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Lt. Gen. Lynch, Mrs. Sarah Lynch, Command Sgt. Maj. Neil Ciotola and Mrs. Beth Ciotola attended the Fort Sam Houston Fiesta and Fireworks Military Ceremony and Commander's Reception Sunday, April 10.
The event was hosted by all unites assigned to Joint Base San Antonio at Ft. Sam Houston, including the U.S. Army Installation Command, Medical Command, Medical Department Center and School, Brooke Army Medical Center, U.S. Army North, U.S. Army South and the U.S. Army 5th Recruiting Brigade.
The Fife and Drum Corps, in historic dress, performed marching music from armies past. Lynch, alongside Lt. Gen. Guy Swan, commanding general of U.S. Army North, Maj. Gen. Simeon Trombitas, commanding general of U.S. Army South, El Rey Feo, Bill Drain and King Antonio, William Mitchell, passed and reviewed the troops.
After the ceremony, Lynch, fellow JBSA commanders and Fiesta royalty enjoyed a reception at the Quadrangle, the original establishment at Ft. Sam which is now home to free-roaming deer, geese and peacocks. The 82nd Airborne Chorus gave an a capella performance and the evening ended with a fireworks show.
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IMCOM handles the day-to-day operations of U.S. Army installations around the globe – We are the Army's Home. Army installations are communities that provide many of the same types of services expected from any small city. Fire, police, public works, housing, and child-care are just some of the things IMCOM does in Army communities every day. We endeavor to provide a quality of life for Soldiers, Civilians and Families commensurate with their service. Our professional workforce strives to deliver on the commitments of the Army Family Covenant, honor the sacrifices of military Families, and enable the Army Force Generation cycle.
Our Mission:
To provide standardized, effective and efficient services, facilities and infrastructure to Soldiers, Civilians and Families for an Army and Nation engaged in persistent conflict.
Our Vision:
Army installations are the Department of Defense standard for infrastructure quality and are the provider of consistent, quality services that are a force multiplier in supported organizations’ mission accomplishment, and materially enhance Soldier, Civilian and Family well-being and readiness.
To learn more about IMCOM:
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The Maryland National Guard and the Armed Forces of Bosnia and Herzegovina share ideas for use of Personal Staff Officers
Maryland Army National Guard staff officers traveled to Bosnia and Herzegovina to exchange knowledge and ideas for the best use of personal staff officers to many of the commanders of the BiH Armed Forces. The four-day training event, April 7-10, at the Army House in Sarajevo, included a conference on the role that chaplains, inspectors general, staff judge advocates, and public affairs play in multiplying the effectiveness of units.
This training event is an example of military-to-military support under the State Partnership Program the Maryland National Guard has with BiH since 2003.
The Maryland National Guard Public Affairs Office worked with BiH public affairs personnel with creating effective press releases, strategic communication, dealing with the media, conducting press conferences, and techniques in public affairs. As a result of the workshop, the BiH public affairs officers interacted with local media and issued a press release about the conference.
(Photo by Staff Sgt. Thaddeus Harrington, 29th Mobile Public Affairs Detachment.)
CORONADO, Calif. (Jan. 20, 2016) Secretary of the Navy (SECNAV) Ray Mabus delivers remarks before the guided-missile destroyer USS Stockdale (DDG 106) departs from Naval Air Station North Island as part of the Great Green Fleet and for a deployment to the Western Pacific. The Great Green Fleet is an initiative optimizing energy use to increase operational range, endurance, and payload, turning energy into a force multiplier. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class Christopher Veloicaza/Released)
On November 18, 2018 65 members of the Community Emergency Response Team, (CERT) from across the Valley conducted important training to enhance their skills and knowledge base when called to act. While the drills focused on Triage, Cribbing, Basic First Aid, Team Organization and Deployment, Battalion Chief Richard Fields and EMS Captain Marc Shapiro spoke to emphasize the important role CERT members play as "force multipliers" for the LAFD and in turn, their communities.
