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Goo2o not just builds your online store, but also offers an end to end solution for managing operations involved in e-commerce business from maintaining the online catalogue, receiving payment for an order and delivering the product to the customer.

 

Source:

goo2o.biz/operations

Since 1975, McDermott Handcrafted Cues has

consistently raised the industry standard for what

billiard players expect from a high quality pool cue.

McDermott products use the latest technology in our

state-of-the-art facility, along with the finest materials

in the world. In 35 years, McDermott has grown into 12

brands that lead the billiard industry in performance,

quality and service.

Our Innovation

We like doing things that have never been done before.

We’re inspired by the thought of introducing new products

and technology. Driven by the challenge to develop better

performance, McDermott is dedicated to the single most

important factor in new product development; your game.

Our Performance

Billiards is not an easy game. It can make your heart

pound, your palms sweat and your muscles tighten. It tests

your concentration, challenges your ability and tries your

patience. It makes you want to come back for more. We

devote all day, every day designing the best performing pool

cues available.

Our Quality

Craftsmanship is a fine art. Found among the gifted artisans

in Menomonee Falls, Wisconsin are the finest wood-makers,

cue designers and engineers in the world. McDermott utilizes

a process that includes over 150 separate procedures in the

construction of each cue. All shafts start from the finest Kilndried,

hand-selected North American Hard Rock maple and are

turned 11 times for stability. All forearms, handles and sleeves

are handcrafted from the finest materials and most exotic

woods from around the world.

Our Involvement

McDermott has been a leader in supporting the industry

through tournaments and billiard events. If it’s important to

our customer, it’s important to us. Whether it be live events,

online promotion or social networking, McDermott strives to

continuously support the sport of billiards.

Murray, still striving to regain the consistently elite form he once possessed, fell to No. 5 Tsitsipas, 7-6 (3), 6-7 (2), 4-6, 7-6 (3), 6-4, in a match so close that Murray outscored his Greek opponent in overall points, 176-169.“I’m obviously very disappointed right now,” he said in a news conference about 25 minutes after the match had ended. “You never know how many opportunities you’re going to get to play here.”Murray’s dreary mood was reflected all around the grounds on a difficult day for British players and their fans on Friday. The 12th-seeded Cameron Norrie, Britain’s current No. 1 player, lost to the unseeded American Chris Eubanks, 6-3, 3-6, 6-2, 7-6 (3), on Court No. 1, and Liam Broady, the British No. 2, fell to the Canadian Dennis Shapovalov, who won 4-6, 6-2, 7-5, 7-5.But with Murray, it is different. For two decades, British tennis supporters have watched while he converted the promise of his junior career into glory when, under great pressure in 2013, he became the first British man in 77 years to win Wimbledon, Britain’s home tournament and the premier event on the tour. Three years later, he did it again, to add to the U.S. Open title and the Olympic gold medal he had won in 2012, the latter also on Centre Court.

 

Source link

 

www.newstodayjournal.com/andy-murrays-run-at-wimbledon-is...

India: women consistently face discrimination at home, at work, at school and in society. Concern India is working with women to help them assert themselves more in society by claiming their constitutional rights. Pictured is beneficiary Mamata Mallick.

Consistent and quick. Two adjectives that rarely associate themselves directly with Dodge Neons. This guy proves that it's 90% driver ability.

The 53rd annual Bon Odori Festival at Camp Zama was held Aug. 4. The festival is consistently the largest bilateral event of the year for U.S. Army Japan, this year attracting more than 30,000 visitors to the installation. The festival featured live entartainment, games for children, a variety of ethnic foods, bilateral sports, and a fireworks show.

 

About the United States Army Garrison Japan:

 

The United States Army Garrison Japan and its 16 supported installation sites are located in the island of Honshu and Okinawa in Japan. The USAG Japan mission is to support the Headquarters, U.S. Army Japan / I Corps (fwd) to ensure mission readiness and the quality of life of the Army community in a sustainable, transforming joint and combined environment.

 

The USAG-J area of responsibility spans 1,500 miles from north to south of Japan. Camp Zama, home for both HQ USARJ and USAG-J is located approximately 25 miles southwest of Tokyo in the cities of Zama and Sagamihara in Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan. The Camp Zama base cluster includes Sagamihara Housing Area and Sagami General Depot.

 

Akasaka Press Center is located in the center of Tokyo. The Akizuki/Kure area near Hiroshima is an ammunition depot. Yokohama North Dock is a port facility in the city of Yokohama, a major commerce port and a popular shopping area. USAG Torii Station is located 980 miles southwest of Camp Zama on the island of Okinawa.

 

We are the Army's home in Japan and the "Garrison of Choice" for Soldiers, Civilians and their Family members. We are committed in becoming the leader in the U.S. Army Installation Management Command by providing world-class installation services.

 

-----

 

To learn more about USAG Japan, please visit:

  

Official Website - www.usagj.jp.pac.army.mil

 

Facebook - www.facebook.com/usagj

 

Flickr - www.flickr.com/usagj

 

YouTube - www.youtube.com/usagjapan

 

Vimeo - www.vimeo.com/usagj

 

Twitter - www.twitter.com/usagjapan

 

Slideshare - www.slideshare.net/usagjapan

 

USARJ This Week on YouTube - www.youtube.com/usarjthisweek

  

Ginger - Cody's Ginger Doc Reg. Paint ( Breeding Stock) Gray Mare - $700

Reg. Codys Ginger Doc dob 3.25.94 age 15. Consistently delivers foals each spring w/out any problems. Reducing Broodmares. Foals have great temperments. Possible package deal w/current foal at side. Pictures of previous foals are available. Reducing/downisizing broodmares. Not exposed this year. Sells open. Would consider breeding before sale to our Reg. AQHA Stud. Call Lee at 701-729-6841 or email to c-lgray@msn.com

 

More information at www.equinenow.com/horse-ad-211043.

The 53rd annual Bon Odori Festival at Camp Zama was held Aug. 4. The festival is consistently the largest bilateral event of the year for U.S. Army Japan, this year attracting more than 30,000 visitors to the installation. The festival featured live entartainment, games for children, a variety of ethnic foods, bilateral sports, and a fireworks show.

 

About the United States Army Garrison Japan:

 

The United States Army Garrison Japan and its 16 supported installation sites are located in the island of Honshu and Okinawa in Japan. The USAG Japan mission is to support the Headquarters, U.S. Army Japan / I Corps (fwd) to ensure mission readiness and the quality of life of the Army community in a sustainable, transforming joint and combined environment.

 

The USAG-J area of responsibility spans 1,500 miles from north to south of Japan. Camp Zama, home for both HQ USARJ and USAG-J is located approximately 25 miles southwest of Tokyo in the cities of Zama and Sagamihara in Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan. The Camp Zama base cluster includes Sagamihara Housing Area and Sagami General Depot.

 

Akasaka Press Center is located in the center of Tokyo. The Akizuki/Kure area near Hiroshima is an ammunition depot. Yokohama North Dock is a port facility in the city of Yokohama, a major commerce port and a popular shopping area. USAG Torii Station is located 980 miles southwest of Camp Zama on the island of Okinawa.

 

We are the Army's home in Japan and the "Garrison of Choice" for Soldiers, Civilians and their Family members. We are committed in becoming the leader in the U.S. Army Installation Management Command by providing world-class installation services.

 

-----

 

To learn more about USAG Japan, please visit:

  

Official Website - www.usagj.jp.pac.army.mil

 

Facebook - www.facebook.com/usagj

 

Flickr - www.flickr.com/usagj

 

YouTube - www.youtube.com/usagjapan

 

Vimeo - www.vimeo.com/usagj

 

Twitter - www.twitter.com/usagjapan

 

Slideshare - www.slideshare.net/usagjapan

 

USARJ This Week on YouTube - www.youtube.com/usarjthisweek

  

After being consistently let down by the quality of the processing at the local photo lab I decided to take the leap and begin processing my own (first) E6 then C41 film. A Jobo CPE2 processor was donated to uni, I only really needed to buy my own chemical bottles, thermometer and, of course processing tank.

 

Bronica ETRS with 50mm with Fuji Pro 160s processed using CPE2 with Fuji Hunt C41 x-press.

Germany consistently retains one of its chief routines, which is harnessing wind power.

 

To learn more visit our Knol at knol.google.com/k/wind-turbines/top-10-countries-where-wi... and our blogger at windturbinesllc.blogspot.com/2011/02/10-cradles-of-wind-t...

Join our wind turbines community – www.windturbines.net

 

Consistently voted “Best French Fries in Austin”. A big platter of hand-cut Idaho Potatoes, dipped in creamy buttermilk, rolled in seasoned flour and lightly fried. Served with special Hyde Park sauce.

consistently wonderful

 

A quick shot at my favorite restaurant and thinking of a fellow 365 traveler and Austinite - the Trial.

 

A toast - to finishing and keeping your sense of humor.

good job.

The 53rd annual Bon Odori Festival at Camp Zama was held Aug. 4. The festival is consistently the largest bilateral event of the year for U.S. Army Japan, this year attracting more than 30,000 visitors to the installation. The festival featured live entartainment, games for children, a variety of ethnic foods, bilateral sports, and a fireworks show.

 

About the United States Army Garrison Japan:

 

The United States Army Garrison Japan and its 16 supported installation sites are located in the island of Honshu and Okinawa in Japan. The USAG Japan mission is to support the Headquarters, U.S. Army Japan / I Corps (fwd) to ensure mission readiness and the quality of life of the Army community in a sustainable, transforming joint and combined environment.

 

The USAG-J area of responsibility spans 1,500 miles from north to south of Japan. Camp Zama, home for both HQ USARJ and USAG-J is located approximately 25 miles southwest of Tokyo in the cities of Zama and Sagamihara in Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan. The Camp Zama base cluster includes Sagamihara Housing Area and Sagami General Depot.

