View allAll Photos Tagged Program)

Catalog #: 08_00838

Title: Space Shuttle Program

Date: 1981-2010

Additional Information: Proposed Shuttle Ground Equipment

Repository: San Diego Air and Space Museum Archive

In the Kennedy Space Center’s Press Site auditorium, Hans Koenigsmann, vice president of Mission Assurance, SpaceX, discusses SpaceX's participation in NASA's Commercial Crew Program and the status of launch preparations for SpaceX CRS-7, the seventh commercial resupply services mission to the station on June 28. From left are Stephanie Schierholz, NASA Communications; Lisa Colloredo, associate program manager, Commercial Crew Program; and Koenigsmann. Photo credit: NASA/Cory Huston

canon ae1 program

fujifilm 200

Part of the JavaScript code that was attached to an e-mail as a fake invoice in a zip file.

 

Once the user opens the malicious zip file the JavaScript code is executed and the ransomware software is downloaded from an infected website.

 

When the ransomware software is running it will encrypt all files that match particular extensions.

 

After encryption, a message (displayed on the user's desktop) instructs them to download the Tor browser and visit a specific criminal-operated Web site for further information.

 

Read more: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ransomware

Photo credit: Elena Olivo

Copyright: NYU Photo Bureau

 

The Fall 2010 Student Hackathon brought in hundreds of students from 30 universities to NYU's Courant Institute for 24 hours of creative hacking on New York City startups' APIs.

 

Selected startups presented their technologies at the beginning of the event, and students formed groups to brainstorm and begin coding on their ideas. Many students worked into the night, foregoing sleep to fulfill their visions.

 

On Sunday afternoon students presented their projects to an audience including a judging panel, which selected the final winners.

 

hackNY hosts hackathons one each semester, as well as a Summer Fellows Program, which pairs quantitative and computational students with startups which can demonstrate a strong mentoring environment, a problem for a student to work on, a person to mentor them, and a place for them to work. Startups selected to host a student are expected to compensate student Fellows. Students enjoy free housing together and a pedagogical lecture series to introduce them to the ins and outs of joining and founding a startup.

 

For more information on hackNY's initiatives, please visit www.hackNY.org and follow us on twitter @hackNY

Her Majesty Queen Rania Al Abdullah at workshop held for participants in the Youth Leadership Program.

Amman, Jordan/ June 6, 2011

 

جلالة الملكة رانيا العبدالله خلال جلسة حوارية مع المشاركين في برنامج "القيادات الشبابية لأجيال قادرة"

عمان، الأردن/ 6 حزيران 2011

 

© Royal Hashemite Court

 

Photo credit: Elena Olivo

Copyright: NYU Photo Bureau

 

The Fall 2010 Student Hackathon brought in hundreds of students from 30 universities to NYU's Courant Institute for 24 hours of creative hacking on New York City startups' APIs.

 

Selected startups presented their technologies at the beginning of the event, and students formed groups to brainstorm and begin coding on their ideas. Many students worked into the night, foregoing sleep to fulfill their visions.

 

On Sunday afternoon students presented their projects to an audience including a judging panel, which selected the final winners.

 

hackNY hosts hackathons one each semester, as well as a Summer Fellows Program, which pairs quantitative and computational students with startups which can demonstrate a strong mentoring environment, a problem for a student to work on, a person to mentor them, and a place for them to work. Startups selected to host a student are expected to compensate student Fellows. Students enjoy free housing together and a pedagogical lecture series to introduce them to the ins and outs of joining and founding a startup.

 

For more information on hackNY's initiatives, please visit www.hackNY.org and follow us on twitter @hackNY

Health Program for Children focusing on Nutrition, Eye and Dental.

