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Wednesday, 1 April 2015: Lokpa (2240 m) to Chumling (2385 m)

 

Only a half day today, but still an early start. A walk along rhododendron-lined path, dropping down to a tea house by the bridge across the Sardi Khola (a long bridge, a deep gorge and the river a long, long way below = wobbly legs for me!), before zig zagging back up high again, shaded by pine forest, and to the village of Chumling.

 

A short way from the gompa and chorten - in true Tsum now, totally Tibetan - we set up camp by the stone-built weaving sheds where some of the village ladies were trimming their newly woven aprons. Green fields of barley, and a lovely welcome-with-a-flower from two small children.

 

As word spread of our arrival, villagers from far and wide arrived to ask for an LED solar light for their home. Leaving Hazel, Anthony and the trek crew to relax for the afternoon, Val, Namgyal and I headed off with a young guy from lower Tsum as our guide to distribute lights to the families in Tharung - a handful of farmhouses set amidst barley fields clinging to the steep mountain slopes of the river valley “just around the corner”. A lot of up and down! A fantastic afternoon - very special welcomes, with invitations to take some Tibetan butter tea and very heartfelt thank yous.

 

In bed by 8pm - not unusual on trek!

 

Read more about my Tsum Valley trek with Val Pitkethly.

 

DSC08019

Widely distributed from Rajasthan to Bangal; from Punjab to whole South India. Juveniles 14-16”, adults from 8-12ft; maximum can grow upto 25ft(rarely grow more than 17ft).

Rev. Morris Sorenson and students at Tokyo Student Center, 1962. Distributing literature at enterance to University inviting students to Lutheran Center.

 

TALC 16/9/4 Japan Mission photos, b2 f10 Student Center in Tokyo (Hongo Center and Hayashi-cho Center).

ELCA Archives image.

www.elca.org/archives

New Jersey State Troopers distributed approximately 560 coats to students of the Elizabeth Public Schools, during their 7th Annual Coat Drive on January 18th and 19th.

The donations, collections and distribution of coats to our student's were made possible through the tremendous assistance and collaboration with: Elizabeth Public Schools team members, Wakefern, Elizabeth Police and Fire Department, Hispanic Law Enforcement Association of Union County (HLEAUC), New Jersey Latin-American Trooper's Society (NJLATS), At Heart's Length, Pepsi, Cummins, Target of Linden and Mario's Pizzeria of Perth Amboy, along with community friends and families. Retail companies that assisted with the coat drive included: Target located at Aviation Plaza in Linden, Macy's and Sears of Woodbridge Center Mall located in Woodbridge and BJ's located in Edison.

The annual community outreach event is reflective of the efforts Troopers make throughout the year, to have a significant and memorable impact on the communities they serve.

 

Once again, the heartfelt generosity of the New Jersey State Troopers and their partners, will help ensure Elizabeth Public Schools students stay warm during this especially cold winter season.

Technical data Nikon D90 Handheld Tamron AF 18-270 155mm Manual mode and focus. Exposure 1/200 sec f32 ISO 160 Intentional Underexposure - 4EV. Selective Color Filter overlay.

  

© Lawrence Goldman 2012, All Rights Reserved

This work may not be copied, reproduced, republished, edited, downloaded, displayed, modified, transmitted, licensed, transferred, sold, distributed or uploaded in any way without my prior written permission.

distributed by Hank's Blue Print & Supply, 6002 S. Pulaski, Chicago; found in abandoned trade school geting demolished

Piping headset audio from Vonage (floor MTA) thru power line (audio) networking (top of PC) then into my whole house audio system so I can hear Barcamp in every room at home. Thanks for setting up the bridge Ross!

 

www.techtalkback.com/2005/08/distributed-audio-over-power...

 

Rohi Aman Mela, Rahim Yar Khan, Punjab Province, Pakistan Feb23 - 2014

 

The heirs of Khawja Ghulam Farid organized a ROHI MELA in Feroza, Tehsil Khanpur of District Rahim Yar Khan from 22nd February to 24th February, 2014. Various civil society’s organizations, networks, intellectuals and activists from across Pakistan, particularly from Sindh, Balochistan, KPK and Punjab participated in this wonderful event.

 

UNDP GEF SGP headed by Masood Lohar, Country Coordinator organized the:

1) Awareness Session on use of Solar Energy

• SUFI Conference was also hold in the event, Mr. Nabeel Javed (Deputy Commissioner Rahim Yar Khan) and Mr. Masood Lohar (National Coordinator-UNDP) were the chief guest of the conference, SHAHBAZ Solar Lantern with Cell Phone charging option were distributed among the participants of Horse and Camel riding competition.

• Mr. Shahid Siddique briefed about the charging and usage of SHAHBAZ SOLAR LANTERN.

 

2) Workshop on GEF-SGP Partners Network, SGP Phase 5

Proposal of building a network of like minded organizations, having participation of Private Organizations CEO/ Owners and technocrats.

Name of Mr. Pervaiz Lodhie was suggested for the member ship of Network.

 

GEF (Global Environment facility)

SGP (Small Grants Programme)

Photos Courtesy of PSP/FSU

© All rights reserved. May not be reproduced or distributed without express written permission. For more information, please contact atullo@troopersfund.org

 

Loved ones recall slain trooper

Buzz up! By Michael Hasch, TRIBUNE-REVIEW

Tuesday, December 13, 2005

 

Cpl. Joseph Pokorny was many things -- a fearless policeman, an avid hunter, a private person who would give a friend the shirt off his back -- but most of all, he was a devoted father.

