View allAll Photos Tagged campaigning

O'Halloran, Thomas J.,, photographer.

 

Eisenhower '56 campaign kick-off picnic at Gettysburg, Pa. farm (shots of farm house, Dick Nixon, Leonard Hall, George Humphrey)

 

1956 September 12.

 

1 photograph : negative; film width 35mm (roll format)

 

Notes:

Title and date from log book.

Use digital image. Negatives not served.

Forms part of: U.S. News & World Report Magazine Photograph Collection.

 

Format: Film negatives--1950-1960.

 

Rights Info: No known restrictions on publication.

 

Repository: Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division, Washington, D.C. 20540 USA, hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.print

 

Part Of: U.S. News & World Report magazine photograph collection (Library of Congress) (DLC) 92517073

 

Higher resolution image is available (Persistent URL): hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/ppmsca.51701

 

Call Number: LC-U9-686A- 13

 

🔍 Plaghunter protects this beautiful picture against image theft. Get your own account for free! 👊

In memory of Baby Tristan, Baby Thomas( my cousin) and for all those who have lost a baby.

 

Today 17 babies will die, the tragic victims of stillbirth or neonatal death. This is a statistic that is seeing no signs of decreasing, and behind each number is a family rocked to the foundations by the death of their baby.

 

This shocking figure, the loss of 6,500 babies every year, is something the public is not generally aware of. Most people think stillbirths don’t happen in the 21st century. Yet stillbirth in the UK is 10 times more common than cot death.

 

At Sands, the stillbirth and neonatal death charity, we feel this number of deaths is totally unacceptable. We have launched the Why17? campaign to raise awareness of this devastating loss and to ask the question:

 

“Why are 17 babies a day dying and what can be done to halt this national tragedy?”

 

“I just want to raise awareness of stillbirth. I had no idea that this could happen to me

 

1) Follow this link, fill in your details to email your MP to make them aware of the parliamentary launch of Why17? on March 4th 2009: www.why17.org/Get-Involved/Contact-your-MP.html

 

2) Add your name to the list of supporters (petition) : www.why17.org/Pledge-Your-Support.html

 

3) Make a contribution: donate online; buy a window sticker / wristband / balloon; or plan a sponsored event. More ideas here: www.why17.org/Get-Involved.html

Vote wisely.

 

San Antonio, Zambales.

🔍 Plaghunter protects this beautiful picture against image theft. Get your own account for free! 👊

At the blog, "Interrupting the Divine," here.

 

Taken by Trace Osterham for the NOH8 SL Campaign. When re-posting this image, please always link back to www.noh8sl.com, and give credit. Thank you.

  

_______________

www.noh8sl.com

www.noh8campaign.com

 

Contact: information(at)noh8sl.com

Seen at the West Somerset Railway Diesel Gala

8th June 2018

Rally supporting refugees and against the SDL, Monkton, Scotland

Fall 2010 Ad Campaign for Christian Louboutin... the theme is "Alice In Wonderland"...

A Japanese girl asked us to pose with an Amnesty message to support their campaign in Japan. Of course we did; I gladly support any campaign to improve LGBTI rights anywhere in the world.

Labour Party election candidate Keir Cozens' campaign office in Broad Row Great Yarmouth.

Campaign for CeroCero MTY

 

Strobist: Deep Octa Camera Right.

 

www.danielyubi.com

www.facebook.com/yubiphoto

The younger sister of Kate Moss does it again. Earlier this summer Lottie Moss was seen in a campaign of Calvin Klein and now she is the face of Red Valentino’s autumn campaign.

Lottie is only 16 years old and is playful seen in the campaign images. The half-sister of the iconic model Kate...

 

weeklyups.com/kate-moss-little-sister-in-campaign-red-val...

Preserved Class 52 D1010 "Western Campaigner" heads away from Crowcombe Heathfield station,on the West Somerset Railway,with a service for Minehead - 9.6.17.

Yashica Mat 124G

 

Fujichrome T64

Western class C - C diesel hydraulic No. D1010 Western Campaigner deep in the Welsh valleys with the Requiem (relief) Railtour.

 

Camera: Olympus OM1 35mm SLR.

Film: Kodachrome II.

(April 2007 Auction Catalog) 1988-89 Mario Lemieux Pittsburgh Penguins Photo-Matched Game Worn Helmet - A super helmet from Super Mario! Lemieux gave this black Cooper helmet a good workout during the Penguins’ road games and there’s definitely a season’s worth of use on it. In fact, we believe that it was worn for a few seasons during the 1980’s, and quite possibly his rookie campaign in 1985. Cooper stickers on both sides and the front. The Cooper sticker on the front has been placed over a Cooper logo that was painted over before the sticker, now present, was affixed. LINK - lelands.com/bids/1988-89-mario-lemieux-pittsburgh-penguin....