 

Akasaka Press Center is located in the center of Tokyo. The Akizuki/Kure area near Hiroshima is an ammunition depot. Yokohama North Dock is a port facility in the city of Yokohama, a major commerce port and a popular shopping area. USAG Torii Station is located 980 miles southwest of Camp Zama on the island of Okinawa.

 

We are the Army's home in Japan and the "Garrison of Choice" for Soldiers, Civilians and their Family members. We are committed in becoming the leader in the U.S. Army Installation Management Command by providing world-class installation services.

 

-----

 

To learn more about USAG Japan, please visit:

  

Official Website - www.usagj.jp.pac.army.mil

 

Facebook - www.facebook.com/usagj

 

Flickr - www.flickr.com/usagj

 

YouTube - www.youtube.com/usagjapan

 

Vimeo - www.vimeo.com/usagj

 

Twitter - www.twitter.com/usagjapan

 

Slideshare - www.slideshare.net/usagjapan

 

USARJ This Week on YouTube - www.youtube.com/usarjthisweek

  

Saying that Delaware has made consistent progress in reducing its infant mortality rate, Governor Carney told the Delaware Maternal and Child Health Summit on April 17 that the goal is that “every child in Delaware is born healthy” and has the opportunity to be successful in his or her life.

 

“I’m optimistic that we can address all of these challenges,” the Governor said in figuring out new and innovative ways to bring down the state’s infant mortality rate from its current 7.5 deaths per 1,000 live births to match or fall below the national average rate of 5.9. Delaware’s infant mortality rate has declined from a high of 9.3 deaths per 1,000 live births in 2005. The Delaware Healthy Mothers and Infants Consortium was created in 2005 to address Delaware’s high rate of infant deaths.

 

“The fact that some segments in our state already have birth outcomes that are better than the national average is a clear indication that we can get there together,” DHSS Secretary Dr. Kara Odom Walker said of the state’s white infant mortality rate that is at 5.1 deaths per 1,000 live births. The black infant mortality rate in Delaware is 12.5. “For the families who experience this terrible nightmare, we can do better,” Secretary Walker said. “That’s what gets me up every day, knowing we can do better.”

 

Lt. Gov. Bethany Hall-Long, a registered nurse, also applauded the progress made to reduce infant mortality in the state, but said the measure is a public health indicator of a state’s overall health.

 

Attorney General Matt Denn said the increasing number of substance-exposed infants in the state indicates that “the opioid crisis is a healthy infants crisis as well.”

 

Kenn Harris of New Haven Healthy Start, one of the summit’s keynote speakers, has devoted his career to child and maternal health after he and his wife lost their second son as a baby. “There is no single fix for this issue of infant mortality … It takes innovation,” he said in encouraging the more than 300 attendees at the Chase Center to listen to and engage their communities. “We have to work on our listening.”

 

To learn more about the Delaware Healthy Mother and Infant Consortium, go to:

dethrives.com/dhmic

 

The 53rd annual Bon Odori Festival at Camp Zama was held Aug. 4. The festival is consistently the largest bilateral event of the year for U.S. Army Japan, this year attracting more than 30,000 visitors to the installation. The festival featured live entartainment, games for children, a variety of ethnic foods, bilateral sports, and a fireworks show.

 

About the United States Army Garrison Japan:

 

The United States Army Garrison Japan and its 16 supported installation sites are located in the island of Honshu and Okinawa in Japan. The USAG Japan mission is to support the Headquarters, U.S. Army Japan / I Corps (fwd) to ensure mission readiness and the quality of life of the Army community in a sustainable, transforming joint and combined environment.

 

The USAG-J area of responsibility spans 1,500 miles from north to south of Japan. Camp Zama, home for both HQ USARJ and USAG-J is located approximately 25 miles southwest of Tokyo in the cities of Zama and Sagamihara in Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan. The Camp Zama base cluster includes Sagamihara Housing Area and Sagami General Depot.

 

Akasaka Press Center is located in the center of Tokyo. The Akizuki/Kure area near Hiroshima is an ammunition depot. Yokohama North Dock is a port facility in the city of Yokohama, a major commerce port and a popular shopping area. USAG Torii Station is located 980 miles southwest of Camp Zama on the island of Okinawa.

 

We are the Army's home in Japan and the "Garrison of Choice" for Soldiers, Civilians and their Family members. We are committed in becoming the leader in the U.S. Army Installation Management Command by providing world-class installation services.

 

-----

 

To learn more about USAG Japan, please visit:

  

Official Website - www.usagj.jp.pac.army.mil

 

Facebook - www.facebook.com/usagj

 

Flickr - www.flickr.com/usagj

 

YouTube - www.youtube.com/usagjapan

 

Vimeo - www.vimeo.com/usagj

 

Twitter - www.twitter.com/usagjapan

 

Slideshare - www.slideshare.net/usagjapan

 

USARJ This Week on YouTube - www.youtube.com/usarjthisweek

  

A nearly complete online collection of Unity & Struggle the newspaper of the Congress of Afrikan People led by the poet and Black activist Amiri Baraka (formerly Leroi Jones).

 

The newspaper was initially published following the Newark, NJ uprising and was affiliated with Baraka’s Spirit House, a Black cultural nationalist organization in the city. It soon concentrated its coverage on Newark community activism and politics with coverage of African liberation struggles.

 

Influenced by Maulana Karenga philosophy of Black nationalism, Baraka formed the Congress of Afrikan People in 1970 at a convention attended by over 3,000 people. Chapters were established in many cities across the United States, including Washington, D.C.

 

Baraka consistently looked toward finding the solution for the liberation of Black people in the United States and his meeting with revolutionaries from movements in Africa helped lead him to Marxism-Leninism-Mao Zedong Thought.

 

The newspaper was renamed Unity and Struggle in 1974 when the Congress of Afrikan People formed the Revolutionary Communist League (RCL) as a successor organization. Its distribution expanded dramatically outside of Newark.

 

However, the RCL ceased doing much of its service work, including closing a popular school that had been operated in Newark by CAP. The newspaper concentrated increasingly on debates with other Marxist-Leninist organizations in an attempt to form a new Communist Party.

 

Some articles of note in the later issues of Unity and Struggle include a series on pre-Civil War Black nationalists and a lengthy analysis of the Black nation in the United States.

 

Unity and Struggle ceased publication when the RCL merged with the League of Revolutionary Struggle in 1980.

 

Black Newark

 

Vol 1 No 1, April 1968 - washingtonareaspark.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/Vol-1-...

Vol 1 No 2, July 1968 - washingtonareaspark.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/vol-1-...

Vol 1 No 3, November 1968 - washingtonareaspark.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/Vol-1-...

 

Black News

 

Vol 1 No 4, undated - washingtonareaspark.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/vol-1-...

 

Black New Ark

 

Vol 1 No 5, April 1972 – washingtonareaspark.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/Vol-1-...

Vol 1 No 6, May 1972 – washingtonareaspark.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/vol-1-...

Vol 1 No 7 July 1972 – washingtonareaspark.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/vol-1-...

Vol 1 No 8, unavailable at this time

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Vol 1 No 10, unavailable at this time

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Vol 1 No 12, December 1972 - washingtonareaspark.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/vol-1-...

Vol 2 No 1, January 1973 - washingtonareaspark.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/Vol-2-...

Vol 2 No 2, February 1973 - washingtonareaspark.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/vol-2-...

Vol 2 No 3, March 1973 – washingtonareaspark.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/vol-2-...

Vol 2 No 4, unavailable at this time

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Vol 2 No 6, June 1973 – washingtonareaspark.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/vol-2-...

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Vol 2 No 8, August 1973 – washingtonareaspark.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/vol-2-...

Vol 2 No 9, September 1973 – washingtonareaspark.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/vol-2-...

Vol 2 No 10, September 1973 – washingtonareaspark.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/vol-2-...

Vol 2 No 11, October 1973 – washingtonareaspark.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/vol-2-...

Vol 2 No 12, November 1973 – washingtonareaspark.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/vol-2-...

Vol 2 No 13, November 1973 –- washingtonareaspark.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/vol-2-...

Vol 2 No 14, December 1973 - washingtonareaspark.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/vol-2-...

Vol 3 No 1, January-February 1974 – washingtonareaspark.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/vol-3-...

 

Unity & Struggle

 

Vol 3 No 2, February-March 1974 - washingtonareaspark.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/vol-3-...

Vol 3 No 3, March 1974 - washingtonareaspark.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/vol-3-...

Vol 3 No 4, April 1974 - washingtonareaspark.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/Vol-3-...

Vol 3 No 5, May 1974 – washingtonareaspark.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/vol-3-...

Vol 3 No 6, June 1974 – washingtonareaspark.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/vol-3-...

Vol 3 No 7, July 1974 – washingtonareaspark.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/vol-3-...

Vol 3 No 8, August 1974 – washingtonareaspark.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/vol-3-...

Vol 3 No 9, September 1974 - washingtonareaspark.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/vol-3-...

Vol 3 No 10, October 1974 – washingtonareaspark.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/vol-3-...

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Vol 5 No 7-10, October 1976 – washingtonareaspark.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/vol-5-...

Vol 6 No 1-6, May-June 1977 – washingtonareaspark.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/vol-6-...

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Vol 7 No 5-6, June 1976 – washingtonareaspark.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/vol-7-...

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Vol 8 No 1-2, February 1979 - washingtonareaspark.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/vol-8-...

Vol 8 No 3, unavailable at this time

Vol 8 No 4-9, 1979 - washingtonareaspark.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/vol-8-...

