View allAll Photos Tagged Programming

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/

Estudantes do Programa Jovem Senador 2016 visitam a Praça dos Três Poderes e o Palácio do Planalto.

 

Participam:

estudante do Acre, Soraia de Freitas Barbosa;

estudante de Alagoas, Ídia Gerônimo da Silva;

estudante do Amapá, Ingrid Gabrielle Pastana Pereira;

estudante do Amazonas, Laura Lima Guedes;

estudante da Bahia, Marcos Paulo Jesus dos Santos;

estudante do Ceará, Ívyna Vaz Silva Borges;

estudante do Distrito Federal, Isabelle da Silva dos Santos (2ª colocada);

estudante do Espírito Santo, Luciana Fim Grancieri;

estudante de Goiás, Tiago Pereira Souza;

estudante do Maranhão, Ester Sá Marciel;

estudante do Mato Grosso, Eduarda Judith Dias Jacome Silva;

estudante do Mato Grosso do Sul, Guilherme Barreto Brandão;

estudante de Minas Gerais, Dilson Gabriel Pieve (1º colocado);

estudante do Paraná, Luiz Jefferson dos Santos;

estudante da Paraíba, Pedro Manoel de Souza Silva Neto;

estudante do Pará, Ruan Magalhães Rodrigues;

estudante de Pernambuco, Acsa Mendes de Albuquerque (3ª colocada);

estudante do Piauí, Jennyfer Emanuelly de Sousa Ferreira;

estudante do Rio Grande do Norte, Nicolle Ohana Alves Marques;

estudante do Rio Grande do Sul, Taíne De Conto;

estudante do Rio de Janeiro, Weslley Tuão Vicente;

estudante de Rondônia, Leonardo Silva Brito;

estudante de Roraima, Pablo Henrique Santos Moreira;

estudante de Santa Catarina, Felipe Eduardo Klowaski;

estudante de Sergipe, Katellen Lorrany Carvalho Mendonça;

estudante de São Paulo, Marina Vivianne Carcassola;

estudante de Tocantins, Emanoel Carvalho Silva.

 

Foto: Pedro França/Agência Senado

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

"Sugarbabies"

Pantages Theater, Los Angeles

The Shoebox RA's hosted an end-of-year tie-dye program for their residents.

MTA Chair and CEO Janno Lieber, MTA Construction & Development President Jamie Torres-Springer, and NYS Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli present a new MTA Capital Program Dashboard at Grand Central Terminal on Monday, Dec 1, 2025.

 

(Marc A. Hermann / MTA)

Quito (Pichincha), 13 de octubre de 2021.- El presidente de la República, Guillermo Lasso, mantuvo una entrevista con el comunicador Carlos Vera, espacio en el que abordó temas de interés nacional. El encuentro se efectuó en el Palacio de Gobierno. Foto: Bolívar Parra / Presidencia de la República.

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/

Junior Lifeguard Program at Brick Beach III on June 25, 2018. Chris Chace/Township of Brick

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/

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/

Nikon d90 | ISO 200 | manual | Nikkor 28-80mm f/3.5-5.6

Female Adult Literacy program was initiated in 2016. At present PEP is running 26 Female Adult Literacy (FAL) Centers with 316 Female Adult Literacy members (Adult Students) in different areas of rural Sindh as follows,

Khipro48

Mirpurkhas47

Khawaja Goth7

Tando Allahyar80

Tando Ghulam Ali134

There are 6 area officers and 1 WEP coordinator for the implementing and monitoring of the adult literacy program.

As a gesture of appreciation Pervaiz Lodhie President and founder LEDtronics Inc. offered a special gift of a Solar Powered LED Solar Light to the 316 student and 7 program officers.

Funding for the solar lights was provided by one of gentleman from USA. His name is not mentioned here on his advice.

First distribution ceremony was held on Thursday October 12, 2017 in Shaleemabad, Achaar Khaskeli & Shanti Nagar ALCs located in Tando Allahyar districts.

Lt. Gen (Retd.) Syed Perwaiz Shahid a renowned educationist was chief guest for the event.

Ms. Lillian Charles Program Manager PEP and other team members from PEP were present in the event.

During the ceremony 72 female students received solar lanterns. PEP will organize another event in Hyderabad for the distribution of remaining solar lights in November 2017.

 

Hope you are well , I am fine too. We are thankful for all your support through lights that you have provided to Women who are part of Adult literacy classes. As I have received a call from Mr Shahid i am sharing the following information with you.

 

Women Empowerment groups were started in 2013 in all the PEP schools. The ideas was to provide awareness to women regarding their rights, responsibilities, savings, and issues such as early marriage. These women were provided training on building low cost washroom and they were also provided training on how to save their families during severe floods. At present PEP has 67 groups in total. Each group has a group of 10 females.

