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View of a group of students standing outside of a Catholic mission.

 

Digital Collection:

North Carolina Postcards

 

Publisher:

Albertype Co., Brooklyn, N.Y.;

 

Date:

1940; 1941; 1942; 1943; 1944; 1945; 1946; 1947; 1948; 1949; 1950; 1951; 1952; 1953;

1954; 1955; 1956; 1957; 1958; 1959; 1960

 

Location:

New Bern (N.C.); Craven County (N.C.);

 

Collection in Repository

Durwood Barbour Collection of North Carolina Postcards (P077); collection guide available

online at www.lib.unc.edu/ncc/pcoll/77barbour/77barbour.html

 

Usage Statement

Contax G2.

Carl Zeiss Planar 45/2

плёнка Kodak BW400CN.

Декабрь 2017г.

svs422_09_nor

.. on the tram.

 

see my fav STREET images here.

Foto: Anne Tritschler / IPPNW

denis & maksim - 22.06.2023

Photos taken for work of the annual DMPS Art Exhibit, displaying works by more than 700 students from every public school in Des Moines.

Hey, guys! www.FreelanceHouse.co.uk is here to help you with your money issues. You all try so hard to make everything right, but studying really does take a lot of time and efforts. Watch this short video and you will definitely find appropriate kind of decision for you personally. The problematical question "How to make money?" will be solved for you. So, how to keep your head above water and be able to have some pocket money? FreelanceHouse.co.uk knows the answer.

First of all you can try FreelanceHouse referral program. Numerous people are already using it and getting their money online. Many of students have part time jobs and the referral program lets them get extra income.

Secondly you can make money as a student by doing something almost similar to previous point - apply to the brand ambassador vacancy. It works really good for making money if you have communication skills and spare time.

Also you can get money fast by selling things that you don't need on eBay. Many students are looking for an iron or some college books which are expensive in the bookstores, and you can sell them those things if they are out of use in your home.

You can join the reserach. It is an easy way to make money as a student. You can pick that one which is harmless and get your money really fast.

Another option is to handle leaflets at the malls or on the streets. It is one of the most popular jobs for students and it can help you earn some cash working part time.

And the last, but not the least - if you study really well and have communation skills you may become a tutor. It's not too hard, you can use special websites where you will find the right vacancy.

We hope our tips will help you to make money while studying. Good luck and good day!

I was trying to get the students to see the use of lettering combined with a concept. I also was pushing to refine skills with drafting tools, skills that students had to develop back before computers. Everything was done at the drawing board.

Kuva kauppakorkeakoulun lukusalista ja arviolta 1970-luvulta.

 

Aalto-yliopiston arkisto / Aalto University Archives

Image nr: HKK_16_044

 

Tiedätkö lisää tästä kuvasta? Jätä kommentti tai ota yhteyttä sähköpostitse: arkisto@aalto.fi

 

Lisätietoja kuvakokoelmista / more information: libguides.aalto.fi/c.php?g=578570&p=4667669

Blue Bird International 3800 T444E

White Roof

Seats 65C 43A

*Pine Bush Markings Removed*

First Student #020288

1 of 14 (see 277-290) (277, 278 and 279 were given to First Student Valley Central)

WNYE started out as an AM station in 1938, switching to FM in 1942 ... The station's original licensee was the New York City Board of Education ... The station's studios and transmitter were originally located within Brooklyn Technical High School ....

-- Wikipedia

------------

Years ago when I taught science in Public School 66 in the Bronx, WNYE would send me lists of programs that they said would help my classes. Unlike the teacher of the students above, I passed up on the opportunity.

------------

Publicity photo, WNYE-FM, 1956

An older Dodge Caravan used by the Student Safety Service. These units are now rarely used.

Found image. The cheap wicker furniture, the books and the pots and pans suggest this may be student digs in about 1920.

Students in PTI's Surgical Technology lab with Instructor Michael Dorich.

High School students visit and experience PTI in person.

This is mon petit contribution to israeli design students and type lovers worldwide. iv'e scanned (in high resolution) this vintage type specimen called "Hebrew Artistic Type" by l.p. toby, circa 1955.

it's probably one of the earliest type specimen booklet printed in israel (i may be wrong), and is a stunning artifact to find. it's the ultimate example of creation that comes out of a certain void. unlike the rich tradition of the western/eastern type, there weren't many hebrew types, and there was a great demand.

Amsterdam : Student Experience at de Zuidas.

Again, you knew there had to be at least one braid picture, right?