 

For other alternative periodicals, see washingtonareaspark.com/contributors/periodicals/

 

Vol. 5 No 5 was donated by Robert Simpson.

 

Vol. 3 No. 9, Vol 3 No 12, Vol 4 No. 1, Vol 4 No. 2, Vol 4 No. 5, Vol 4 No 6, Vol 4 No 7, Vol 4 No 8, Vol 4 No 9, Vol 4 No 10, Vol 4 No 11, Vol 4 No 12, Vol 4 No 13, Vol. 4 No 14, Vol 4 No 15, Vol 4 No 16, Vol 5 No 1, Vol 5, No 2, Vol 5 No 3, Vol 5 No 4, Vol 5 No 6, Vol 5 No 7-10, Vol 6, No 1-6, Vol 7, No 1, Vol 8 No 4-9 were scanned from originals held in the Marshall Bloom (AC 1966) Alternative Press Collection, Amherst College Archive and Special Collections Box U5.

 

Vol 3 No 2, Vol 3 No 3, Vol 3 No 5, Vol 3 No 6, Vol 3 No 8, Vol 3 No 10, Vol 3 No 12, Vol 4 No 3, Vol 4 No 4, Vol 7 No 2-4, Vol 7 No 7, Vol 7 No 8-10, Vol 8 No 1-2 are from the Encyclopedia of Anti-Revisionism Online.

 

Vol 1 No 1, Vol 1 No 2, Vol 1 No 3, Vol 1 No 4, Vol 1 No 6, Vol 1 No 7, Vol 1 No 11, Vol 1 No 12, Vol 2 No 5, Vol 3 No 4, Vol 3 No 7, Vol 3 No 11, Vol 6 No 7-10, Vol 7 no 7, Vol 8 No 1-2 are from Rutgers University Libraries, Rutgers University Community Repository, Newark Black Newspapers.

   

El Perú recibió por parte de México ayuda para los damnificados, consistente en equipos de bombeo de lodo y un grupo de rescatistas.

Entertainment Weekly consistently leads the national conversation on film, and nowhere is this better illustrated than with this striking cover of Michael Keaton for the movie Birdman. Keaton’s performance and the film itself—a sharp meta-commentary on acting, actors, Hollywood and our superhero-centered culture—deserved the full weight of EW’s expertise and insight. The magazine scored the first in-depth interview with Keaton, written by editor-at-large Mark Harris, and EW photo editor Aeriel Brown collaborated with photographer Art Streiber on these dramatic portraits of the actor. The offbeat cover illustrations and lettering were created by Geoff McFetridge. “This cover exemplifies what EW does at our highest level,” says executive editor Sean Smith. “The right story, the right writer and the right photographer at exactly the right time. We couldn’t be prouder of it.”

Autumn is consistently a great time to visit, with the foliage adding so much in spectacular, rich colors. And even during the latter part of the season, there is something so special about the bareness of many trees and vegetation. The nice thing as an observer of nature’s critters is that the birds are so much more visible. Even if they are at a fair distance, at least, one can appreciate their features. Also, many fall berries and other fruits and nuts, often with bright colors and interesting shapes, accentuate the landscape as seen only at this time of year.

The late, Doris Duke, had left a wonderful legacy in converting her magnificent estate into a Natural Wildlife Preserve for the public’s education and enjoyment. The paths throughout the estate offer such splendid scenery. One is forever exploring, always seeing something subtly beautiful. There are always pleasant surprises, from the general scenery to the world of the wildlife, even tiny insects and flowers are enjoyable to observe. The bucolic nature of the preserve is so relaxing—akin to meditating while experiencing the landscape. The beauty of visiting Duke Farms is that so many incredible views are there simply by observing all of the surroundings. Spotting new and fascinating wildlife—both animals and plants—always adds to the experience.

 

The narratives on ancient stones from this ancient culture are consistently complex.

*The larger cloud-like " Sacred One" figure in the upper left quadrant.

*The luminescent reflective blue full standing figure in the far right quadrant.

*The ancient highly reflective blue pigment creating the blue aura surrounding the stone indicates unknown technology produced by the properties of sunlight that is yet to be fully discovered and understood. This reflective blue aura cannot be seen with our naked eye, only the advanced technology of a modern digital camera is capable to capture this blue reflective light produced by specific angles of sun.

* A line of three micro red ochre/blue symbols paired with a curious three dimensional cupule image perhaps referring to the union of the separate blue and ochre figures that appear to arrive from the sky and universe above; North America, culture unknown.

The 53rd annual Bon Odori Festival at Camp Zama was held Aug. 4. The festival is consistently the largest bilateral event of the year for U.S. Army Japan, this year attracting more than 30,000 visitors to the installation. The festival featured live entartainment, games for children, a variety of ethnic foods, bilateral sports, and a fireworks show.

 

About the United States Army Garrison Japan:

 

The United States Army Garrison Japan and its 16 supported installation sites are located in the island of Honshu and Okinawa in Japan. The USAG Japan mission is to support the Headquarters, U.S. Army Japan / I Corps (fwd) to ensure mission readiness and the quality of life of the Army community in a sustainable, transforming joint and combined environment.

 

The USAG-J area of responsibility spans 1,500 miles from north to south of Japan. Camp Zama, home for both HQ USARJ and USAG-J is located approximately 25 miles southwest of Tokyo in the cities of Zama and Sagamihara in Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan. The Camp Zama base cluster includes Sagamihara Housing Area and Sagami General Depot.

 

Akasaka Press Center is located in the center of Tokyo. The Akizuki/Kure area near Hiroshima is an ammunition depot. Yokohama North Dock is a port facility in the city of Yokohama, a major commerce port and a popular shopping area. USAG Torii Station is located 980 miles southwest of Camp Zama on the island of Okinawa.

 

We are the Army's home in Japan and the "Garrison of Choice" for Soldiers, Civilians and their Family members. We are committed in becoming the leader in the U.S. Army Installation Management Command by providing world-class installation services.

 

-----

 

To learn more about USAG Japan, please visit:

  

Official Website - www.usagj.jp.pac.army.mil

 

Facebook - www.facebook.com/usagj

 

Flickr - www.flickr.com/usagj

 

YouTube - www.youtube.com/usagjapan

 

Vimeo - www.vimeo.com/usagj

 

Twitter - www.twitter.com/usagjapan

 

Slideshare - www.slideshare.net/usagjapan

 

USARJ This Week on YouTube - www.youtube.com/usarjthisweek

  

The 53rd annual Bon Odori Festival at Camp Zama was held Aug. 4. The festival is consistently the largest bilateral event of the year for U.S. Army Japan, this year attracting more than 30,000 visitors to the installation. The festival featured live entartainment, games for children, a variety of ethnic foods, bilateral sports, and a fireworks show.

 

About the United States Army Garrison Japan:

 

The United States Army Garrison Japan and its 16 supported installation sites are located in the island of Honshu and Okinawa in Japan. The USAG Japan mission is to support the Headquarters, U.S. Army Japan / I Corps (fwd) to ensure mission readiness and the quality of life of the Army community in a sustainable, transforming joint and combined environment.

 

The USAG-J area of responsibility spans 1,500 miles from north to south of Japan. Camp Zama, home for both HQ USARJ and USAG-J is located approximately 25 miles southwest of Tokyo in the cities of Zama and Sagamihara in Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan. The Camp Zama base cluster includes Sagamihara Housing Area and Sagami General Depot.

 

Akasaka Press Center is located in the center of Tokyo. The Akizuki/Kure area near Hiroshima is an ammunition depot. Yokohama North Dock is a port facility in the city of Yokohama, a major commerce port and a popular shopping area. USAG Torii Station is located 980 miles southwest of Camp Zama on the island of Okinawa.

 

We are the Army's home in Japan and the "Garrison of Choice" for Soldiers, Civilians and their Family members. We are committed in becoming the leader in the U.S. Army Installation Management Command by providing world-class installation services.

 

-----

 

To learn more about USAG Japan, please visit:

  

Official Website - www.usagj.jp.pac.army.mil

 

Facebook - www.facebook.com/usagj

 

Flickr - www.flickr.com/usagj

 

YouTube - www.youtube.com/usagjapan

 

Vimeo - www.vimeo.com/usagj

 

Twitter - www.twitter.com/usagjapan

 

Slideshare - www.slideshare.net/usagjapan

 

USARJ This Week on YouTube - www.youtube.com/usarjthisweek

  

MADRID RIO

  

Madrid Río es un parque de la ciudad española de Madrid, consistente en una zona peatonal y de recreo construida entre los años 2006 a 2012 en los dos márgenes del río Manzanares, en buena parte sobre el trazado soterrado de la vía de circunvalación M-30,1​ desde el nudo Sur hasta el enlace con la A-5. En 2016, el proyecto se hizo con el galardón Veronica Rudge Green Prize in Urban Design de la Universidad de Harvard por su diseño e impacto social y cultural en la transformación del río

Entre 2003 y 2007 se llevó a cabo la obra de soterramiento del arco oeste de la M-30 en el ámbito del río, obra que hizo posible la eliminación del tráfico en superficie y la consiguiente liberación de más de cincuenta hectáreas de terreno ocupado anteriormente por las calzadas. A esta superficie se sumaron otras casi cien hectáreas correspondientes a los diferentes suelos infrautilizados adyacentes a la autopista.

 

Tras la construcción de los túneles afloró una herida vacía formada por un rosario de espacios desocupados, que atesoraban la potencia latente de convertirse en nexo de unión de un corredor ambiental de casi tres mil hectáreas dentro del término municipal, que se extiende desde El Pardo hasta Getafe y que enlaza importantísimas áreas verdes de la ciudad como la Casa de Campo, el Parque de la Arganzuela o el Parque del Manzanares Sur.

