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A diretoria executiva da Ambev recebeu, em 03/12/10, os selecionados no Programa de Trainee 2011.
Os 22 jovens foram recebidos pelo presidente João Castro Neves, os vice-presidentes Ricardo Tadeu (Vendas); Milton Seligman (Relações Corporativas); Ricardo Manuel Moreira (Refrigerantes e Hila-ex); Rodrigo Figueiredo de Souza (Logística), Renato Nahas (TI e Serviços Compartilhados) e Márcio Fróes (Industrial e Gente e Gestão) e os diretores Sandro Bassili e Alexandre Médicis.
Fotos: Fernando Cavalcanti
Descripton: An indoor group portrait of the 1961-1962 Boston University Teacher Training Class. There are 15 female trainees, including one in the front row wearing a traditional Indian dress. Three female trainees from Japan, India, and Korea where traditional dress. There are five male trainees in the back row, along with Dr. Edward J. Waterhouse and William Heisler who are both smiling.
Back row left to right:
Margaret Olsen
Anne Howard
Leonard Dodge
George Auzene
Justin Kelly
Director of the Teacher Training, William Heisler
Perkins Director and lecturer, Dr. Edward J. Waterhouse
Ram Kanwar — India
Philip Po Ba — Burma
Betty Gaukroger — England
Beverly Lemons
Madeleine Jamaer — Belgium
Front row left to right:
Lillian Crowell
Marcia Damon
Mrs. Ann Sampson
Barbara Pine
Martha Ford
Elizabeth Bonnar
Mrs. Sulochana Padbidri — India
Barbara Cressy
Carolyn Center
Kathleen Lonergan
Historical Note: In 1953, the Teacher Training Program, as it became known, moved from Harvard to Boston University where it stayed until 1966.
Note on Verso: 1961-1962
Full Text: (from album label)
Front Row
Lillian Crowell
Marcia Damon
Mrs. Ann Sampson
Barbara Pine
Martha Ford
Elizabeth Bonnar
Mrs. Sulochana Padbidri — India
Barbara Cressy
Carolyn Center
Kathleen Lonergan
Back Row
Margaret Olsen
Anne Howard
Leonard Dodge
George Auzene
Justin Kelly
Mr. Heisler
Dr. Waterhouse
Ram Kanwar — India
Philip Po Ba — Burma
Betty Gaukroger — England
Beverly Lemons
Madeleine Jamaer — Belgium
Creator:
Ralph H. Hutchins. Jr. Co. Photographers
237 Belmont Street
Belmont, Mass.
Date: circa 1961-1962
Format: photograph
Provenance: Part of AG49 box 2 untitled photograph album.
Digital Identifier: ag49_02_0044
Rights: Perkins Archives, Perkins School for the Blind, Watertown, MA
We recently welcomed the first cohort of trainee teachers on our new Affiliate Training and Assessment Programme. They undertook their first week of training in the studios at the Royal Opera House.
©2022 The Royal Ballet School. Photographed by Rachel Cherry.
A diretoria executiva da Ambev recebeu, em 03/12/10, os selecionados no Programa de Trainee 2011.
Os 22 jovens foram recebidos pelo presidente João Castro Neves, os vice-presidentes Ricardo Tadeu (Vendas); Milton Seligman (Relações Corporativas); Ricardo Manuel Moreira (Refrigerantes e Hila-ex); Rodrigo Figueiredo de Souza (Logística), Renato Nahas (TI e Serviços Compartilhados) e Márcio Fróes (Industrial e Gente e Gestão) e os diretores Sandro Bassili e Alexandre Médicis.
Fotos: Fernando Cavalcanti
A diretoria executiva da Ambev recebeu, em 03/12/10, os selecionados no Programa de Trainee 2011.
Os 22 jovens foram recebidos pelo presidente João Castro Neves, os vice-presidentes Ricardo Tadeu (Vendas); Milton Seligman (Relações Corporativas); Ricardo Manuel Moreira (Refrigerantes e Hila-ex); Rodrigo Figueiredo de Souza (Logística), Renato Nahas (TI e Serviços Compartilhados) e Márcio Fróes (Industrial e Gente e Gestão) e os diretores Sandro Bassili e Alexandre Médicis.