 

Write a mail to us : support@trinitycarefoundation.org

trinitycarefoundation.org/preventive/school-health-program

 

www.trinitycarefoundation.org/

Title: Space Shuttle Program

Catalog #: 08_01033

Date: 1981-2010

Additional Information: North American Rockwell Two Stage Winged Space Shuttle

Repository: San Diego Air and Space Museum Archive

Program Trading, Flavien Prat up, at Saratoga Race Course, Saratoga Springs, New York

S- Class tuned by A.R.T. Tuning + monoART 1 rims.

Catalog #: 08_00923

Title: Space Shuttle Program

Date: 1981-2010

Additional Information: Space Shuttle Mock up

Repository: San Diego Air and Space Museum Archive

Just the artwork for the fold-out promo flyer.

The top illustration is by Frank McCarthy.

Photo credit: Elena Olivo

Copyright: NYU Photo Bureau

 

The Fall 2010 Student Hackathon brought in hundreds of students from 30 universities to NYU's Courant Institute for 24 hours of creative hacking on New York City startups' APIs.

 

Selected startups presented their technologies at the beginning of the event, and students formed groups to brainstorm and begin coding on their ideas. Many students worked into the night, foregoing sleep to fulfill their visions.

 

On Sunday afternoon students presented their projects to an audience including a judging panel, which selected the final winners.

 

hackNY hosts hackathons one each semester, as well as a Summer Fellows Program, which pairs quantitative and computational students with startups which can demonstrate a strong mentoring environment, a problem for a student to work on, a person to mentor them, and a place for them to work. Startups selected to host a student are expected to compensate student Fellows. Students enjoy free housing together and a pedagogical lecture series to introduce them to the ins and outs of joining and founding a startup.

 

For more information on hackNY's initiatives, please visit www.hackNY.org and follow us on twitter @hackNY

This is not a posed shot---

November 18, 2019 - Attendees of the 2019 Office of Indian Energy Program Review listen to the presentations during the event at the Sheraton Denver West. (Photo by Werner Slocum / NREL)

Our goal is to help with the care and treatment of diabetes including diagnosing the symptoms. Being able to diagnose quickly is very important. We also aim to give the most useful information we can find, with as much help as possible..

 

Write a mail to us : support@trinitycarefoundation.org

trinitycarefoundation.org/preventive/outreach-health-prog...

 

www.trinitycarefoundation.org/ Health Screening and referral services can be initiated under Corporate Social Responsibility Programs India. Outreach Health programs are important tools for bringing health education and screening services directly to community members and serve to contribute to reducing health disparities.

November 20, 2019 - Attendees of the Office of Indian Energy 2019 Program Review chat during a break in the presentations at the event at the Sheraton Denver West. (Photo by Werner Slocum / NREL)

The Uncle Al Show was a children's television program originating in Cincinnati. The show was hosted by Cleveland native Al Lewis (1924–2009) (not to be confused with the actor who played Grandpa on The Munsters), and later was co-hosted by his wife, Wanda.

 

The show enjoyed a remarkable 35-year run (1950–1985) on WCPO-TV, making it one of the longest-running local children's shows in American TV history. (Sesame Street holds the national record, as it has now surpassed 40 consecutive years on the air.) Uncle Al holds the unofficial record for the longest-running regularly scheduled series with the same host for the show's entire run.

 

The show's origins were completely happenstantial. In the summer of 1949, then-General Manager Mort Watters asked Lewis (hired on two months earlier as WCPO's first art director) to host an hour-long filler show called Al's Corner Drugstore, in which Lewis, dressed in a soda jerk's uniform, would take phone-in requests for songs which he would play on his accordion, which would later become one of his many trademarks along with his straw boater hat.

 

At that time, the show was not aired in a closed set, so people could walk in from off the street to watch the show in person. Neighborhood children began doing just that, and Lewis, having a natural affinity for children, invited them onto the stage during the show. The same kids would return on subsequent occasions bringing friends, and they all took to calling Lewis "Uncle Al".

