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Ivan Mwiiwa, Principal Psychics Mubende district, counsels Rose Nakagwa, a mother of one who is wife to Ebola virus survivor Alex Ssebayigga at their home in Lulungo Village, Kabulasoke trading centre, Madudu sub county, Mubende district on 29th of September 2022. Her husband who tested positive for Ebola while her and her nine month old baby tested negative. Her husband who was undergoing treatment for two weeks in Mubende Regional Referral Hospital was discharged on this day. On 20th September 2022, health authorities in Uganda confirmed Ebola Disease outbreak in Mubende district. Since the official announcement of the outbreak, the country has so far recorded a total of 34 cases (16 confirmed, 18 probable) and 21 deaths (4 confirmed, 17 probable) as of 25th September 2022. Cases have been registered in Mubende, Kyegegwa and Kassanda districts. PHOTO BY JIMMY ADRIKO
U.S Air Force Senior Airman Kate Vojtko, 40th Airlift Squadron loadmaster, observes the propellers of a C-130J Hercules during exercise Swift Response 16, June 6, 2016 at Ramstein Air Base, Germany. Swift Response is a joint, multinational-exercise designed to train the U.S. Global Response Force alongside high-readiness forces from Belgium, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Spain and the United Kingdom. The men and women of the 40th AS support theater commanders' requirements with combat-delivery capability through tactical airland and airdrop operations as well as humanitarian efforts and aeromedical evacuation. (U.S. Air Force photo by Staff Sgt. DeAndre Curtiss/Released)
a bad photograph from my archives.. taken 5 years back when used to take photos with point and shoot film camera.. NMMC viz. Navi Mumbai Municiple Corporation warns people not to put any posters on bus-stop and it gets response from people.
Marca: Mercedes Benz
Carrocería: Marcopolo
Modelo: Viaggio G6 1050
Chasis: O 400 RSE
Año: 2003
Empresa Responsable: Buses Los Halcones
Tipo de Servicio: Interprovincial Zona Central
PPU: XB*9868
N° Interno:
Prohibida Su Copia.
Pedido De Imágenes Al Correo: claudio.mac.ro.1992@gmail.com
Down in the 7th Inning...Aaron Responds.
We played our final playoff game, and lost to the number one team. Our boys played well, and Aaron pitched beautifully and respectfully. :)
Metropolitan Police Peugeot 308 Unmarked Response Car, seen parked outside Charing Cross Police Station, Westminster.
__________________________________________________
Members of the Illinois Air National Guard assemble medical equipment at the McCormick Place Convention Center in response to the COVID-19 pandemic in Chicago, Ill., March 31, 2020. Approximately 30 members of the Illinois Air National Guard were activated to support the US Army Corps of Engineers and the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) to temporarily convert part of the McCormick Place Convention Center into an Alternate Care Facility (ACF) for COVID-19 patients with mild symptoms who do not require intensive care in the Chicago area. (U.S. Air Force Photo by Senior Airman Jay Grabiec)
Vježba Immediate Response 19 provodi se od 10. svibnja do 6. lipnja 2019. na teritoriju Hrvatske na vojnom poligonu "E. Kvaternik" Slunj i u vojarni "Josip Jović" Udbina, te na području Slovenije i Mađarske.
Soldiers of 2/113th Infantry Battalion, New Jersey Army National Guard, prepare to provide area security and quick reaction force during a Homeland Response Force exercise at Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst, N.J. April 18. Nearly 600 New Jersey and New York Army and Air National Guardsmen participated in the three-day joint-training event with NJ State Police. (U.S. Army National Guard photo by Sgt. Bill Addison/released.)
GALVESTON, Texas - Volunteers assess a three-mile stretch of shoreline at Stewart Beach in Galveston, Texas, on March 28, 2014. Workers and volunteers have been working Galveston’s shoreline in response to the Texas City oil spill. U.S. Coast Guard photo by Petty Officer 3rd Class Ivan Barnes.
