D.C.’s Arlington Athletic and Social League – have recreational and competitive leagues.
The U.S. National Dodgeball League, which includes the Pittsburgh Punishers, the Houston Bounty Hunters and the Seattle Bluedogs hosted the 9th annual Dodgeball World Championships in Las Vegas this August. The championship brought together teams from Japan, Australia, Canada and Great Britain.
In Area I, nine teams took on the dodgeball challenge laid down by the Camp Casey Better Opportunities for Single (and unaccompanied) Soldiers, or BOSS, program.
In the true spirit of the dodgeball movie, some of the teams took to the court in “unique” team uniforms.
“We were going to do the whole 2-I-D shorts thing,” Pfc. Robert Ferguson, of Battery B, 1st Battalion, 38th Field Artillery Regiment, said in a reference to the 2nd Infantry Division. “But, we went to the Exchange and found some Angry Birds costumes and thought ‘Why not?’”
And thus team Angry Birds was hatched.
Another team that dressed for the tournament was from Company B, 2nd Battalion, 9th Infantry Regiment, known as the “Manchus.”
“My buddy plays dodgeball in college and they wear all yellow with white head bands,” said Pfc. Cody Crutchfield, team captain for the Manchus.
"So I was like, we are the Manchus, so let’s get our black Manchu t-shirts, black shorts, and the captain will wear black head and wrist bands, while his pawns wear white,” he said.
Just because a team opted to wear a “unique” uniform didn’t mean they didn’t take the competition seriously.
Crutchfield’s Manchus, who found out about the tournament just hours before it started, were serious about winning.
“You have to pick the people you think are good athletes and know how to throw and jump… they have to be agile,” said Crutchfield, who evidently picked his team wisely, as they took first-place in the tournament.
“We wanted to give the Soldiers something fun to do on the weekend,” said Spc. Crystalyne Matthews, BOSS representative for Company B, 302nd Brigade Support Battalion. “It was an inexpensive event for everyone involved, it didn’t cost a dime to participate in or set up.”
Matthews said that during the tournament some of the participants said they’d like to have more dodgeball tournaments scheduled, possibly even a peninsula-wide competition.
“This is a great idea and will allow them to have fun on more than just one day,” Matthews said. “We are always looking for ideas on what to do, so if someone has an idea of an event they would like BOSS to do, they need to contact their unit BOSS rep, or every Wednesday, we have a meeting at the Casey CAC at 3 p.m. and they are more than welcome to come. They can not only give us their idea, but also find out what is going on at Camp Casey.”
CAMP CASEY, South Korea – Normally you wouldn’t associate Angry Birds with Hotdogs or Nachos and Coke. But add five rubber balls and It’s Not What You Think, and you have Camp Casey’s 5-on-5 Dodgeball Tournament, which occurred Oct. 13 at the Carey Fitness Center.
The team sport that most elementary through high school students do during physical education in the states isn’t just for kids anymore. Although the sport has been around for years, it had a resurgence after Vince Vaughn’s 2004 movie “DodgeBall: A True Underdog Story.”
Dodgeball has spread throughout the United States. Colleges have intramural leagues and local community sports centers – such as Washington D.C.’s Arlington Athletic and Social League – have recreational and competitive leagues.
The U.S. National Dodgeball League, which includes the Pittsburgh Punishers, the Houston Bounty Hunters and the Seattle Bluedogs hosted the 9th annual Dodgeball World Championships in Las Vegas this August. The championship brought together teams from Japan, Australia, Canada and Great Britain.
In Area I, nine teams took on the dodgeball challenge laid down by the Camp Casey Better Opportunities for Single (and unaccompanied) Soldiers, or BOSS, program.
In the true spirit of the dodgeball movie, some of the teams took to the court in “unique” team uniforms.
“We were going to do the whole 2-I-D shorts thing,” Pfc. Robert Ferguson, of Battery B, 1st Battalion, 38th Field Artillery Regiment, said in a reference to the 2nd Infantry Division. “But, we went to the Exchange and found some Angry Birds costumes and thought ‘Why not?’”
And thus team Angry Birds was hatched.
Another team that dressed for the tournament was from Company B, 2nd Battalion, 9th Infantry Regiment, known as the “Manchus.”
“My buddy plays dodgeball in college and they wear all yellow with white head bands,” said Pfc. Cody Crutchfield, team captain for the Manchus.
"So I was like, we are the Manchus, so let’s get our black Manchu t-shirts, black shorts, and the captain will wear black head and wrist bands, while his pawns wear white,” he said.