Fotos: Fernando Cavalcanti
Given that jet fighters might be tricky to fly for pilots used to flying propeller aircraft, let alone new trainee pilots, Lockheed proposed in 1945 that a two-seat conversion trainer be built for the P-80 Shooting Star. The US Army Air Force rejected the idea on cost grounds, citing that the T-6 Texan already in service would be sufficient enough. After a series of fatal crashes of the P-80, the USAAF revisited Lockheed’s proposal, which included extending the P-80’s fuselage by three feet, extending the canopy backwards, and adding a second cockpit with full flight controls. This aircraft, designated first TP-80C on its maiden flight in March 1948, then TF-80C, then finally T-33A, would go on to be far more successful than the fighter it was based on.
The T-33 was designed to be simple, robust, and easy to fly for trainee pilots, though it was intended at first to be only used for propeller-qualified pilots to transition into jets. As propeller aircraft were mostly phased out of the independent US Air Force’s inventory, the service made the decision to go to an “all-jet” training syllabus, and as a result pilots began flying T-33s in flight school.
The “T-Bird,” as it became known, could still be unforgiving in certain circumstances, and was less forgiving as the T-37 Tweet or the T-38 Talon that would eventually replace it. It also was an aircraft for practical jokers: the in-and-outs of the T-33 was something only experienced pilots knew well, and trainees could be subjected to all kinds of tricks by the instructor pilot. The T-33 was, however, eminently reliable. Even after it was withdrawn from training units in the mid-1950s, it soldiered on as a “hack” aircraft for units, a familiarization aircraft, advanced trainer, and aggressor aircraft, especially in Air Defense Command and Air National Guard units.
Well into the 1980s, T-33s could be found in frontline USAF units, and it was said that, when the last F-16 was retired, the pilot would hitch a ride home in a T-Bird. While this did not prove true, it was not off by much—the last USAF T-33s did not leave the inventory until around 1988. The US Navy also used T-33s, including both standard Shooting Stars and the heavily modified TV-1 Seastar, which had a larger engine, reworked tail, and strengthened fuselage for carrier operations. While the Seastar was replaced in the 1960s by the T-2 Buckeye, standard T-33s remained as test and chase aircraft for the Navy’s test squadrons into the 1990s.
Because of its robustness and cheap flyaway price, the T-33 was also popular with foreign air forces: no less than 41 nations operated T-33s at one time or another, and it was license-built in Japan by Kawasaki and in Canada as the CT-133 Silver Star, which differed from US-built aircraft only in using a Rolls-Royce Nene engine. While it was usually used in the trainer role, many were modified for a variety of roles, including armed AT-33s and reconnaissance RT-33s (some of which were also used by the USAF). AT-33s, which were basically two-seat F-80s, were used in several conflicts worldwide, mainly in South America; Bolivia still uses its AT-33s as frontline counterinsurgency aircraft. While Bolivia remains the only air force to still operate T-33s on a regular basis, many of these nations did not retire their Shooting Stars until the late 1990s—Canada did not retire its last CT-133s until 2008, and Boeing Aircraft has two T-33As on charge as chase aircraft. 6557 T-33s were built overall, and today over 80 and possibly as many as a hundred survive, with many still flyable.
58-2106, shown here, was a T-33A assigned to the 318th Fighter-Interceptor Squadron at McChord AFB, Washington. As an active-duty Air Defense Squadron, the 318th had a relatively large number of T-33s assigned to it, with nine on strength. These aircraft were used for familiarization training, general duty "hack" aircraft, and simulating enemy aircraft penetrating American airspace. 58-2106 flew a very unusual mission on 18 May 1980: while on a flight to Oregon to drop off a pilot, the two pilots witnessed Mount St. Helens erupt in front of them. She sits resplendent in her 318th FIS colors at the McChord AFB airpark today.
