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1st. Sgt. Tomeka Johnson-Nunn hands the Headquarters and Headquarters Company guidon to Command Sgt. Maj. Craig D. Owens, command sergeant major of the 200th Military Police Command, symbolizing relinquishment of her role as company first sergeant during a change of responsibility ceremony at Fort Meade, Maryland, Sept. 8, 2018. Change of responsibility ceremonies are held to acknowledge the transfer of leadership of a military unit among noncommissioned officers. (U.S. Army Reserve photo by Sgt. Audrey Hayes)
And here he is, transformed!
Featured on Life In Plastic: nerditis.com/2017/08/10/life-in-plastic-toy-review-tiny-t...
Hundreds of visitors came to get inspired and play with us at our Climate Art Exhibit on Sep. 14-15 at the Mill Valley Fall Arts Festival. Green Change and dozens of volunteers hosted this special exhibit to engage more people to go green and fight climate change. We collaborated with these talented artists to create this featured presentation: Ann Dodge, Tess Felix, Fabrice Florin, Janey Fritsche, Al Grumet, Aurora Mahassine and Randy Rosenberg.
Together, we transformed the redwood grove at Old Mill Park into a creative space for climate action. We inspired hundreds of conversations about climate change through vibrant artworks, visual storytelling, interactive installations and fun activities for all ages. Over a hundred people signed up as Green Change members, dozens pledged to take climate action and many more played our educational games and learned new information to help them go green.
Our climate art exhibit featured:
• Ocean Plastic Portraits - stunning portraits made from recycled materials found on beaches
• Seeds of Change - a multi-dimensional living art installation rising 20 feet up in the redwood trees
• Keeping Score - a fun corn hole game about our food choices
• Hitting Home - an origami house activity about our energy choices
• Alchemy of Fire - mixed-media paintings about the threat of wildfires
• This Island Earth - paintings celebrating the beauty and spiritual power of nature
• Earth Bike - a unique art float created to inspire people to go green
• Green Change - an information table for learning about climate action
This was a fun and rewarding experience for all participants, bringing together hundreds of people and inspiring them to make a green change in their lives. The majestic redwood grove at Old Mill offered an ideal setting for helping each other protect nature and our future.
Special thanks to our gracious hosts Erma Murphy and Sylvia Barsky at MVFAF -- and to all the volunteers who so generously helped us present our work for this transformative experience!
View more photos of our Climate Art Exhibit presentation:
www.flickr.com/photos/fabola/albums/72157709354972591
View photos of our Climate Art Exhibit creation:
www.flickr.com/photos/fabola/sets/72157710958173956
Learn about this Climate Art Exhibit at MVFAF:
Read this Pacific Sun story:
Learn more about Green Change:
#art #climateaction #climateart #climatechange #green #greenchange #marin #millvalley #millvalleyfallarts #mvfaf
The plant you gave us several years ago has just flowered, for the
first time - today. I'll take a photo and send it to you.
la kata ya no es la misma , cambie o quizás solo madure en fin. . . me aburri de esta puta gente, y solo me quedo con los/las verdaderos/as (: . . . ya no quiero más mierda en mi vida , solo quiero P A Z y tranquilidad junto a la gente que deverdad quiero y siempre esta ahí ♥
CLR-15 welcomes new commanding officer
Colonel Stephen D. Sklenka relinquishes his duties and responsibilities as commander of Combat Logistics Regiment 15, 1st Marine Logistics Group, to Col. Tracy W. King during a change of command ceremony aboard Camp Pendleton, Calif., Thursday, March 28, 2013. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Cpl. Laura Gauna/Released)
Read more: dvidshub.net/r/ms4iod
Facebook: www.facebook.com/1stMarineLogisticsGroup
Various Artists
Sunday 10 November, 10:00am - 5:00pm
Wellgate Shopping Centre
Level 2, Space 5
Dundee, DD1 2DB
NEoN is delighted to be working with Dundee based artist and curator Saoirse Anis to bring you the first workshop in our Change:Debate series addressing the work that must be done by us, together with Dundee’s many creative institutions to champion, support and nourish the work of artists of colour.