LAFD Event - 111818
Photo Use Permitted via Creative Commons - Credit: Cody Weireter
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Multiply Your Options is a one day conference for 8th-grade girls aimed at exposing the students to female role models in the fields of science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM).
***DÉBORA ACOSTA***Souvenirs,Centros de mesa,Maquetas, Decoracion artesanal de Tortas___________ Mensajes, preguntas y encargos: ------deboramarlen@hotmail.com---------------------Télefono: (54) (011) 4857-9162 -----envios al interior y exterior
had a bit of a headache today but i was itching to take some pictures. this is what came out of that.
the teleidoscope 2012 theme #8 - multiply
anyone knows how to stop these things from coming out? btw i have lots of handkerchiefs to give, blue and red colours only with some "little green stripes" :-D
so my idea for multiplication was of course magic (since we don't have replicators invented yet). as you know, magicians can get endless stuff off their bodies: coins, cards and handkerchiefs. i have been with a minor cold and i've too been able to take endless stuff off my nose... ok it's mostly snot... :-S
*currently loving this song: foster the people - don't stop and the video is precious too (pun intended)
Four Seasons Resort Koh Samui, Thailand.
Our review of the hotel: www.travelplusstyle.com/hotels/four-seasons-resort-koh-samui
title: multiply me TWO
medium: digital photography with layer of windows 2011
intended presentation context: for web and print showing
please help me decide which one is best!? ok?
thanks in advance...
Now there's so many Tardis...Tardis's...Tardi...still not sure what the plural of tardis is. I may have to go back and rewatch all the episodes just to see if they ever mention it. There's not that many episodes, 700 at the most, maybe 800. They're bound to have said at one point.
Maybe in the 50th anniversary episode when all those Tardis were flying about Gallifrey, you know the bit.
Yeah that was cool.
Again, dedication for my BFF... today is all about the multiplying. Sending you my best energy today as always because your struggle is my struggle.
Somebody went to the Mason-Dixon Flattrackers race in Lampeter PA. Last night, Somebody had a great time. Somebody made his first attempt at an 5 shot, in-camera, multiple exposer. Somebody needs to read the book again and work out the kinks, just saying …. Taken during an early practice for the AMA District 6 Flat Track races at Lampeter PA.
“Adobe CS6” NIK "Color Efex Pro 4" “AKVIS Sketch”
© 2013 Doug Miller Photography - www.dougmillerphotos.com
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Dang it! Twice now, I've been caught in cloudbursts so severe, it's like being sprayed with a hose. (I got quite enough of that in remedial school, thanks.) But at least getting drenched reminded me of something I wrote for the Oregonian 18 years ago (!). The paper didn't use my title, but I called it...
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UMBRELLAS ARE FOR WIMPS!
I have found that rainy days are excellent opportunities to research information and stay active indoors. For example, there is nothing like learning about our country’s official state mottoes to stir the blood and fire the imagination. America is replete with simple and inspirational state mottoes that smack of great deeds and stalwart souls: “It is forever” (Idaho), “I lead” (Maine), and “Live free or die” (New Hampshire). A few states elected to have slogans that are more open to interpretation, like Maryland’s “Manly deeds, womanly words.”
Washington’s selection of “By and by” sounds like the mantra of a lazy fisherman, but it does serve to make the Oregon state motto of “She flies with her own wings,” look good in comparison. Although it is a noble-sounding sentiment, I suspect that like myself, most Oregonians have no inkling as to what our slogan means. (After all, if we are going to fly, whose wings would we use?) I like our unofficial state motto a lot more: UMBRELLAS ARE FOR WIMPS.