Our second cohort of Affiliate Trainee Teachers joined us at the School for a week on intensive training.
©2022 The Royal Ballet School. Photographed by Rachel Cherry.
Description: An indoor group portrait of teacher trainees in the class of 1956-1957. Seven female and three male trainees stand and sit in two rows. Perkins Director Edward J. Waterhouse stands in the middle of the back row. Head of the Deafblind Department Daniel J. Burns stands second from the right in the back row.
Back row left to right:
unidentified man
John D. McGann
Doris M. Richardson
Perkins Director, and Lecturer, Dr. Edward J. Waterhouse
Ruth M. Kesselman
Daniel J. Burns, Head of the Deafblind Department
unidentified man
Front row left to right:
Peggy Parcell
Aileen B. Lee
unidentified woman
unidentified woman
unidentified woman
Historical Note: The first graduate-level teacher training course designed to prepare instructors of students with deafblindness commenced in Perkins in September of 1956 in collaboration with Boston University.
Note on Verso:
Richardon Robbus
MAR 3 ‘58
Creator: Richardon Robbus
Date: circa 1956-1957
Format: photograph
Digital Identifier: ag49_05_0004
Rights: Perkins Archives, Perkins School for the Blind, Watertown, MA
A class of garment trainees funded by USAID learns to sew at the INDEPCO training center.
Photo by Ben Edwards/USAID
May 13, 2011, Port-au-Prince, Haiti
A diretoria executiva da Ambev recebeu, em 03/12/10, os selecionados no Programa de Trainee 2011.
Os 22 jovens foram recebidos pelo presidente João Castro Neves, os vice-presidentes Ricardo Tadeu (Vendas); Milton Seligman (Relações Corporativas); Ricardo Manuel Moreira (Refrigerantes e Hila-ex); Rodrigo Figueiredo de Souza (Logística), Renato Nahas (TI e Serviços Compartilhados) e Márcio Fróes (Industrial e Gente e Gestão) e os diretores Sandro Bassili e Alexandre Médicis.
Fotos: Fernando Cavalcanti
Trainee Joshua Vander-Heyden (left) reads his chain of command study guide as trainee Devin Velez looks for what is ahead before their flight's first finance appointment. In the first week of training, trainees receive a finance briefing, military haircuts and their first sets of uniforms. (U.S. Air Force photo/Staff Sgt. Vernon Young Jr.)
Rafael Mariano Grossi, IAEA Director General met with Safeguards Trainees at the Agency headquarters in Vienna, Austria. 15 November 2022.
Photo Credit: Dean Calma / IAEA
Safeguards 2022 Trainees:
ALGERIA - Mr Lahcene BOUDRAA
CAMEROON - Ms Boubakari MAIMOUNATOU
COSTA RICA - Mr Anthony ESQUIVEL CAMBRONERO
GUYANA - Ms Avanelle Nikita JACKSON
NIGERIA - Mr Michael Chukwudi ECHETA
PANAMA - Ms Evestania ESCOBAR DEL VALLE
TAJIKISTAN - Ms Shahnoza HUSEINOVA
TANZANIA - Ms VALENTINE Tunu KAIJAGE
YEMEN - Mr Basheer QAIRAH
IAEA Safeguards Training:
SH-SGCP-CTR - Ms Susan E. PICKETT
Programme Coordinator - Mr Haori YANG
TA - Ms Kseniya POJASEK
Trainees from Foxtrot Battery, 1-31 Field Artillery BN complete Treadwell Rappel tower. July 14th, 2023, Ft. Sill, OK (U.S. Army Photo by 2LT Ellington Ward)
Designer: Yin Taiyin
1956, March
Female ironsmelting trainee
Nü liantie shixisheng (女炼铁实习生)
Call nr.: PC-1956-s-003 (Private collection)
More? See: chineseposters.net
Graduating basic military training trainees stand in formation on the Levitow Training Support Facility drill pad during the BMT graduation ceremony at Keesler Air Force Base, Mississippi, Oct. 8, 2020. Nearly 60 trainees from the 37th Training Wing Detachment 5 completed the six-week BMT course. (U.S. Air Force photo by Kemberly Groue)
A diretoria executiva da Ambev recebeu, em 03/12/10, os selecionados no Programa de Trainee 2011.
