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Red Cross volunteers assist residents impacted by flash flooding in Eastern Kentucky by providing hot meals and distributing clean up items like mops, buckets and other cleaning supplies.

 

RM & MT

Very limited distribution in mesic and xeric tall-grass prairie along the base of the northern Front Range in Colorado. This male is from a population found on ancient, cobbly floodplain deposits with cover of native Little Bluestem (Schizachyrium scoparium) and perennial flowers, such as blanketflower (Gaillardia pinnatafida).

Kars for kids distributing coats

Need ‘billers’ for your 2014 season? Bespoke poster campaigns for events A-Z poster distribution work directly with you to tailor make an individual poster campaign for your event. Our poster distribution team will target all important areas and ensure every poster is displayed in the most influenti…

A picture taken when I passed by the fruit distribution market, had to take it from hip secretly, those people there aren't the kindest people you can meet!

 

Taken with: Minolta SRT-Super, MD Rokkor 50/1.4, Fujifilm Superia 800

Poster distribution, QR codes and retargeting Some of our clients are using QR codes very effectively on the posters for their events, combined with retargeting this has become an increasingly effective way of advertising an event. What is a QR Code? Quick Response Codes are a two-dimensional barcode that can be read using smartphones […] First posted by Zed Lawrence in A-Z Poster Distribution ift.tt/11oGp1j

Syeda Amina Trust® delivers food aid to the poor and vulnerable in Pakistan 2014

Journée distribution sur le marché de Provins, puis porte à porte sur Champbenoist

Cruzeiro x Mirassol, no Mineirão.

 

Foto: Gustavo Aleixo/Cruzeiro

 

IMPORTANTE: Imagem destinada a uso institucional e divulgação, seu uso comercial está vetado incondicionalmente por seu autor e o Cruzeiro Esporte Clube.

 

IMPORTANT: image intended for institutional use and distribution. Commercial use is prohibited unconditionally by its author and Cruzeiro Esporte Clube.

On Dec 21, 2014, Mayor Ras J. Baraka, the City of Newark’s Office of Community Engagement hosted a free Toy Distribution for Newark children at the CityPlex 12 Theater.

 

The City partnered with CityPlex 12 and G-Wiz Entertainment to collect and donate new, unwrapped toys. Children also had the opportunity to take pictures with Santa Claus.

 

This official City of Newark photograph is being made available only for publication by news organizations and/or for personal use printing by the subject(s) of the photograph. The photograph may not be manipulated in any way and may not be used in commercial or political materials, advertisements, emails, products, promotions that in any way suggests approval or endorsement of the Mayor of Newark, the City of Newark, or Newark City Hall.

 

Any use or reprinting of official City of Newark photos must use the following credit language and style: Newark Press Information Office

Unloading and distributing products from Sally Foster, one of many fundraising programs during the regular school year, on November 14, 2008. Taken with a phonecam. See related newsletter article.

Distirbution Summit 2024 der MVFP Akademie (Medienverband der freien Presse) am 02./03. September 2024 im Empire Riverside Hotel in Hamburg; Netzwerkpause // Foto: Ole Bader / sandwichpicker-berlin.com

All photos used from this gallery are to be credited: UNR Med/Brin Reynolds.

Questions: please contact brinr@unr.edu.

Corporate identity - Styleguide

On June 14, 2022, the library received 900 COVID tests from Public Health Madison & Dane County for public distribution. This display is at the Sequoya Library. Photos by Library staff.

ready to send the right spark to the right spark plug at the right time....

White Handed Gibbon

Hylobates lar

 

Geographic Distribution: Forests of Southeast Asia

 

Gibbons have the longest arms of all primates, and long slender hands which make superb hooks for arm swinging beneath branches. This form of locomotion is known as brachiation.

 

Gibbons are territorial and live in monogamous family groups with mated pairs accompanied by up to four offspring. The male and female duet and their elaborate songs are used in territorial defense, and for pair attraction and maintenance.

 

Their diet is based mainly on fruit, with some leaves and a few insects and young birds.

On Dec 21, 2014, Mayor Ras J. Baraka, the City of Newark’s Office of Community Engagement hosted a free Toy Distribution for Newark children at the CityPlex 12 Theater.

 

The City partnered with CityPlex 12 and G-Wiz Entertainment to collect and donate new, unwrapped toys. Children also had the opportunity to take pictures with Santa Claus.

 

This official City of Newark photograph is being made available only for publication by news organizations and/or for personal use printing by the subject(s) of the photograph. The photograph may not be manipulated in any way and may not be used in commercial or political materials, advertisements, emails, products, promotions that in any way suggests approval or endorsement of the Mayor of Newark, the City of Newark, or Newark City Hall.

