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Hospital corpsman second class Ian Schmidt, left, and Hospital Corpsman third class Jeremy Black, both en-route care corpsmen assigned to Second Medical Battalion, prepare a patient for movement using the sked basic rescue system during a litter bearing/casualty assessment training course, at the Healthcare Simulation and Bio-skills Center on Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune, May 15, 2024.
November American Red Cross meeting in Contra Costa County was a well attended shelter operations simulations.
Photography by | Cate Calson of American Rec Cross
Students participated in a poverty simulation at IU Kokomo on March 10, 2025. (Photography by Mike Glassburn/Myah Halter/IU Kokomo)
November American Red Cross meeting in Contra Costa County was a well attended shelter operations simulations.
Photography by | Cate Calson of American Rec Cross
In this poverty simulation, participants assume the roles of different families facing poverty. The task of the "families" is to provide for their basic necessities and shelter during the course of four 15 minute "weeks."
November American Red Cross meeting in Contra Costa County was a well attended shelter operations simulations.
Photography by | Cate Calson of American Rec Cross
Photos of the trade fair in February 2012 competition of the management simulation Emerald Forest in Veliko Tranovo, 2012.
‘The Political Reporter’ is a new media installation by Boone, NC-based artist Mark Nystrom that generates random, but intriguing statements with words found on political websites and in the media. Sources include the Obama and Romney presidential campaigns, the Democratic and Republican parties, bloggers and the news media.
‘The Political Reporter’ animates a cloud of letters and periodically makes statements. These images are screen grabs taken while ‘The Political Reporter’ was running on Election Day and the day after.
Letters from words gathered from conservative sources are colored red and ones from liberal sources are blue. ‘The Political Reporter’s’ vocabulary includes over 70,000 words, but only 300 appear on the screen at any given time. As words are used to make statements, they are replaced by randomly chosen new ones from the list of 70,000.