 

In 2016 , on the request of women, adult literacy course is introduced to the women. Project aimed at 5 centres in 2016 but 27 centre were started in 2016. they women were provide free books and no fee was charged from them. A mobilizer from the same village taught these classes.. They course is designed for one year as it is a weekly class.

 

In 2017 , PEP introduced a centre where women can learn from android tablets. PEP has designed three grade applications in Sindhi on tablets which are useful for these women. They can use those applications and hear sounds and can read the sentences and stories.

 

Now women are able to read and write sentences. Instead of thumb print they can write their names. They developed their confidence and able to perform theater on sensitive issues. Some of the theatre performances are uploaded on PEP website.

 

PEP is reaching out to the marginalized communities with a hope of educating them and making them effective citizen of our country.

 

PEP requested you to distribute these light as a token of thanks and as a resource for them so they can use it in the night too. They are thankful for all the encouragement that you have provided to them.

Please feel free to ask further information.

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/

As part of the NYC DOT’s Urban Art Program’s Asphalt Art Activation initiative, NY Cares and the DOT Bike Share Program present “Lovely to See You” by Brooklyn-based artist Emily Caisip at the Franklin Street Bike Share station. On the first day of the two day installation, the DOT Bike Share staff primed the site with a vibrant blue color. On the second day, NY Cares volunteers assisted in the implementation of the colorful red leaf design. The leaf pattern was inspired by leaves that are strewn about on many of our New York City streets. The placement of the leaves was spontaneous, while creating a sense of order and pattern at the same time. This project was the first for the Asphalt Art Activation initiative, which activates asphalt with murals around bike share stations throughout the city.

 

NYCDOT Urban Art Program, Special Projects

Lovely to See You by Emily Caisip

Presented with NY Cares and the DOT Bike Share Program

Asphalt on Franklin Street between West Broadway and Varick Street, Manhattan

www.nyc.gov/urbanart

www.nycares.org

 

Eight men commence ministry for the Church

 

Story and photos by Ambria Hammel | Nov. 15, 2010 | The Catholic Sun

 

A baptism at St. Gabriel the Archangel Parish in Cave Creek last week marked a double cause for celebration for one man in particular.

 

The waters of baptism signaled the first step of a lifelong journey in faith for the 2-month-old boy and the first time the celebrant — the infant’s grandfather — administered the sacrament as a permanent deacon for the Church.

 

One day prior, Deacon Robert Torigian was among eight men, all married with children, whom Bishop Thomas J. Olmsted ordained to the diaconate Nov. 6 at Ss. Simon and Jude Cathedral. They join 239 permanent deacons serving the Phoenix Diocese from the altar, within parish ministries and in the greater community.

 

“I know that each of them has what it takes to be an effective, caring deacon and a powerful witness of Jesus, the Servant of all,” said Deacon Doug Bogart, associate director of education and formation for the diaconate.

 

He described them as smart and creative. The new deacons, ages 42-60, have a strong commitment to service, particularly to the bishop, their parishes and to the poor, Deacon Bogart added.

 

Bishop Olmsted told a crowded cathedral filled with extended family, friends, priests and fellow deacons that deacons represent the charity of the Church. Therefore, he said, they will see the new deacons as disciples seeking “not to be served, but to serve.”

 

Then he spoke directly to his eight newest “sons.”

 

“You receive sacred authority to teach in the name of the Church. Such teachings are badly needed,” the bishop said. He cautioned them to resist the temptation to omit any teaching that may not be popular.

 

“Hand it on faithfully in its organic wholeness,” the bishop said.

 

One by one all eight deacon candidates knelt in front of the bishop, placed their hands in his and promised their fidelity.

 

Then the entire church offered a litany of supplication while the candidates fully prostrated themselves down the cathedral’s center aisle. It marked their act of submission.

 

When they got up, the new deacons spread themselves along the foot of the altar where priests vested them for the first time. Jesuit Father Dave Klein vested his brother Deacon Tom Klein, who will be the only deacon serving St. Francis Xavier Parish.

 

Deacon Klein also cited his other brother, a St. Thomas the Apostle parishioner and longtime Vincentian, as influential in his discernment.

 

“It’s been a lifetime evolution for me. There was no lightning bolt moment,” Deacon Klein said in his final hour before ordination.

 

Deacon Klein, who also works as a trial lawyer, will head the parish’s busy marriage preparation program. He hopes to encourage parishioners of all ages to become more active in the Church.

 

Once vested, the deacons knelt a final time in front of Bishop Olmsted as he symbolically handed each of them the Book of the Gospels.

 

“Now you are not only hearers of the Gospels, but also its ministers,” the bishop said.

 

The deacons finished their ordination Mass from the altar and helped distribute the Eucharist.