This workshop will be led and delivered by PoC artists, makers and activists who work in the digital sector to discuss their practice, share their experience of the industry and lead a dialogue about the vital challenges it must overcome.
Delivered and guided by Jazmin Morris, Danielle Brathwaite-Shirley, and Shay Thompson, the day will take the form of hands on activities, stories, discussion and drawing up suggested routes for future development. The space will be safe but challenging and a place for listening but for being heard, a place for growth and change.
Programme for the day
Danielle Brathwaite-Shirley 10:00am-12:00pm
Shay Thompson 12.30pm-1.30pm – Talk – We’re talking about Diversity all wrong
Jazmin Morris 2:00pm-5:00pm – workshop – Redesigning representation in games
Some laptops will be available but please do bring one along if you can.
About the Artists
Saoirse Anis is a Dundee-based artist and curator. She takes delight in exploring the relationships between materials, memories, and the essential movement which runs through everything. Interested in the value of empathy, she has recently been thinking about personal therapeutic processes, and how this relates to the ways we share our vulnerabilities with others. She is interested in the potential that lies in creative collaboration, and the extent to which it can nurture and inspire us, both personally and politically.
Jazmin Morris is a Creative Technologist. Her personal practice focuses on the complexities within simulating culture and identity through virtual games and experiences. Technology is used as a creative toolset to respond to predetermined ideologies and cultural and political theory. Jazmin works across institutions around London focusing on alternative STE(A)M education for diverse groups of people. The workshop, Redesigning representation in games, will provide an insight into Jazmin’s conceptual practice as well as guide participants through basic game development concepts.
Danielle Brathwaite-Shirley is an artist working predominantly in animation, sound and performance to communicate their experience as a Black Trans person. Their practice focuses on recording the lives of Black Trans people, intertwining lived experience with fiction to imaginatively retell Trans stories. Spurred on by a desire to meet buried bodies like theirs, their work dreams of a Trans archive where Black Trans people could share their buried experiences.
Throughout history, Black queer and Trans people have been erased from the archives. Because of this it is necessary not only to archive our existence, but also the many creative narratives we have used and continue to use to share our experiences.
Shay Thompson is a video games presenter, currently working for McLaren, hosting panels and podcasts for Bafta and previously streaming for Xbox UK. Interests include romancing alien squadmates, spending too much time in the character creator and trying to pet all the cats. Shay is also the founder of Level Up Link Up, an event aiming to make the games industry a more diverse place.
Images by Kathryn Rattray Photography
Playing For Change @ Klauss Vianna's Theater - Belo Horizonte/MG - Brazil - 16/06/11
Pictures by Rapha Garcia / www.flickr.com/r_garcia
© Copyright 2011. All Rights Reserved.
CHANGE is the topic for Tuesday June 7, 2011
I am behind on my ODC2 comments. Promise I will catch up. Life has been hectic lately. Thanks for stopping by.
From Left to Right:
Joshua Judd, undergraduate student
Chelsie Hancock, Management Intern University Service Learning
Regina Duran, Social Embeddedness Intern
Rachael Jake, undergraduate student
Leah Luben, undergraduate student
Leanne Daly, undergraduate student
Alex Wilson, undergraduate student
Kristen Altman, MBA student
Gozi Ibeji, undergraduate student
Isaac Lee, undergraduate student
Summer - August 2009
Just for fun, I thought I'd show you the changing seasons at Hiawatha Park.
See below for Spring, Winter and Autumn taken at the same place.
Click here to see more of my photos on Darckr.
Fuck you hippies.
Hah! When Olivia and I had our day at the park on Tuesday she pointed out that someone had written "Be The Change" on the parks gazebo. I made fun of her for being a hippie. It's a on going joke, don't worry.
P.S
I went to schiller camera today and bought some basic things. But I'm super excited! I got a remote :) a UV filter (finally) and just some lens cleaner (much needed).
