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In June 2012, Bastrop Main Street Program’s Entrepreneur-Ready Leadership Team was responsible for Bastrop being only the second city in Texas to be awarded the designation of an “Entrepreneur-Ready Community” by the Texas Center for Rural Entrepreneurship.

 

As a part of this project and in partnership with Bastrop High School Business Department, student finalists presented their business plans for a start-up business in Bastrop to a panel of judges on May 2, 2013. Students were vying for over $850 in scholarship money.

 

These are pictures of the event were taken by Upstart Bastrop thanks to Bastrop Main Street Program and the Entrepreneur-Ready Leadership team.

Members of the Chesapeake Bay Program's Citizens Advisory Committee tour Stroud Water Research Center in Avondale, Pa., on Sept. 18, 2019. The group listened first to Stroud's executive director David Arscott describe onsite wastewater treatement and other conservation features incorporated into the Stroud campus, before touring research facilities with aquatic entomologist John Jackson. (Photo by Will Parson/Chesapeake Bay Program)

 

USAGE REQUEST INFORMATION

The Chesapeake Bay Program's photographic archive is available for media and non-commercial use at no charge.

 

To request permission, send an email briefly describing the proposed use to requests@chesapeakebay.net. Please do not attach jpegs. Instead, reference the corresponding Flickr URL of the image.

 

A photo credit mentioning the Chesapeake Bay Program is mandatory. The photograph may not be manipulated in any way or used in any way that suggests approval or endorsement of the Chesapeake Bay Program. Requestors should also respect the publicity rights of individuals photographed, and seek their consent if necessary.

Healing Touch Program's 2014 Worldwide Conference, Schaumburg, IL, August 14-17

Healing Touch Program's 2014 Worldwide Conference, Schaumburg, IL, August 14-17

Merola Opera Program’s Spring Benefit

San Francisco Opera Marketing Director Marcia Lazar with Merola Chairman Jayne Davis.

 

Photo by Claudine Gossett for Drew Altizer Photography

Students and faculty in UF Law’s Environmental and Land Use Law Program’s Spring Break Field Course explored the diverse marine and coastal ecoregion shared by South Florida and the Bahamian archipelago.

The purpose of the week-long course, led by Tom Ankersen, Florida Sea Grant's Legal Specialist, was to provide students a firm grounding in the law, policy and practice of coastal and marine sustainable development through field-based immersion, practitioner lectures, and reflective discussions.

The group traveled from the intensely developed waterfront of Biscayne Bay to the bustling government center of Nassau in the Bahamas, and then on to the quiet, rural family island of Andros, bounded by the great Bahama Bank and the Tongue of the Ocean. While there is a world of difference between the two neighbors separated by the Gulf Stream, they share a remarkably similar ecosystem facing many of the same threats, and common language of the common law.

This year’s Spring Break Field course furthers the UF Law Conservation Clinic’s South Florida Bahamas ecoregional initiative supported by Florida Sea Grant, and in partnership with the Bahamas National Trust.

To read more about the course and what the students learned, visit: www.law.ufl.edu/…/elulp-students-faculty-spend-spri…/

(UF/IFAS photos by Amy Stuart)

Healing Touch Program's 2014 Worldwide Conference Instructor's Gathering, Schaumburg, IL, August 13

Sarah Anderson attends the Chesapeake Bay Program's Diversity Workgroup Meeting at Masonville Cove Environmental Education Center in Baltimore, Md., on Nov. 2, 2016. Representatives from across the watershed gathered for discussions about what communities need, opportunities for enhancing engagement, public health, environmental justice, and other topics. (Photo by Will Parson/Chesapeake Bay Program)

 

USAGE REQUEST INFORMATION

The Chesapeake Bay Program's photographic archive is available for media and non-commercial use at no charge. To request permission, send an email briefly describing the proposed use to requests@chesapeakebay.net. Please do not attach jpegs. Instead, reference the corresponding Flickr URL of the image.

 

A photo credit mentioning the Chesapeake Bay Program is mandatory. The photograph may not be manipulated in any way or used in any way that suggests approval or endorsement of the Chesapeake Bay Program. Requestors should also respect the publicity rights of individuals photographed, and seek their consent if necessary.

