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Northern Foothills Land Management Program Project Officer Monica Seiler engages with Gould Creek property owners participating in the Natural Resources Adelaide and Mount Lofty Ranges Coolatai Grass (Hyperrhenia hirta) control program.
City of Playford, South Australia.
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
Pingxi Sky Lantern Festival 2012 平溪天燈節
watching hundreds of sky lanterns released simultaneously in Pingxi (Junior High School)
1,600 sky lanterns were released into the dark sky in eight waves.
to view all my photos about this topic: Sky lanterns festival 平溪天燈節.
2012 平溪天燈節,第二場施放天燈活動2/6在平溪國中操場舉行,主題是「幸福平溪,擁抱世界」,自傍晚6時起到9時結束,新北市觀光旅遊局免費提供1,600顆天燈分八梯次給民眾施放。
Pingxi, New Taipei City, Taiwan
2012/1/28
d25607
High school students participating in the Biotechnology Learning Alliance for Bioscience (LAB) Program at Ohlone College. Get information at www.ohlone.edu/instr/biotech/labprogram/
Members of two railfan groups watch a program inside the former Pennsylvania Railroad passenger station in Union City, Indiana, in September 2022. The groups are Railfans of Indianapolis and Miami Valley Railfans of Dayton, Ohio.
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
High school students participating in the Biotechnology Learning Alliance for Bioscience (LAB) Program at Ohlone College. Get information at www.ohlone.edu/instr/biotech/labprogram/
Data recovery software can recover lost, formatted, accidently deleted documents, photos, video, music from hard drive, USB flash drive, floppy disk, mobile phone, digital cameras, memory card, memory stick. It supports recovering data with Windows file system (FAT12, FAT16, FAT32, NTFS).
El 3 de marzo de 2022 hicimos la presentación oficial del CAREER ADVISORY PROGRAM con la decana Dª Gema Tomás, Eba Gaminde, directora del programa y los diferentes advisors quienes tendrán como labor y objetivo apoyar y ayudar al alumnado en la toma de decisiones que afectan a su futuro profesional.
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
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
From the outboard camera under the left wing, a look to the north as Commander Val departs west in the Civvie Prototype for a short mission to test a new science instrument.
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
The Canon AE-1 is a 35 mm single-lens reflex film camera for use with interchangeable lenses. It was manufactured by Canon Camera K. K. in Japan from April 1976 to 1984. It uses an electronically controlled, electromagnet horizontal cloth focal plane shutter, with a speed range of 2 to 1/1000 second plus Bulb and flash X-sync of 1/60 second. The camera body is 87 mm tall, 141 mm wide, and 48 mm deep; it weighs 590 g. Most are black with chrome trim, but some are all black.
Format: Dokument
Dato / Date: 6 Mars 1938
Sted / Place: Holmenkollen, Oslo
Wikipedia: Holmenkollrennene
Eier / Owner Institution: Trondheim byarkiv, The Municipal Archives of Trondheim
Arkivreferanse / Archive reference: Ranheim Papirfabrikk: Saksarkiv - Scankraftmøte 1938 - Memoarer (1938 - 1940)
Merknad:
De svenske, norske og finske kraftpapirfabrikanters noteringsforening Scankraft avholdt sitt ordinære kvartalsmøte i Oslo 4 - 7 mars 1938.
Som en del av programmet for Scankraftmøtet dro deltagerne med fruer for å se sine landsmenn konkurrere i hoppløp og 50-kilometer ved Holmenkollrennene.
Ariana and Bobbie are part of Brooklyn Botanic Garden's 2018 Garden Apprentice Program. Photo courtesy of Brooklyn Botanic Garden.
An assortment of orbital craft (some historical, some not) using several Russian mods in Kerbal Space Program.
. KSP 1.0.5 + Tantares + Contares
Art Interruptions, an annual temporary art program created by the Office of Arts & Culture in partnership with the Seattle Department of Transportation, will offer ephemeral moments of surprise and reflection in the Rainer Valley East-West Neighborhood Greenway. This area includes: New Holly, Othello, Brighton, Lakewood and Seward Park. Beginning September, seven temporary installations on view in the greenway from through January 2, 2017, will inspire and enliven the route with an element of the unexpected. Art Interruptions is funded by Seattle Department of Transportation 1% for Art funds.
The artworks range from street sign paintings to a collage fabricated entirely out of aluminum soda cans. The seven selected artists include Ruben David, Melissa Koch, Vikram Madan, Ulises Mariscal, Kemba N. Opio, little talia, and Junko Yamamoto. Working with the Seattle Department of Transportation and the Office of Arts & Culture, each artist designed a series of small-scale temporary artworks to be installed on city-owned street furniture and infrastructure, including signal boxes, utility poles, sidewalks, and street trees. (Several projects appear on private property adjacent to the right of way with permission of the property owners.) This year, six of the selected artists participated in the 2016 Public Art Boot Camp, a free two-day intensive basic training overview offered by the Office of Arts & Culture's Public Art Program offered to artists who are ready to translate their exhibition experience to the public realm.
The installations include a series of stencils featuring images of various community members that bring positivity to the pedestrians of the Greenway; tiny sculptures inspired by historic and present-day forms of transportation in Seattle; and a collage of butterflies representing cultural diversity.
Artist concept of Skylab shroud separation. Note that the illustration differs from the more blunt shroud which was actually flown. It is probably an early concept.
The Revera and Reel Youth Age is More Film Project is an intergenerational partnership between Revera, a Canadian leader in seniors' accommodation, care and services, and Reel Youth, a charitable project that empowers youth to create engaging films about important social issues. The partnership was launched in 2013.