"He cared for his kids more than anything in the world," said his brother, Frank Pokorny, wiping tears from his eyes Monday outside his family's home in Beaver County.

 

Pokorny, 45, of Moon, a 22-year state police veteran, was shot and killed while making a traffic stop early yesterday near the Rosslyn Farms on-ramp to the Parkway West in Carnegie.

 

"He was a dedicated trooper and devoted father to his two children," said Robinson District Judge Carla Swearingen, one of the small but trusted circle of people Pokorny called friends.

 

Pokorny opted to work a steady midnight shift so he could be home during the day with his son, Joseph, 17, known as Jake, and daughter, Alexandre, 15, known as Ali.

 

"If he gave you his word, he stood by it. His biggest priority was his children. Everybody that knew him liked him," said Swearingen.

 

Pokorny was nearly 6 feet tall and 200 pounds, but he was small in childhood and learned at an early age how to defend himself from larger bullies, Frank Pokorny said.

 

"He was extremely fearless. He didn't take anything from anybody. He was a very hard-nosed person," his brother said.

 

Joseph Pokorny received a letter of commendation for bravery after an incident on July 8 when state police began chasing a man suspected of drunken driving and pulling a gun on a trooper.

 

When troopers tried to end the high-speed chase by putting spike strips on the Beaver Valley Expressway, the motorist turned around and began driving the wrong way.

 

When Pokorny saw the motorist trying to ram the side of a police car, he steered his cruiser into the path of the speeding car, hitting it head-on in a fiery collision.

 

"He saved one of our guys by taking on the other guy head-on," said state police Cpl. Kenneth Yuhas, one of several troopers offering condolences and support yesterday to Pokorny's parents, Florence and Joseph R. Pokorny, in Center Township.

 

"He actually put his life on the line by ramming the vehicle and stopping (it)," said Col. Jeffrey Miller, the head of the state police. "He was a very aggressive and conscientious corporal, always out there backing up the troops."

 

Pokorny, who joined the state police in 1983 after graduation from Indiana University in Bloomington, Ind., spent much of his career working dangerous undercover narcotics and vice details, his brother said.

 

In 1990, he joined the state police Tactical Narcotics Team based in Greensburg, Westmoreland County.

 

"He would never tell me stories about it except that it was scary and it was ugly," Frank Pokorny said. "(Other troopers) tell me he was always the first one through the front door with the battering ram."

 

Tom Alexander, who was Pokorny's football coach at Center Area High School, remembers "Joey" as a student who gave his all on the football field and in the classroom.

 

"Joey was one of those kids who played hard. He chose a rough career. He was a good student," Alexander said.

 

Pokorny's smile is what impressed state police Cpl. David Bova. "The thing I'll miss the most is his laugh and his big smile," Bova said.

 

"He was a great kid, a great adult who was fun-loving in high school but took his job seriously," said Anthony Mendicino, principal of Center Area High School, where Pokorny graduated in 1978.

 

Frank Pokorny said his brother did not decide to pursue a career in law enforcement until his last semester in school.

 

Following his promotion to corporal in September 2000, Joseph Pokorny served at various stations --including Belle Vernon, Fayette County -- until January 2003 when he became the vice supervisor for Troop B headquarters in Washington County.

 

Pokorny, who also is survived by a sister, Laura Hill, of Center, became a patrol supervisor in Moon in July 2004, but refused to be tied to a desk reading reports.

 

"He was, like, caffeinated. He was high-speed. He would go out and get the job done. He was not a slug," said Trooper Robin Mungo, a state police spokeswoman.

 

"He always wanted to be out on the road with the guys," Yuhas said.

 

But Frank Pokorny said his brother was "a very private" man.

 

"He certainly was not a mixer. He had a very small circle of friends. He was very guarded until you earned his trust and respect. Then he'd give you the shirt off his back," Frank Pokorny said.

 

"He was like a brother to me," said Ronald Evans, who often went hunting with the Pokorny brothers. "He was a great guy, the best. You knew you could count on him."

 

Crystal Hoffman, who lives near Joseph Pokorny's home in the Sharon Hill Manor neighborhood of Moon, said she regularly returned Pokorny's golden retriever when it broke free of its tether and ended up at her home.

 

"I didn't know Joe well, but he seemed to have a very a good sense of humor. He seemed like the kind of guy who really enjoyed life," Hoffman said.

 

The Pokorny brothers were avid hunters who made a number of trips together to hunt elk out West.

 

They last saw each other last week when Joseph Pokorny visited his brother's home in Hanover, Beaver County.

 

"He went out in the back woods to go hunting. He was an incredible woodsman. When he came back, he said he saw a buck but didn't shoot it. He smiled and said, 'I didn't want to.'"

 

Frank Pokorny, known as "Fearless Frank" for his special teams play for the Steelers in 1985 and '86, made no effort to hide his pain and tears.

 

"He was my older brother. I loved and miss everything about him."

Senator Paul Doyle helps distribute food to the hungry at Elm Ridge Park in Rocky Hill. Senator Doyle has been teaming-up this summer with Foodshare, the Connecticut Food Bank and other anti-hunger organizations to help distribute fresh produce and other foodstuffs to the needy throughout his 9th Senate District towns of Cromwell, Middletown, Newington, Rocky Hill and Wethersfield. (August 3, 2012)

A landscape photo shows Hafun beach, Somalia on 19 February 2021. FAO in Somalia continues its anti-piracy initiatives to provide alternatives for youth living in coastal communities of Puntland, Galmudug and Mogadishu.