Healing Touch Program's 2014 Worldwide Conference, Schaumburg, IL, August 14-17

Healing Touch Program's 2014 Worldwide Conference, Schaumburg, IL, August 14-17

Healing Touch Program's 2014 Worldwide Conference, Schaumburg, IL, August 14-17

Healing Touch Program's 2014 Worldwide Conference, Schaumburg, IL, August 14-17

In June 2012, Bastrop Main Street Program’s Entrepreneur-Ready Leadership Team was responsible for Bastrop being only the second city in Texas to be awarded the designation of an “Entrepreneur-Ready Community” by the Texas Center for Rural Entrepreneurship.

 

As a part of this project and in partnership with Bastrop High School Business Department, student finalists presented their business plans for a start-up business in Bastrop to a panel of judges on May 2, 2013. Students were vying for over $850 in scholarship money.

 

These are pictures of the event were taken by Upstart Bastrop thanks to Bastrop Main Street Program and the Entrepreneur-Ready Leadership team.

Members of the Chesapeake Bay Program's Citizens Advisory Committee tour Stroud Water Research Center in Avondale, Pa., on Sept. 18, 2019. The group listened first to Stroud's executive director David Arscott describe onsite wastewater treatement and other conservation features incorporated into the Stroud campus, before touring research facilities with aquatic entomologist John Jackson. (Photo by Will Parson/Chesapeake Bay Program)

 

USAGE REQUEST INFORMATION

The Chesapeake Bay Program's photographic archive is available for media and non-commercial use at no charge.

 

To request permission, send an email briefly describing the proposed use to requests@chesapeakebay.net. Please do not attach jpegs. Instead, reference the corresponding Flickr URL of the image.

 

A photo credit mentioning the Chesapeake Bay Program is mandatory. The photograph may not be manipulated in any way or used in any way that suggests approval or endorsement of the Chesapeake Bay Program. Requestors should also respect the publicity rights of individuals photographed, and seek their consent if necessary.

  

USAGE REQUEST INFORMATION

The Chesapeake Bay Program's photographic archive is available for media and non-commercial use at no charge. To request permission, send an email briefly describing the proposed use to requests@chesapeakebay.net. Please do not attach jpegs. Instead, reference the corresponding Flickr URL of the image.

 

A photo credit mentioning the Chesapeake Bay Program is mandatory. The photograph may not be manipulated in any way or used in any way that suggests approval or endorsement of the Chesapeake Bay Program. Requestors should also respect the publicity rights of individuals photographed, and seek their consent if necessary.

Healing Touch Program's 2014 Worldwide Conference, Schaumburg, IL, August 14-17

The Cal State LA College of ECST Capstone Senior Design Program's corporate and university partnerships provide highly engaging and relevant professional practice experiences for our engineering, technology, and computer science students. We invite you to explore the 2022-2023 projects and RSVP to attend the ECST Capstone Launch on Friday, September 2, 2022.

 

Agnes and Stephen Reading, who endow 10 nursing student scholarships annually through a donation to the WCC Foundation, received a tour of the program's lab and simulation technology.

River Corps staff members visit RiverSmart homes in Washington, D.C., on April 13, 2017. The River Corps makes home inspections to RiverSmart homes to ensure stormwater practices like trees and rain barrels are properly installed and maintained. (Photo by Will Parson/Chesapeake Bay Program)

 

USAGE REQUEST INFORMATION

The Chesapeake Bay Program's photographic archive is available for media and non-commercial use at no charge. To request permission, send an email briefly describing the proposed use to requests@chesapeakebay.net. Please do not attach jpegs. Instead, reference the corresponding Flickr URL of the image.

 

A photo credit mentioning the Chesapeake Bay Program is mandatory. The photograph may not be manipulated in any way or used in any way that suggests approval or endorsement of the Chesapeake Bay Program. Requestors should also respect the publicity rights of individuals photographed, and seek their consent if necessary.

Robert Perciasepe, Deputy Administrator, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency at the Chesapeake Executive Council Meeting at the National Arboretum in Washington, D.C., on Dec. 12, 2013. (Photo by Steve Droter/Chesapeake Bay Program)

 

USAGE REQUEST INFORMATION

The Chesapeake Bay Program's photographic archive is available for media and non-commercial use at no charge.