This photo is licensed under a Creative Commons license. If you use this photo within the terms of the license or make special arrangements to use the photo, please list the photo credit as "Nicholas Chan / NCDN" and link the credit to nickchan.net.

About Dr. Takeshi Yamada:

 

Educator, medical assistant, author and artist Takeshi Yamada was born and raised at a traditional and respectable house of samurai in Osaka, Japan in 1960. He studied art at Nakanoshima College of Art in Osaka, Japan. As an international exchange student of Osaka Art University, he moved to the United States in 1983 and studied art at the California College of Arts and Crafts in Oakland, CA and Maryland Institute College of Art in Baltimore, MD in 1983-85, and completed his Bachelor of Fine Art degree in 1985.

 

Yamada obtained his Master of Fine Art Degree in 1987 at the University of Michigan, School of Art in Ann Arbor, MI. Yamada’s “Visual Anthropology Artworks” reflects unique, distinctive and often quickly disappearing culture around him. In 1987, Yamada moved to Chicago, and by 1990, Yamada successfully fused Eastern and Western visual culture and variety of cross-cultural mythology in urban allegories, and he became a major figure of the River North (“SUHU” district) art scene. During that time he also developed a provocative media persona and established his unique style of super-realism paintings furnishing ghostly images of people and optically enhanced pictorial structures. By 1990, his artworks were widely exhibited internationally. In 2000, Yamada moved to New York City.

 

Today, he is highly media-featured and internationally famed for his “rogue taxidermy” sculptures and large-scale installations, which he calls “specimens” rather than “artworks”. He also calls himself “super artist” and “gate keeper” rather than the “(self-expressing) artist“. His passion for Cabinet of Curiosities started when he was in kindergarten, collecting natural specimens and built his own Wunderkammer (German word to express “Cabinet of Curiosities“). At age eight, he started creating “rogue taxidermy monsters” such as two-headed lizards, by assembling different parts of animal carcasses.

 

Internationally, Yamada had over 600 major fine art exhibitions including 50 solo exhibitions including Spain, The Netherlands, Japan, Canada, Columbia, and the United States. Yamada also taught classes and made public speeches at over 40 educational institutions including American Museum of Natural History, Louisiana State Museum, Laurenand Rogers Museum of Art, International Museum of Surgical Science, University of Minnesota, Montana State University, Eastern Oregon University, Illinois Institute of Technology, Mount Vernon Nazarene College, Salem State College, Osaka College of Arts, Chemeketa Community College, Maryland Institute College of Art, etc. Yamada’s artworks are collection of over 30 museums and universities in addition to hundreds of corporate/private art collectors internationally. Yamada and his artworks were featured in over 400 video websites. In addition, rogue taxidermy artworks, sideshow gaffs, cryptozoological artworks, large sideshow banners and showfronts created by Yamada in the last 40 years have been exhibited at over 100 of state fairs and festivals annually nationwide, up to and including the present.

  

Yamada won numerous prestigious awards and honors i.e., “International Man of the Year”, “Outstanding Artists and Designers of the 20th Century”, “2000 Outstanding Intellectuals of the 21st Century”, “International Educator of the Year”, “One Thousand Great Americans”, “Outstanding People of the 20th Century”, “21st Century Award for Achievement”, “Who’s Who in America” and “Who’s Who in The World”. The Mayors of New Orleans, Louisiana and Gary, Indiana awarded him the “Key to the City”. Yamada’s artworks are collections of many museums and universities/colleges i.e., Louisiana State Museum, New Orleans Museum of Art, University of Michigan Museum of Art, Chicago Athenaeum Museum, Eastern Oregon University, Montana State University and Ohio State University.

 

Yamada was profiled in numerous TV programs in the United States, Japan and Philippine, Columbia, i.e., A&E History Channel, Brooklyn Cable Access Television, “Chicago’s Very Own” in Chicago, “Takeshi Yamada’s Divine Comedy” in New Orleans, and Chicago Public Television’s Channel ID. Yamada also published 22 books based on his each major fine art projects i.e., “Homage to the Horseshoe Crab”, Medical Journal of the Artist”, “Graphic Works 1996-1999”, “Phantom City”, “Divine Comedy”, “Miniatures”, “Louisville”, “Visual Anthropology 2000”, “Heaven and Hell”, “Citizen Kings” and “Dukes and Saints” in the United States. In prints, Yamada and his artworks have been featured in numerous books, magazine and newspapers internationally i.e., The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, Time out New York (full page color interview), Washington Times, The Fine Art Index, New American Paintings, Village Voice 9full page interview), Chicago Art Scene (front cover), Chicago Tribune Magazine (major color article), Chicago Japanese American News, Strong Coffee, Reader, Milwaukee Journal, Clarion, Kaleidoscope, Laurel Leader-Call, The Advertiser News, Times-Picayune (front page, major color articles), Michigan Alumnus (major color article), Michigan Today (major color article), Mardi Gras Guide (major color article), The Ann Arbor News (front covers), Park Slope Courier (color pages), 24/7 (color pages), Brooklyn Free Press (front cover) and The World Tribune.