 

Photo credits must be given to: ©FAO/Arete/Isak Amin

 

The part of South Eastern Distributer is sunken below South Dowling Street. Taken from the overbridge, towards Cleveland Street.

Photos Courtesy of PSP/FSU

© All rights reserved. May not be reproduced or distributed without express written permission. For more information, please contact atullo@troopersfund.org

 

Loved ones recall slain trooper

Buzz up! By Michael Hasch, TRIBUNE-REVIEW

Tuesday, December 13, 2005

 

Cpl. Joseph Pokorny was many things -- a fearless policeman, an avid hunter, a private person who would give a friend the shirt off his back -- but most of all, he was a devoted father.

"He cared for his kids more than anything in the world," said his brother, Frank Pokorny, wiping tears from his eyes Monday outside his family's home in Beaver County.

 

Pokorny, 45, of Moon, a 22-year state police veteran, was shot and killed while making a traffic stop early yesterday near the Rosslyn Farms on-ramp to the Parkway West in Carnegie.

 

"He was a dedicated trooper and devoted father to his two children," said Robinson District Judge Carla Swearingen, one of the small but trusted circle of people Pokorny called friends.

 

Pokorny opted to work a steady midnight shift so he could be home during the day with his son, Joseph, 17, known as Jake, and daughter, Alexandre, 15, known as Ali.

 

"If he gave you his word, he stood by it. His biggest priority was his children. Everybody that knew him liked him," said Swearingen.

 

Pokorny was nearly 6 feet tall and 200 pounds, but he was small in childhood and learned at an early age how to defend himself from larger bullies, Frank Pokorny said.

 

"He was extremely fearless. He didn't take anything from anybody. He was a very hard-nosed person," his brother said.

 

Joseph Pokorny received a letter of commendation for bravery after an incident on July 8 when state police began chasing a man suspected of drunken driving and pulling a gun on a trooper.

 

When troopers tried to end the high-speed chase by putting spike strips on the Beaver Valley Expressway, the motorist turned around and began driving the wrong way.

 

When Pokorny saw the motorist trying to ram the side of a police car, he steered his cruiser into the path of the speeding car, hitting it head-on in a fiery collision.

 

"He saved one of our guys by taking on the other guy head-on," said state police Cpl. Kenneth Yuhas, one of several troopers offering condolences and support yesterday to Pokorny's parents, Florence and Joseph R. Pokorny, in Center Township.

 

"He actually put his life on the line by ramming the vehicle and stopping (it)," said Col. Jeffrey Miller, the head of the state police. "He was a very aggressive and conscientious corporal, always out there backing up the troops."

 

Pokorny, who joined the state police in 1983 after graduation from Indiana University in Bloomington, Ind., spent much of his career working dangerous undercover narcotics and vice details, his brother said.

 

In 1990, he joined the state police Tactical Narcotics Team based in Greensburg, Westmoreland County.

 

"He would never tell me stories about it except that it was scary and it was ugly," Frank Pokorny said. "(Other troopers) tell me he was always the first one through the front door with the battering ram."

 

Tom Alexander, who was Pokorny's football coach at Center Area High School, remembers "Joey" as a student who gave his all on the football field and in the classroom.

 

"Joey was one of those kids who played hard. He chose a rough career. He was a good student," Alexander said.

 

Pokorny's smile is what impressed state police Cpl. David Bova. "The thing I'll miss the most is his laugh and his big smile," Bova said.

 

"He was a great kid, a great adult who was fun-loving in high school but took his job seriously," said Anthony Mendicino, principal of Center Area High School, where Pokorny graduated in 1978.

 

Frank Pokorny said his brother did not decide to pursue a career in law enforcement until his last semester in school.

 

Following his promotion to corporal in September 2000, Joseph Pokorny served at various stations --including Belle Vernon, Fayette County -- until January 2003 when he became the vice supervisor for Troop B headquarters in Washington County.

 

Pokorny, who also is survived by a sister, Laura Hill, of Center, became a patrol supervisor in Moon in July 2004, but refused to be tied to a desk reading reports.

 

"He was, like, caffeinated. He was high-speed. He would go out and get the job done. He was not a slug," said Trooper Robin Mungo, a state police spokeswoman.

 

"He always wanted to be out on the road with the guys," Yuhas said.

 

But Frank Pokorny said his brother was "a very private" man.

 

"He certainly was not a mixer. He had a very small circle of friends. He was very guarded until you earned his trust and respect. Then he'd give you the shirt off his back," Frank Pokorny said.

 

"He was like a brother to me," said Ronald Evans, who often went hunting with the Pokorny brothers. "He was a great guy, the best. You knew you could count on him."

 

Crystal Hoffman, who lives near Joseph Pokorny's home in the Sharon Hill Manor neighborhood of Moon, said she regularly returned Pokorny's golden retriever when it broke free of its tether and ended up at her home.

 

"I didn't know Joe well, but he seemed to have a very a good sense of humor. He seemed like the kind of guy who really enjoyed life," Hoffman said.

 

The Pokorny brothers were avid hunters who made a number of trips together to hunt elk out West.