 

Mario Lemieux's autograph has certainly evolved through time. As a rookie and for the first few years of his career, Lemieux's signature was legible, featuring a large "M" followed by a lower case "a" and a series of bumps and lines. It was during this time that Lemieux was an accommodating signer via the mail and in person. As his popularity grew through the years, Lemieux instructed someone else to sign his mail due to the overwhelming volume of requests. In addition, his in-person signing habits drastically changed with more and more collectors left out in the cold when pursuing his signature. His last name, similar to his first, featured a large "L" followed by a lower case "e" and a series of bumps and lines. His current autograph, the same one he has featured since the late 1980s, resembles a "ML" followed by his jersey number (66). LINK - www.psacard.com/autographfacts/hockey/mario-lemieux/95#:~....

 

Mario Lemieux OC CQ (born October 5, 1965) is a Canadian former professional ice hockey player. He played parts of 17 seasons in the National Hockey League for the Pittsburgh Penguins between 1984 and 2005, and he assumed ownership of the franchise in 1999. Nicknamed "the Magnificent One", "Le Magnifique", and "Super Mario", Lemieux is widely regarded as one of the greatest players of all time for his combination of size, strength, athleticism, and creativity.

 

Drafted first overall by the Penguins in the 1984 NHL Entry Draft, Lemieux led Pittsburgh to consecutive Stanley Cup championships in 1991 and 1992. Under his ownership, the Penguins won additional titles in 2009, 2016, and 2017. He is the only man to have his name on the Cup both as a player and owner. He also led Team Canada to an Olympic gold medal in 2002, a championship at the 2004 World Cup of Hockey, and a Canada Cup in 1987. He won the Lester B. Pearson Award as the most outstanding player voted by the players four times, the Hart Trophy as the NHL's most valuable player during the regular season three times, the Art Ross Trophy as the league's points leader six times, and the Conn Smythe Trophy as playoffs MVP in 1991 and 1992. He is the only player to score one goal in each of the five possible situations in a single NHL game, a feat he accomplished in 1988. At the time of his retirement, he was the NHL's seventh-highest career points scorer with 690 goals and 1,033 assists. He ranks second in NHL history with a 0.754 career goals-per-game average, behind Mike Bossy (0.762). He ranks second in NHL history with a 1.129 career assists-per-game average and a 1.883 points-per-game average, both behind Wayne Gretzky (1.320 and 1.921, respectively).

 

Lemieux was never able to play a full season, and played in 70 or more games in a season on only six occasions during his career - four of which came before the age of 25. Lemieux's career was plagued by health problems that limited him to 915 of a possible 1,430 regular season games between the opening of the 1984–85 campaign and the conclusion of the 2005–2006 campaign. Lemieux's NHL debut was on October 11, 1984 and his final game took place on December 16, 2005. His numerous ailments included spinal disc herniation, Hodgkin's lymphoma, chronic tendinitis of a hip-flexor muscle, and chronic back pain so severe that other people had to tie his skates. He retired on two occasions due to these health issues, first in 1997 after battling lymphoma before returning in 2000, and then a second and final time in 2006 after being diagnosed with atrial fibrillation. Lemieux also missed the entire 1994–95 season due to Hodgkin's lymphoma. Despite his lengthy absences from the game, his play remained at a high level upon his return to the ice; he won the Hart Trophy and scoring title in 1995–96 after sitting out the entire previous season. He was on pace for 188 points, but only played in 70 games. He was also a finalist for the Hart Trophy when he made his comeback in 2000. In 1999, he bought the then-bankrupt Penguins and their top minor-league affiliate, the American Hockey League's Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins, and was the team's principal owner until selling controlling interest in the team to Fenway Sports Group in 2021. However, he remains part-owner and chairman of the board.

 

The Hockey Hall of Fame inducted Lemieux immediately after his first retirement in 1997, waiving the normal three-year waiting period; upon his return in 2000, he became the third Hall of Famer (after Gordie Howe and Guy Lafleur) to play after being inducted. Lemieux's impact on the NHL has been significant: Andrew Conte of the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review called him the saviour of the Pittsburgh Penguins, and after Lemieux's retirement, Wayne Gretzky commented, "You don't replace players like Mario Lemieux ... The game will miss him." Bobby Orr called him "the most talented player I've ever seen." Orr, along with Bryan Trottier and numerous fans, speculated that if Lemieux had had fewer health issues, his on-ice achievements would have been much greater. In 2017, he was named one of the "100 Greatest NHL Players". He was inducted into Canada's Walk of Fame in 2004, and into the IIHF Hall of Fame in 2008.