 

Por tanto, los beneficios obtenidos al enterrar la antigua autopista, obviamente, no han quedado reducidos a la mejora de ciertos aspectos de la movilidad urbana, ni siquiera a la rehabilitación local de los barrios, sino que pueden adquirir en un futuro próximo, una dimensión de gran escala que necesariamente deberá repercutir en las relaciones entre la ciudad y el territorio, entendidas en su mayor alcance. La enorme trascendencia para la ciudad de los espacios liberados como consecuencia del soterramiento de la M-30, llevó al Ayuntamiento de Madrid a convocar un Concurso Internacional de Ideas para concebir y proyectar los nuevos espacios libres en el entorno del río. El concurso lo ganó el equipo de arquitectos dirigido por Ginés Garrido y formado por Burgos & Garrido Arquitectos, Porras & La Casta y Rubio & Álvarez-Sala y West8, con la solución para la construcción de un parque urbano de más de ciento veinte hectáreas, que ocupa la superficie liberada por el soterramiento de la autopista. Los inicios del proyecto pasaron por el intento de comprender en su totalidad las cualidades geográficas de la cuenca fluvial. Las características del territorio y la diversidad de sus elementos naturales constituyen un conjunto de claves que han sustentado muchas de las ideas contenidas en el proyecto.

 

Sumariamente, la estrategia del éste se basa en la convicción de que, a través del río es posible conectar la ciudad, expresión máxima de la acción artificial, con los territorios del norte y el sur de Madrid, en los que aún perviven los elementos naturales propios de la cuenca fluvial. El río se convierte en puerta o enlace entre interior urbano y exterior territorial y, a través de sus márgenes, se establece la continuidad y la permeabilidad, hasta hoy aniquiladas por los sucesivos anillos concéntricos, hollados por los cinturones viarios, M-30, M-40, M-45, M-50 …, que fueron el resultado de aplicar a la red circulatoria los modelos de movilidad propios de mediados del siglo XX.

 

El proyecto se ha concebido en sucesivas aproximaciones o escalas a partir de las que se ha aplicado la reflexión sobre el campo de juego, obteniendo respuestas o soluciones diversas, desde el ámbito territorial o estratégico al local o específico.

 

En la escala territorial se han establecido los parámetros de partida para que, en el medio plazo, sea posible la regeneración de las márgenes del río en toda su longitud, como verdaderas áreas de integración entre el paisaje y la actividad humana, bajo un entendimiento contemporáneo capaz de superar el antagonismo implícito en el binomio urbano-rural.

 

En la escala metropolitana, a través del proyecto y de su concepción como gran infraestructura, se lleva a cabo la incorporación del corredor que se extiende sobre los bordes fluviales a su paso por la ciudad como parte del GR 124 (Gran Recorrido de la Red de Senderos Europeos) que ya, en 2011 se podrá transitar en toda su extensión, desde Manzanares el Real hasta Aranjuez.

 

En la escala urbana, el proyecto incorpora el río como doble línea de fachada inédita y configura un conjunto enlazado de espacios verdes que se infiltra en la ciudad; establece en la superficie un nuevo sistema de movilidad y accesibilidad; incrementa la integración y calidad urbana de los barrios limítrofes al río; protege y revaloriza el patrimonio histórico y detecta áreas de oportunidad que, sobre este ámbito de nueva centralidad, serán capaces de generar un cambio potencial del conjunto de la ciudad en el largo plazo.

 

En la escala local, la propuesta se ejecuta como una operación radicalmente artificial, materializada sin embargo con instrumentos eminentemente naturales. No se debe olvidar que se actúa mayoritariamente sobre una infraestructura bajo tierra. El proyecto se implanta sobre un túnel o, más bien, sobre la cubierta de un conjunto complejísimo de instalaciones al servicio del viario enterrado. Un edificio de hormigón de más de seis kilómetros de longitud, con enormes y determinantes servidumbres y con una topografía cuya lógica obedece exclusivamente a la construcción de la infraestructura, que emerge inopinadamente sobre el suelo y con la que ha sido necesario negociar. Sobre esta edificación subterránea, la solución adoptada se ha basado en el uso de la vegetación como principal material de construcción. El proyecto establece como estrategia general la idea de implantar una densa capa vegetal, de carácter casi forestal, allá donde sea posible, es decir, fabricar un paisaje con materia viva, sobre un sustrato subterráneo inerte, modificado y excavado para el automóvil, sobre una construcción que expresa por sí misma el artificio máximo.

 

Las familias, formas y asociaciones de especies vegetales seleccionadas provienen de la extrapolación del estudio de la cuenca del río y su adaptación, en cada caso, al medio urbano específico. La ordenación de los distintos entornos y su caracterización como lugares de uso público se ha producido teniendo en cuenta, por un lado, las funciones requeridas y las necesidades detectadas en cada distrito y por otro, la capacidad de conformar espacios habitables, inherente a los conjuntos organizados de vegetación de distinto porte.

La solución se concreta en tres unidades de paisaje principales. Primero, el Salón de Pinos, o corredor verde que discurre por la margen derecha del río. Es la estructura que permite la continuidad de los recorridos y reacciona en su encuentro con los puentes existentes dando lugar a distintos tipos de jardines de ribera (Jardines bajos de Puente de Segovia, Jardines del Puente de San Isidro, Jardines del Puente de Toledo y Jardines del Puente de Praga). Segundo, el enlace definitivo del centro histórico (representado por la imagen imponente del Palacio Real y la cornisa elevada de la ciudad), con la Casa de Campo, parque de más de mil setecientas hectáreas. En este entorno se incluyen la Avenida de Portugal, la Huerta de la Partida, la Explanada del Rey y los Jardines de la Virgen del Puerto. Tercero, la ancha franja sobre la ribera izquierda donde se sitúa el conjunto del Parque de la Arganzuela que incluye el centro de creación de arte contemporáneo de Matadero, y que representa la mayor superficie de espacio verde unitario de la propuesta.

 

Además de estas tres grandes operaciones paisajísticas coherentes entre sí, el proyecto propone ciento cincuenta intervenciones de diferente carácter, entre las que destaca el sistema puentes que dotan de un inédito grado de permeabilidad al cauce. Se han desarrollado soluciones sobre más de veinte puentes o pasarelas sobre el río, rehabilitando las siete presas, reciclando algunos puentes existentes y creando nuevos pasos, unas veces con un lenguaje silencioso y otras, intencionadamente expresivo. Como en una acción microquirúrgica el proyecto incorpora, eslabón por eslabón, una cadena de fórmulas de integración del río en la ciudad y de la ciudad en el río. Son elementos que garantizarán el contagio de los nuevos valores de las orillas regeneradas sobre los ámbitos y barrios cercanos. Con este efecto de resonancia, se prevé una sucesión de operaciones que aseguren una renovación de gran alcance. Desde ahora y de manera irreversible, se está fraguando una radical metamorfosis, sin precedentes para la ciudad de Madrid.

La superestructura lineal del Salón de Pinos es el elemento que organiza la continuidad de recorridos a lo largo de la ribera derecha del río. Está construida sobre los túneles en su práctica totalidad y tiene un ancho medio de treinta metros. Sobre la losa de hormigón que cubre el paso de los automóviles se han plantado más de 9.000 unidades de diferentes especies de pinos, de diversos tamaños, formas y agrupaciones con un marco de plantación forestal. Los ejemplares han sido seleccionados fundamentalmente en campos en los que hubiese posibilidad de extraer plantas con morfologías naturales (troncos no lineales, troncos dobles, troncos inclinados, etc.) De este modo se obtiene una prolongación controlada de los pinares de la sierra situada al norte de Madrid que parecen extenderse hasta el confín de la ciudad. Estos árboles han sido anclados a la losa de los túneles mediante cables de acero y bridas biodegradables, para potenciar su estabilidad y el crecimiento de sus raíces en horizontal sobre el paquete de tierras disponible. No obstante, este paseo se encuentra frecuentemente con estructuras de gran valor urbano o patrimonial.

 

Dos ejemplos simbólicos de esta intersección son los puentes históricos de Segovia (1582) y de Toledo (1732). En estos enclaves el salón reacciona como espacio de estancia, ampliando sus límites y ofreciendo un diseño específico, con árboles de ribera de hoja caduca y alineaciones de setos y bancos de piedra. Las actividades integradas en el salón se incorporan con un lenguaje coherente con su carácter forestal. Un claro ejemplo de este procedimiento lo forma el conjunto de áreas de juegos infantiles, diseñado específicamente como un sistema completo de formas naturales.

 

Jardines del Puente de Segovia

 

El puente de Segovia está declarado Bien de Interés Cultural. Fue construido a finales del siglo XVI por el arquitecto Juan de Herrera, por encargo de Felipe II. El proyecto de ajardinamiento de su entorno conforma una excepción en el ámbito del Salón de Pinos, constituyendo un ensanchamiento de éste y ofreciendo un modo diferente de aproximación al río. Los jardines se ordenan mediante una serie de líneas de traza orgánica que modelan sucesivas terrazas que descienden hacia el río. Estas líneas están construidas con unas piezas de granito de gran formato que sirven también de bancos. Entre ellos se extiende una superficie de hierba de bajo consumo hídrico arbolada con diferentes especies de árboles frondosos de ribera de la familia de los populus. En las inmediaciones de la fábrica almohadillada del puente se han construido dos estanques de agua limpia sobre los cuales, por un lado alza una fuente monumental de 16 chorros con forma de ciprés y por otro se extiende un pequeño jardín de lirios acuáticos. Los estanques son accesibles mediante unas gradas de piedra que se acercan a ellos hasta sumergirse.

