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A page from the PDF document.
AC Wharton, Jr. with Memphis & Shelby County Government.
A collaboration of MCA Students:
Myself & Katie Benjamin — Logo & Digital Implementation Plan
Eric Huber — Packaging
Bryan Rollins — CD Layout
James Hart — Broadside Design
Azman Mokhtar, Managing Director, Khazanah Nasional, Malaysia capture during the Session: Implementing Strategies for Inclusive Growth at the Annual Meeting 2018 of the World Economic Forum in Davos, January 23, 2018
Copyright by World Economic Forum / Sikarin Thanachaiary
Festus G. Mogae, Chairperson of the Joint Monitoring and Evaluation Commission (JMEC), met with the Group of 10 (former detainees), members of Sudan People’s Liberation Movement/Army-In-Opposition (SPLM/A-IO), and members of the Government of the Republic of South Sudan (GRSS) on 22 December 2015. During his welcoming remarks, Mr. Mogae said the return of SPLM/A-IO indicates their commitment to restoring peace and implementing the Agreement in South Sudan. “Your return is not the end of the road, but the start of another important journey,” he stressed.
He also mentioned his appreciation of the Government for enabling the first group of the SPLM/A (IO) to return, and urged both parties to plan for the expeditious return of the second and third groups, in accordance with the proposed plan. In remarks aimed at the greater South Sudanese population, he said “in this season of hope, forgiveness and renewal … this Christmas, 2015, is the last celebrated in a context of conflict.”
The main purposes of the meeting were: a) to ensure the timely establishment of the main pre-transitional institutions, b) to hear from the leadership of the Ceasefire and Transitional Security Arrangements Monitoring Mechanism (CTSAMM) about their activities, challenges and how best to support their efforts in future, c) to hear from the Parties on the status, to date, of the cantonment of forces and d) to move forward with the other processes necessary to establish the Transitional Government of National Unity, as required by the Compromise Peace Agreement.
Agro Kusuma tourism is located in Ngaglik village, Batu district. One stop shooping service has implemented in Agro Kusuma Tourism. The unforgettable experience can found here after visiting apple plantation, flower, coffee, strawberry, and hydroponics vegetables (non- insecticide).
Agro tourism, which has supported by fancy hotels, lies in 17-acre plantation. This tourism object allows the visitors to pluck apple directly from tree. We just meet this interesting activity in Agro Kusuma tourism. You can pick the apples and oranges in the plantation area and tasted them. Feel the fresh and health fruit from its tree.
You may see the process of drying the coffee, or buy vegetables, which can cook soon. Since the plantation is wide, it can use for jogging, bicycling, playground and riding a horse. Besides, it has a mini zoo, camping ground, and swimming pool. Do not forget, before leaving Kusuma Agro Batu, you can buy souvenirs of its products, including; jenang, apple vinegar, and orange. We also able to enjoy various food products of Batu city, such as; apples, jamb, brem apple and strawberry.
Agro Kusuma tourism is facilitated with mini zoo, green house, bar, restaurant, coffee shop, warm swimming pool, badminton hall, tennis court, volley field, etc.
For details:
From(Left to Right) Mr T Chitty Babu, Convenor, Infrastructure & Urban Development Panel, CII Chennai Zone and Chairman & CEO, Akshaya Pvt Ltd. Mr Amit Bansal, Director, Forensic Services, Infrastructure Sector, KPMG in India, Mr Ramesh Subramaniam, President, Sri City Pvt Ltd at the session on Project Implementation Risks in Infrastructure - Typical Misconduct Practices on 28th July 2010 at Chennai.
From 15th to 18th of July 2013, a workshop was held in Accra, Ghana to set EAF (ecosystem approach to fisheries) implementation baselines for 13 countries in the CECAF-south area.
Savings group
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In the Teso region of Uganda, Cordaid and partner organization SOCADIDO support female farmers who struggle to maintain their livelihood because of climate change, land depletion or a lack of tools and agricultural knowledge. Cordaid and SOCADIDO provide seeds, tools, technology and training.