The evolution of this state-wide philosophy regarding umbrella usage is interesting to speculate on. Our history of persistent but relatively light rainfall combined with our settlement by testosterone-riddled lumberjacks have led to a studied indifference on the part of modern Oregonians regarding umbrellas. They are seen as fripperies for out-of-staters and the faint of heart. As my dad always light-heartedly says from the drenched locale of Astoria, “A little water never hurt anyone . . . unless they contract pneumonia.”
But this season, conditions will apparently be even wetter than usual for Oregon, perhaps forcing some of us to change our lofty habits. Winter’s meteorological conditions have always been awe-inspiring. They are responsible for the first myths, as early hunter-gatherers huddled together around a fire peering upwards at dark clouds with a sense of wonder and fear. The storm gods inspired by wintry thunderheads were fierce and wrathful, and their very names inspired respect: Zeus, Thor, La Niña.
Perhaps you are not impressed by La Niña’s moniker, and you don’t think you need to batten down the hatches for “The Little Girl.” Do not be so hasty in your underestimation. Just as the ancient Greeks named the avenging Furies who whipped sinful souls in the afterlife “The Kindly Ones,” so too did meteorologists employ their own twisted form of weather-inspired humor in innocently naming this winter’s storm pattern La Niña. So impressed am I by this little girl, I am going to do something this winter that I have always had too much self-respect to do before: I am going to use an umbrella.
I can almost hear your gasps of surprise, but before you rush to judgment, let me make my case. Let me begin by stating that I am a grown man and in full control of my mental faculties. Having followed the alarmist long-term weather forecasts that the local media barrages us with, I know that now is not the time for false heroics regarding umbrella usage. Also, as a bald man who wears glasses, I am in a state of double-jeopardy regarding rainfall. (For those of you who have had the disconcerting experience of having a drop of water fall precisely on the crown of your head, imagine that sensation multiplied a thousand-fold and you will have an idea of what the pitter-pat of rain on my cranium feels like.)
I intend to defiantly open up my umbrella and use it both as a shield against La Niña and as a shield from the contemptuous glances of sodden pedestrians doggedly slogging their own proud but soggy paths. I will tell myself that it is better to be ashamed and dry than righteous and miserable. If the people of any other geographical region can commiserate with we Oregonians, it would be the English, who also suffer their fair share of overcast days. To paraphrase the English judge, Lord Bowen:
"It rains down both on the proud
And also the shameful fella.
But chiefly on the proud, because
The shameful aren’t afraid to use an umbrella."
Active Soldiers perform "Oh How I Hate to Get Up in the Morning" during the Soldier Show (Tim Hipps/2010)
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About the U.S. Army Installation Management Community:
IMCOM handles the day-to-day operations of U.S. Army installations around the globe - We are the Army's Home. Army installations are communities that provide many of the same types of services expected from any small city. Fire, police, public works, housing, and child-care are just some of the things IMCOM does in Army communities every day. We endeavor to provide a quality of life for Soldiers, Civilians and Families commensurate with their service. Our professional workforce strives to deliver on the commitments of the Army Family Covenant, honor the sacrifices of military Families, and enable the Army Force Generation cycle.
Our Mission: To provide standardized, effective and efficient services, facilities and infrastructure to Soldiers, Civilians and Families for an Army and Nation engaged in persistent conflict.
Our Vision: Army installations are the Department of Defense standard for infrastructure quality and are the provider of consistent, quality services that are a force multiplier in supported organizations' mission accomplishment, and materially enhance Soldier, Civilian and Family well-being and readiness.
To learn more about IMCOM, visit us online:
IMCOM Official Web Site - www.imcom.army.mil/hq/
Flickr Photostream - www.flickr.com/photos/imcom
YouTube - www.youtube.com/installationmgt
Twitter - www.twitter.com/armyimcom
Facebook - www.facebook.com/InstallationManagementCommunity
Scribd - www.scribd.com/IMCOMPubs
CNN iReport - www.ireport.com/people/HQIMCOMPA/
DoD Live Blog - usarmyimcom.armylive.dodlive.mil/