 

When mothers began calling into the station requesting tickets to be on The Uncle Al Show, a Cincinnati institution was born- again, completely by accident, although Lewis himself never treated it in such a manner, as evidenced by the show's exceptional longevity. The Uncle Al Show made its official début on June 12, 1950. Having originally started as a 15-minute outing, it quickly expanded into an hour long show airing three episodes daily:

 

First episode: 9-10 am (ET)

Second episode: 11 am-12 noon (ET)

Third episode: 1-2 pm (ET)

 

By the mid-late 1960s the show was scaled back to one 90-minute episode per day from 9 to 10:30 am, running opposite WLWT's Paul Dixon Show.

 

By 1955 Uncle Al had become so popular that executives from CBS came to Cincinnati to consult with Al about hosting a similar show on their network; this was before WCPO switched affiliation from ABC to CBS in 1961. Station executives understandably refused to release Lewis from his contract, so CBS brass settled on Howdy Doody alum Bob Keeshan to host their new kids' show, which became Captain Kangaroo. When WCPO switched network affiliation from ABC to CBS in 1961, both shows would run back-to-back on weekday mornings.

 

Lewis' wife Wanda joined the show in 1956. Initially, Wanda was called "Captain Windy", costumed in a superhero-like outfit during the early days of the show, and was seen "flying" Superman-style before she made her entrance on stage. Her shy, quiet manner inspired colleague Paul Dixon to call her "The Windy One" when they co-starred on their own show.

 

Uncle Al's show was picked up by ABC from October 18, 1958 until September 19, 1959.

 

The kids who visited Uncle Al were more than just audience members; most of them were selected to be active participants for different skits on the show. While Wanda would handle the more educational aspects of the show, featuring kids assisting in one way or another, Uncle Al got kids involved as helpers for puppets doing different odd jobs, or he would enlist a child from the crowd on-the-spot to be a barker for games at Uncle Al's circus ("Step right up! Win a prize!"). Then-eight-year-old future film superstar George Clooney appeared in a 1970 episode of Uncle Al playing a ship's captain in one of the show's skits.

 

By the 1960s, kids who appeared on the show each were given a nametag sticker in the shape of a bow tie modeled after Uncle Al's sartorial trademark. While the kids were told the name tag was a ticket to get in and a souvenir to take home, the primary reason for them was so that Lewis could refer to each child by name. Initially the tags were plain white, but later included the name of the show to one side, and WCPO's "9" logo to the other, with room in the middle for the child's name.

 

Other activities included dance contests, celebrating birthdays of kids in the audience that day (which was usually done during their trip to the circus near the end of the show) and singing, accompanied by Al himself, who often played either a banjo, a guitar or his trademark accordion singing simple ditties like this one:

 

"When we sing together songs are such delight..

Har-mo-nee makes the melody right.."

 

Each day the show would end with Uncle Al, Wanda and the kids all singing a prayer on the air before the kids made their way off the stage:

 

(they sang the first three lines of the prayer)

 

"Help me, God, to love you more,

Than I ever did before,

In my work and in my play,

 

(the last five lines they spoke)

 

Please be with me through the day,

Thank you for the friends we meet,

Thank you for the food we eat,

Thank you for the birds that sing,

Thank you, God, for everything!"

 

The cast and the kids would then say their goodbyes and the kids would walk off the set as the closing credits ran. The show's closing theme was the last few verses of the Disney standard It's a Small World written by Robert & Richard Sherman.

 

Throughout the years The Uncle Al Show remained a perennial ratings champion in Cincinnati, especially when the show ran three times a day. Personalities from competing stations knew they were in trouble when their shows were rescheduled opposite Uncle Al. The show ran an estimated 15,000 episodes, with an estimated 440,000 children having appeared on the show throughout its run.

 

By 1975, the show had adopted a more educational base, with guest appearances by members of the Cincinnati Police and Fire departments, representatives from the Cincinnati Zoo, educators and many others. But despite the educational enrichments, The Uncle Al Show continued to hold fast to the values the children came to love from day one.