 

(updated November 24, 2012)

 

Reference (videos featuring sea rabbits and Dr. Takeshi Yamada):

www.youtube.com/watch?v=7Ek-GsW9ay0

www.youtube.com/watch?v=jJK04yQUX2o&feature=related

www.youtube.com/watch?v=XrCCxV5S-EE

www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q0QnW26dQKg&feature=related

www.youtube.com/watch?v=GpVCqEjFXk0

www.youtube.com/watch?v=5NlcIZTFIj8&feature=fvw

www.youtube.com/watch?v=8UPzGvwq57g

s87.photobucket.com/albums/k130/katiecavell/NYC%2008/Coney%20Island/?action=view&current=SeaRabbitVid.mp4

www.animalnewyork.com/2012/what-are-you-doing-tonight-con...

www.youtube.com/watch?v=oeAdsChmSR8

 

Reference (sea rabbit artifacts)

www.wondersandmarvels.com/2012/06/coney-island-sea-rabbit...

www.flickr.com/photos/searabbit3/5417188428/in/photostream

www.flickr.com/photos/searabbit3/5417189548/in/photostream

www.flickr.com/photos/searabbit3/5416579163/in/photostream

www.flickr.com/photos/searabbit3/5417191794/in/photostream

www.flickr.com/photos/searabbit3/5417192426/in/photostream

www.flickr.com/photos/searabbit3/5417192938/in/photostream

 

Reference (flickr):

www.flickr.com/photos/searabbit15/

www.flickr.com/photos/searabbit14/

www.flickr.com/photos/searabbit13

www.flickr.com/photos/searabbit12

www.flickr.com/photos/searabbit11

www.flickr.com/photos/searabbit10

www.flickr.com/photos/searabbit9/

www.flickr.com/photos/searabbit8/

www.flickr.com/photos/searabbit7

www.flickr.com/photos/searabbit6

www.flickr.com/photos/searabbit5/

www.flickr.com/photos/searabbit4/

www.flickr.com/photos/searabbit3/

www.flickr.com/photos/searabbit2/

www.flickr.com/photos/searabbit1/

www.flickr.com/photos/museumofworldwonders3/

www.flickr.com/photos/museumofworldwonders2

www.flickr.com/photos/museumofworldwonders/

www.flickr.com/photos/takeshiyamadapaintings/

 

Reference (newspaper articles and reviews):

www.amctv.com/shows/immortalized/about

blogs.amctv.com/photo-galleries/immortalized-cast-photos/...

online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704828104576021750...

www.villagevoice.com/2006-11-07/nyc-life/the-stuffing-dre...

karlshuker.blogspot.com/2011/06/giant-sea-serpents-and-ch...

amusingthezillion.com/2011/12/08/takeshi-yamadas-jersey-d...

amusingthezillion.com/2010/12/07/art-of-the-day-freak-tax...

amusingthezillion.com/2010/10/27/oct-29-at-coney-island-l...

amusingthezillion.com/2010/09/18/photo-of-the-day-takeshi...

amusingthezillion.com/2009/11/07/thru-dec-31-at-coney-isl...

4strange.blogspot.com/2009/02/ten-of-takeshi-yamada-colle...

www.flickr.com/photos/museumofworldwonders/5440224421/siz...

 

Reference (fine art websites):

www.roguetaxidermy.com/members_detail.php?id=528

www.brooklynartproject.com/photo/photo/listForContributor...

www.bsagarts.org/member-listing/takeshi-yamada/

www.horseshoecrab.org/poem/feature/takeshi.html

www.artfagcity.com/2012/09/06/recommended-go-brooklyn-stu...

 

Reference (other videos):

www.youtube.com/watch?v=otSh91iC3C4

www.youtube.com/watch?v=BhIR-lz1Mrs

www.youtube.com/watch?v=BttREu63Ksg

 

(updated November 24, 2012)

 

My first overseas community service trip to Vietnam. A personal experience, as a student, to document this moment - young Vietnamese students queuing up for dismissal. A memorable trip, which taught me many valuable life lessons, is now history. This eye-opener experience will never be forgotten.

 

Alexus Goh Xue Ying, Student

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