 

Any use or reprinting of official City of Newark photos must use the following credit language and style: Newark Press Information Office

at a backpack program distribution 4.18.08

 

story from last year in the Shreveport Times:

10-12-2007

Story From the Shreveport Times

 

Programs target childhood hunger

 

Children filed into the Ingersoll Elementary School cafeteria for their after-school program, washed their hands, sat and instantly devoured the corn dog and baked beans in front of them.

 

"After a long day, it's like dinner to me," 9-year-old JeCinda Turner said. "I think it's healthy for us."

 

Four days a week, the children in the LightHouse after-school program receive a full meal from the Food Bank of Northwest Louisiana before going on to their tutoring and other activities. Even the children realize it makes a difference.

 

"If I'm not hungry, I can work pretty good," said Brodrick Pipkins, 10.

 

For many of the students, it could be the only full meal they get after school.

 

With more than 300,000 children in Louisiana living in poverty, the food bank is expanding its services to children in hopes that hunger will no longer be an excuse for bad behavior or poor performance.

 

"We have to take care of their physical needs before their academic needs," Ingersoll Elementary principal Jerry Paige said.

 

A $10,000 grant from America's Second Harvest, the food bank's parent organization, has allowed it to start a backpack program. And a partnership with other organizations has increased the number of children it can serve in after-school programs.

 

The BackPack Program launched as a pilot at Ingersoll a couple of months ago. On Fridays, a group of 85 children, chosen by their teachers, are called down to the "backpack club." They pick up a bag with seven to 10 items of kid-friendly, healthy food. On Mondays, they return an empty backpack.

 

"It was born out of the realization that weekends are a time when children need extra food," said Jim Presson, executive director of the food bank. "Why just focus on Monday through Friday for child nutritional needs?"

 

During the week, the children can count on breakfast and lunch through the school. But on Mondays, teachers noticed some children coming to school tired or irritable.

 

The teachers selected 85 children whom they were sure had limited meals over the weekend to participate. Some of their parents may work weekends, leaving children to fend for themselves; and some just might be unable to afford much food for whatever reason.

 

Program coordinator Kimberly Page reported a decrease in behavioral problems and an increase in attentiveness after the program started.

 

"If a child is hungry, you can't keep their attention," she said. "The only thing they're thinking about is what time is lunch? They're just acting better."

 

The food is distributed in backpacks in hopes of keeping it a little more discreet and lessening any sort of stigma that might come from needing to take the food. But Paige said other children know about it, and he hasn't noticed any problems. If anything, more children want to be part of the program.

 

Expanding could be difficult because most of the food has to be bought specifically for the program, Presson said. Little of the food bank's donated food meets the kid-friendly criteria.

 

Filling one of the backpacks each week for a school year costs about $150.

 

Staff at Ingersoll say they know of more children there that could use the help. About 96 percent of Ingersoll's students receive free or reduced-price lunches.

 

"We have to realize that a lot of our parents are poor," Paige said. "We can't penalize children for something their parents do or don't do. Wherever there's a need, we try and take care of that for our children."

 

After school, more help is available for children. A partnership with Shreveport Job Corps has allowed the food bank to add 120 children, for a total of 600 children each day, to its Kids' Cafe program.

 

Job Corps students prepare the meals, package them, transport and serve them to the children. Without the program, breakfast and lunch might be the only meal the children receive.

 

"We can rest assured that they have three meals a day," instructional coordinator Yolanda Saunders said. "With a full meal, we see the difference in their behavior and performance."

 

Previously, many of the children would just get a snack. Saunders knew more was needed when she would see students taking extra snacks and pocketing them for later.

 

Working with Job Corps means the food bank can afford to prepare and transport more food. Now they are just a serving of milk short of a full meal — milk is one of the most expensive items the food bank buys.

 

It also benefits the Job Corps students, who have learned more about serving, working as a team and community service.

 

"A lot of our kids are from low-income homes, and they get to see others in need and know I can do something to make a difference," said Sharon Daniels, business community liaison at Job Corps.

 

Student Andrea Taylor, 17, said she has learned about portion control and how to serve quickly — the youths get pretty impatient.

 

And she's glad to help. "We try and fill them up the best we can."

 

With teachers, principals and organizers touting the success of the programs, Presson starts to get nervous.

 

"We have to sustain it. We had start-up grants, but we have to find support."

 

By Diane Haag

dhaag@gannett.com

©The Times

November 19, 2007

 

Mexico City, Mexico, March 18, 2023. [Photo: Libna Stevens/IAD]

These kids are happy to have clothes more in comparision to our children,who won't have the such kind happiness even of having new clothes on every occassion

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