 

By the early 1980s, demographics were changing, and The Uncle Al Show was not immune. The show was first cut down to a half-hour, and then moved from its weekday slot to an early-morning weekend show. The show was renamed Uncle Al Town with the final episode taped on May 29, 1985. Despite the show coming to an end, both Al and Wanda remained at WCPO to the end of the 1980s.

 

Al and Wanda both retired to their home, a large farm near Hillsboro, Ohio. But in retirement, the Lewises remained active in their community, and on occasion made personal appearances at festivals and other functions in Cincinnati. Surrounded by his family, Al Lewis died at his Hillsboro home on February 28, 2009 at the age of 84. He was survived by his wife Wanda, his four daughters and his 13 grandchildren.

U.S. Forest Service GTAC's Eric Rounds helps employees of the Central African Forest Satellite Observatory (OSFAC), a regional non-profit remote sensing firm, to complete exercises during a training on analyzing LIDAR data to estimate biomass carbon in Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of the Congo.

(Forest Service Photo by Eva McNamara)

Taken with the Sure Shot Supreme I found at a thrift shop that summer (replacing the one I had previously gotten from a yard sale several years earlier.)

  

posting some shots that were taken mostly in June 2017 for my daily photo project, but I'm not sure WHICH days they were taken because I lost the notes for that month

Taking soil samples in the carbon rich peatland forests of the Democratic Republic of the Congo. (Forest Service photo by Roni Ziade)

Three Humphreys’ teens completed their tenure with the Child, Youth and School Services HIRED! apprenticeship program and were recognized during a ceremony Feb. 12 here.

 

The HIRED! program offers teens ages 15-18 an opportunity to work in Family and Morale, Welfare and Recreation-partnered facilities around the installation.

 

“This program allows teens to gain experience in the workforce,” said Shatoraca Morgan, the CYSS workforce preparation specialist and program manager for HIRED!. “This is the first time we’ve offered this program on USAG-Humphreys and we’re very proud that Quincy (Dewey), Tyria (Harris) and Mark (Harris) completed the program.”

 

The teens started the apprenticeship program 12 weeks ago and worked a child youth program assistants, in training.

 

Before teens are selected to participate in the program, there’s a selection process and several classes they must attend.

 

“Prospective youth apprentices need to complete workforce preparation classes, attend and complete a financial management course, have a grade point average of 2.0 or better and complete the HIRED! interview process,” said Morgan.

 

After individuals are selected, they are assigned to FMWR positions and are required to work 15 hours within a seven day period.

 

Apprentices work after school and weekends while earning a pay check. The HIRED! program on Humphreys will offer four-12 week apprenticeship terms.

 

“This is a great opportunity for Humphreys’ teenagers,” said Morgan. “I’m proud to be a part of this wonderful program.”

 

Orientation for Term 3 of the HIRED! program begins March 1 and interested parents and teens should contact Morgan at 753-8507 or e-mail shatoraca.t.morgan@korea.army.mil.

 

U.S. Army photos by Joon Auci

 

For more information on U.S. Army Garrison Humphreys and living and working in Korea visit: USAG-Humphreys' official web site or check out our online videos.

Equipment used for a Carbon Capture program, which is developing novel solvents for better capturing CO2 from a coal powered power plant.

 

Terms of Use: Our images are freely and publicly available for use with the credit line, "Andrea Starr | Pacific Northwest National Laboratory"; Please use provided caption information for use in appropriate context.

Botello EL - Summer Cool Program - 2021

Photos made for blog post about shell script that dynamically splits output into files while processing.

 

Blog post: blog.christiaan008.com/2015/11/08/dynamic-splitting-outpu...

Final version of the two trains for the layout of 2017.

 

One train has color dark blue and the other dark red.

1 2 ••• 5 6 8 10 11 ••• 79 80