 

They last saw each other last week when Joseph Pokorny visited his brother's home in Hanover, Beaver County.

 

"He went out in the back woods to go hunting. He was an incredible woodsman. When he came back, he said he saw a buck but didn't shoot it. He smiled and said, 'I didn't want to.'"

 

Frank Pokorny, known as "Fearless Frank" for his special teams play for the Steelers in 1985 and '86, made no effort to hide his pain and tears.

 

"He was my older brother. I loved and miss everything about him."

ShelterBoxes being distributed to survivors who have lost their homes after a 9.0 Mw earthquake triggered a Tsunami in the town of Nagahama, Ofunato, Iwati Prefecture, Japan on Wednesday, 23nd March, 2011. (Picture By Mark Pearson)

 

Visitez www.shelterboxfrance.org

Cherry Blossom. Washington, DC. USA. Mar/2016

 

A cherry blossom is the flower of any of several trees of genus Prunus, particularly the Japanese cherry, Prunus serrulata, which is called sakura after the Japanese (桜 or 櫻; さくら).

Cherry blossom is speculated to be native to the Himalayas.[4] Currently it is widely distributed, especially in the temperate zone of theNorthern Hemisphere including Europe, West Siberia, India, China, Japan, Korea, Canada, and the United States. The cherry blossom is considered the national flower of Japan.

Japan gave 3,020 cherry blossom trees as a gift to the United States in 1912 to celebrate the nations' then-growing friendship, replacing an earlier gift of 2000 trees which had to be destroyed due to disease in 1910. These trees were planted in Sakura Park in Manhattan and line the shore of the Tidal Basin and the roadway in East Potomac Park in Washington, D.C. The first two original trees were planted by first ladyHelen Taft and Viscountess Chinda on the bank of the Tidal Basin. The gift was renewed with another 3,800 trees in 1965.In Washington, D.C. the cherry blossom trees continue to be a popular tourist attraction (and the subject of the annual National Cherry Blossom Festival) when they reach full bloom in early spring

 

Todos os anos o Festival Nacional das Cerejeiras celebra a floração das cerejeiras dadas à cidade de Washington, em 1912, pelo prefeito de Tóquio. O presente foi uma homenagem do prefeito à longa história de amizade entre Estados Unidos e Japão. As cerejeiras floridas marcam a chegada da primavera na cidade e proporcionam uma das vistas mais apreciadas da região. Um dos lugares mais bonitos para observação é ao redor do Tidal Basin, espelho d’água no centro de Washington próximo ao Washington Monument, ao Lincoln Memorial, ao Jefferson Memorial e ao Franklin Delano Roosevelt Memorial. O pico da florada é definido como o dia em que 70% das flores do Tidal Basin estão abertas

 

Houve a coordenação de muitas pessoas para assegurar a chegada das cerejeiras. Um primeiro lote de 2.000 árvores chegou doente em 1910, mas isso não impediu as partes envolvidas de envidarem todos os esforços para a concretização do intento. Entre os governos dos dois países, com as coordenações do Dr. Jokichi Takamine, um químico famoso mundialmente e fundador da Sankyo Co., Ltd. (hoje conhecida como Daiichi Sankyo), Dr. David Fairchild, do Departamento de Agricultura dos Estados Unidos, de Eliza Scidmore, primeiro membro da diretoria feminina da National Geographic Society e da primeira-dama Helen Herron Taft, mais de 3.000 árvores chegaram a Washington, D.C. em 1912. Em uma cerimônia simples, em 27 de março de 1912, a primeira-dama Helen Herron Taft e a Viscondessa Chinda, esposa do embaixador do Japão, plantaram as duas primeiras árvores do Japão na margem norte do Tidal Basin em West Potomac Park. Ao longo dos anos, os presentes foram trocados entre os dois países. Em 1915, o Governo dos Estados Unidos retribuiu com um presente de árvores chamadas “dogwood” (que também tem belas florações) para o povo do Japão. (tradução:nationalcherryblossom)

  

Cherry Blossom. Washington, DC. USA. Mar/2016

 

A cherry blossom is the flower of any of several trees of genus Prunus, particularly the Japanese cherry, Prunus serrulata, which is called sakura after the Japanese (桜 or 櫻; さくら).

Cherry blossom is speculated to be native to the Himalayas.[4] Currently it is widely distributed, especially in the temperate zone of theNorthern Hemisphere including Europe, West Siberia, India, China, Japan, Korea, Canada, and the United States. The cherry blossom is considered the national flower of Japan.

Japan gave 3,020 cherry blossom trees as a gift to the United States in 1912 to celebrate the nations' then-growing friendship, replacing an earlier gift of 2000 trees which had to be destroyed due to disease in 1910. These trees were planted in Sakura Park in Manhattan and line the shore of the Tidal Basin and the roadway in East Potomac Park in Washington, D.C. The first two original trees were planted by first ladyHelen Taft and Viscountess Chinda on the bank of the Tidal Basin. The gift was renewed with another 3,800 trees in 1965.In Washington, D.C. the cherry blossom trees continue to be a popular tourist attraction (and the subject of the annual National Cherry Blossom Festival) when they reach full bloom in early spring

 

