Give children in Africa the write stuff with READ's stationery swap.GOING back to school with new stationery seems to be compulsory for kids - not least because most love stationery and want to stand out from the crowd. The list can seem endless - pencil case, pens, highlighters, stapler sta·pler 1 n. One who deals in staple goods or staple fibers. stapler Noun a device used to fasten things together with a staple Noun 1. , calculator, ruler, notebooks, paper, files and so on. And then there are different sizes, styles and colours to choose. But have you ever wondered - when you're buying new pens and pencil cases for your children - what happens to all those perfectly good unwanted ones? For most families they simply end up in a cupboard or drawer, taking up valuable space or, even worse, they're thrown away. But now Staples has come up with a solution. It has joined forces with the charity READ International to launch Back to School Swapsies, a major initiative that aims to ship the UK's unwanted pencil cases and pens - as long as they are in working order - to schoolchildren in Tanzania and Uganda. All you have to do is drop the pens and pencil cases off at your local Staples store and Staples will give you a pounds 1 voucher to WARRANTY, VOUCHER TO, practice. A warranty is a contract real, annexed to lands and tenements, whereby a man is bound to defend such lands and tenements from another person; and in case of eviction by title paramount, to give him lands of equal value. 2. spend on anything from a scientific calculator to that all-important maths set. READ International will then collect, sort and ship the stationery to Africa. This latest initiative builds on the work of the charity, which has a 500-strong student volunteer network, responsible for redistributing disused disused Adjective no longer used Adj. 1. disused - no longer in use; "obsolete words" obsolete noncurrent - not current or belonging to the present time disused adj text books from the UK to Africa. Since its launch in 2003 it has shipped nearly half a million books. READ director Rob Wilson “Rob Wilson” redirects here. For the singer, see Fresh I.E.. Robert Wilson (born January 4, 1965 in south Oxfordshire) is a United Kingdom politician and entrepreneur. said: "This is a fantastic idea which we hope will capture the imagination of young people and get them thinking about recycling, their own environment and helping others. I have seen first hand the huge demand for basic stationery like pens and pencils in East African Adj. 1. East African - of or relating to or located in East Africa schools and know that hundreds of thousands of school children in Tanzania and Uganda will benefit from this initiative." Staples has also agreed to donate new pens and pencil cases to the charity. They will be shipped to Africa later this year, together with the latest batch of text books. Schoolchildren in Tanzania and Uganda follow a syllabus almost identical to the UK but, as one of the poorest regions in the world, teachers often lack the resources needed to teach. CAPTION(S): READ international director Rob Wilson discovers for himself how the charity's work is helping children in Tanzania |
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