Marines from the Chemical/Biological Incident Response Force out of Indiana Head, Maryland run a decontamination tent assisting simulated victims of a nuclear detonation in exercise Vibrant Response at Muscatatuck Urban Training Center in Southern Indiana July 29. The exercise, hosted by U. S. Army North, U. S. Northern Command’s Joint Force Land Component Command, brings together approximately 9,000 military and civilian personnel from across the country to simulate the response to a terrorist attack in the United States. (Photo by Sgt. 1st Class Matt Scotten, Atterbury - Muscatatuck Public Affairs)
SLUNJ TRAINING AREA, Croatia – Observer Controller, Sgt. 1st Class Marc Turner from U.S. Army Europe’s Joint Multinational Training Command speaks to soldiers from the Alabamian Land Forces as they conduct an after action review during Immediate Response 2012 here, May 28, 2012. Immediate Response 2012 is a multinational tactical field training exercise that will involve more than 700 personnel primarily from the U.S. Army Europe’s 2nd Calvary Regiment and Croatian armed forces, with contingents from Albania, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Montenegro and Slovenia. Macedonia and Serbia will send observers to the exercise. The exercise is a part of USEUCOM's joint training and exercise program designed to enhance joint and combined interoperability between the U.S. Army, U.S. Air Force, Croatian Armed Forces and partner nations, and will help prepare participants to operate successfully in a joint, multinational, interagency, integrated environment. (U.S. Army photo by Staff Sgt. Jose Ibarra)/released
The interior of the Pima Sheriff's Detective's car. 2010 Southern Public Safety Show, Tucson Arizona.
11/06/2010
SLUNJ TRAINING AREA, Croatia – Observer Controller, Sgt. 1st Class Marc Turner from U.S. Army Europe’s Joint Multinational Training Command observe soldiers from the Alabamian Land Forces conducting an after action review after tactical drills they conducted during the Immediate Response 2012 training event held in Slunj, Croatia, on Monday, May 28, 2012. Immediate Response 2012 is a multinational tactical field training exercise that will involve more than 700 personnel primarily from the U.S. Army Europe’s 2nd Calvary Regiment and Croatian armed forces, with contingents from Albania, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Montenegro and Slovenia. Macedonia and Serbia will send observers to the exercise. The exercise is a part of USEUCOM's joint training and exercise program designed to enhance joint and combined interoperability between the U.S. Army, U.S. Air Force, Croatian Armed Forces and partner nations, and will help prepare participants to operate successfully in a joint, multinational, interagency, integrated environment. (U.S. Army photo by Staff Sgt. Jose Ibarra)/released
Vježbovne aktivnosti tijekom Međunarodne vojne vježbe Immediate Response 19 | Foto: OSRH/ V. Jovanovac
Photo ID: 46324 Ocean Response
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BC's first ever-full scale earthquake and tsunami emergency exercise. Learn more at www2.gov.bc.ca/gov/content/safety/emergency-preparedness-...
Panelists included: • Colonel Morris Davis – former Chief Prosecutor for the Military Commissions at
Guantanamo Bay
• Sig Libowitz – writer/producer of the fi lm, attorney at Venable LLP
• Peter Riegert – one of the lead actors in The Response, also known for his starring roles in
Animal House, Crossing Delancey and The Sopranos
• Thomas Wilner – retired partner at Shearman & Sterling LLP who represented Guantanamo
detainees in front of the U.S. Supreme Court
(October 27, 2011)
U.S. Air Force Airman 1st Class Keene Nettles, an aircraft fuel systems repair technician with the 169th Maintenance Squadron at McEntire Joint National Guard Base, S.C., decontaminates a member of the hydrazine response team during an exercise involving an F-16 fighter jet emergency power unit activation and simulated hydrazine leak, April 10, 2013. The hydrazine response team is demonstrating contamination control capabilities to the exercise evaluation team. Members of the 169th Fighter Wing are preparing for Phase I and II Readiness Inspection, which evaluates a unit’s ability to deploy, then operate and launch missions in a chemical combat environment.