Todos os anos o Festival Nacional das Cerejeiras celebra a floração das cerejeiras dadas à cidade de Washington, em 1912, pelo prefeito de Tóquio. O presente foi uma homenagem do prefeito à longa história de amizade entre Estados Unidos e Japão. As cerejeiras floridas marcam a chegada da primavera na cidade e proporcionam uma das vistas mais apreciadas da região. Um dos lugares mais bonitos para observação é ao redor do Tidal Basin, espelho d’água no centro de Washington próximo ao Washington Monument, ao Lincoln Memorial, ao Jefferson Memorial e ao Franklin Delano Roosevelt Memorial. O pico da florada é definido como o dia em que 70% das flores do Tidal Basin estão abertas

 

Houve a coordenação de muitas pessoas para assegurar a chegada das cerejeiras. Um primeiro lote de 2.000 árvores chegou doente em 1910, mas isso não impediu as partes envolvidas de envidarem todos os esforços para a concretização do intento. Entre os governos dos dois países, com as coordenações do Dr. Jokichi Takamine, um químico famoso mundialmente e fundador da Sankyo Co., Ltd. (hoje conhecida como Daiichi Sankyo), Dr. David Fairchild, do Departamento de Agricultura dos Estados Unidos, de Eliza Scidmore, primeiro membro da diretoria feminina da National Geographic Society e da primeira-dama Helen Herron Taft, mais de 3.000 árvores chegaram a Washington, D.C. em 1912. Em uma cerimônia simples, em 27 de março de 1912, a primeira-dama Helen Herron Taft e a Viscondessa Chinda, esposa do embaixador do Japão, plantaram as duas primeiras árvores do Japão na margem norte do Tidal Basin em West Potomac Park. Ao longo dos anos, os presentes foram trocados entre os dois países. Em 1915, o Governo dos Estados Unidos retribuiu com um presente de árvores chamadas “dogwood” (que também tem belas florações) para o povo do Japão. (tradução:nationalcherryblossom)

A cooler box container holds fish in Hafun, Somalia on 20 February 2021. FAO supplied the community of Hafun with supplies for fishing. FAO in Somalia continues its anti-piracy initiatives to provide alternatives for youth living in the coastal communities of Puntland, Galmudug and Mogadishu.

 

Photo credits must be given to: ©FAO/Arete/Isak Amin

 

IOM staff distributes water labeled with cholera prevention messages to Zimbabwean returnees from Botswana. The numbers of cholera cases continue to rise as the disease spreads further into the rural heartland of the country.

Volunteers David Boateng (left) and Emmanuel Obour distributing bednets in Apenimadi, Bonsaaso Millennium Village. Trained by Millennium Village Project staff, volunteers across the cluster work with communities to hang bednets at all sleeping sites and educate local people about the dangers of malaria. Since 2006, over 30,000 long-lasting insecticide-treated bednets have been distributed, covering all households in the cluster.

 

For more information on Millennium Promise, please visit www.millenniumpromise.org, or follow us on Facebook (www.facebook.com/millenniumpromise) or Twitter (@endofpoverty).

Multan, 11-10-2013: Al-Khidmat Foundation Pakistan distributed 15 sewing machines among deserving and talented women. The machines were given to them as a part of dowry gifts. A special distribution ceremony was held in that regard. President Chambers of Commerce Multan, Khawaja Muhammad Usman was the chief guest on the occasion. President Al-Khidmat Foundation Punjab, Dr. Safdar Iqbal Hashmi was also present. He addressed the audience and distributed the sewing machines among deserving women.

↓↓↓

al-khidmatfoundation.org/index.php?p=news_detail&id=650

PLEASE DISTRIBUTE THIS FLIER AND CALL BART TO COMPLAIN!

(Click on all sizes, then go to 'original' for a high resolution flier to print)

 

Read the article here.. endlesscanvas.com/?p=1357

 

ALAMEDA COUNTY REPRESENTATIVE

June Garrett, jgarret@bart.gov 510-464-6257

 

DEPARTMENT MANAGERS

Kerry Hamill, Department Manager of Government and Community Relations, khamill@bart.gov 510-464-6153

 

Roddrick Lee, Division Manager of Local Government and Community Relations, rlee@bart.gov 510-464-6235

 

ADMINISTRATION

Lisa Moland, Goverment and Community Relations Specialist, lmoland@bart.gov 510-464-7227

  

Mailing Address:

Bay Area Rapid Transit District

Government and Community Relations Department

300 Lakeside Drive, 18th Floor

Oakland, CA 94612

 

Fax Number: 510-464-6146

Mayor of Hafun, Mahmoud Yousuf Garow, sits in an interview in Hafun, Somalia on 19 February 2021. FAO in Somalia continues its anti-piracy initiatives to provide alternatives for youth living in the coastal communities of Puntland, Galmudug and Mogadishu.

 

QUOTE: I’m the Mayor of Hafun. My name is Mahmoud Yousuf Garow. The cyclone has affected the sea and majority of the people because most are fishermen. 121 boats were lost. We shared about it on media. The United Nations, Puntland Government and other NGOs have helped. We are preparing to get back to work and restore everything.

 

Photo credits must be given to: ©FAO/Arete/Isak Amin

 

IMAGE DISTRIBUTED FOR BREITLING - Breitling Wingwalker Freya Paterson, from Liverpool, UK, flies above Kuwait City's iconic Water Towers with pilots David Barrell and Martyn Carrington on Thursday, March 6, 2014. The team loop and roll up to 160 mph enduring G-forces of 4-5g. Crowds are expected to line the Kuwaiti coastline to catch a glimpse of the Wingwalking team on Saturday, March 8, 2014, to mark the opening of the first dedicated boutique in the city for the prestigious watch brand. (Katsuhiko Tokunaga/Breitling via AP Images)

Distributed 117 bicycles to the school girls in village Bahmaniwala under Mai Bhago Vidya Scheme today. As many as 7085 bicycles would be distributed to the girl students in Fazilka District alone in the coming days.

