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Corporal David Easter, USMC, communicates via hand signals with his patrol leader while participating in a mounted patrol with Alpha Company, Second Light Armored Reconnaissance Battalion, 26th Marine Expeditionary Unit (Special Operations Capable) near the Kandahar International Airport, Kandahar, Afghanistan, during OPERATION ENDURING FREEDOM.
USAF Captain Walter Mettler, a Air Mobility Liaison Officer and TACP with the 8th ASOS, listens to aircraft communications during the drop of hundreds of Polish, U.S. and Canadian forces during Dragon 11, a multinational training event between Poland, the U.S., Canada and a few members from UK. Over 100 members of US Army Europe's 173rd Airborne Brigade Combat Team along with more than 20 members of the Royal Canadian Regiment, are here in Mirosławiec Poland, training and developing relationships with the Polish military. These are some of the same soldiers that will deploy with Polish troops to Afghanistan. US Army Europe Public Affairs photo by Richard Bumgardner.
The Rev. Gary Henderson (seated, center) and Phileas Jusu (seated, in black cap) share photos from a 2010 distribution of mosquito nets with villagers in Baima Songa near Bo, Sierra Leone. Several villages in the Bo district will receive new, insecticide-treated mosquito nets from the United Methodist Church's Imagine No Malaria campaign in the first planned redistribution to replace nets given in 2010. Henderson heads the denomination's Global Health Initiative and Jusu is a communicator for the Sierra Leone Annual Conference. Photo by Mike DuBose, UMNS.
Today, we’re introducing three revolutionary products of this class.
The first one: is a widescreen iPod with touch controls.
The second: is a revolutionary mobile phone.
And the third is a breakthrough Internet communications device.
This collage was created by the young people in our Insight Group to show how we listen and communicate with each other.
"Elephants Communicating" by Ratchakrit Wichaiyo,another bright Elephant.Part of the Elephant Parade at the Gateshead Shoping Centre.
From a show curated by Rick Poynor at Brno Biennial 2010, held in the Moravian Gallery, Brno from 22 June until 24 October 2010. For more details see the events page on the Eye blog: blog.eyemagazine.com/?page_id=158
Toyen, Czechoslovakia, André Breton, Spojité nádoby / The Communicating Vessels, 1934
book cover, 19,7 x 13,5 cm, 1934 , private collection
Photo: The Moravian Gallery in Brno
I've been to speakers corner quite a few times and I've not really taken any pictures that concentrate on some of ways speakers have of getting their point across. So forgive me for chopping off the heads but thats only half the story.
West Michigan Whitecaps Pitcher Brennan Smith and Catcher Robert Brantly both attempt to field a bunt
Rob Beaney (substituting for Harry Mack) of Victor and the Bully performing at Asylum IX, August 2017, Lincoln. The title is a quote from Leonard Bernstein.
Vanessa got violently sick that night after drinking this at the market. I found a local 24-hour pharmacy 4 am in the morning, communicated as best as I could, and procured some medicine to ease her intense condition. Luckily, she got better slowly the next day.
Tejate is a non-alcoholic maize and cacao beverage traditionally made in Oaxaca, Mexico, originating from pre-Hispanic times. It remains very popular among the indigenous Mixtec and Zapotec peoples, especially in rural areas. It is also very popular in Oaxaca and the surrounding regions. Principal ingredients include toasted maize, fermented cacao beans, toasted mamey pits (pixtle) and flor de cacao (also known as rosita de cacao). These are finely ground into a paste. The paste is mixed with water, usually by hand, and when it is ready, the flor de cacao rises to the top to form a pasty foam. It can be served as-is or with some sugar syrup to sweeten it. The drink is served cold.
The Sunday open-air market (or tianguis) of Tlacolula is one of the oldest continuous in Mesoamerica and the largest and busiest in the Central Valley region of Oaxaca. The only market of any type which is larger is the Centro de Abastos (main grocery market selling to retailers) in the city of Oaxaca. This market is part of a tradition of weekly markets which is still found in Oaxaca, where people from rural areas come to the local town to buy, sell and socialize, and are a functional feature of pre-modern peasant economies. The market provides a retail outlet for those living in communities too small to support permanent retail establishments.
Mercado de Tlacolula, 70400 de, Galeana 2, Tercera Secc, Tlacolula de Matamoros, Oax., Mexico