(National Guard photo by Tech. Sgt. Caycee Watson/Released)
During the 2006 FIFA World Cup in Germany, the playing nations were represented by "buddy bears" on Kurfürstendamm (corner of Knesebeckstraße) . Since then they ever stayed.
Condom Kingdom is a venerable institution on South Street in Philadelphia. When Geno's Cheesesteaks put up their notorious "When Ordering, Please Speak English" sign, this was CK's response.
Considering this one for Instruction #28
I wasn't sure if these could be considered street photography so did a little research. I loved what Nitsa had to say and her work on www.nonphotography.com/
About Instruction #28
"Go somewhere you haven't been before - a dog show, a polo match, a monster truck rally - and remember, the interesting things often happen at the fringes away from the main 'action'." - Paul Russell
This is the twenty-eigth Instruction for the Street Photography Now Project, written to inspire fresh ways of looking at and documenting the world we all live in. Photographs you contribute should be new work made in response to the Instruction.
You have until 10.00 GMT on 15.4.11 to upload one photograph in response to this Instruction.
For more info on the project visit: streetphotographynowproject.wordpress.com/
U.S. Soldiers with the South Carolina National Guard's 59th Aviation Troop Command at McEntire Joint National Guard Base, S.C. performs its first damage assessment mission to determine the effects of Hurricane Matthew's aftermath over the South Carolina Low Country, Oct. 8, 2016. Approximately 2,000 South Carolina National Guard Soldiers and Airmen were activated since Oct. 4, 2016. Hurricane Matthew peaked as a Category 4 hurricane in the Caribbean and is projected to pass along the S.C. coast. (U.S. Army National Guard Photo by Staff Sgt. Roberto Di Giovine)
Direct Relief International workers pack shipments for tornado and storm response.Direct Relief offered additional medications, medical supplies and products to clinics impacted by the severe flooding and tornadoes that spanned the Midwest through the Southeast. Products like Ensure and Pediasure Nutritional supplements are part of the shipment, along with Aveeno sun screen.
Photo by Nick Presniakov
Elorry Mahou (25) – CAR Joint Response Field Coordinator.
“In the past five years, eight Dutch organizations joined hands with Central Africans to respond to one of the world’s biggest humanitarian crises, in a country unknown or forgotten by most. The past year, I was part of this Joint Response. It was challenging but also deeply moving.
In Ouham and Ouham Pendé, two of the most affected provinces, we reached out to kids and grownups who were traumatically affected by war, displacement, and loss. We provided shelter and food security. We constructed latrines and water points. We handed out cash for work or unconditionally to those who couldn’t work. And for thousands of kids and young people – many of whom are former child soldiers, victims of sexual violence and orphans – we set up child-friendly spaces, organized vocational training and gave psychosocial support. This gives them part of the protection and perspective they need to be young and to move on.
We gain a lot by being an alliance. We complement each other, share networks and expertise. In some communities, one partner improves food security, while another constructs latrines and sanitation facilities and another one provides psychosocial care and protection to children. In short, we strengthen each other’s interventions. Next year, we will expand to new provinces, where needs have risen dramatically due to new displacements. Access to these areas is difficult and very few NGOs provide humanitarian aid. That’s why we need to go there.
For me, this has been a life-changing year. What we do makes a difference in people’s lives. Seeing that, in a setting of conflict, poverty, and injustice, is moving. But most of all, Central Africans who went through incredible hardship, find the power within themselves to rise again. That’s what inspired me most. And it humbled me. I have only started as a humanitarian. It is very much a tough boy’s world. That’s demanding. But as a woman, I could also add something to that world, by coordinating people and efforts in a different way.”
What I learned is that humanitarian responses are not only about logistics and security. They are about compassion and standing with others when they need it most. I hope I can do this for the rest of my working life.”
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Since 2015, the Dutch Relief Alliance, led by Cordaid, reached out to thousands of war-affected people in the Central African Republic. We joined hands with Central African responders to provide shelter, protection, food and livelihood assistance, clean water and cash support.