 

Hope for the future

 

“We, today, witnessed the living faith being handed on from generation to generation so that the Church of Christ will never be without the sacraments of the three holy orders of the Church,” Bishop Eduardo A. Nevares said during a brief program at a post-ordination reception.

 

Providing for the future of the Church, especially by administering the sacrament of baptism, is what several new deacons looked forward to in their first weeks of ordained ministry. One had eight baptisms lined up during his first week.

 

“That is the joy and source of hope,” said Deacon David Runyan, a retired meteorologist who will serve St. Andrew the Apostle Parish in Chandler and El Cristo Rey Parish at the Grand Canyon in the summertime.

 

Deacon Torigian, who baptized his grandson, plans to remind older Catholics of their baptismal obligation to come to know and serve the Lord, he said.

 

The new deacon and longtime physician assistant should know a thing or two about service. He devoted so much time to pastoral ministry in his native Detroit that several deacons invited him to consider joining the diaconate. He finished formation in Phoenix.

 

Outside of parish work at St. Gabriel, Deacon Torigian will also help the diocesan Office of Natural Family Planning develop curriculum for Catholic high school students.

 

Deacon Jim Gall, who for a while didn’t know what a deacon was but always liked to serve others, also looks forward to living the deacon motto of servant leadership.

 

He gained a deeper prayer life during the formation process. It’s helped him see things with spiritual eyes instead of reacting based on temperament, he said.

 

“I could never go back to the way I was,” Deacon Gall said.

 

Most new deacons said they gained a deeper spirituality and strengthened their marriage and family relationships during formation.

 

“I just thank God that I finally said yes,” said Deacon Al Homiski, a parish administrator at St. Bernadette in Scottsdale. He admitted putting off repeated invitations to join the diaconate for years.

 

The five-year formation process in Phoenix involves two years of weekly Kino classes, monthly diaconate meetings with candidates and their wives, practicums including at St. Joseph’s Hospital and Medical Center, and twice daily prayer. The experience is enough to impact the entire family.

 

Deacon Ron Johnson saw a noticeable change in the spiritual lives of his three children as well during formation. The psychologist first felt called to the diaconate during a Cursillo weekend seven years ago and is looking forward to being the first Spanish-speaking deacon in the Flagstaff area.

 

He’ll also travel with Fr. Pat Mowrer throughout the north deanery supporting other parishes and missions.

 

Deacon Jason Robinson said he was always attracted to serving the Church. He applied to the priesthood after high school and entered further discernment.

 

He soon met his wife through a singles ministry and continued to search for his niche in the Church.

 

“I had this passion for the Church kind of from the inside, yet I was a working man,” the software developer said, “so I was always a bridge.”

 

He thought about entering the diaconate later in life. A personal invitation to the diaconate expedited his formation and ordination.

 

His ministry will include prison and Native American outreach plus parish work.

 

“Thank you for responding to God,” Deacon Jim Trant, director of the diaconate told the diocese’s newest deacons, “for doing and acting upon His will.”

 

More: www.catholicsun.org

 

ORDERING INFORMATION

Looking for a glossy/matte copy of this photo? Please call 602-354-2140 or send an e-mail for ordering information. Please note the photo's title when ordering. Download the order form here.

 

Copyright 2006-2010 The Catholic Sun. All rights reserved. This photo and all photos on this Web site credited to The Catholic Sun are provided for personal use only and may not be published, broadcasted, transmitted or sold without the expressed consent of The Catholic Sun.

The Loyola Preparatory Arts Program offers comprehensive arts programs in the metropolitan New Orleans area with a structured program of music studies in piano, ballet, voice, guitar and string instruments.

 

Photos by Harold Baquet

Taken May 1, 2013

anticipating the discovery of the ultimate program that runs the universe

That Swiftie is lookin' kinda plain. The names written on the back are the friends that my mom went to the game with.

with Sigma 1:3.5-4.5 28-84mm Zoom

 

more black cameras in the black camera group

Theatre National de L'Opera programme for Wagner's opera Lohengrin on Monday 8th June 1896 ~ featuring Rose Carron [1857 - 1930] as Elsa and Ernest van Dyck [1861 - 1923] as Lohengrin.

 

Two weeks before this performance, on May 20th, one of the counterweights for the grand chandelier fell into the auditorium killing a member of the audience.

 

This incident inspired one of the more famous scenes in Gaston Leroux's classic 1910 gothic novel The Phantom of the Opera.

McMurdo Station, Antarctica. July 2021 - March 2022.

the dedication program at the first assembly held here. photos sent to me from a friend.

Volunteer Shelby Knapper in Peru Cusco Child Care program 4 weeks www.abroaderview.org

 

1- How was the local ABV Coordinator/staff and the support provided in-country?