Earlier, conducted Sangat Darshan in 14 villages of the Jalalabad and disbursed grants worth Rs. 24 crore. The villages namely---Kahnewala, Chak Sohna Sandar, Bahmaniwala, Chak Dumal, Simriwala, Chak Kherewala (Jaimalwala), Chakk Pakkhi, Nukerian, Sahiwala, Chak Sarriyan, Sarriyan, Chakk Paliwala, Dhani Resham Singh and Meenewala received the grants for various developments like provisioning of proper water supply, construction of concrete streets and drainage system in the villages. Lets make Punjab a better place.

Rohi Aman Mela, Rahim Yar Khan, Punjab Province, Pakistan Feb23 - 2014

 

The heirs of Khawja Ghulam Farid organized a ROHI MELA in Feroza, Tehsil Khanpur of District Rahim Yar Khan from 22nd February to 24th February, 2014. Various civil society’s organizations, networks, intellectuals and activists from across Pakistan, particularly from Sindh, Balochistan, KPK and Punjab participated in this wonderful event.

 

UNDP GEF SGP headed by Masood Lohar, Country Coordinator organized the:

1) Awareness Session on use of Solar Energy

• SUFI Conference was also hold in the event, Mr. Nabeel Javed (Deputy Commissioner Rahim Yar Khan) and Mr. Masood Lohar (National Coordinator-UNDP) were the chief guest of the conference, SHAHBAZ Solar Lantern with Cell Phone charging option were distributed among the participants of Horse and Camel riding competition.

• Mr. Shahid Siddique briefed about the charging and usage of SHAHBAZ SOLAR LANTERN.

 

2) Workshop on GEF-SGP Partners Network, SGP Phase 5

Proposal of building a network of like minded organizations, having participation of Private Organizations CEO/ Owners and technocrats.

Name of Mr. Pervaiz Lodhie was suggested for the member ship of Network.

 

GEF (Global Environment facility)

SGP (Small Grants Programme)

When an engine, or a set of engines is placed on the end of a train, or in the middle, those units in rail parlance are refereed to as "DPU" power.

 

Here, BNSF #7700 and #7713 are acting as Distributed Power Units (DPUs) at the end of a manifest (mixed load) train heading down the hill towards Los Angeles.

 

BNSF Cajon Subdivision at M.P. 58.4 (Hill 582) San Bernardino County California.

 

(March 9, 2010)

  

See Distributed Power I: Remnants of a V8 Engine Distributor with Vacuum Advance.

  

See Distributed Power III: Distributed Power III - High Tension Wires.

9 May 2012 - The United Nations has distributed humanitarian aid to 175 internally displaced families in the northern province of Balkh who were forced to leave their home due to ongoing drought and insecurity. The families from Tandorak village in the Charkent district are currently living in the Nasaji area of Mazar-e Sharif.

 

“We left our homes due to insecurity and unemployment and now we do labour work,” said Mohammad Akbar.

“The Taliban started infiltrating our villages and government forces conducted counterinsurgency operations, night raids, planes, bombs made us leave the area,” he added.

 

Many families in Charkent migrated to the cities abandoning their homes and families when their crops failed due to a lack of rain-fed farming last year. Some have been living in Mazar-e Sharif for nearly five months.

 

The UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) together with its governmental counterpart – provincial department of repatriation and refuges, distributed yesterday aid donated by UNHCR, World Food Programme (WFP) and International Organization for Migration (IOM).

Each family package included blankets, plastic sheets, cooking supplies, gas cylinders, gas containers, soap, a metal bucket, beans, oil and salt.

 

“I am the only supporter of a family of seven members and I am thankful to the UN for this assistance,” said Amrullah, adding that he hoped for more aid. “I do labor work for 250 AFN (equivalent to USD 5 ) per day and it’s hard to manage supporting a seven-member family on that amount.”

 

UNHCR has assisted over 1000 IDP families with humanitarian aid since the beginning of this year in the north and northeastern provinces of Balkh, Jawzjan, Faryab and Kunduz and is planning to assist hundreds more vulnerable IDP families in coming weeks in the same region.

 

By UNAMA Mazar

 

Photo: UNAMA / Sayed Barez

I have to bite chunks out of the apples to feed the filly. Her mouth isn't big enough yet to handle even these small wild apples

Seen at the end of "Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street" (2007).

 

For Entertainment Purposes Only.

Nothing Belongs to Me As Usual.

No Copyright Infringement Is Intended.

WARNING: I do not accept rude comments, chain letters, or spam

Distributed audio using invisible speakers.

Hilda created and distributed this flier on Sunday 02/15/2009. It piggybacks on a planned candidates forum to encourage attendees to advocate for a promised improvement to Woodlawn Lake Park. It is a good example of individuals taking action to make change happen, in this case by lobbying governmental officials

Tallahassee Florida Attorney

Criminal Defense Lawyer

DUI / DWI Defense Law

 

Tallahassee attorney Tor J. Friedman is here for you when needing a criminal defense, expungement or DUI lawyer. Call 850-681-3540 Florida Attorney at Law. DUI, DWI, drugs, assault, battery, robbery, theft, juvenile, student arrests, charges and laws. 810 Thomasville Rd, Tallahassee, FL 32303.