Just because a team opted to wear a “unique” uniform didn’t mean they didn’t take the competition seriously.
Crutchfield’s Manchus, who found out about the tournament just hours before it started, were serious about winning.
“You have to pick the people you think are good athletes and know how to throw and jump… they have to be agile,” said Crutchfield, who evidently picked his team wisely, as they took first-place in the tournament.
“We wanted to give the Soldiers something fun to do on the weekend,” said Spc. Crystalyne Matthews, BOSS representative for Company B, 302nd Brigade Support Battalion. “It was an inexpensive event for everyone involved, it didn’t cost a dime to participate in or set up.”
Matthews said that during the tournament some of the participants said they’d like to have more dodgeball tournaments scheduled, possibly even a peninsula-wide competition.
“This is a great idea and will allow them to have fun on more than just one day,” Matthews said. “We are always looking for ideas on what to do, so if someone has an idea of an event they would like BOSS to do, they need to contact their unit BOSS rep, or every Wednesday, we have a meeting at the Casey CAC at 3 p.m. and they are more than welcome to come. They can not only give us their idea, but also find out what is going on at Camp Casey.”
CAMP CASEY, South Korea – Normally you wouldn’t associate Angry Birds with Hotdogs or Nachos and Coke. But add five rubber balls and It’s Not What You Think, and you have Camp Casey’s 5-on-5 Dodgeball Tournament, which occurred Oct. 13 at the Carey Fitness Center.
The team sport that most elementary through high school students do during physical education in the states isn’t just for kids anymore. Although the sport has been around for years, it had a resurgence after Vince Vaughn’s 2004 movie “DodgeBall: A True Underdog Story.”
Dodgeball has spread throughout the United States. Colleges have intramural leagues and local community sports centers – such as Washington D.C.’s Arlington Athletic and Social League – have recreational and competitive leagues.
The U.S. National Dodgeball League, which includes the Pittsburgh Punishers, the Houston Bounty Hunters and the Seattle Bluedogs hosted the 9th annual Dodgeball World Championships in Las Vegas this August. The championship brought together teams from Japan, Australia, Canada and Great Britain.
In Area I, nine teams took on the dodgeball challenge laid down by the Camp Casey Better Opportunities for Single (and unaccompanied) Soldiers, or BOSS, program.
In the true spirit of the dodgeball movie, some of the teams took to the court in “unique” team uniforms.
“We were going to do the whole 2-I-D shorts thing,” Pfc. Robert Ferguson, of Battery B, 1st Battalion, 38th Field Artillery Regiment, said in a reference to the 2nd Infantry Division. “But, we went to the Exchange and found some Angry Birds costumes and thought ‘Why not?’”
And thus team Angry Birds was hatched.
Another team that dressed for the tournament was from Company B, 2nd Battalion, 9th Infantry Regiment, known as the “Manchus.”
“My buddy plays dodgeball in college and they wear all yellow with white head bands,” said Pfc. Cody Crutchfield, team captain for the Manchus.
"So I was like, we are the Manchus, so let’s get our black Manchu t-shirts, black shorts, and the captain will wear black head and wrist bands, while his pawns wear white,” he said.
Just because a team opted to wear a “unique” uniform didn’t mean they didn’t take the competition seriously.
Crutchfield’s Manchus, who found out about the tournament just hours before it started, were serious about winning.
“You have to pick the people you think are good athletes and know how to throw and jump… they have to be agile,” said Crutchfield, who evidently picked his team wisely, as they took first-place in the tournament.
“We wanted to give the Soldiers something fun to do on the weekend,” said Spc. Crystalyne Matthews, BOSS representative for Company B, 302nd Brigade Support Battalion. “It was an inexpensive event for everyone involved, it didn’t cost a dime to participate in or set up.”
Matthews said that during the tournament some of the participants said they’d like to have more dodgeball tournaments scheduled, possibly even a peninsula-wide competition.
“This is a great idea and will allow them to have fun on more than just one day,” Matthews said. “We are always looking for ideas on what to do, so if someone has an idea of an event they would like BOSS to do, they need to contact their unit BOSS rep, or every Wednesday, we have a meeting at the Casey CAC at 3 p.m. and they are more than welcome to come. They can not only give us their idea, but also find out what is going on at Camp Casey.”
CAMP CASEY, South Korea – Normally you wouldn’t associate Angry Birds with Hotdogs or Nachos and Coke. But add five rubber balls and It’s Not What You Think, and you have Camp Casey’s 5-on-5 Dodgeball Tournament, which occurred Oct. 13 at the Carey Fitness Center.
