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MONDRAGON Korporazioko ordezkariek oso balorazio positiboa egin dute. Gustura agertu dira BIENALean izandako bisita eta kontaktu kopuruekin.
Representatives from Carl Sandburg College participated in the Manufacturing Day event on Thursday, Oct. 27, at the Galesburg Area Vocational Center. Participants visiting Sandburg reps toured the Maker Trailer, our mobile classroom experience which for this event included two virtual welding stations, and also a chance to meet with a recruiter to learn more about our career-tech programs. Participants also had the chance to visit with local and regional businesses and organizations as well as see or participate in demonstrations. #MFGDay22
Mayor Nutter attends the Urban Manufacturing Alliance.
Copyright City of Philadelphia. Photograph by Mitchell Leff.
This Mayor's Office photograph is being made available only for publication by news organizations and for noncommercial personal use. The photograph may not be manipulated in any way and may not be used in advertisements, emails, products, or promotions that in any way suggests approval or endorsement of the Mayor or his Administration. Reproduction of this photograph requires attribution of ownership to the City of Philadelphia, as well as attribution of the photographer.
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National Manufacturing Day, celebrated on the first Friday in October brings together the misconceptions, the public perception and the career pathways that make up what many would argue is the most vital industry to our country. More than anything, Manufacturing Day is an opportunity to bring modern manufacturing to life for the public
For National Manufacturing Day, the Aerospace Joint Apprenticeship Committee (AJAC) partnered with the Tacoma School District, Rainier Beach High School, OMAX Corporation, Cadence Aerospace – PMW Operations, Gensco and South Seattle College to offer tours, hands-on activities and presentations about all things manufacturing. Many of the students we invited were currently enrolled in Career and Technical Education programs such as aerospace science, engineering and manufacturing.
2017 was a unique year for AJAC’s Manufacturing Day initiatives, particularly for the next wave of Youth Apprenticeship cohorts we will launch this school year. Students from every background and social-economic status came together and learned what a day in the life is like for a manufacturer. From concept to design, to fabrication and machining. These are the components each company utilizes to make their products world renown.
At Cadence Aerospace – PMW Operations, students saw larger-than-life CNC machines cutting metal parts for Boeing’s 787 Dreamliner and Airbus’s A320-Neo. They rode a 5-axis Cincinnati Milacron Gantry CNC machine as it spewed coolant over the airplane parts, cutting each part with precision. At Gensco, a company known for its fabrication of HVAC equipment, students were drawn to laser cutters and heavy sheet metal equipment to build commercial heating and ventilation systems we have in our very buildings. OMAX Corporation, the world leader in abrasive waterjet machining, demonstrated how 60,000 PSI of water can machine parts down to the thousands of an inch.
Throughout the three tours, students understood what it takes to become a journey-level machinist or fabricator. AJAC’s registered Youth Apprenticeship and Adult Apprenticeship programs brought to life the career pathways that gave them the freedom to earn while they learn, complete college-level classes and refrain from years of college debt.
Central services area
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Carl Sandburg College was presented with a proclamation from the State of Illinois on Tuesday morning in the Center for Manufacturing Excellence to celebrate Manufacturing Month. Participating on the stage included Dr. Seamus Reilly, President of Carl Sandburg College; Adrian Madunic, Northwest Region Manager, Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity; Sarah Hartwick, Vice President of Education & Workforce Policy, Illinois Manufacturers' Association, and Ellen Burns, Dean of Career and Technical Education.
The ACC Manufacturing Careers Expo event at the Highland Campus, Building 2000, on Thursday, July 8, 2021.
Herend porcelain manufacture winter 2008 (hungary)
Camera was a Nikon D70, freehand shot at 1/5 second (leaning to a wall) / F3.5
Colour balance slightly changed in photoshop trying to give the atmosphere more of the original touch.
MONDRAGON Korporazioko ordezkariek oso balorazio positiboa egin dute. Gustura agertu dira BIENALean izandako bisita eta kontaktu kopuruekin.
Side 1: Harvesting redcedars (a form of juniper) for pencil manufacturing, along with pines and baldcypress for lumber, was of great importance to the Cedar Keys and the early development of North Florida in the late 1800s and early 1900s. In 1849, German entrepreneur J. Eberhard Faber (1830-1884) arrived in New York hunting splinter-free wood for pencils. He found abundant redcedar in Florida’s Gulf Hammock/Waccasassa Bay area between the Suwannee and Withlacoochee Rivers. He bought land and timber, floated logs to the Keys, and shipped logs to the family factory in Germany. In 1858, Faber built a slat mill on Atsena Otie (Depot Key), directly south of this location, and shipped slats instead of logs. In 1862, he built the Faber pencil factory on New York’s East River (near the current site of the United Nations) and supplied it with slats from his Cedar Keys mill, a practice facilitated by the 1861 completion of David Levy Yulee's (1810-1886) Florida Railroad connecting the Keys and Fernandina Beach. Side 2: The Eagle Pencil Company followed Faber’s lead, building its New York factory in 1868 and supplying it with redcedar slats from its own mill built on this site in 1876. This industry flourished on the Cedar Keys until the local resources were depleted and the slat mills were destroyed by a hurricane in 1896. Augmenting Cedar Key’s redcedar-for- pencils industry of the era were other forest-based products. Yellow pine and baldcypress lumber was milled on the Keys by Suwannee Lumber and Fenimore Steam and Planing mills on Atsena Otie and Way Key, respectively . Cabbage (sabal) palms were harvested and used for dock pilings locally and as far away as Key West. Later (1910-1952), the Standard Manufacturing Company developed a process, established a mill, and produced brush fibers and Donax® whisk brushes from young cabbage palms. Palm fibers were shipped nationwide and as far as Canada, Germany, and Australia. The rich and diverse forest resources of the Cedar Keys and surrounding area, and the entrepreneurial energy of many were central to the settlement and development of the “Cedar Keys.” They provided homes and livelihood for thousands, products needed and enjoyed around the world, and a proud legacy for Florida.
MONDRAGON Korporazioko ordezkariek oso balorazio positiboa egin dute. Gustura agertu dira BIENALean izandako bisita eta kontaktu kopuruekin.
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