 

Jardines del Puente de Toledo

 

Los jardines del Puente de Toledo constituyen una de las áreas más significativas del Proyecto Madrid Río, ya que se están situados en un enclave de excepcional importancia en el que el Salón de Pinos se encuentra con uno de los puentes monumentales de Madrid, el puente de Toledo, construido entre 1718 y 1732. El proyecto aprovecha dicho monumento en un doble sentido: Por un lado se compone un espacio concebido para ser visto desde lo alto del puente que se convierte así en un mirador privilegiado. De este modo los jardines ofrecen una nueva e inédita panorámica de Madrid ya que sus trazados dibujan un enorme tatuaje que se extiende como una alfombra sobre la superficie, reproduciendo un motivo figurativo vegetal. Por otro lado, los jardines incorporan el Puente de Toledo, que es una estructura barroca diseñada por el arquitecto Pedro de Ribera, como un objeto al que admirar, al que tocar y bajo el que pasar. La disposición de los setos está organizada de modo que conforma una serie de líneas que toman como referencia los jardines barrocos de la época borbónica, aunque están trazadas con un lenguaje contemporáneo. Asimismo en este punto se ha construido un graderío que permite la máxima aproximación a la lámina de agua del río, y la mejor contemplación de los arcos del antiguo puente.

 

Segunda unidad de paisaje: La Escena Monumental

 

La vinculación del centro histórico y el barrio de La Latina con la Casa de Campo ha estado vedada a los peatones de forma secular. El nuevo contacto, que ya es posible por la desaparición de los automóviles bajo tierra, ha sido resuelto con diversas intervenciones que asumen el carácter monumental y panorámico de esta zona, en la que el zócalo elevado del Palacio Real (germen primigenio del nacimiento de la ciudad) contacta con el río. Se han propuesto diferentes soluciones afrontando con extremada atención el contexto en el que se sitúan: La “Explanada del Rey”, explanada abierta pavimentada con un gran patrón figurativo y que sirve de gran atrio ante la Casa de Campo. La huerta de la partida, que es un recinto cerrado en el que se han plantado diferentes retículas de árboles frutales (perales, manzanos, moreras, granados, higueras, nogales, avellanos, etc) acoge un extraordinario mirador de la cornisa. La avenida de Portugal, convertida en un bulevar pavimentado por calceteiros portugueses y poblado por cuatro especies de cerezos (Prunus avium, P. avium ‘Plena’, P.yedoensis y P.padus ‘Watereii’ ) permite la contemplación de una espectacular floración que se alarga más de un mes en primavera. Por último, los jardines de La Virgen del Puerto, en la otra margen del río, estructurados mediante la disposición de parterres orientados según los ejes de los principales acontecimientos urbanos del área: el puente de Segovia, el puente del Rey, la avenida de Portugal y la puerta del Rey que ha sido restaurada y resituada según los datos disponibles en la cartografía histórica de Madrid.

 

Plataforma del Rey

 

En el acceso monumental que enlaza el centro histórico de Madrid con la Casa de Campo, antiguo cazadero real, destaca la Explanada o Plataforma del Rey, que es un espacio abierto de una superficie aproximada de 14.000 m2 y un frente paralelo al río de poco menos de 250 m. El destino de este espacio es el de formar un escenario capaz de acoger diferentes manifestaciones cívicas (conciertos, celebraciones oficiales, actividades culturales, etc.) en un entorno de extraordinaria calidad ambiental, que permite contemplar la Cornisa Histórica de la Ciudad. Este lugar está conectado con el Salón de Pinos y forma parte de él, aunque por exigencias de su uso, sea un área casi desprovista de arbolado. En ella el principal elemento organizador es el pavimento que, de forma muy suave, se adapta a una topografía que integra todas las emergencias de los túneles hasta hacerlas imperceptibles. En este pavimento las pequeñas piezas de granito y basalto forman un patrón que desciende desde la Avenida de Portugal y se esparce sobre la superficie del suelo a una escala en aumento progresivo. Dicho patrón vincula la plataforma con el pavimento proyectado en la avenida. De este modo la Plataforma es un elemento que liga de manera natural importantes piezas del escenario monumental que se produce en este punto, como son el Puente del Rey, la Casa de Campo, la Avenida de Portugal y el Salón de Pinos.

 

Huerta de la Partida

  

Se trata de un espacio recuperado que en las pasadas décadas se dedicó a albergar uno de los principales nudos de la autopista. La propuesta de regeneración de este lugar incluye varias operaciones: En primer lugar la construcción de una tapia, a veces opaca, a veces permeable que constituye un cierre que confiere al recinto el carácter de huerto cerrado. En segundo lugar, el modelado artificial del terreno, regularizando su superficie y tallando un único plano inclinado de suave pendiente que se desliza hacia el río. En tercer lugar la plantación de diferentes agrupaciones de árboles frutales (granados, moreras, manzanos, perales, avellanos, almendros, higueras, olivos y nogales) que se incorporan en el entorno describiendo cuadrantes reticulados con sutiles variaciones de orientación. Por último, se ha proyectado una ría húmeda que describe la trayectoria del Arroyo Meaques, actualmente entubado y oculto. Este proyecto ha sido fruto del estudio minucioso de la historia del lugar, ya que en el pasado, cuando Felipe II adquirió esta finca después de establecer la capitalidad de Madrid, en esta posición se plantaron algunas huertas que producían el alimento necesario para los trabajadores de la Casa de Campo.

 

Tercera unidad de paisaje: La Ribera del Agua. Arganzuela y Matadero

 

En la margen izquierda del cauce la ciudad se separa del río. El ejemplo más importante de la propuesta en esta orilla es el nuevo Parque de la Arganzuela, construido sobre antiguas dehesas de pasto de uso comunal. En este entorno se construyó el Matadero Municipal, notable ejemplo de arquitectura posindustrial de la segunda década del siglo XX. Con el soterramiento de la autopista, Madrid dispone ahora en este punto de 33 hectáreas de espacios libres que forman el mayor parque del proyecto. Éste se ha concebido como un gran espacio en el que el río se ha retirado dejando su huella ancestral. Está organizado con diferentes líneas que se entrecruzan, como surcos por los que pasó el agua, dejando entre sí espacios para distintos usos. Estas líneas, de carácter marcadamente longitudinal, son los caminos de distinta especie que recorren el espacio de norte a sur.

 

Paseo junto al matadero

 

Un camino más plano y ancho (el Camino Rápido), otro más sinuoso y de pendiente variable (el Camino Lento) y una franja empedrada de márgenes frondosos (el Arroyo Seco), que vertebra el centro del parque. La construcción del espacio se plantea como una gran arboleda que contiene varios paisajes, algunos más naturales y otros más construidos, configurados por una variación de especies, alturas, densidades y texturas. De este modo el parque, concebido como un retazo de la cuenca del río, incorpora tres áreas botánicas: bosque mediterráneo, bosque atlántico y fronda de ribera. El carácter de estos paisajes interiores está relacionado con los trazados longitudinales del parque, con árboles que siguen los caminos y las sendas, con sotos y bosques que emergen sobre la topografía. La textura boscosa se intercala con las superficies plantadas de aromáticas entre los caminos y el Arroyo Seco. Siguiendo la orilla izquierda del río, se dispone una franja húmeda y verde, con una pradera de césped que se inclina hacia el agua. Una constelación de fuentes ornamentales y un conjunto de tres láminas elípticas de agua pura introducen este elemento como materia narrativa que relaciona las distintas asociaciones de vegetación. Cada fuente presenta un distinto juego sonoro y visual y se rodea de pequeñas laderas plantadas de frutales que remiten a la imagen de los jardines de las leyendas o del Paraíso. Las líneas entrelazadas que estructuran el parque permiten la formación de recintos en los que se han situado importantes instalaciones para el recreo al servicio de los usuarios de todas las edades. En él se incluye un campo de fútbol , dos pistas de patinaje y tres importantes conjuntos de juegos infantiles. El parque así mismo incorpora el conjunto dedicado a la creación de arte contemporáneo de Matadero, como una gran dotación cultural que vive dentro de él. A través de los caminos se accede a las naves del antiguo complejo, cuya rehabilitación está a punto de finalizar. El diseño de los trazados permite entender la relación entre Matadero y el parque como un continuo entre el río y la ciudad.

 

El sistema de puentes sobre el río

 

La implantación de puentes sobre el Manzanares se lleva a cabo como una estrategia global, es decir, como un conjunto en que cada elemento resuelve problemas puntuales detectados en el entorno próximo, pero también forma parte a su vez de un sistema integral de conectividad transversal de acuerdo con la relación entre la ciudad y el río. Las unidades de este conjunto son de diferente carácter: puentes y presas rehabilitados o reciclados, puentes rodados existentes acondicionados al nuevo sistema de tráfico ciclista y peatonal, puentes singulares que constituyen hitos en el recorrido del río, pasarelas funcionales situadas en los nodos de máximo tránsito transversal y puentes de grandes luces que enlazan los recorridos del parque con los territorios exteriores a la ciudad al norte y al sur, haciendo realidad la principal aspiración territorial del proyecto.

 

Entre los puentes existentes destaca la operación llevada a cabo con las siete presas que han sido convertidas en pasarelas peatonales a través de su restauración integral y la incorporación de un tablero de madera accesible. En segundo lugar dentro de esta serie, se debe destacar el reciclaje del puente rodado de la M-30 que cruzaba el río al sur del Puente de Segovia, reconvertido en un puente peatonal y ciclista que incorpora un talud plantado con pinos. Entre los puentes singulares cabe mencionar el puente con forma de Y construido con cajones de perfiles metálicos, que evoca el lenguaje de los puentes ferroviarios del s. XIX colgados sobre los desfiladeros forestales y los puentes gemelos de hormigón que se dan acceso al complejo Matadero, proyectados como elementos de paso capaces también de configurar un espacio al que se ingresa, como pabellones que gravitan sobre el río, pero que verdaderamente pertenecen al parque.