Os 22 jovens foram recebidos pelo presidente João Castro Neves, os vice-presidentes Ricardo Tadeu (Vendas); Milton Seligman (Relações Corporativas); Ricardo Manuel Moreira (Refrigerantes e Hila-ex); Rodrigo Figueiredo de Souza (Logística), Renato Nahas (TI e Serviços Compartilhados) e Márcio Fróes (Industrial e Gente e Gestão) e os diretores Sandro Bassili e Alexandre Médicis.
Fotos: Fernando Cavalcanti
U.S. Air Force Tech. Sgt. Anthony Mendoza, 37th Training Wing Detachment 5 military training instructor, and graduating basic military training trainees stand at attention during the BMT graduation ceremony on the Levitow Training Support Facility drill pad at Keesler Air Force Base, Mississippi, Aug. 7, 2020. Nearly 60 trainees from the 37th Training Wing Detachment 5 completed the six-week BMT course. (U.S. Air Force photo by Kemberly Groue)
Rafael Mariano Grossi, IAEA Director General met with Safeguards Trainees at the Agency headquarters in Vienna, Austria. 15 November 2022.
Photo Credit: Dean Calma / IAEA
Safeguards 2022 Trainees:
ALGERIA - Mr Lahcene BOUDRAA
CAMEROON - Ms Boubakari MAIMOUNATOU
COSTA RICA - Mr Anthony ESQUIVEL CAMBRONERO
GUYANA - Ms Avanelle Nikita JACKSON
NIGERIA - Mr Michael Chukwudi ECHETA
PANAMA - Ms Evestania ESCOBAR DEL VALLE
TAJIKISTAN - Ms Shahnoza HUSEINOVA
TANZANIA - Ms VALENTINE Tunu KAIJAGE
YEMEN - Mr Basheer QAIRAH
IAEA Safeguards Training:
SH-SGCP-CTR - Ms Susan E. PICKETT
Programme Coordinator - Mr Haori YANG
TA - Ms Kseniya POJASEK
A diretoria executiva da Ambev recebeu, em 03/12/10, os selecionados no Programa de Trainee 2011.
Os 22 jovens foram recebidos pelo presidente João Castro Neves, os vice-presidentes Ricardo Tadeu (Vendas); Milton Seligman (Relações Corporativas); Ricardo Manuel Moreira (Refrigerantes e Hila-ex); Rodrigo Figueiredo de Souza (Logística), Renato Nahas (TI e Serviços Compartilhados) e Márcio Fróes (Industrial e Gente e Gestão) e os diretores Sandro Bassili e Alexandre Médicis.
Fotos: Fernando Cavalcanti
Participants in CIMMYT's 2007 Wheat Improvement Course, along with CIMMYT staff, examining wheat plants in the field at the center's CENEB experiment station near Ciudad Obregón, Sonora, northern Mexico.
Photo credit: CIMMYT.
A rather mucky GNW LUT liveried 6223 NK58DVY is captured up Breighhtmet full of trainees ....
P1370855
We recently welcomed the first cohort of trainee teachers on our new Affiliate Training and Assessment Programme. They undertook their first week of training in the studios at the Royal Opera House.
©2022 The Royal Ballet School. Photographed by Rachel Cherry.
U.S. Air Force Tech. Sgt. Cody Lucas, 37th Training Wing Detachment 5 military training instructor, and graduating basic military training trainees stand in formation on the Levitow Training Support Facility drill pad during the BMT graduation ceremony at Keesler Air Force Base, Mississippi, Oct. 8, 2020. Nearly 60 trainees from the 37th TRW Detachment 5 completed the six-week BMT course. (U.S. Air Force photo by Kemberly Groue)