 

To request permission, send an email briefly describing the proposed use to requests@chesapeakebay.net. Please do not attach jpegs. Instead, reference the corresponding Flickr URL of the image.

 

A photo credit mentioning the Chesapeake Bay Program is mandatory. The photograph may not be manipulated in any way or used in any way that suggests approval or endorsement of the Chesapeake Bay Program. Requestors should also respect the publicity rights of individuals photographed, and seek their consent if necessary.

Teachers measure glucose levels in biomass samples with and without enzymes as part of the CB2E classroom activity. The GLBRC Education & Outreach Program's CB2E (Cellulosic Biofuel to Ethanol) is a lab for high school and undergraduate students. The exercise walks participants through the entire biofuels pipeline step-by-step.

 

Check out the activity here www.glbrc.org/education/educationalmaterials/cb2e

  

Photo Credit: John Greenler, WEI

On Friday, August 24, 2012, Maj. Gen. Joyce L. Stevens, Assistant Adjutant General-Army for Texas and Commander of the Texas Army National Guard honor the Job Education Connection Program (JCEP) for having in 1000th Service Member hired in Texas. Originally began as a pilot program in Texas, Spec. Anthony Tony Christmas became the 1000th JCEP participant hired when he accepted a position with Aramark Uniform Services in Dallas, Texas. (National Guard photo by Laura L. Lopez).

  

The Texas Military Forces OCS program’s mission is to develop and evaluate potential future commissioned officers for the Texas Army National Guard. It is a course that follows the Program of Instruction and Course Management Plan prescribed by the US Army Infantry School at Fort Benning, Georgia.

 

Produced by Texas Military Forces Public Affairs Office

It was a magic season for the Syracuse Academy of Science girls basketball team.

 

The #SASAtoms accomplished a lot - winning the program's first Section III title and advancing to the state final four.

 

SAS missed out on only one goal, as Section IX champion Millbrook bested the Atoms, 67-64, in overtime in the Class C state championship game at Hudson Valley Community College.

 

"We came up short, but we accomplished a whole lot," #SASCS coach Reggie Pickard said after his team came out on the short end of the 4-minute extra session, during which the Atoms led three times before surrendering the final four points. "Overtime game, we lost to a great team, a well-coached team."

 

SAS, who finish 19-5, lost despite a determined effort from senior Lyrik Jackson, who led the Atoms with 24 points and 15 rebounds, and junior Diamonne Harris, who added 23 points.

 

"She made a big difference," Pickard said.

 

Millbrook led the whole way, until there was just one minute left in regulation. A basket by Jackson tied the game at 54-54.

 

The Blazers pushed the lead back to four points with 34 seconds left, but SAS got a pair of free throws from Jackson to pull within two and 6-0 sophomore Erykah Pasha sent the game into overtime by converting two free throws with no time left on the clock after she was fouled on a put back attempt at the buzzer.

 

The Atoms led three times in the extra session - 60-59, 62-61 and 64-63 - before the Blazers got their final points from reserve junior forward Claire Martell, who hit a basket and two free throws in the final 45 seconds.

 

Pickard said he told his players to keep their heads high.

 

"I just told them they had no reason to hang their heads," said Pickard, who started the varsity program at SAS in 2010. "We set a goal at the beginning of the season. We reached our goal, but we just came up short."

 

Pickard said his all-state senior, Jackson, was all heart.

 

"She played hurt. She twisted her ankle early on. Her shoulder was still sore from the fall yesterday. She was banged up. But she gave it her all. She gave it her heart," he said.

 

The coach said he hoped the Atoms would be back, albeit probably in a higher classification. Nearly everyone associated with Section III basketball expects that SAS will be moved up in class by the competition committee.

 

Article posted at highschoolsports.syracuse.com/news/article/-7252830500078...

The Colorado State University Dance Program rehearses its Fall Concert, November 8, 2018

It was a magic season for the Syracuse Academy of Science girls basketball team.

 

The #SASAtoms accomplished a lot - winning the program's first Section III title and advancing to the state final four.

 

SAS missed out on only one goal, as Section IX champion Millbrook bested the Atoms, 67-64, in overtime in the Class C state championship game at Hudson Valley Community College.