Beatriz was awesome. She was there to help with anything I needed, and offered support for the duration of my trip. She showed me around Cusco, helped plan weekend trips, and introduced me to my family, program, and to other volunteers.

 

2- What was the most surprising thing you experienced? Name 2

Program: The kindergarten was very well equipped and staffed.

Host Family: My family ate very big lunches, and the dinner was very light, which was an adjustment.

Country: The weather can change from frizzing to hot within minutes.

 

3- What was the most challenging thing you experienced?

Program: Sometimes being left alone with the whole class of three-year old-kids.

Host Family: Trying to finish the huge lunch they’d give me!

Country: Constantly being approached in the street by people trying to sell stuff.

 

4- Any tips for future volunteers… (clothing, travel, personal items, donations)

1. Warm clothing for nighttime.

2. Extra toilet paper (lots of public bathrooms not have it)

3. Good shoes for walking and hiking.

4. Bug spray for Machupicchu

 

5.1-Other things volunteers should know before coming here: (that’s not in the orientation guide)

a. Come with an open mind.

b. Cusco is full of things to do, so be proactive.

c. You may want to buy your own extra food to supplement.

d. Make use of your weekends with trips.

 

6- Personal Paragraph about the experience:

I had a good experience with A Broader View. I love that I could combine travel with volunteering. I got to see many sights and had a rewarding experience volunteering.

 

7- How would you describe your accommodation, meals, security, friendliness, quality others:

My host family was so welcoming and accommodating. I’m vegetarian, and my host mom would even make special tofu for me. I felt very at home.

 

8- What was your favorite memory of this trip?

 

Program: Bonding with the kids and teachers at the school.

Host Family: Watching soccer together and talking together during meals.

Country: All of the things I got to see in Cusco and Machupicchu.

 

9- How was the ABV USA support prior traveling?

They were so helpful, and always responded to calls and emails superb fast.

 

9.1- What do you think about the reservation system online?

It worked well with me.

 

9.2- Who did you find Abroaderview website

A friend recommended it.

 

10 – Are you willing to speak to other potential ABV volunteers?

Yes.

 

https;/#abroaderview.org

#volunteer #peru #cusco #cuzco #abroaderview

Learning English is sometimes hard but fun!

Inmate Apprenticeship Program Celebrates 30th Birthday,

Graduates 30 in Printing Operations Skills

 

NASHVILLE, Nov 18, 2013 - Nash Correctional Institution today celebrated the 30th anniversary of the Multi-Trades Apprenticeship and Training Committee (MTATC) program at Nash Correctional Print Plant.

 

MTATC is a North Carolina Department of Labor program that offers apprenticeships to qualified inmates which allows them to gain experience in all aspects of printing as well as management, data entry, shipping, maintenance and other related skills.

 

Thirty inmates were recognized at the event for completion of their apprenticeships, each of whom received a certificate authenticating their graduation from the program.

I often wondered: How do the algorithms behind exposure programs work? This test does not give me the answer - just a hint or two: Landscape means small aperture f/11), Portrait means large aperture (f/4) and Action means a fast speed (1/1000s). Not at all surprising, I must say :-) Today such algorithms are considered Industrial Secrets ... I guess AUTO means: Concider the distance - this has got to be a landscape shot. Normal means medium fast speed + medium stoped down lens. MTF means: This lens is great @ f/5.6.

The problem with such programs are: They never seem to be able to go to extreemes - like 1/2000s f.4 ISO 1600 for an action shot - which may in fact be the best choice.

October 9, 1911

630 S. Broadway, Los Angeles

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/

via bit.ly/154iAb2 TV Episodes Online

Click for More TV Episodes Onlineat bit.ly/12siVlD episodes-online/

Children and their families learning what microorganisms live in the streams at Hungry Mother during the Critter Crawl program.

 

Learn about Virginia State Parks here: www.dcr.virginia.gov/state-parks/

Knox College President Teresa Amott and Peace Corps Preparatory Program Director Robin Ragan present a new program agreement to Peace Corps representative Brad Merryman.

Members of the Knox College men's and women's tennis teams lead fitness activities for students at Gale School in Galesburg, as part of BOKS, Build Our Kids Success program.

PROGRAM at 27th Annual AIDS WALK / DC at Freedom Plaza in 1300 block of Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, Washington DC on Saturday morning, 26 October 2013 by Elvert Barnes Photography

 

Grand Marshals, Mitchell Gold and Bob Williams

www.whitman-walker.org/page.aspx?pid=635

 

Follow AIDS WALK / DC at www.facebook.com/aidswalkdc

 

Elvert Barnes AIDS WALK / WASHINGTON DC ongoing project at elvertbarnes.com/AIDSWalkDC

1 2 ••• 15 16 18 20 21 ••• 79 80