 

Pasarela de Almuñécar

 

Fabricada de una sola pieza con fibra de carbono, para salvar una luz de algo más de 40 metros. Se sitúa sobre el único tramo del cauce que carece de cajero de hormigón. Su diseño final responde a las capacidades del material con que está fabricada, extremadamente ligero y resistente.

 

Restauración de Presas

 

Las siete presas que regulan el río a su paso de la ciudad han sido restauradas y puestas al servicio del nuevo sistema de pasos transversales. Sus mecanismos y exclusas han sido reparados y se les ha incorporado un tablero accesible de madera y una escala de peces para favorecer la continuidad de la fauna subacuática a lo largo del río.

 

Puente Oblicuo

 

Esta estructura viaria coetánea de la M-30 se ha reciclado para incorporarla al Salón de Pinos como un paso privilegiado a través del cual los peatones, los ciclistas y los árboles pasan de una a otra orilla. La losa aligerada que componía el tablero de hormigón postesado se cortó y apeó reforzándose para soportar las cargas debidas a su nuevo uso.

 

Puente del Principado de Andorra

 

Es uno de los nuevos puentes singulares del proyecto. Está construido por jaulas de perfiles abiertos, de expresividad algo arcaica, que toma como referencia las estructuras ferroviarias sobre los desfiladeros boscosos que se construyeron en Europa y Estados Unidos a finales de siglo XIX. Antes conocido como Puente Y, en julio de 2011 se le cambió de nombre al actual de Principado de Andorra, para agradecer al gobierno de Andorra la construcción del Puente de Madrid en Andorra la Vieja.​ Se escogió este puente para nombrarlo como Principado de Andorra porque representa también la geografía de Andorra: el país pirenaico está formado por dos valles, el del Valira del Norte y el del Valira de Oriente, los cuales confluyen en Escaldes-Engordany y se convierten en uno solo, de nombre Gran Valira. Esta disposición de los valles y sus ríos es similar a una Y.

 

Puentes Cáscara

 

Son dos puentes gemelos construidos con una lámina de 15 cm de hormigón autonivelante que forma una superficie con doble curvatura, de la que cuelga el tablero. Se conciben como dos pabellones a los que acceder para cruzar el río. Su bóveda se ha ornamentado con un mosaico creado por el artista Daniel Canogar.

 

Pasarela de la Princesa

 

El canto necesario para el funcionamiento de la pasarela se incorpora en las barandillas que en realidad conforman una pareja de vigas de alma llena y rigidizadores verticales. El lenguaje de la pasarela es intencionadamente sobrio.

  

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Phone:- (702) 819-0601

 

The 53rd annual Bon Odori Festival at Camp Zama was held Aug. 4. The festival is consistently the largest bilateral event of the year for U.S. Army Japan, this year attracting more than 30,000 visitors to the installation. The festival featured live entartainment, games for children, a variety of ethnic foods, bilateral sports, and a fireworks show.

 

About the United States Army Garrison Japan:

 

The United States Army Garrison Japan and its 16 supported installation sites are located in the island of Honshu and Okinawa in Japan. The USAG Japan mission is to support the Headquarters, U.S. Army Japan / I Corps (fwd) to ensure mission readiness and the quality of life of the Army community in a sustainable, transforming joint and combined environment.

 

The USAG-J area of responsibility spans 1,500 miles from north to south of Japan. Camp Zama, home for both HQ USARJ and USAG-J is located approximately 25 miles southwest of Tokyo in the cities of Zama and Sagamihara in Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan. The Camp Zama base cluster includes Sagamihara Housing Area and Sagami General Depot.

 

Akasaka Press Center is located in the center of Tokyo. The Akizuki/Kure area near Hiroshima is an ammunition depot. Yokohama North Dock is a port facility in the city of Yokohama, a major commerce port and a popular shopping area. USAG Torii Station is located 980 miles southwest of Camp Zama on the island of Okinawa.

 

We are the Army's home in Japan and the "Garrison of Choice" for Soldiers, Civilians and their Family members. We are committed in becoming the leader in the U.S. Army Installation Management Command by providing world-class installation services.

 

-----

 

To learn more about USAG Japan, please visit:

  

Official Website - www.usagj.jp.pac.army.mil

 

Facebook - www.facebook.com/usagj

 

Flickr - www.flickr.com/usagj

 

YouTube - www.youtube.com/usagjapan

 

Vimeo - www.vimeo.com/usagj

 

Twitter - www.twitter.com/usagjapan

 

Slideshare - www.slideshare.net/usagjapan

 

USARJ This Week on YouTube - www.youtube.com/usarjthisweek

  

Sua mãe, Indignada das Marias, vem se mostrando uma das matrizes mais consistentes do Mandala. Também, tem sangue lastrado nos sementais da linhagem Angelim indo ao grande Ogum e a inesquecível Vaidade.

The 53rd annual Bon Odori Festival at Camp Zama was held Aug. 4. The festival is consistently the largest bilateral event of the year for U.S. Army Japan, this year attracting more than 30,000 visitors to the installation. The festival featured live entartainment, games for children, a variety of ethnic foods, bilateral sports, and a fireworks show.

 

About the United States Army Garrison Japan:

 

The United States Army Garrison Japan and its 16 supported installation sites are located in the island of Honshu and Okinawa in Japan. The USAG Japan mission is to support the Headquarters, U.S. Army Japan / I Corps (fwd) to ensure mission readiness and the quality of life of the Army community in a sustainable, transforming joint and combined environment.

 

The USAG-J area of responsibility spans 1,500 miles from north to south of Japan. Camp Zama, home for both HQ USARJ and USAG-J is located approximately 25 miles southwest of Tokyo in the cities of Zama and Sagamihara in Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan. The Camp Zama base cluster includes Sagamihara Housing Area and Sagami General Depot.

 

Akasaka Press Center is located in the center of Tokyo. The Akizuki/Kure area near Hiroshima is an ammunition depot. Yokohama North Dock is a port facility in the city of Yokohama, a major commerce port and a popular shopping area. USAG Torii Station is located 980 miles southwest of Camp Zama on the island of Okinawa.

 

We are the Army's home in Japan and the "Garrison of Choice" for Soldiers, Civilians and their Family members. We are committed in becoming the leader in the U.S. Army Installation Management Command by providing world-class installation services.

 

-----

 

To learn more about USAG Japan, please visit:

  

Official Website - www.usagj.jp.pac.army.mil

 

Facebook - www.facebook.com/usagj

 

Flickr - www.flickr.com/usagj

 

YouTube - www.youtube.com/usagjapan

 

Vimeo - www.vimeo.com/usagj

 

Twitter - www.twitter.com/usagjapan

 

Slideshare - www.slideshare.net/usagjapan

 

USARJ This Week on YouTube - www.youtube.com/usarjthisweek

  

My Minox 35GT is consistently underexposing by a couple of stops. I've

started adjusting the film speed to make up for it but I'm adjusting

slowly, a stop at a time. This was fully two, maybe even three stops

underexposed, so I had to adjust the image "curves" digitally to get

it as bright as this. But it was a dark day.

 

I like poured concrete buildings and have been photographing them

inconsistently for 25 years. They were popular here from the late

1920s until perhaps the early 1950s. Many show art deco or modernist

styling, like this one.

 

I have often puzzled over the concavity in the nearest bit of concrete

retaining wall. It's like a large culvert once ran through it, which

I cannot imagine was the case.

Brassneck (2014)

 

If you read this website on a somewhat consistent basis, you'll see two things repeated quite often. 1. I'm just a complete sucker for the music of the 90's, the music released then will always just seem like the best to me. And 2. There has been a real resurgence in bands today taking cues and paying homage to bands from the 90's; which is A-OK by me. Of all of the 90's things to stage a little comeback, the one I expected the least, but probably love the most is all of these new bands that sound like the glory days of the mid to late 90's UK punk scene. I'll say it until I'm blue in the face, when bands like Broccoli, Hooton 3 Car and Chopper ruled the world, I never loved music more.

 

The 2 bands on this 7" not only take cues from that UK scene, several of the guys in these bands were actually part of it. First up we have The No Marks. They feature members of Crocodile God and Blocko. The 2 songs on their side of the 7" are phenomenal. They definitely have that Broccoli-esque raspy vocal thing and intricate guitar playing down, but I find them to be a bit poppier and perhaps slightly more lighthearted than Broccoli was. In particular the back and forth between clean guitar and fuzzy guitar on "About Tomorrow" really stands out as something unique.

 

Over on the flip side we've got Hyalin. A band made up of folks from Blocko and folks from one of my absolute current favorite bands Chestnut Road. All you really need to know is that of the 2 songs on this 7", one is a cover of the Broccoli song "Constance." It's great as is their original "Clear As Glass." If you imagined a band that sounded like a cross between Blocko and Chestnut Road, they would sound exactly like this.

 

This is just such a great 7" and really, everyone should check it out. While you're doing that, you really also should make sure you have every Broccoli, Blocko, Chestnut Road and Crocodile God record you can find. When you have all those don't forget Hooton 3 Car and Chopper. Oh and you should really grab that donFisher 7" that Crackle put out. So many record to buy...

 

The No Marks / Hyalin - Split 7":

brassneckrecords.bandcamp.com/album/the-no-marks-hyalin-s...

Consistent Performance Recognition: Harwich Water Department

El Perú recibió por parte de México ayuda para los damnificados, consistente en equipos de bombeo de lodo y un grupo de rescatistas.