 

"We came up short, but we accomplished a whole lot," #SASCS coach Reggie Pickard said after his team came out on the short end of the 4-minute extra session, during which the Atoms led three times before surrendering the final four points. "Overtime game, we lost to a great team, a well-coached team."

 

SAS, who finish 19-5, lost despite a determined effort from senior Lyrik Jackson, who led the Atoms with 24 points and 15 rebounds, and junior Diamonne Harris, who added 23 points.

 

"She made a big difference," Pickard said.

 

Millbrook led the whole way, until there was just one minute left in regulation. A basket by Jackson tied the game at 54-54.

 

The Blazers pushed the lead back to four points with 34 seconds left, but SAS got a pair of free throws from Jackson to pull within two and 6-0 sophomore Erykah Pasha sent the game into overtime by converting two free throws with no time left on the clock after she was fouled on a put back attempt at the buzzer.

 

The Atoms led three times in the extra session - 60-59, 62-61 and 64-63 - before the Blazers got their final points from reserve junior forward Claire Martell, who hit a basket and two free throws in the final 45 seconds.

 

Pickard said he told his players to keep their heads high.

 

"I just told them they had no reason to hang their heads," said Pickard, who started the varsity program at SAS in 2010. "We set a goal at the beginning of the season. We reached our goal, but we just came up short."

 

Pickard said his all-state senior, Jackson, was all heart.

 

"She played hurt. She twisted her ankle early on. Her shoulder was still sore from the fall yesterday. She was banged up. But she gave it her all. She gave it her heart," he said.

 

The coach said he hoped the Atoms would be back, albeit probably in a higher classification. Nearly everyone associated with Section III basketball expects that SAS will be moved up in class by the competition committee.

 

Article posted at highschoolsports.syracuse.com/news/article/-7252830500078...

Healing Touch Program's 2014 Worldwide Conference Instructor's Gathering, Schaumburg, IL, August 14-17

Healing Touch Program's 2014 Worldwide Conference Instructor's Gathering, Schaumburg, IL, August 13

Healing Touch Program's 2014 Worldwide Conference Instructor's Gathering, Schaumburg, IL, August 13

Culinary Arts and Hospitality Program's

30th Annual Gourmet Dinner

May 4, 2012

 

Menu:

 

-Chocolate Tea Smoked Duck

(ancho chile and chocolate cremeux)

w/ 2010 County Line Pinot Noir, Sonoma Coast, California.

 

-Braised Pork Chocolate Ravioli

(mole sauce and Parmesan emulsion)

 

-Artisan Greens with Champagne Vinaigrette

(chocolate stout cheddar and pretzel tuile)

 

-Cocoa Butter Seared Scallop

(caramelized Belgian endive with apples & chocolate balsamic reduction) w/ 2011 Raptor Ridge Pinot Gris, Willamette Valley, Oregon

 

-Pink Grapefruit Sorbet

with crushed cocoa nibs.

 

-Chocolate Espresso Beef Tenderloin (roasted baby root vegetables, rosemary infused garlic smashed Yukon golds,

chocolate Port wine sauce) w/ 2009 Colterris Cabernet Sauvignon, Grand Valley, Colorado.

 

-Frambois Entremet

(rich chocolate cake layered with

raspberry and chocolate mousse)

  

USAGE REQUEST INFORMATION

The Chesapeake Bay Program's photographic archive is available for media and non-commercial use at no charge. To request permission, send an email briefly describing the proposed use to requests@chesapeakebay.net. Please do not attach jpegs. Instead, reference the corresponding Flickr URL of the image.

 

A photo credit mentioning the Chesapeake Bay Program is mandatory. The photograph may not be manipulated in any way or used in any way that suggests approval or endorsement of the Chesapeake Bay Program. Requestors should also respect the publicity rights of individuals photographed, and seek their consent if necessary.

Healing Touch Program's 2014 Worldwide Conference, Schaumburg, IL, August 14-17

M.Saleem Arif, DCOP USAID Power Distribution Program shed light on program's objectives & goals and shared upcoming IESCO specific interventions and initiatives

The Colorado State University Dance Program rehearses its Fall Concert, November 13, 2014.