 

LINK to video - Top 10 Mario Lemieux Moments - www.youtube.com/watch?v=x1g2BneSPNQ

Campaign 1964

Clip Book of Line Art

Harry Volk Jr. Art Studio

 

An "extra" – produced for and sent exclusively to our subscribers

...the right FORMAT .

 

Campaign image for professional BMX street rider, Nigel Sylvester's lifestyle boutique, FORMAT in Queens, New York City.

 

Digital. 2009.

 

© FORMAT New York. All rights reserved.

© Ryan Christopher VanWilliams. All rights reserved. If using this image elsewhere, please attribute proper credit.

www.RCVWphoto.com

www.RCVW.tumblr.com

Join me on my Facebook fan page!

The other day, i had to help a friend do a shoot for her advertising campaign on Massimo Dutti..and obviously, the theme has something to do with "standing out from the rest"or something like that. But in reality, the dudes in white were the ones who stoood out MOST in the final photos and during the shoot..hahahha, had me laughing behind the camera!! They were the most restless, funniest, and silliest bunch EVER!!! The dude on the WAAYY right was doing something funky in EVERY shot (u had us rolling on the floor wen we uploaded them on the computer)..ahhahahaah. and AHMMM...Bu Mubarak @ AUS {UaeSignature} is in the pic!! Looool..spot him, and NO SIGNATURE..u cant point urself out =Pp and THANKS AGAIN for hanging around until the MODEL came...<3 u guys were really appreciated!!!

  

Comment in English =)

 

Taken by Trace Osterham for the NOH8 SL Campaign. When re-posting this image, please always link back to www.noh8sl.com, and give credit. Thank you.

  

_______________

www.noh8sl.com

www.noh8campaign.com

 

Contact: information(at)noh8sl.com

Assemble like-minded people in a show of great support for your very own public campaign. Add your own pictures to create a custom campaign with this unique effect from PhotoFunia. Upload not one, but two pictures of your choice! One picture will be transformed into a handheld poster while the other as a backdrop for the public event.

 

photofunia.com/effects/campaign

Campaigners pro-EU rallying the Scots and bemused tourists to Edinburgh

Spring 2019

Election campaigning, the Danish way.

Save Dartmoor Campaign

Leica M6 35mm Summicron-M HP5+ 1600 (ID-11 21mins)

Uniéndome a la protesta en contra del abuso hacia los elefantes. Una iniciativa de PETA (People of Ethical Treatment of Animals)

 

Más información aquí: www.peta.org/feat-ringling.asp?c=pfp

 

Joining the PETA campaign against the abuse of elephants.

 

More information here: www.peta.org/feat-ringling.asp?c=pfp

Voronezh is a city and the administrative centre of Voronezh Oblast in southwestern Russia straddling the Voronezh River, located 12 kilometers (7.5 mi) from where it flows into the Don River. The city sits on the Southeastern Railway, which connects western Russia with the Urals and Siberia, the Caucasus and Ukraine, and the M4 highway (Moscow–Voronezh–Rostov-on-Don–Novorossiysk). In recent years the city has experienced rapid population growth, rising in 2021 to 1,057,681, up from 889,680 recorded in the 2010 Census, making it the 14th-most populous city in the country.

 

For many years, the hypothesis of the Soviet historian Vladimir Zagorovsky dominated: he produced the toponym "Voronezh" from the hypothetical Slavic personal name Voroneg. This man allegedly gave the name of a small town in the Chernigov Principality (now the village of Voronizh in Ukraine). Later, in the 11th or 12th century, the settlers were able to "transfer" this name to the Don region, where they named the second city Voronezh, and the river got its name from the city. However, now many researchers criticize the hypothesis, since in reality neither the name of Voroneg nor the second city was revealed, and usually the names of Russian cities repeated the names of the rivers, but not vice versa.