The program started in August 2017 and has been implemented in 9 sub-counties in Teso and supports 9000 farmers in total. The main objectives are threefold: increase food production, reduce post-harvest losses and improve access to finance for the farmers.
Each participating farmer received 2 kilograms of seeds, mainly black-eyed peas, corn and vegetables like cassava and potato, which they plant in a plot of land of about one acre.
All 9000 participating farmers are put into groups of 30. The 300 farming groups are trained on harvest loss reduction, how to organize savings and credit and improve economic activities.
Each sub-county also has a marketing association. That is where the farmers collect their produce reserved for the market after they put aside all they need for their own consumption. The farmers get paid per kilogram of product sold. The association connects the sellers and buyers.
"The problem was that they had a poor bargaining position and often had to sell their products for a bad price", says Tom Edul, Program Coordinator for the Female Farmers Deserve Better program. "As a group, the farmers are much stronger and better equipped to improve their income."
Another vital factor in raising the value of their products is the possibility to save the harvests for a longer time. In some cases, the time of year greatly determines the price of the products. By providing the farmers with special bags, called PICS bags, fruits and vegetables can be saved for months. Now they can wait for the right time to sell and get a much better price.
The successful project is about to end in a few months, but SOCADIDO is eager to extend and expand. Edul: "We really want to continue. The results are great, and we have really made a difference in the lives of these farmers. Our methods of distributing PICS bags, providing tarpaulins for drying the harvest, which increases the quality of the produce, and the implementation of irrigation systems, are unique in this region. The farmers truly appreciate our efforts and they now have the confidence and courage to sell their products on the markets for a reasonable price. They can sustain themselves and even grow their businesses."
The Stump Jump Plow was one of many models of plow made in the East Bros Workshop at Mallala. The plow could be made with fittings to be pulled by either horses or a tractor. It was used to work the ground after it was cleared of scrub and enabled the tynes to "Jump" over any protrusions such as roots or stones. On display at the Mallala Museum.
from the museum of funeral customs. the interior is dimly lit with incadescents, but i wanted most of the pictures i took in there to look more antiseptic and clinical so i gelled the flash with a rosco Tough Plusgreen and overpowered the ambient lights, bouncing where i could to emulate ambient fluorescents. it was frustrating because the ceiling is high above the subjects and also painted matte black, making it impossible to bounce the light from above.
Solar LED Area Flood Lights in Badin Sep3, 2012
Funded By: UNDP GEF SGP Early Recovery Project
Implementing NGOs:
LEAF (Laar Environmental Awareness Forum), IDF (Indus Development Forum) in Badin, Sindh, Pakistan
Designed by : LEDtronics, USA
Manufactured by: ShaanTech KEPZ Karachi.
Installed by : ShaanTech KEPZ Karachi.
Product: Solar LED Flood Lights system SLR-FDL002-TPW-25W-001
12 Watt LED Flood Light.
25 watt Solar Panel
Implementos y herramientas usadas por viejos mineros y pirquineros de Andacollo: Máquina para lavar oro con harnero y peinecillo, cascos, lámpara a carburo, challa, combo, capacho, pala y chuzo.
Think, Develop, Implement – From the Idea to Your Project
Have you thought about realising your own MitOst project, and maybe already have an idea? Or are you looking for others interested to join your team? Then stop by, bring your project idea, and meet creative people!
The aim of the workshop is to pitch ideas, to connect people, and to discuss directly with the Project Advisory Board. Here you can learn what already exists, what is possible, and how it can be implemented.