With 80 films to date, the program celebrates older Canadians through story-telling and film, with the added benefit of fostering new intergenerational relationships. The project aims to shed light on ageism, challenge the assumptions of aging and recognize the valuable contributions of older adults to society.
The Revera and Reel Youth Age is More Film Project is an intergenerational partnership between Revera, a Canadian leader in seniors' accommodation, care and services, and Reel Youth, a charitable project that empowers youth to create engaging films about important social issues. The partnership was launched in 2013.
With 80 films to date, the program celebrates older Canadians through story-telling and film, with the added benefit of fostering new intergenerational relationships. The project aims to shed light on ageism, challenge the assumptions of aging and recognize the valuable contributions of older adults to society.
Since 1994, the Healthy Smiles by Direct Relief has provided free dental treatment to 1,800 low-income, uninsured school-age children with severe need. Sponsored by Healthy Smiles, one-day free clinics are hosted by local dentists and Healthy Start programs throughout Santa Barbara County.
This free-clinic event was hosted by Dr. Samuel Burg and was staffed by volunteer dentists and hygienists who provided dental care and education to over 60 children that day.
Receiving services are low-income, uninsured children identified by their schools as needing professional dental care that they would not have been able to receive without the program.
Additionally, children received Dental Packs – toothbrushes, toothpaste and floss – that were donated by multiple healthcare manufacturers to Direct Relief and packed by volunteers at Direct Relief. For some families, event the cost of a toothbrush is too much and children go without. These donated products ensure that children can continue the good oral hygiene practices they learn during their free clinic visitl.
Each year, Direct Relief distributes approximately 1,000 child dental kits and 3,400 family dental kits (each of which serves a family of five) with donated dental supplies, which Direct Relief then allocates to their local partner agencies. These agencies distribute the dental kits to the low-income children and families whom they already serve.
(Photo by Alex Beauchamp)
The CSIS International Security Program cordially invites you to a Military Strategy Forum discussion of:
On December 8, the CSIS Global Health Policy Center will host a major day-long conference on the future of global malaria efforts. It will open with a high-level deliberation over the strategic long-term goal of elimination, highlighting the political, financial, and institutional requisites. It will feature expert roundtables on drug and insecticide resistance, future technologies (vaccines, therapies, diagnostics), and financing. There will be a special focus on civilian-military cooperation in the Mekong Subregion. On that day, CSIS will release five commissioned policy analyses.
RSVP here.
Conference Agenda:
8:45am-9:00am Welcome remarks
Video: Dr. Margaret Chan, Director-General, WHO
Dr. J. Stephen Morrison, Senior Vice President and Director, CSIS Global Health Policy Center
9:00-10:15 Roundtable: Future Vision for Global Action on Malaria
Dr. Alan Magill, Director, Malaria, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
Dr. Bernard Nahlen, Deputy Coordinator, President’s Malaria Initiative
Dr. David J. Smith, Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense, Force Health Protection and Readiness
Moderator: Dr. J. Stephen Morrison, Senior Vice President and Director, CSIS Global Health Policy Center
10:15-11:15 Panel: Financing of a Global Elimination Strategy
Dr. Jen Kates, Director of Global Health & HIV Policy, Kaiser Family Foundation
Dr. Mead Over, Senior Fellow, Center for Global Development
Mr. Todd Summers, Senior Adviser, CSIS Global Health Policy Center
Moderator: Ms. Amy Studdart, Deputy Director and Fellow, William E. Simon Chair in Political Economy
11:15-12:00 Break
12:00-1:30 Luncheon: Civilian-Military Cooperation in the Mekong Subregion
RADM Colin Chinn, Command Surgeon, U.S. Pacific Command
Dr. Mark Fukuda, CDC Malaria Advisor, President’s Malaria Initiative Greater Mekong Subregion
Maj General Vu Quoc Binh, Director General, Military Medical Department, Vietnam People’s Army
Dr. Nipon Chinanonwait, Director, Thai Bureau of Vector Borne Diseases
Dr. Aung Thi, Director, Myanmar National Malaria Control Programme
Moderator: Dr. Alan Magill, Director, Malaria, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
1:30-2:30 Panel: Evolving Technologies in the Push for Elimination
Dr. Ashley Birkett, Director, PATH Malaria Vaccine Initiative
Dr. Christopher Plowe, Professor, University of Maryland School of Medicine
Mr. Paul LaBarre, Senior Technical Officer, PATH
Moderator: Dr. Regina Rabinovich, Exxon Mobil Scholar in Residence, Harvard School of Public Health
2:30-3:30 Panel: The Threat of Artemisinin and Pyrethroid Resistance
Dr. Pascal Ringwald, Coordinator, WHO Drug Resistance and Containment Unit
Dr. Fredros Okumu, Research Scientist, Ifkara Health Institute
Dr. Martin Akogbeto, Director, Centre de Recherché Entomologique de Cotonou (CREC)
Dr. Christopher Plowe, Professor, University of Maryland School of Medicine
Moderator: Dr. S. Patrick Kachur, Chief, CDC Malaria Branch
This event will be webcast live at www.SmartGlobalHealth.org/Live.
Breakfast and lunch will be provided to registered guests.
Programs
GLOBAL HEALTH POLICY CENTER
Topics
GLOBAL HEALTH
Caption: Frantic reading commcnced after the registration, as people attempted to understand the program schedule and the layout of facilities and services.
Citation: Mennonite World Conference. Twelfth Mennonite World Conference, 1990, Winnipeg, Canada. Slides by T. Klassen; Script by John Dyck. X-9 Box 52 Folder 4 Slide 8. Mennonite Church USA Archives - Goshen. Goshen, Indiana.