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A source can be evaluated using the 5 following terms: authority, accuracy, objectivity, currency, and coverage.
Today is Evaluate Your Life Day and even though our Trooper didn’t have much choice in his career path, he thought he would take a moment to evaluate if he liked where it was going.
Enjoy!
This is an Alternative Version for one of my daily shots of 365 Days of Clones.
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Researchers at the American Center in Moscow. The Division teams with research firms in evaluation design and implementation.
There really doesn't seem to be a large number of dolls I've painted left in my local plastic population, considering how many little faces I've re-done in the last few years.
U.S. Army 2nd Lt. Ian Wrigglesworth of Alpha Company, 1st Battalion, 4th Infantry Regiment performs casualty care while performing a medical evacuation event during the Joint Multinational Readiness Center (JMRC) Best Warrior Competition at the U.S. Army’s JMRC in Hohenfels, Germany, June 23, 2015. Noncommissioned officers, officers, and lower enlisted Soldiers participated in the three-day competition during which their skills were tested in multiple areas including physical fitness, land navigation, marksmanship, and military knowledge. (U.S. Army photo by Spc. Shardesia Washington/Released)
In addition to checking turtles for the presence of oil, researchers conducted a biological evaluation of each turtle. During the evaluation, researchers recorded the species, size, and injuries of each turtle. Researchers also retrieved any fecal samples (to determine what the turtle had been eating) and took a small skin sample (to determine through genetic testing from which nesting population the turtle came from). Researchers use all of this biological information to provide a better understanding of each sea turtle species’ life history.
View related news release: FWC rescuing oil-impacted sea turtles with help from Gulf fishermen
The kit and its assembly:
A major kitbashing project which I had on my idea list for a long time and its main ingredients/body donors already stashed away – but, as with many rather intimidating builds, it takes some external motivation to finally tackle the idea and bring it into hardware form. This came in August 2020 with the “Prototypes” group build at whatifmodellers.com, even though is still took some time to find the courage and mojo to start.
The original inspiration was the idea of a stealthy successor for the A-10, or a kind of more modern A-7 as an alternative to the omnipresent (and rather boring, IMHO) F-35. An early “ingredient” became the fuselage of a Zvezda Ka-58 stealth helicopter kit – I liked the edgy shape, the crocodile-like silhouette and the spacious side-by-side cockpit. Adding wings, however, was more challenging, and I remembered a 1:200 B-2A which I had turned into a light Swedish 1:72 attack stealth aircraft. Why not use another B-2 for the wings and the engines, but this time a bigger 1:144 model that would better match the quite bulbous Ka-58 fuselage? This donor became an Italeri kit.
Work started with the fuselage: the Ka-58’s engine and gearbox hump had to go first and a generous, new dorsal section had to be scratched with 1mm styrene sheet and some PSR. The cockpit and its glazing could be retained and were taken OOB. Under the nose, the Ka-58’s gun turret was omitted and a scratched front landing gear well was implanted instead.
The wings consist of the B-2 model; the lower “fuselage half” had its front end cut away, then the upper fuselage half of the Ka-58 was used as benchmark to cut the B-2’s upper wing/body part in two outer wing panels. Once these elements had been glued together, the Ka-58’s lower nose and tail section were tailored to match the B-2 parts. The B-2 engine bays were taken OOB and mounted next, so that the A-14’s basic hull was complete and the first major PSR session could start. Blending the parts into each other turned out to be a tedious process, since some 2-3 mm wide gaps had to be filled.
Once the basic BWP pack had been finished, I added the fins. These were taken from an 1:72 F-117 kit (IIRC from Italeri), which I had bought in a lot many moons ago. The fins were just adapted at their base to match the tail sting slope, and they were mounted in a 45° angle. This looks very F-117ish but was IMHO the most plausible solution.