Photos by Ruslan Altimirov
William Francis Morneau, Minister of Finance of Canada capture during the Session: Implementing Strategies for Inclusive Growth at the Annual Meeting 2018 of the World Economic Forum in Davos, January 23, 2018
Copyright by World Economic Forum / Sikarin Thanachaiary
Plaque on the front of F.L. Sankot Case Implement, 807 13th Street, Belle Plaine, Iowa. The Sankot Motor Company, also known as the Sankot Garage, is a historic building located on the Lincoln Highway. The historical significance of this building is its association with the increase in all-season travel and the development of businesses like this one to serve them along the Lincoln Highway, the United States's first transcontinental route. It is a brick front building with side walls of clay tile that was constructed on a concrete foundation. The west half of the building was added in 1927. It was operated by O.B. Charles and Sid Sankot until 1937. They also sold Chryslers. Gasoline was sold from 1920 to 1944. F.L. Sankot bought the business in 1937. In addition to vehicle repair, he sold Case and Oliver tractors and implements. William and Jerry Sankot purchased the business in 1985, and limited it to passenger, commercial and agricultural vehicle repairs. The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1995. It was included as a contributing property in the Belle Plaine Main Street Historic District in 2013.
Yes. This is the trash can where Nick Montfort and Scott Rettberg were questioned about photographing. I was a little nervous about it before I came into the city, but it was all cool. Nobody even noticed me.
You, Too, Can Have a Super Power!
This Mid-'50s 'Walk Behind' tractor was intended for use in gardens and fields of less than one acre (about 4,000 square meters). David Bradley, a maker of agricultural implements, was born in New York State in 1811. After working for his brother for three years, he moved to Chicago, Illinois to form a business of his own, merging with a partner in 1854. After thirty years, David and his son J. Harley Bradley bought out the Company. David Bradley passed away in 1899; seven years later, the company went into receivership and eventually became a manufacturing division of Sears Roebuck. Antitrust laws forced Sears to divest the company again in the early 1960s.
Sears sold this model between 1951 and 1954, with production actually ending in late 1953. These tractors used one of two Briggs and Stratton engines or two Continental engines, all between 2 ¼ and 2 ½ horsepower, depending on availability or production run. Three tire types were also available: the knobby lawn tires shown here; the Allstate Ag (more conventional tractor tires) and a steel wheel with movable lugs. This unit sports a cultivator attachment, but like the Gravely Super Convertible, dozens of other attachments were available. You may find more information at www.davidbradley.net/.
November 18, 2010 - "Roles for Third Parties in Improving Implementation of EPA's and OSHA's Regulations on the Management of Low-Probability, High-Consequence Process Safety Risks" - Penn Program on Regulation, in conjunction with the Wharton Risk Management Center, hosted a conference regarding the usage of third party auditors in the enforcement of regulatory safety measures in high risk industries. Industries which experts call "Low-Probability, High-Consequence," such as nuclear reactors, oil refineries, or chemical processing plants, are specifically hoped to be improved by third party inspections safety. The conference brought together numerous participants from a variety of fields, including from government, industry, insurance, academia, and non-profit sectors. The conference consisted of a day-long discussion spread over three separate panels. Over the course of the conference, participants stressed the importance of implementing a third party system to effectively and thoroughly audit industry despite lack of adequate funds and resources. Other potential scenarios offered for enacting effective third party auditing included making sure that these third party auditors were completely independent from the industries they would be inspecting so as to eliminate bias or a conflict of interest. Another issue to consider is the question of whose authority would the third party auditors be under and what kind of enforcement power would they have to enforce industry change. One of the panel discussions brought up the potential linkage of third party audits with insurance companies so as to provide an incentive for industry to decrease safety risks in order to pay lower insurance premiums. Workshop participants included Isadore "Irv" Rosenthal, a Senior Research Fellow at the Wharton Risk