 

A comprehensive scientific analysis was conducted in 2015–2016 by the historian Pavel Popov. His conclusion: "Voronezh" is a probable Slavic macrotoponym associated with outstanding signs of nature, has a root voron- (from the proto-Slavic vorn) in the meaning of "black, dark" and the suffix -ezh (-azh, -ozh). It was not “transferred” and in the 8th - 9th centuries it marked a vast territory covered with black forests (oak forests) - from the mouth of the Voronezh river to the Voronozhsky annalistic forests in the middle and upper reaches of the river, and in the west to the Don (many forests were cut down). The historian believes that the main "city" of the early town-planning complex could repeat the name of the region – Voronezh. Now the hillfort is located in the administrative part of the modern city, in the Voronezh upland oak forest. This is one of Europe's largest ancient Slavic hillforts, the area of which – more than 9 hectares – 13 times the area of the main settlement in Kyiv before the baptism of Rus.

 

In it is assumed that the word "Voronezh" means bluing - a technique to increase the corrosion resistance of iron products. This explanation fits well with the proximity to the ancient city of Voronezh of a large iron deposit and the city of Stary Oskol. As well as the name of Voroneț Monastery known for its blue shade.

 

Folk etymology claims the name comes from combining the Russian words for raven (ворон) and hedgehog (еж) into Воронеж. According to this explanation two Slavic tribes named after the animals used this combination to name the river which later in turn provided the name for a settlement. There is not believed to be any scientific support for this explanation.

 

In the 16th century, the Middle Don basin, including the Voronezh river, was gradually conquered by Muscovy from the Nogai Horde (a successor state of the Golden Horde), and the current city of Voronezh was established in 1585 by Feodor I as a fort protecting the Muravsky Trail trade route against the slave raids of the Nogai and Crimean Tatars. The city was named after the river.

 

17th to 19th centuries

In the 17th century, Voronezh gradually evolved into a sizable town. Weronecz is shown on the Worona river in Resania in Joan Blaeu's map of 1645. Peter the Great built a dockyard in Voronezh where the Azov Flotilla was constructed for the Azov campaigns in 1695 and 1696. This fleet, the first ever built in Russia, included the first Russian ship of the line, Goto Predestinatsia. The Orthodox diocese of Voronezh was instituted in 1682 and its first bishop, Mitrofan of Voronezh, was later proclaimed the town's patron saint.

 

Owing to the Voronezh Admiralty Wharf, for a short time, Voronezh became the largest city of South Russia and the economic center of a large and fertile region. In 1711, it was made the seat of the Azov Governorate, which eventually morphed into the Voronezh Governorate.

 

In the 19th century, Voronezh was a center of the Central Black Earth Region. Manufacturing industry (mills, tallow-melting, butter-making, soap, leather, and other works) as well as bread, cattle, suet, and the hair trade developed in the town. A railway connected Voronezh with Moscow in 1868 and Rostov-on-Don in 1871.

Hancock County (GA) Copyright 2008 D. Nelson

 

Due to a shortage of fire-fighters during WWII, the Forest Service created the Cooperative Forest Fire Prevention Campaign in an effort to raise awareness of the danger of forest fires and maybe help prevent some of them. In 1942 Walt Disney let the Forest Service use his newest creation "Bambi" for advertising which turned out to be very well received by the public. However, the loan of Bambi expired after one year, and the Forest Service decided to make a bear the symbol for its campaign. The first Smokey Bear poster appeared on August 9, 1944 (considered Smokey's birthday) and by 1952 Smokey was such a huge commercial success that an Act of Congress passed to take Smokey out of the public domain and place him under the control of the Secretary of Agriculture. The Act provided for the use of collected royalties and fees for continued education on forest fire prevention. I would love to put this photo on a coffee mug but I understand I might go to prison for doing so...

 

When in 1952 Steve Nelson and Jack Rollins wrote the hit song "Smokey The Bear", adding a "the" between "Smokey" and "Bear" in order to keep the song's rhythm. As a result, much confusion ensued as Smokey Bear became incorrectly known as "Smokey The Bear".

 

After a devastating fire in New Mexico in the spring of 1950, a black bear cub was found clinging to a tree that had saved his life but burned his paws and hind legs. He was rescued and treated for his burns; when the media picked up the little cub's story, he became an instant celebrity. It was decided to make him the spokesbear for the fire prevention campaign and he was put up in the National Zoo in Washington DC where he lived for 26 years. It is said that he was so popular that he had his own zip code. After his death in November 1975, Smokey's remains were returned by the government to Capitan, New Mexico, and buried at what is now the Smokey Bear Historical Park.

 

The Smokey Bear campaign is the longest running public service campaign in U.S. history, with its forest fire prevention message remaining unchanged for more than 50 years. It was changed in April, 2001, when the Ad Council updated his message to address the increasing number of wildfires in the nation's wildlands.

 

2 4 5 6 7 ••• 79 80