The team sport that most elementary through high school students do during physical education in the states isn’t just for kids anymore. Although the sport has been around for years, it had a resurgence after Vince Vaughn’s 2004 movie “DodgeBall: A True Underdog Story.”
Dodgeball has spread throughout the United States. Colleges have intramural leagues and local community sports centers – such as Washington D.C.’s Arlington Athletic and Social League – have recreational and competitive leagues.
The U.S. National Dodgeball League, which includes the Pittsburgh Punishers, the Houston Bounty Hunters and the Seattle Bluedogs hosted the 9th annual Dodgeball World Championships in Las Vegas this August. The championship brought together teams from Japan, Australia, Canada and Great Britain.
In Area I, nine teams took on the dodgeball challenge laid down by the Camp Casey Better Opportunities for Single (and unaccompanied) Soldiers, or BOSS, program.
In the true spirit of the dodgeball movie, some of the teams took to the court in “unique” team uniforms.
“We were going to do the whole 2-I-D shorts thing,” Pfc. Robert Ferguson, of Battery B, 1st Battalion, 38th Field Artillery Regiment, said in a reference to the 2nd Infantry Division. “But, we went to the Exchange and found some Angry Birds costumes and thought ‘Why not?’”
And thus team Angry Birds was hatched.
Another team that dressed for the tournament was from Company B, 2nd Battalion, 9th Infantry Regiment, known as the “Manchus.”
“My buddy plays dodgeball in college and they wear all yellow with white head bands,” said Pfc. Cody Crutchfield, team captain for the Manchus.
"So I was like, we are the Manchus, so let’s get our black Manchu t-shirts, black shorts, and the captain will wear black head and wrist bands, while his pawns wear white,” he said.
Just because a team opted to wear a “unique” uniform didn’t mean they didn’t take the competition seriously.
Crutchfield’s Manchus, who found out about the tournament just hours before it started, were serious about winning.
“You have to pick the people you think are good athletes and know how to throw and jump… they have to be agile,” said Crutchfield, who evidently picked his team wisely, as they took first-place in the tournament.
“We wanted to give the Soldiers something fun to do on the weekend,” said Spc. Crystalyne Matthews, BOSS representative for Company B, 302nd Brigade Support Battalion. “It was an inexpensive event for everyone involved, it didn’t cost a dime to participate in or set up.”
Matthews said that during the tournament some of the participants said they’d like to have more dodgeball tournaments scheduled, possibly even a peninsula-wide competition.
“This is a great idea and will allow them to have fun on more than just one day,” Matthews said. “We are always looking for ideas on what to do, so if someone has an idea of an event they would like BOSS to do, they need to contact their unit BOSS rep, or every Wednesday, we have a meeting at the Casey CAC at 3 p.m. and they are more than welcome to come. They can not only give us their idea, but also find out what is going on at Camp Casey.”
CAMP CASEY, South Korea – Normally you wouldn’t associate Angry Birds with Hotdogs or Nachos and Coke. But add five rubber balls and It’s Not What You Think, and you have Camp Casey’s 5-on-5 Dodgeball Tournament, which occurred Oct. 13 at the Carey Fitness Center.
The team sport that most elementary through high school students do during physical education in the states isn’t just for kids anymore. Although the sport has been around for years, it had a resurgence after Vince Vaughn’s 2004 movie “DodgeBall: A True Underdog Story.”
Dodgeball has spread throughout the United States. Colleges have intramural leagues and local community sports centers – such as Washington D.C.’s Arlington Athletic and Social League – have recreational and competitive leagues.
The U.S. National Dodgeball League, which includes the Pittsburgh Punishers, the Houston Bounty Hunters and the Seattle Bluedogs hosted the 9th annual Dodgeball World Championships in Las Vegas this August. The championship brought together teams from Japan, Australia, Canada and Great Britain.
In Area I, nine teams took on the dodgeball challenge laid down by the Camp Casey Better Opportunities for Single (and unaccompanied) Soldiers, or BOSS, program.
In the true spirit of the dodgeball movie, some of the teams took to the court in “unique” team uniforms.
“We were going to do the whole 2-I-D shorts thing,” Pfc. Robert Ferguson, of Battery B, 1st Battalion, 38th Field Artillery Regiment, said in a reference to the 2nd Infantry Division. “But, we went to the Exchange and found some Angry Birds costumes and thought ‘Why not?’”
And thus team Angry Birds was hatched.
Another team that dressed for the tournament was from Company B, 2nd Battalion, 9th Infantry Regiment, known as the “Manchus.”