It may be lame, but I love buying things for my camera, even if its not much. I'm pretty sure its my child.
Bangkok railway station or also know as "Hua Lamphong station" , the classical railway station with western modernism architecture that attended for foreigner or Thai traveler to take photos and travel by train and away taking transportation by people who live in this neighborhood.
In the end of 2021, Government had a plan to change main station to Bangsue Grand Station, abolish train travel from Hua Lamphong station and will made them to other space (Ex. park or mall with original station building). Among the sadness of people who love this station, they are opposing these plan.
Me in that time, I felt sad when this station will be closing and I toke slide film with the latest camera to take memorial picture before they are going to the end.
However, after I take this picture around 1 month. Government listen oppose and "Change" plan back to still able train traveling with will made them to be "Living museum". That's good news for us!
This picture I took with Nikon F4, Nikon 28-105mm f3.5-4.5 AF-D lens and Kodak Ektachrome E100 film.
An Ultra-short film about evanescence, mortality and symmetry.
Every thing changes over time - again.
Saving the planet one step at a time
Have you heard of climate change?
Temperatures are getting higher. Storms are getting worse. Ice is melting and sea levels are rising. Portions of the coast of Bangladesh are likely to go underwater, lost forever. Millions will become homeless. The ability of the earth to sustain people is threatened.
Why is climate change happening?
Because people are burning up fossil fuels (diesel, petrol, natural gas, coal) at such rapid rates that future generations are now threatened.
Is it possible to slow climate change?
Yes, but we cannot continue to waste time. Carbon dioxide levels are rising rapidly. That is where the number 350 comes in. If we can limit CO2 in the atmosphere to 350 parts per million then we can avoid the worst of the harm to come.
Is there anything we can do?
No one person cam stop climate change but everyone contributes something significant. We can slow out own use of fossil fuels by walking and cycling and taking cycle rickshaws rather than using motorized transport. We can reduce our use of electricity. We can avoid, as a nation, burning coal (pure carbon) or selling it to others to burn. We can encourage the government to act to encourage reductions in fuel use and to encourage walking, cycling, and rickshaws.
This will mean making some changes. Fortunately most of those changes are likely to
increase rather than reduce our quality of life. Imagine being able to cycle safely in
Dhaka. Imagine the air being fresh and clean. Imagine children and youth being able to play in side streets. If we move our focus from cars to people, from traveling long
distances to accessing basic needs close to home, we can reduce congestion and all the misery it causes, We can have more time with family and for the other important parts of life.
Remember 350 is not just a number. It is not just an ideal. It is something we can all work to make a reality.
Syed Saiful Alam
shovan1209@yahoo.com
I changed the text around from the previous version, and added some water droplets. I still am going to do some more stuff to this obviously, but what do you guys think about the droplets and the text?
Vietnam: Changing Weapons Technology
Changing Weapons Technology
The evolution of U.S. military aircraft has been driven more by the development of accurate weapons than by the size or capability of the aircraft delivering those weapons.
In Korea the use of short-range navigation, a method of using radio frequency transmission to guide B-29s, enabled bombers to locate and attack large targets even in poor weather. The use of increasingly sophisticated “smart” weapons in Vietnam began to achieve results that only huge numbers of “dumb” bombs had in the past. These new precision weapons began to overturn the long-accepted notions that strategic attacks required large bombers carrying massive bomb loads, and that it always entailed high civilian casualties.
Modern precision weapons now provide a variety of options for applying airpower. In the Persian Gulf War of 1991, cruise missiles launched from ships and B-52s, and laser-guided bombs dropped from F-117, A-6s, and other fighters, led the first waves of attacks on Iraq. Effects-based bombardment measured by impact upon the enemy rather than by the type of aircraft delivering the attack – has been enhanced by the development of precision weapons, whether aimed at targets in the air or on the ground.
my first roll of 120 film and first in the vintage Diana. there really isn't a picture that i didn't like on the whole roll. that never happens!
Northampton, MA