 

At the Tallahassee Attorney Offices of Tor J. Friedman, we are here for you. When you are facing criminal, DUI, or misdemeanor charges, we want to help you right now. If you have been arrested for DUI, possession of marijuana, battery, criminal mischief, robbery, juvenile crimes, misdemeanors or needing a felony defense lawyer, we want to help you fight.

 

If you feel you need help sealing arrest records or getting them expunged, then Tallahassee Lawyer Tor J. Friedman Attorney at Law wants to help you fight. If you are facing DUI, dwi, drugs, criminal charges, discrimination, harassment, battery, mischief, robbery, juvenile crimes, misdemeanors and felonies, call (850) 681-3540 right now. Defense lawyers are available to you at all times. The weekend is just another day, and after 5 p.m. is just another time. Don't delay, contact a lawyer now, we are here to help and to fight for you.

 

Tallahassee Florida lawyer Tor J. Friedman understands that this can be a difficult and possibly a confusing time. Tor J. Friedman Attorney at Law knows that you have many legal criminal defense questions and that you want answers. The Tallahassee defense law offices of Tor J. Friedman intent is not focus on how we can get the most criminal, juvenile and student clients, but how we can get the most for all our clients.

 

Are you tired of feeling that you are just a number? Do you want a Florida defense attorney that cares about your current legal situation as well as your future? Then contact Tallahassee trial lawyer Tor J. Friedman, Criminal Defense Attorney at Law, today. Do not let a small possession of marijuana, intent to distribute coke, cocaine or other drug problems turn into a big ones. Do not let more time pass hoping criminal charges will just somehow turn out all right.

 

Call Tallahassee Florida Lawyer Tor J. Friedman, Attorney at Law now at (850) 681-3540. Tallahassee attorneys and defense lawyers are looking forward to hearing from you and helping with your DUI, DWI, expungement, marijuana possession, cocaine distribution, drug crimes, harassment, assault, battery, mischief, robbery, and other criminal, juvenile, student or misdemeanor charges, crimes, court cases and expungement.

 

The information you obtain here is not, nor is it intended to be, legal advice. Since every law case is unique, it is not possible for any attorney to guarantee the outcome of your case. You should consult an attorney for advice regarding your individual legal situation.

 

We invite you to contact the Tallahassee Law Offices of Tor J. Friedman and welcome your calls, letters and electronic mail. The information provided on this web site or contacting us does not create an attorney-client or lawyer-client relationship. Please do not send any confidential DUI, DWI, criminal, juvenile, misdemeanor, felony, or other privileged information to us until such time as an attorney-client or lawyer-client relationship has been established.

 

Phone: (850) 681-3540

 

810 Thomasville Road

Tallahassee, FL, 32303 US

 

Copyright © Law Offices of Tor J. Friedman, LLC. All rights reserved.

 

Tags:

tallahassee dui criminal defense attorney florida lawyer lawyers attorneys fl dwi arrests controlled substances adderall laws narcotics cannabis cultivation trafficking drugs marijuana possession weed intent to distribute coke selling cocaine pot distribution speed ecstasy mdma drug court sales tax mischief juvenile assault battery trial assaults batteries felony crimes theft burglary burglaries rape probation violations petty offenses larceny robbery acts robberies student arrest expungement sealing of records law sexual harassment misdemeanors

IMAGE DISTRIBUTED FOR UCLA ANDERSON - Noel Massie, president, UPS Southern California, and from left, Michael Stoll, Chair, Professor of Public Policy and Urban Planning, UCLA Luskin School of Public Affairs, Frederick Zimmerman, Chair, Professor, Dept. of Health Policy and Management, UCLA School of Public Health, Alicia Lara, Vice President of Community Investment, United Way, Leslie Aaronson, Foshay Learning Center Lead Teacher and Jan Perry, General Manager, Economic and Workforce Development Department, City of Los Angeles, focus on job preparedness at the UCLA Anderson Forecast Economic Outlook: Solutions for Our City at the JW Marriott Hotel at L.A. Live on Wednesday, April 2, 2014, in Los Angeles. (Photo by Matt Sayles/Invision for UCLA Anderson/AP Images)

Local distribution center, Minami Senba, Osaka.

#Zakat Is Distributed Among 8 Asnaf (Categories) Of People, Namely:

 

1) #Fakir

One who has neither material possessions nor means of livelihood.

2) #Miskin

One with insufficient means of livelihood to meet basic needs.

3) #Amil

One who is appointed to collect zakat.

4) #Muallaf

One who converts to Islam.

5) #Riqab

One who wants to free himself from bondage or the shackles of slavery. (In Singapore, zakat due to this category of recipients is spent on those who need help to pursue education or to improve their standard of living).

6) #Gharmin

One who is in debt (money borrowed to meet basic, halal #expenditure).

7) #Fisabillillah

One who fights for the cause of #Allah.

8) Ibnus #Sabil

One who is stranded in journey.

goo.gl/KIXJLH

New Jersey State Troopers distributed approximately 560 coats to students of the Elizabeth Public Schools, during their 7th Annual Coat Drive on January 18th and 19th.