Education Opportunity Program (EOP) alumnus Arel Moodie '05 returns to Binghamton University to discuss college student success at EOP's Binghamton Enrichment Summer program's kickoff, July 6, 2023.

 

Jonathan Cohen / University Photographer

A Chinese hackberry, donated by Shu-ying Lui and cultivated since 1946, resides at the National Arboretum's National Bonsai and Penjing Museum in Washington, D.C., on July 22, 2015. (Photo by Will Parson/Chesapeake Bay Program)

 

USAGE REQUEST INFORMATION

The Chesapeake Bay Program's photographic archive is available for media and non-commercial use at no charge. To request permission, send an email briefly describing the proposed use to requests@chesapeakebay.net. Please do not attach jpegs. Instead, reference the corresponding Flickr URL of the image.

 

A photo credit mentioning the Chesapeake Bay Program is mandatory. The photograph may not be manipulated in any way or used in any way that suggests approval or endorsement of the Chesapeake Bay Program. Requestors should also respect the publicity rights of individuals photographed, and seek their consent if necessary.

In June 2012, Bastrop Main Street Program’s Entrepreneur-Ready Leadership Team was responsible for Bastrop being only the second city in Texas to be awarded the designation of an “Entrepreneur-Ready Community” by the Texas Center for Rural Entrepreneurship.

 

As a part of this project and in partnership with Bastrop High School Business Department, student finalists presented their business plans for a start-up business in Bastrop to a panel of judges on May 2, 2013. Students were vying for over $850 in scholarship money.

 

These are pictures of the event were taken by Upstart Bastrop thanks to Bastrop Main Street Program and the Entrepreneur-Ready Leadership team.

Montclair Rowing's Varsity Boys Eight as they cross the finish line as Stotesbury Cup Champions for the first time in the program's history and maintaining their undefeated season.

Teaching science and technology reached a new height as the Des Moines Public Schools’ Aviation Engineering Technology Program took possession of a Learjet Model 35. The aircraft will be based at the program’s lab, located at the Des Moines International Airport, and used as a teaching tool for high school students studying aviation technology and maintenance.

 

“At a time when science and technology education has never been more important, we are providing students in Des Moines with a hands-on, high-tech learning experience that will prepare them for great opportunities after high school,” said Jerry Bradley, director of the Aviation Technology Program. “The addition of this Learjet to our ‘teaching fleet’ puts us on the leading edge of high school aviation programs.”

 

Des Moines Public Schools’ Aviation Engineering Technology Program is one of only three high school programs in the nation certified by the Federal Aviation Administration to teach aircraft maintenance. In fact, the program in Des Moines is the only one of its kind among the nearly 4,000 school districts in the Midwestern states.

 

The Learjet Model 35 – also classified as a C-21 because of its use as a military transport – is a surplus aircraft from Keesler Air Force Base in Mississippi. It was acquired at a cost of $4,000.

 

“Des Moines Public Schools is committed to providing students and families with the best educational choices to meet their needs and interests,” added Superintendent Nancy Sebring. “This is one more example of a great opportunity, providing students with a rigorous education and technical skills available in only a few school districts throughout the nation.”

 

Today the Corporation for National and Community Service (CNCS) and leading experts on issues of poverty in the U.S. kicked off the 50th anniversary of AmeriCorps VISTA with the first-ever National Solutions Summit. The half-day event focused on the program’s accomplishments and feature innovative ways AmeriCorps VISTA members are fighting poverty.

 

Since its inception 50 years ago, nearly 200,000 men and women have served communities all over the country through AmeriCorps VISTA. VISTA has a unique and effective approach to fighting poverty by providing knowledge and tools to increase a community’s capacity to fight poverty. From establishing literacy programs to training people for 21st century jobs, VISTA members have mobilized community volunteers and local resources to create a lasting impact.