This week Cristofer wrote his name on his own for the first time! I think I was more excited than he was. At 7 years old, he doesn't realize the importance of being able to write your own name. It isn't a consistent thing yet. The next day he needed my help because he forgot the F. None the less he did it twice on his own this week. I was hoping to have him write his name on his own by Christmas! He did it in October, a little over a month after school started. It is so rewarding to see the quick progress he is making with just a little bit of extra attention from someone.

 

He also has really been enjoying reading. He asks me to read him the same "Grifford the Bombero" book twice a day. After I read to him one day, I asked him if anyone has every read him a book before. He shook his head no. Not even a short bed time story? Nope. It then occurred to me that this little boy, like many others here, probably had never even seen a story book before in his home. The whole concept that the words on the page tell a story was new to him. I asked him if he wanted to take a book home and have someone read it to him. His face lit up. He had a huge smile and got so excited. I let him borrow a book and told him to bring it back at the end of the week and he can trade it for another one to take home. The next morning, the first thing he did was excitedly pull out the book and tell me that his sister read it to him before he went to bed.

 

The 53rd annual Bon Odori Festival at Camp Zama was held Aug. 4. The festival is consistently the largest bilateral event of the year for U.S. Army Japan, this year attracting more than 30,000 visitors to the installation. The festival featured live entartainment, games for children, a variety of ethnic foods, bilateral sports, and a fireworks show.

 

About the United States Army Garrison Japan:

 

The United States Army Garrison Japan and its 16 supported installation sites are located in the island of Honshu and Okinawa in Japan. The USAG Japan mission is to support the Headquarters, U.S. Army Japan / I Corps (fwd) to ensure mission readiness and the quality of life of the Army community in a sustainable, transforming joint and combined environment.

 

The USAG-J area of responsibility spans 1,500 miles from north to south of Japan. Camp Zama, home for both HQ USARJ and USAG-J is located approximately 25 miles southwest of Tokyo in the cities of Zama and Sagamihara in Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan. The Camp Zama base cluster includes Sagamihara Housing Area and Sagami General Depot.

 

Akasaka Press Center is located in the center of Tokyo. The Akizuki/Kure area near Hiroshima is an ammunition depot. Yokohama North Dock is a port facility in the city of Yokohama, a major commerce port and a popular shopping area. USAG Torii Station is located 980 miles southwest of Camp Zama on the island of Okinawa.

 

We are the Army's home in Japan and the "Garrison of Choice" for Soldiers, Civilians and their Family members. We are committed in becoming the leader in the U.S. Army Installation Management Command by providing world-class installation services.

 

-----

 

To learn more about USAG Japan, please visit:

  

Official Website - www.usagj.jp.pac.army.mil

 

Facebook - www.facebook.com/usagj

 

Flickr - www.flickr.com/usagj

 

YouTube - www.youtube.com/usagjapan

 

Vimeo - www.vimeo.com/usagj

 

Twitter - www.twitter.com/usagjapan

 

Slideshare - www.slideshare.net/usagjapan

 

USARJ This Week on YouTube - www.youtube.com/usarjthisweek

  

Nature is a sensational part of the world we live in. Consistently surrounded by crispy, beautiful leaves, floating, smooth flowers and unexpected, sudden weather. Nature is mainly affected due to the four seasons that fall between each and every year. Spring, summer, autumn and winter all represent various changes between the two regarding nature. Spring is often thought to be the season of youth, new life and birth. It is often regarded to be thought of the season of new life due to the nature that is born such as chicks and lambs which by many is associated as the re-born of Jesus. The colours associated with spring are bright, pastel colours such as super lemon and vibrant green. Summer is associated as being the season of long, warm days, with fully grown flowers, trees and plants. However it is towards the end of this long, warm season in which the trees begin to die out due to the heat. Unlike the previous seasons which are full of green, budding trees and powerful coloured flowers, it is in the season of autumn in which these sensational colours begin to fade and die away. Although this season is the beginning of the process of dying for a lot of nature such as trees, it is a beautiful season full of shades of light orange, forest brown and deep green.

The astonishing, beautiful seasons spring, summer and autumn inspired this piece as although they are all diverse and unique seasons from one another, they all represent parts within in the life cycle of nature. When creating this dress, it was important to highlight the life cycle of leaves on trees through the seasons. To create this a variety of colours, techniques and materials were used to create texture, layering and depth into the impact these seasons have on such an ordinary, expected aspect of the world’s nature. The representation of leaves in spring has been created using a burning technique. This captured an assortment of bright green textured fabrics such as silk, felt and cotton which appeared in different tones due to their textures and thickness. The burning appears full and layered which reflects the leaves in spring. In this season they are budding, creating new fresh leaves. It is in the spring season in which trees appear bursting and full of colour. By using the technique of burning, the stitching to hold the fabrics in place is tight and pulled together to hold a firm structure. This exaggerates the idea that the leaves in spring are tightly held together, supporting one another in their journey through the seasons. Summer has been represented using a solufleece material. This fabric tightens which expresses how the leaves on trees in summer are still bursting with leaves and brightness however to stress that towards to end of summer trees start to fall and open away from one another, small sections of the solufleece has been burnt away on the dress. This highlights aspects of the spring from the burning beneath however also exaggerates how going into autumn pulls all of the oxygen from the leaves leaving them crispy and crackly. The colours, textures and bareness of autumn has been symbolised through felt. The felt has been created using colours such as red, orange, yellow and green all fused together to create a warm layered piece. Within the felt there are aspects of scrim and stitching. This contrasts against the smooth, fluffy feel of the felt however represents the dead, crisp feeling of leaves in autumn. Between the top half of the dress and the bottom between summer and autumn, a cotton waist band has been applied. This is as unlike spring and summer, there are numerous changes between summer and autumn which make them particularly different. Applied on top of the waist band are various sized leaves created using tyvek. This crisp, fragmented material exaggerates what the dress is based and inspired from. The leaves are created using colours associated with autumn however blend into the section of the dress based on summer leaves. The leaves appear 3D creating new layers and textures.

The 53rd annual Bon Odori Festival at Camp Zama was held Aug. 4. The festival is consistently the largest bilateral event of the year for U.S. Army Japan, this year attracting more than 30,000 visitors to the installation. The festival featured live entartainment, games for children, a variety of ethnic foods, bilateral sports, and a fireworks show.

 

About the United States Army Garrison Japan:

 

The United States Army Garrison Japan and its 16 supported installation sites are located in the island of Honshu and Okinawa in Japan. The USAG Japan mission is to support the Headquarters, U.S. Army Japan / I Corps (fwd) to ensure mission readiness and the quality of life of the Army community in a sustainable, transforming joint and combined environment.

 

The USAG-J area of responsibility spans 1,500 miles from north to south of Japan. Camp Zama, home for both HQ USARJ and USAG-J is located approximately 25 miles southwest of Tokyo in the cities of Zama and Sagamihara in Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan. The Camp Zama base cluster includes Sagamihara Housing Area and Sagami General Depot.

 

Akasaka Press Center is located in the center of Tokyo. The Akizuki/Kure area near Hiroshima is an ammunition depot. Yokohama North Dock is a port facility in the city of Yokohama, a major commerce port and a popular shopping area. USAG Torii Station is located 980 miles southwest of Camp Zama on the island of Okinawa.

 

We are the Army's home in Japan and the "Garrison of Choice" for Soldiers, Civilians and their Family members. We are committed in becoming the leader in the U.S. Army Installation Management Command by providing world-class installation services.

 

-----

 

To learn more about USAG Japan, please visit:

  

Official Website - www.usagj.jp.pac.army.mil

 

Facebook - www.facebook.com/usagj

 

Flickr - www.flickr.com/usagj

 

YouTube - www.youtube.com/usagjapan

 

Vimeo - www.vimeo.com/usagj

 

Twitter - www.twitter.com/usagjapan

 

Slideshare - www.slideshare.net/usagjapan

 

USARJ This Week on YouTube - www.youtube.com/usarjthisweek

  

waterfall at matthiessen state park illinois, processd mildly HDR for consistent exposure

The Vishay Dale WSBS8518...20 Power Metal Strip® battery shunt resistor features extremely low resistance values down to 50 µΩ to increase accuracy and lower costs, and two sense pins to provide consistent contact point location.

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As an advocacy photographer, I consistently share updates on my work travels, featuring photos, journals, and other relevant information on both my Instagram and Facebook pages. I invite you to follow whenever you have a moment.

 

www.instagram.com/photojournalist.nishanka

www.instagram.com/photo.by.nish

www.photobynish.com

 

Official Profile:

Advocacy photography serves as a powerful catalyst for social change, spearheading the fight for a more just and equitable world. It relies on the support and engagement of people from all corners of the globe.

 

SD Nishanka, a passionate advocacy photojournalist, is dedicated to shedding light on pressing issues such as poverty, abuse, corruption, hatred, racism, conflicts, and various social concerns that persist in numerous regions worldwide. He accepts assignments without geographical boundaries, determined to capture the essence of these issues through his lens.

 

It's important to note that all of Nishanka's photographs are captured using natural-available light, devoid of any artificial effects or image manipulation. This commitment to authenticity ensures that the images remain a faithful representation of the realities he encounters. Furthermore, these photographs are available in large formats, suitable for editorial purchases and exhibition purposes.

 

In supporting Nishanka's work, you join a global community dedicated to raising awareness and inspiring change. Through his lens, we witness the stories of those often overlooked, amplifying their voices and contributing to the collective effort toward a more just and compassionate world.

 

www.instagram.com/photojournalist.nishanka

www.instagram.com/photo.by.nish

www.photobynish.com

 

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The 53rd annual Bon Odori Festival at Camp Zama was held Aug. 4. The festival is consistently the largest bilateral event of the year for U.S. Army Japan, this year attracting more than 30,000 visitors to the installation. The festival featured live entartainment, games for children, a variety of ethnic foods, bilateral sports, and a fireworks show.