“My buddy plays dodgeball in college and they wear all yellow with white head bands,” said Pfc. Cody Crutchfield, team captain for the Manchus.
"So I was like, we are the Manchus, so let’s get our black Manchu t-shirts, black shorts, and the captain will wear black head and wrist bands, while his pawns wear white,” he said.
Just because a team opted to wear a “unique” uniform didn’t mean they didn’t take the competition seriously.
Crutchfield’s Manchus, who found out about the tournament just hours before it started, were serious about winning.
“You have to pick the people you think are good athletes and know how to throw and jump… they have to be agile,” said Crutchfield, who evidently picked his team wisely, as they took first-place in the tournament.
“We wanted to give the Soldiers something fun to do on the weekend,” said Spc. Crystalyne Matthews, BOSS representative for Company B, 302nd Brigade Support Battalion. “It was an inexpensive event for everyone involved, it didn’t cost a dime to participate in or set up.”
Matthews said that during the tournament some of the participants said they’d like to have more dodgeball tournaments scheduled, possibly even a peninsula-wide competition.
“This is a great idea and will allow them to have fun on more than just one day,” Matthews said. “We are always looking for ideas on what to do, so if someone has an idea of an event they would like BOSS to do, they need to contact their unit BOSS rep, or every Wednesday, we have a meeting at the Casey CAC at 3 p.m. and they are more than welcome to come. They can not only give us their idea, but also find out what is going on at Camp Casey.”
CAMP CASEY, South Korea – Normally you wouldn’t associate Angry Birds with Hotdogs or Nachos and Coke. But add five rubber balls and It’s Not What You Think, and you have Camp Casey’s 5-on-5 Dodgeball Tournament, which occurred Oct. 13 at the Carey Fitness Center.
The team sport that most elementary through high school students do during physical education in the states isn’t just for kids anymore. Although the sport has been around for years, it had a resurgence after Vince Vaughn’s 2004 movie “DodgeBall: A True Underdog Story.”
Dodgeball has spread throughout the United States. Colleges have intramural leagues and local community sports centers – such as Washington D.C.’s Arlington Athletic and Social League – have recreational and competitive leagues.
The U.S. National Dodgeball League, which includes the Pittsburgh Punishers, the Houston Bounty Hunters and the Seattle Bluedogs hosted the 9th annual Dodgeball World Championships in Las Vegas this August. The championship brought together teams from Japan, Australia, Canada and Great Britain.
In Area I, nine teams took on the dodgeball challenge laid down by the Camp Casey Better Opportunities for Single (and unaccompanied) Soldiers, or BOSS, program.
In the true spirit of the dodgeball movie, some of the teams took to the court in “unique” team uniforms.
“We were going to do the whole 2-I-D shorts thing,” Pfc. Robert Ferguson, of Battery B, 1st Battalion, 38th Field Artillery Regiment, said in a reference to the 2nd Infantry Division. “But, we went to the Exchange and found some Angry Birds costumes and thought ‘Why not?’”
And thus team Angry Birds was hatched.
Another team that dressed for the tournament was from Company B, 2nd Battalion, 9th Infantry Regiment, known as the “Manchus.”
“My buddy plays dodgeball in college and they wear all yellow with white head bands,” said Pfc. Cody Crutchfield, team captain for the Manchus.
"So I was like, we are the Manchus, so let’s get our black Manchu t-shirts, black shorts, and the captain will wear black head and wrist bands, while his pawns wear white,” he said.
Just because a team opted to wear a “unique” uniform didn’t mean they didn’t take the competition seriously.
Crutchfield’s Manchus, who found out about the tournament just hours before it started, were serious about winning.
“You have to pick the people you think are good athletes and know how to throw and jump… they have to be agile,” said Crutchfield, who evidently picked his team wisely, as they took first-place in the tournament.
“We wanted to give the Soldiers something fun to do on the weekend,” said Spc. Crystalyne Matthews, BOSS representative for Company B, 302nd Brigade Support Battalion. “It was an inexpensive event for everyone involved, it didn’t cost a dime to participate in or set up.”
Matthews said that during the tournament some of the participants said they’d like to have more dodgeball tournaments scheduled, possibly even a peninsula-wide competition.
“This is a great idea and will allow them to have fun on more than just one day,” Matthews said. “We are always looking for ideas on what to do, so if someone has an idea of an event they would like BOSS to do, they need to contact their unit BOSS rep, or every Wednesday, we have a meeting at the Casey CAC at 3 p.m. and they are more than welcome to come. They can not only give us their idea, but also find out what is going on at Camp Casey.”