Management and Decision Processes Center; Howard Kunreuther, James G. Dinan Professor of Business and Public Policy at Wharton and Co-Director of the Wharton Risk Center; Laurie Miller, Senior Director of Environment and Process Safety at the American Chemistry Council; Erwann O. Michel-Kerjan, Managing Director of the Wharton Risk Management and Decision Processes Center; Scott Berger, Executive Director of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers; Don Nguyen, a Principal Process Safety Management Engineer at Siemens Energy, Inc.; Mike Marshall, Process Safety Management Coordinator at the Directorate of Enforcement Programs at the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) within the United States Department of Labor; Cary Coglianese, Edward B. Shils Professor of Law and Professor of Political Science at the University of Pennsylvania Law School and Director of the Penn Program on Regulation; Bob Whitmore, Former Chief of OSHA Division of Recordkeeping at the United States Department of Labor; Jim Belke, Chemical Engineer at the Office of Emergency Prevention and Member of the Office of Chemical Preparedness within the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA); William Doerr, FM Global Research Area Director; Manuel Gomez, Director of Recommendations at the U.S. Chemical Safety Board; Tim Cillessen, Manager of Sales and Marketing at Siemens Energy, Inc.; Mike Wright, Director of Health, Safety, and Environment at United Steelworkers; Jennifer Nash, Affiliated Researcher of Nanotechnology and Society Research Group at Northeastern University and the Associate Director of the Mossavar-Rahmani Center for Business and Government, Executive Director of Regulatory Policy Program at Harvard Kennedy School of Government; Michael Perron, Senior Vice President of Willis Re New York.
The superficial markings of the highlighter, which are somewhat difficult to see in visible light, are clearly visible. Due to the shallow penetration of ultraviolet light, however, highlighter ink itself was largely obscured by almost every implement tested.
Village: Nayagadi, Cuttuck, Odisha, India, 7 March 2013:.Children interactively play during a break, at Nayagadi UG school in Cuttuck. .School Students Helpline and SAMIKSHA ( analysis) are monitoring and feedback tools, implemented by Odhisa Government for effective implementation of the Right to Education Act in Odhisa. UNICEF India/2013/Prashanth Vishwanathan.
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Antique 19th Century Buddhist Temple Bell.
A ritual bell or dril bu cast from brass/bronze decorated with tsipa or face of glory with strings of pearl festooned between each face. The handle is surmounted by the face of yum or mother deity and a half dorje. Iron drop clapper missing in the mists of time and replaced.
A very old Tibetan bronze temple bell the handle is slightly at an angle and looks like a very old repair to the handle about 1cm above the bell it is very decorative it really is a beautiful piece.
Size, 16cms high.
Code 2940
About:
Hand-held bells such as this one are among the most commonly used implements of Tibetan Buddhist ritual. The bell symbolizes wisdom, the feminine component of enlightenment, and is often used together with the "vajra," which symbolizes compassionate action and intention, the masculine component of enlightenment. Small images of vajras adorn the rim and upper face of this bell; other imagery includes auspicious symbols, protective animal-like faces, and garlands. The handle (in the form of a half-vajra), is well worn, attesting to the bell’s past use.
The Walters Art Museum
Baghdad, 07 March 2018 – Under the patronage of H.E. Prime Minister of Iraq, Dr. Hayder Al-Abadi , today in Baghdad a high level conference on implementation of Iraq National Action Plan on United Nations Security Council Resolution 1325 on women, peace and security in Iraq, was held.
In 2012-2014 the Iraqi Cross Sector Task Force (CSTF) developed the Iraqi National Action Plan (NAP) for implementation of the United Nations Security Council Resolution 1325. The NAP 1325 is a crucial tool for improving the status of women’s rights in Iraq. Composed of ministries, institutions and civil society, the CSTF has been the driving mechanism for implementing, monitoring, and reporting of this NAP.
At today’s conference, the Government of Iraq and CSTF took the opportunity to mark the International Women’s Day, 8th of March, by sharing the preliminary outcomes, lessons learned and conclusions summarized during the on-going process of developing of the draft national report on the implementation of the first NAP 1325, which will be presented to the United Nations Security Council later during 2018.