The donations, collections and distribution of coats to our student's were made possible through the tremendous assistance and collaboration with: Elizabeth Public Schools team members, Wakefern, Elizabeth Police and Fire Department, Hispanic Law Enforcement Association of Union County (HLEAUC), New Jersey Latin-American Trooper's Society (NJLATS), At Heart's Length, Pepsi, Cummins, Target of Linden and Mario's Pizzeria of Perth Amboy, along with community friends and families. Retail companies that assisted with the coat drive included: Target located at Aviation Plaza in Linden, Macy's and Sears of Woodbridge Center Mall located in Woodbridge and BJ's located in Edison.

The annual community outreach event is reflective of the efforts Troopers make throughout the year, to have a significant and memorable impact on the communities they serve.

 

Once again, the heartfelt generosity of the New Jersey State Troopers and their partners, will help ensure Elizabeth Public Schools students stay warm during this especially cold winter season.

... the boy was jumping on trampolines.

Margaret Brugler, Director of CROP, distributes milk India.

 

"Miss Margaret Brugler, Director of CROP, distributing milk received as a gift from the people of the Churches of America to needy children in Delhi during a recent visit."

 

ELCA Archives photo.

The DMPS Board of Directors approved a policy for schools to keep a supply of Naloxone, commonly known as NARCAN. It is an opioid antagonist that is administered as a nasal spray and acts on opiate receptors in the brain, immediately countering the effects of an overdose. If any student, employee, family member, or visitor in the school appears to have overdosed on opioids, the medication would be administered by the nurse or another trained staff member. The supply of NARCAN was distributed to school nurses on Monday, October 31st.

 

The adoption of the policy qualifies Melissa Abbott, the DMPS health services supervisor, to access two prescriptions for each DMPS building through the Iowa Department of Health and Human Services, which provides the drug at no cost to schools.

 

Medical professionals say keeping a supply of Naloxone is similar to stocking an EpiPen for extreme allergic reactions, or an AED for heart failure. They are meant to be temporary measures. When there is a medical emergency, schools will still call 911 for an ambulance.

@荒川河川敷(Arakawa riverbed, Tokyo)

Rohi Aman Mela, Rahim Yar Khan, Punjab Province, Pakistan Feb23 - 2014

 

The heirs of Khawja Ghulam Farid organized a ROHI MELA in Feroza, Tehsil Khanpur of District Rahim Yar Khan from 22nd February to 24th February, 2014. Various civil society’s organizations, networks, intellectuals and activists from across Pakistan, particularly from Sindh, Balochistan, KPK and Punjab participated in this wonderful event.

 

UNDP GEF SGP headed by Masood Lohar, Country Coordinator organized the:

1) Awareness Session on use of Solar Energy

• SUFI Conference was also hold in the event, Mr. Nabeel Javed (Deputy Commissioner Rahim Yar Khan) and Mr. Masood Lohar (National Coordinator-UNDP) were the chief guest of the conference, SHAHBAZ Solar Lantern with Cell Phone charging option were distributed among the participants of Horse and Camel riding competition.

• Mr. Shahid Siddique briefed about the charging and usage of SHAHBAZ SOLAR LANTERN.

 

2) Workshop on GEF-SGP Partners Network, SGP Phase 5

Proposal of building a network of like minded organizations, having participation of Private Organizations CEO/ Owners and technocrats.

Name of Mr. Pervaiz Lodhie was suggested for the member ship of Network.

 

GEF (Global Environment facility)

SGP (Small Grants Programme)

SproutLoud’s marketing resource management platform (mrm) includes marketing processes that that streamline workflows, automate manual tasks, decrease marketing design and production cycles, and provide effective business intelligence for almost any industry. Our solutions are also designed to solve the full range of distributed marketing challenges that many different types of marketing channels face.

 

Jewelry -- Independent Retailers

Jewelry manufacturers face intense logistical challenges with coordinating local marketing efforts involving thousands of individually owned stores located across the country. See how using our mrm platform created local store interest in promoting a client’s brand and reduced production costs faced by both the jewelry store owner and the manufacturer.

 

Cruise -- Franchisor

Franchisors may have control over their corporate image in marketing, but engagement and participation is still in the hands of thee local franchisee. Read why Auto Enroll – programs that let franchisees sign up once to be included in regularly scheduled direct marketing – entice marketing novices and pros alike.

 

Optical -- Buying Groups

Buying groups aggregate the purchasing power of small businesses, but how do they know how to support your products and services when they aren’t aware of your channel marketing materials. Check out how our network awareness campaigns help notify and educate your distributors on your latest product launches and collateral.

 

Merchant Services -- Sales Forces

It’s paramount for companies employing field sales to ensure they have access to the most up to date marketing support materials and collateral, and more importantly, that they are using them. Understand how SproutLoud helped one company monitor downloads of their latest materials and tracked collateral spends and orders across their entire sales force.

 

Hospitality -- Corporate/Franchise Hybrid

It’s always critical for chain operators to provide consistent quality in their products and services, no matter what the industry or ownership structure. Find out on how one brand improved their user acceptance while simplifying material procurement processes and production to produce a win-win situation for corporate marketing and their local businesses.

 

Download Articles Here www.sproutloud.com/master/resources/case-studies

 

Co-Op Marketing, Marketing Resource Management, Distributed Marketing, Channel Marketing, Marketing Asset Management, Co-Op Funds Management - SproutLoud.com

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