A Paradigm Marine excavator conducts beach-tilling operations to release trapped oil in the inter-tidal zone at a spill site on Shuyak Island near Kodiak, Alaska, April 7, 2018. The Unified Command determined that response efforts are no longer producing measurable results and were starting to impact the environment. U.S. Coast Guard photo by Alaska Chadux Corporation.
SLUNJ TRAINING AREA, Croatia – Lt. Col. Kendric Robbins from U.S. Army Europe’s 2nd Cavalry Regiment observe soldiers from the Alabamian Land Forces conducting a movement to contact drill during Immediate Response 2012 here, May 28, 2012. Immediate Response 2012 is a multinational tactical field training exercise that will involve more than 700 personnel primarily from the U.S. Army Europe’s 2nd Calvary Regiment and Croatian armed forces, with contingents from Albania, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Montenegro and Slovenia. Macedonia and Serbia will send observers to the exercise. The exercise is a part of USEUCOM's joint training and exercise program designed to enhance joint and combined interoperability between the U.S. Army, U.S. Air Force, Croatian Armed Forces and partner nations, and will help prepare participants to operate successfully in a joint, multinational, interagency, integrated environment. (U.S. Army photo by Staff Sgt. Jose Ibarra)/released
More than 180 Virginia Army and Air Guard personnel from a special response force of the Virginia National Guard conduct final training and preparations for an external evaluation exercise April 25, 2013, at the Virginia Beach Fire Training Center in Virginia Beach. The special response force is the Chemical Biological Radiological Nuclear High Yield Explosive Response Force Package, known as the CERFP (pronounced “surf-p”), and it can conduct tasks associated with incident management, urban search and rescue, mass causality decontamination, technical decontamination, medical triage and treatment and fatality search and recovery. The force is made up of Soldiers and Airmen from units based in Petersburg, West Point, Rocky Mount, Danville, Virginia Beach The final exercise will validate response capabilities and improve operations for the response force and is scheduled to take place April 27, 2013. Role players simulating causalities took part in the final training to add more realistic conditions and will be included in the final evaluation exercise. (Photo by Cotton Puryear, Virginia National Guard Public Affairs)
At first I was just going to describe it with words, but then I thought I would draw it and take a photo in response. That should be faster.
Except, as I started to draw it, I found my mind wandering as I tried to grab all the memories of exactly how we had played the game, what set of rules we followed.
I moved a lot as a child. Some people moved more, but I moved quite a bit. 18 schools attended during K-12 time, plus getting homeschooled for a short stretch. That is a lot of playgrounds and a lot of playground games. The rules usually varied from place to place, and nothing made a new kid more of a freak than not knowing the clearly established rules that EVERYONE knew.
So really, my memories of the hopscotch rules are no doubt something of an amalgamation, but the boards everywhere I went looked the same. Nine boxes and a circle at the top.
The rules as I remember them:
Each hopper chose a marker, anything was fair game, but I preferred flat rocks (like those that work best for skipping on a pond).
When it was your turn, you would throw your marker aiming first for box 1. If the marker didn't land in the correct box, your turn ended. If it did, you began to jump. You could hop one legged on whichever foot you wanted, but you couldn't switch once you started. One foot per box, and on the side by side (4&5 and 7&8) boxes both feet were touching at once, in adjacent boxes. Your foot had to be completely within the box, not on the line. You had to skip over any boxes that had markers in them (this could be ridiculously difficult if there were too many markers spread over the board). In the circle you would carefully turn around on one leg to make your trip back. On the space prior to your marker, you would balance and bend over to retrieve your marker. Once you completed the course, you would aim the marker at box 2, and so on. If at any point you messed up your turn was over (but your marker stayed on the board if it had landed in the right box to start with.
The goal was to eventually get your marker in the top circle and complete the trip up and back. The winner was the one who did it first. Of course this was easiest if you managed to make a complete run of it on the very first turn so there were no other markers on the board.
Some places I lived did not require you to skip other markers, but ended your turn if your hopping caused another's marker to move. Some places you called out the numbers as you landed on them (and you had to skip the numbers that you skipped).
So there is my hop down memory lane for the day.