South Carolina National Guard Soldiers, and fire department/EMS rescuers with the S.C. Helicopter Aquatic Rescue Team (SC-HART) program, S.C. Urban Search and Rescue Task Force 1 (SC-TF1), perform hoist-training operations during the preliminary phases of “Patriot South Exercise 2017” (Patriot South 17), a joint training-exercise focused on natural disaster-response and preparedness, Gulfport and Port Bienville Industrial Complex (PBIC), Mississippi, Jan. 29, 2017. Patriot South 17 is taking place at multiple locations across Mississippi, from January 23 through February 7, 2017, and it offers the National Guard and its local and federal partners a realistic-training opportunity to test response capabilities, procedures, and readiness through a simulated earthquake and Tsunami scenario “hitting the coastal areas of the state.” Specifically, in preparation for future operations, South Carolina’s Headquarters and Headquarters and (-) Company A 2-151st Security and Support Aviation Battalion, 59th Aviation Troop Command, deployed both its current HART-capable platforms, the UH-60L Black Hawk utility helicopter and its LUH-72A Lakota light utility helicopter--the latter being a recent addition to the HART program for South Carolina. (U.S. Army National Guard Photo by Staff Sgt. Roberto Di Giovine/Released)

Krissy Hopkins, Communications and Education Subcommittee staffer with the Chesapeake Research Consortium at the Chesapeake Bay Program, holds a clump of bay grasses in Poplar Harbor near Poplar Island in Talbot County, Md., on May 19, 2009. (Photo by Alicia Pimental/Chesapeake Bay Program)

 

USAGE REQUEST INFORMATION

The Chesapeake Bay Program's photographic archive is available for media and non-commercial use at no charge.

 

To request permission, send an email briefly describing the proposed use to requests@chesapeakebay.net. Please do not attach jpegs. Instead, reference the corresponding Flickr URL of the image.

 

A photo credit mentioning the Chesapeake Bay Program is mandatory. The photograph may not be manipulated in any way or used in any way that suggests approval or endorsement of the Chesapeake Bay Program. Requestors should also respect the publicity rights of individuals photographed, and seek their consent if necessary.

Members of the program’s platform party, from left, the Rev. Michael P. Reid II, ’92 from Widener Law; Professor John L. Gedid, founding associate dean; James P. White, former ABA consultant on legal education; alumnus Harry P. McGrath, ’92 from Widener Law; Trustee Ayana Wood, ’95 from Widener University; Trustee James J. Hargadon, ’75 from Widener University; Thomas H. Bown II, ’67 from Widener University; Widener University Senior Vice President and Provost Jo Allen; Widener University President James T. Harris III; Widener Law Dean Linda L. Ammons; Trustee Cynthia H. Sarnoski, ’74 from Widener University; Trustee Eugene D. McGurk Jr., ’78 from Widener Law, who also serves as chairman of the law school’s Board of Overseers; Anthony J. Santoro, former Widener Law dean; Laura Cooper, ’03 from Widener Law; Professor James W. Diehm, founding faculty member.

Norway's minister of Foreign Affairs Børge Brende at the UN podium celebrating UN Development Program's 50th anniversary.

  

USAGE REQUEST INFORMATION

The Chesapeake Bay Program's photographic archive is available for media and non-commercial use at no charge. To request permission, send an email briefly describing the proposed use to requests@chesapeakebay.net. Please do not attach jpegs. Instead, reference the corresponding Flickr URL of the image.

 

A photo credit mentioning the Chesapeake Bay Program is mandatory. The photograph may not be manipulated in any way or used in any way that suggests approval or endorsement of the Chesapeake Bay Program. Requestors should also respect the publicity rights of individuals photographed, and seek their consent if necessary.

  

USAGE REQUEST INFORMATION

The Chesapeake Bay Program's photographic archive is available for media and non-commercial use at no charge. To request permission, send an email briefly describing the proposed use to requests@chesapeakebay.net. Please do not attach jpegs. Instead, reference the corresponding Flickr URL of the image.

 

A photo credit mentioning the Chesapeake Bay Program is mandatory. The photograph may not be manipulated in any way or used in any way that suggests approval or endorsement of the Chesapeake Bay Program. Requestors should also respect the publicity rights of individuals photographed, and seek their consent if necessary.

Healing Touch Program's 2014 Worldwide Conference Instructor's Gathering, Schaumburg, IL, August 13

Healing Touch Program's 2014 Worldwide Conference, Schaumburg, IL, August 14-17

Healing Touch Program's 2014 Worldwide Conference Instructor's Gathering, Schaumburg, IL, August 14-17

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