At the opening session of the conference, participants were greeted by the Prime Minister of Iraq, Dr. Hayder Al Abadi, Secretary General of the Council of Ministers and Co-Chair of the CSTF 1325, Dr. Mahdi Al Alaq, Chairperson of the National Committee for the Advancement of Iraqi Women and Chair of the Coordination Committee of CSTF 1325, Dr. Thikra Alloush, Chair of the High Council of Women of the Kurdistan Region and Co-Chair of CSTF 1325, Ms. Pakshan Zangana and by the Director General of the Iraqi Women Empowerment Department of the Council of Ministers, Dr. Ibtisam Aziz.
Representatives of the international community expressed their commitment to support women’s rights and their participation in the process of peace building in Iraq as well as in the upcoming phase of the development of the second NAP. On behalf of the International community the conference was addressed by the Special Representative of the United Nations Secretary-General for Iraq, Mr. Jan Kubiš, British Ambassador to Iraq, Jon Wilks, Charge d’Affairs of the Embassy of the Kingdom of the Netherlands, Marielle Geraedts, and by the Country Director of UN Women, Ms. Dina Zorba.
Photos by UNAMI PIO.
Southern Regional Fuels Program recognized for implementing prescribed fire over 1.3 million acres this year
Wildfire season has intensified with “mega fires” becoming the norm across western landscapes. The Regional Fuels Program acknowledged it’s not “if,” but “when” the south will have to face similar wildfire seasons. Forests across the Southern Region applied prescribed fire on a regional record-high 1.3 million acres of federal lands. All of this was completed during a pandemic and a new budget modernization process.
The last decade, the U.S. wildfire season has intensified year after year with “mega fires” becoming common place across the western landscape. The Southern Regional Fuels Program acknowledged it’s not “if,” but when the south will have to face similar wildfire seasons as climate change continues making its mark. This Region accomplished implementing prescribed fire to more than 1.3 million acres in FY21, during a pandemic, and following a new budget modernization process.
Forest Service employees carried out the program of work while putting their trust in Regional leadership that the funding and needed resources would be provided. Every Ranger District executed its best effort on all burn days, managing the team's safety while meeting the objectives outlined in the interdisciplinary approved burn plans.
The Forest Service improved water quality, air quality, and carbon sequestration as it reduced the wildfire threat to local communities throughout the south, including Puerto Rico. Our employees embody the skills necessary to perform at a high level to accomplish the mission and communicate the benefits of their work to external audiences. This monumental feat would not have occurred without thousands of Southern USDA Forest Service Employees dedication and strong work ethic.
The success of the Regional Fuels Program was dependent on several individuals for their leadership and ability to communicate to make this year’s historic accomplishment possible.
Mike Ward has been at the helm of fuels management, overseeing suppression, aviation, and coordination functions to acquire the necessary resources and not overextending fire suppression needs. Ward coordinated with Air, Archeology, Biology, Budget, and Timber program managers to ensure a desired outcome by all.
Jason Demas has managed budget concerns and balanced fire suppression needs. Mike Seaton managed the surge modules stationed all around the Southern Region. Seaton communicated daily inside and outside the Geographical Area to keep a workforce available to meet Regional needs. Nancy Ellsworth was a critical contributor to streamlining the ordering process and troubleshooting with the National Interagency Coordination Center to improve the process.
Shardul Raval helped navigate the process to keep the Regional Leadership Team informed, while addressing concerns promptly. He had the bigger picture insight that led to the great success for all of our lands treated with prescribed fire.
Meeting with 15 Indonesian Mayors to discuss ITU standards and the implementation of the U4SSC KPIs
24 February 2023
Geneva, Switzerland
©ITU/D.Woldu
Implementation of anti-corruption reforms in Ukraine: stock-taking event, by the delegation to the EU-Ukraine Parliamentary Accession Committee.
Antique tractors belonging to the Tessmer family. They mostly collect Minneapolis-Moline models, but also have a few other models including Case, Oliver, and Fordson.
These were taken at the Edgar, WI antique tractor show in August, 2011. All but the Oliver are handheld, 3-exposure capture for HDR processing.