 

About the United States Army Garrison Japan:

 

The United States Army Garrison Japan and its 16 supported installation sites are located in the island of Honshu and Okinawa in Japan. The USAG Japan mission is to support the Headquarters, U.S. Army Japan / I Corps (fwd) to ensure mission readiness and the quality of life of the Army community in a sustainable, transforming joint and combined environment.

 

The USAG-J area of responsibility spans 1,500 miles from north to south of Japan. Camp Zama, home for both HQ USARJ and USAG-J is located approximately 25 miles southwest of Tokyo in the cities of Zama and Sagamihara in Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan. The Camp Zama base cluster includes Sagamihara Housing Area and Sagami General Depot.

 

Akasaka Press Center is located in the center of Tokyo. The Akizuki/Kure area near Hiroshima is an ammunition depot. Yokohama North Dock is a port facility in the city of Yokohama, a major commerce port and a popular shopping area. USAG Torii Station is located 980 miles southwest of Camp Zama on the island of Okinawa.

 

We are the Army's home in Japan and the "Garrison of Choice" for Soldiers, Civilians and their Family members. We are committed in becoming the leader in the U.S. Army Installation Management Command by providing world-class installation services.

 

-----

 

To learn more about USAG Japan, please visit:

  

Official Website - www.usagj.jp.pac.army.mil

 

Facebook - www.facebook.com/usagj

 

Flickr - www.flickr.com/usagj

 

YouTube - www.youtube.com/usagjapan

 

Vimeo - www.vimeo.com/usagj

 

Twitter - www.twitter.com/usagjapan

 

Slideshare - www.slideshare.net/usagjapan

 

USARJ This Week on YouTube - www.youtube.com/usarjthisweek

  

The 53rd annual Bon Odori Festival at Camp Zama was held Aug. 4. The festival is consistently the largest bilateral event of the year for U.S. Army Japan, this year attracting more than 30,000 visitors to the installation. The festival featured live entartainment, games for children, a variety of ethnic foods, bilateral sports, and a fireworks show.

 

About the United States Army Garrison Japan:

 

The United States Army Garrison Japan and its 16 supported installation sites are located in the island of Honshu and Okinawa in Japan. The USAG Japan mission is to support the Headquarters, U.S. Army Japan / I Corps (fwd) to ensure mission readiness and the quality of life of the Army community in a sustainable, transforming joint and combined environment.

 

The USAG-J area of responsibility spans 1,500 miles from north to south of Japan. Camp Zama, home for both HQ USARJ and USAG-J is located approximately 25 miles southwest of Tokyo in the cities of Zama and Sagamihara in Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan. The Camp Zama base cluster includes Sagamihara Housing Area and Sagami General Depot.

 

Akasaka Press Center is located in the center of Tokyo. The Akizuki/Kure area near Hiroshima is an ammunition depot. Yokohama North Dock is a port facility in the city of Yokohama, a major commerce port and a popular shopping area. USAG Torii Station is located 980 miles southwest of Camp Zama on the island of Okinawa.

 

We are the Army's home in Japan and the "Garrison of Choice" for Soldiers, Civilians and their Family members. We are committed in becoming the leader in the U.S. Army Installation Management Command by providing world-class installation services.

 

-----

 

To learn more about USAG Japan, please visit:

  

Official Website - www.usagj.jp.pac.army.mil

 

Facebook - www.facebook.com/usagj

 

Flickr - www.flickr.com/usagj

 

YouTube - www.youtube.com/usagjapan

 

Vimeo - www.vimeo.com/usagj

 

Twitter - www.twitter.com/usagjapan

 

Slideshare - www.slideshare.net/usagjapan

 

USARJ This Week on YouTube - www.youtube.com/usarjthisweek

  

Consistent Character

The 53rd annual Bon Odori Festival at Camp Zama was held Aug. 4. The festival is consistently the largest bilateral event of the year for U.S. Army Japan, this year attracting more than 30,000 visitors to the installation. The festival featured live entartainment, games for children, a variety of ethnic foods, bilateral sports, and a fireworks show.

 

About the United States Army Garrison Japan:

 

The United States Army Garrison Japan and its 16 supported installation sites are located in the island of Honshu and Okinawa in Japan. The USAG Japan mission is to support the Headquarters, U.S. Army Japan / I Corps (fwd) to ensure mission readiness and the quality of life of the Army community in a sustainable, transforming joint and combined environment.

 

The USAG-J area of responsibility spans 1,500 miles from north to south of Japan. Camp Zama, home for both HQ USARJ and USAG-J is located approximately 25 miles southwest of Tokyo in the cities of Zama and Sagamihara in Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan. The Camp Zama base cluster includes Sagamihara Housing Area and Sagami General Depot.

 

Akasaka Press Center is located in the center of Tokyo. The Akizuki/Kure area near Hiroshima is an ammunition depot. Yokohama North Dock is a port facility in the city of Yokohama, a major commerce port and a popular shopping area. USAG Torii Station is located 980 miles southwest of Camp Zama on the island of Okinawa.

 

We are the Army's home in Japan and the "Garrison of Choice" for Soldiers, Civilians and their Family members. We are committed in becoming the leader in the U.S. Army Installation Management Command by providing world-class installation services.

 

-----

 

To learn more about USAG Japan, please visit:

  

Official Website - www.usagj.jp.pac.army.mil

 

Facebook - www.facebook.com/usagj

 

Flickr - www.flickr.com/usagj

 

YouTube - www.youtube.com/usagjapan

 

Vimeo - www.vimeo.com/usagj

 

Twitter - www.twitter.com/usagjapan

 

Slideshare - www.slideshare.net/usagjapan

 

USARJ This Week on YouTube - www.youtube.com/usarjthisweek

  

The 53rd annual Bon Odori Festival at Camp Zama was held Aug. 4. The festival is consistently the largest bilateral event of the year for U.S. Army Japan, this year attracting more than 30,000 visitors to the installation. The festival featured live entartainment, games for children, a variety of ethnic foods, bilateral sports, and a fireworks show.

 

About the United States Army Garrison Japan:

 

The United States Army Garrison Japan and its 16 supported installation sites are located in the island of Honshu and Okinawa in Japan. The USAG Japan mission is to support the Headquarters, U.S. Army Japan / I Corps (fwd) to ensure mission readiness and the quality of life of the Army community in a sustainable, transforming joint and combined environment.

 

The USAG-J area of responsibility spans 1,500 miles from north to south of Japan. Camp Zama, home for both HQ USARJ and USAG-J is located approximately 25 miles southwest of Tokyo in the cities of Zama and Sagamihara in Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan. The Camp Zama base cluster includes Sagamihara Housing Area and Sagami General Depot.

 

Akasaka Press Center is located in the center of Tokyo. The Akizuki/Kure area near Hiroshima is an ammunition depot. Yokohama North Dock is a port facility in the city of Yokohama, a major commerce port and a popular shopping area. USAG Torii Station is located 980 miles southwest of Camp Zama on the island of Okinawa.

 

We are the Army's home in Japan and the "Garrison of Choice" for Soldiers, Civilians and their Family members. We are committed in becoming the leader in the U.S. Army Installation Management Command by providing world-class installation services.

 

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To learn more about USAG Japan, please visit:

  

Official Website - www.usagj.jp.pac.army.mil

 

Facebook - www.facebook.com/usagj

 

Flickr - www.flickr.com/usagj

 

YouTube - www.youtube.com/usagjapan

 

Vimeo - www.vimeo.com/usagj

 

Twitter - www.twitter.com/usagjapan

 

Slideshare - www.slideshare.net/usagjapan

 

USARJ This Week on YouTube - www.youtube.com/usarjthisweek

  

The 53rd annual Bon Odori Festival at Camp Zama was held Aug. 4. The festival is consistently the largest bilateral event of the year for U.S. Army Japan, this year attracting more than 30,000 visitors to the installation. The festival featured live entartainment, games for children, a variety of ethnic foods, bilateral sports, and a fireworks show.

 

About the United States Army Garrison Japan:

 

The United States Army Garrison Japan and its 16 supported installation sites are located in the island of Honshu and Okinawa in Japan. The USAG Japan mission is to support the Headquarters, U.S. Army Japan / I Corps (fwd) to ensure mission readiness and the quality of life of the Army community in a sustainable, transforming joint and combined environment.

 

The USAG-J area of responsibility spans 1,500 miles from north to south of Japan. Camp Zama, home for both HQ USARJ and USAG-J is located approximately 25 miles southwest of Tokyo in the cities of Zama and Sagamihara in Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan. The Camp Zama base cluster includes Sagamihara Housing Area and Sagami General Depot.

 

Akasaka Press Center is located in the center of Tokyo. The Akizuki/Kure area near Hiroshima is an ammunition depot. Yokohama North Dock is a port facility in the city of Yokohama, a major commerce port and a popular shopping area. USAG Torii Station is located 980 miles southwest of Camp Zama on the island of Okinawa.

 

We are the Army's home in Japan and the "Garrison of Choice" for Soldiers, Civilians and their Family members. We are committed in becoming the leader in the U.S. Army Installation Management Command by providing world-class installation services.

 

-----

 

To learn more about USAG Japan, please visit:

  

Official Website - www.usagj.jp.pac.army.mil

 

Facebook - www.facebook.com/usagj

 

Flickr - www.flickr.com/usagj

 

YouTube - www.youtube.com/usagjapan

 

Vimeo - www.vimeo.com/usagj

 

Twitter - www.twitter.com/usagjapan

 

Slideshare - www.slideshare.net/usagjapan

 

USARJ This Week on YouTube - www.youtube.com/usarjthisweek

  

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