Now that the overall length of the aircraft was defined, I could work on the final major assembly part: the wing tips. The 1:144 B-2 came with separate wing tip sections, but they proved to be much too long for the Squatina. After some trials I reduced their length by more than half, so that the B-2’s jagged wing trailing edge was kept. The result looks quite natural, even though blending the cut wing tips to the BWB turned out to be a PSR nightmare because their thickness reduces gently towards the tip – since I took out a good part of the inner section, the resulting step had to be sanded away and hidden with more PSR.
Detail work started next, including the cockpit glazing, the bomb bay (the B-2 kit comes with one of its bays open, and I kept this detail and modified the interior) and the landing gear, the latter was taken from the F-117 donor bank and fitted surprisingly well.
Some sensors were added, too, including a flat glass panel on the nose tip and a triangular IRST fairing under the nose, next to the landing gear well.
2016 Equipment Evaluations and Kiteboard Format Trials. 2012 Copyright ©ISAF. Image copyright free for editorial use. This image may not be used for any other purpose without the express prior written permission of ISAF.
The Cochlear Implant Program team at St. Louis Children's Hospital evaluates a child's eligibility for a cochlear implantation.
For more information on Cochlear Implants, visit www.stlouischildrens.org/our-services/cochlear-implant-pr....
Iraqi medics with 7th Iraqi Army Division evacuate an amputee played by an American medic with 307th Brigade Support Battalion, 1st Advise and Assist Brigade, 82nd Airborne Division, during a mass-casualty training exercise June 3, 2010, at Camp Mejid, Iraq. American medics have been training the Iraqis since August 2009. (U.S. Army photo by Sgt. Michael J. MacLeod, 1/82 AAB, USD-C)
Seminar hos Norad i forbindelse med lanseringen av evalueringsrapporten: "Can We Demonstrate the Difference that Norwegian Aid Makes?"
Foto: Terje Fjeldsgård Andersen/Norad
My lost and refound evaluation form from Quiltcon 2013 exhibition of Flying Geese and Swans. I hope I'm not offending anybody by publishing this. Just to give you a general idea of the format. For me it shows care in formulating an opinion.
I was surprised when they offered the form at pickup, and glad I could have it. After reading I felt all right. I knew some things had not been really perfect and it would be strange if nobody had seen it - and I was glad that the spirit of the quilt was recognized.
Ideal conformation for the hindquarters of a horse, from the rear view.
www.extension.org/pages/11286/relating-form-to-function:-...
Platoon sergeant evaluates soldiers assigned to Lightning Troop, 3rd Squadron, 2d Cavalry Regiment, movements across the objective with the use of phosphorous smoke for concealment during a squad live fire exercise at Bemowo Piskie Training Area, Poland, on November 21, 2017.
Seminar hos Norad i forbindelse med lanseringen av evalueringsrapporten: "Can We Demonstrate the Difference that Norwegian Aid Makes?"
Foto: Terje Fjeldsgård Andersen/Norad
Seminar hos Norad i forbindelse med lanseringen av evalueringsrapporten: "Can We Demonstrate the Difference that Norwegian Aid Makes?"
Foto: Terje Fjeldsgård Andersen/Norad
Henrik Harboe, Ørnulf Strøm og Øyvind Eggen på seminar hos Norad i forbindelse med lanseringen av evalueringsrapporten: "Can We Demonstrate the Difference that Norwegian Aid Makes?"
Foto: Terje Fjeldsgård Andersen/Norad
2018-09-05: African Development Bank staff members at Knowledge Cafe during the Evaluations for Greater Impact in Bank Operations, Abidjan, Côte d'Ivoire.
2016 Equipment Evaluations and Kiteboard Format Trials. 2012 Copyright ©ISAF. Image copyright free for editorial use. This image may not be used for any other purpose without the express prior written permission of ISAF.
Once ready, the patients were welcomed one by one into the clinic, interviewed by the doctors (utilizing a translator if necessary) and decisions were made by the doctors if the patient was a potential candidate for surgery. If approved as a patient, they were then screened by the pediatrician and routine tests performed, i.e. hemoglobin.