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This is a photo of the food distribution centre that Human Appeal International setup in Somalia to help the people affected by the famine.
We distribute food parcels containing essential food items that are sourced locally to accommodate for custom and taste. Each parcel is designed to last a family for one month.
Please check the following link for more information about our appeal for East Africa - bit.ly/east-africa-appeal
Living wing structures (wing veins, scent pads/patches) have elevated emissivity to facilitate heat dissipation through thermal radiation.
DIL School Distribution Rawalpindi
Tuesday, April 01, 2014
Reward of Solar Powered LED lights for "the teaching students and learner parents/adults", on behalf of Lodhie Foundation's- Pehli Kiran Project
DIL School Bagga Sheikhan Campus Rawalpindi
Pervaiz Lodhie (Chief Guest)
Salma Sufi Sr. Regional Manager Programs (North)
Shahid Siddique (Plant Manager-Shaan Technologies)
Abdul Aziz (Manager Marketing-ShaanTech)
For building an educated society, one should not overlook the education level of parents, neighbors and adult members of the community because they are influential for the education of children. Considering the fact Lodhie Foundation was looking for a program which make the young students teach their parents, neighbors and adult community members. Young Students of DIL Schools taught their illiterate parents or adult community members in evening time. The students educated their parents/ adult community members to read, write and understand, now they can communicate and understand like an educated person and both parents and students feel pride. Lodhie Foundation appreciated such a unique initiative of DIL Foundation and gifted solar Powered LED Lights to the students who taught their parents and the community adults who learned from their juniors without feeling any shame.
IOM distributes household kits to survivors of Cyclone Nargis in Kyae Chan Chaung Pyar village, Mawlamyinegyun Township. © IOM
This is what happens when you don't pay attention to the warning !!!
Etoile, champs élysées, Paris
"Home" where brother and sister Ahmad (green hat) and Mona (red top) are staying with their families. The coal heater is the only source of heating (and the cheapest) in the room but it is too dangerous because of fumes to leave on at night.
Mona - "We rent a house; well, its really a garage, and pay 200,000 Lebanese pounds a month. There is one room and a living room; a kitchen and a bathroom. Four families are all living here: that's more than 13 people in all. There is a lot of pressure on us; and its very difficult. Everyone is part of the extended families: all relatives"
"We try to stay warm with blankets, but there aren't enough. The temperatures have really dropped. Today, I think it must be only 8 or 9 degrees; its much colder at night"
Photo credit: Caroline Gluck/Oxfam GB
LA County Parks & Recreation employee Jonathan Acero loads food into a car at a food drive-thru giveaway hosted by the County of Los Angeles and L.A. Regional Food Bank at Castaic Lake State Recreation Area, Nov. 10, 2020. (Photo/Michael Owen Baker)
The City of Laredo visited various organizations Thursday, December 19 to distribute items donated through a recent donation drive among City of Laredo employees. Items including socks, blankets and toys were distributed at Bethany House, the Holding Institute and Casa de Misericordia.
Food drive-thru giveaway hosted by the County of Los Angeles and L.A. Regional Food Bank at Liberty Community Plaza in Whittier, Oct. 6, 2020. (Photo/Michael Owen Baker)
LA County Library employees Alain Vargas, left, and Patrick Lorilla stack boxes of food at a food drive-thru giveaway hosted by the County of Los Angeles and L.A. Regional Food Bank at Lennox Middle School, Sept. 22, 2020. (Photo/Michael Owen Baker)
This is a photo of the food distribution centre that Human Appeal International setup in Somalia to help the people affected by the famine.
We distribute food parcels containing essential food items that are sourced locally to accommodate for custom and taste. Each parcel is designed to last a family for one month.
Please check the following link for more information about our appeal for East Africa - bit.ly/east-africa-appeal
LA County Library employee Monique Guerrero carries a box of food to a car at a food drive-thru giveaway hosted by the County of Los Angeles and L.A. Regional Food Bank at the Bellflower Unified Nutrition Center, Sept. 10, 2020. (Photo/Michael Owen Baker)
The loading platform, the truck will come in through the shutter doors, where 2 workers will pack it with parcels from the distribution loading platform. All go today!
Beneficiaries of the Emergency and Resilience Programme receiving the vegetable seeds kit
©FAOLesotho/Bokang Mantutle
This illustration shows the distribution and characteristics of two native and two invasive Cerastium (chickweed) species found in North Carolina. The native ones appear to be restricted to the mountains and upper Piedmont, whereas the invasive ones occur throughout the state. There are several more non-native species, but they are less common and their distribution is more scattered.
The map was a royalty-free NC county map I downloaded from somewhere years ago, colored in using data from auth1.dpr.ncparks.gov/flora/ for the native species and BONAP for the non-native ones. The plant drawings are from the USDA website (plants.usda.gov/) and not copyrighted (original source: Britton & Brown: An illustrated flora of the northern United States, published 1913).
Just realized that many Easterners may not be familiar with the distribution of this bluest of blue birds. Here's a little info by way of Cornell's Lab of Ornithology.
"Keys to identification:
Size & Shape
Mountain Bluebirds are fairly small thrushes with round heads and straight, thin bills. Compared with other bluebirds they are lanky and long-winged, with a long tail.
Color Pattern
Male Mountain Bluebirds are sky-blue, a bit darker on wings and tail and a bit paler below, with white under the tail. Females are mostly gray-brown with tinges of pale blue in the wings and tail. They occasionally show a suffusion of orange-brown on the chest. Mountain Bluebirds’ bills are entirely black. Juveniles have fewer spots than the young of other bluebirds.
Behavior
Unlike other bluebird species, Mountain Bluebirds often hover while foraging; they also pounce on their insect prey from an elevated perch. In winter, the species often occurs in large flocks wandering the landscape feasting on berries, particularly those of junipers.
Habitat
Mountain Bluebirds are common in the West’s wide-open spaces, particularly at middle and higher elevations. They breed in native habitats such as prairie, sagebrush steppe, and even alpine tundra; anywhere with open country with at least a few trees that can provide nest cavities. They also readily take to human-altered habitats, often nesting in bluebird boxes and foraging in pastures."
An IDP woman waits to receive NFIs in a distribution in Malwal Achot. These IDPs were displaced from Abyei by clashes in May 2011. The IDPs left their homes with the little that they could carry; some left their belongings along the way as they were forced to carry the smaller children who were unable to keep up. Warap State, August 2011. © IOM 2011