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Mr. & Mrs. Olson & son, Ron on capitol steps with Odin Langen -1963.
More at pchs.org/resources/1997-040-021
Family Festival - Engelstad Pioneer Village - 6-30-2007 - Right-Center of the Ole L. & Anna Ihle Pioneer Family Display in the Engelstad Building..
More at pchs.org/resources/2007-012-030
United Way 2-1-1 organized a Multi Agency Resource Center on May 14 for people affected in our region by the April 22 tornadoes. Nearly 800 people attended. Information and help from places such as FEMA, Legal Services of Eastern Missouri, St. Louis County Department of Health and more were on hand.
United Way 2-1-1 organized a Multi Agency Resource Center on May 14 for people affected in our region by the April 22 tornadoes. Nearly 800 people attended. Information and help from places such as FEMA, Legal Services of Eastern Missouri, St. Louis County Department of Health and more were on hand.
Postcard - Red Lake Falls, MN - "Should old acquaintance be forgot? No my dear, surely not! To prove it true, this Card I send to you, my faithful friend." St Josephs Church and School, Main Street from Court House. Postmarked and dated 1912..
More at pchs.org/resources/2006-071-025
Distributed Marketing, Co-Op Marketing, Marketing Resource Management, Marketing Asset Management, Channel Marketing, Co-Op Advertising Platform, Brand Management System,Local Marketing Automation, Local Store Marketing, Corporate Franchise Marketing, Co-Op Funds Management, Ad Builder, Decentralized Marketing Organizations, Brand Compliance.
Who is SproutLoud?
SproutLoud is a Marketing Resource Management company devoted to the local marketers of distributed marketing organizations and their respective channel programs. We develop technology and service offerings designed to make our clients local marketers successful within their respective business communities by enabling integrated local marketing management.
Who can work with SproutLoud?
If you are a local marketer, you must have a SproutKey™ to register which would be provided by a Network Sponsor. You may also be provided one-click access to SproutLoud from their internet site. If you would like to tell a business colleague about SproutLoud, click here. If you support a distributed marketing organization and would like to become a network sponsor or find out more about SproutLoud,
Do you work with a distributed marketing organization?
A distributed marketing organization, also known as a local marketing network or field marketing organization, may consist of franchises, retailers, dealer networks, VAR Programs, remote sales forces, distributed offices and/or employees, affiliates, field reps, associations, etc. Distributed Marketing Organizations need their brand, products and services to be represented consistently across multiple marketing media at the local level, and especially when marketing decisions are decentralized and deferred to the businesses and people marketing locally.
A bit more on SproutLoud
We live and breathe to solve the complex challenges of distributed marketing organizations. We love using technology to simplify workflows and solve problems on behalf of the distributed marketing organization, as well as the local marketing network.
Family Festival - Engelstad Pioneer Village - 6-30-2007 - Center of Clarence & Emma Peterson Pioneer Family Display in the Engelstad Building..
More at pchs.org/resources/2007-012-023
Family Festival - Engelstad Pioneer Village - 6-30-2007 - Left Edge of Clarence & Emma Peterson Pioneer Family Display in the Engelstad Building..
More at pchs.org/resources/2007-012-021
(5309) Torre Guil conference center (environment training center) in the Sierra de Carrascoy mountain range, 15 km outside of Murcia (Spain) : el estanque del centro.
Photographs of the 2/25/2010 Law.Gov workshop at the Columbia Law School, hosted by Tim Wu and Stuart Sierra. Photos by Stuart Sierra.
Postcard - Red Lake River below the dam in Thief River Falls looking North - Reverse = Date "1909".
More at pchs.org/resources/2007-023-003
ethiopienne: Support We Read Too: A Central Resource for Books by PoC We Read Too is a mobile directory of books with PoC main characters written by authors of color. When We Read Too first launched, the directory contained 300 books. Since then, it’s doubled to over 600! The process of reviewing suggestions and researching books is time intensive and cannot be done alone. Since the launch, I’ve received over 1,600 suggestions. I worked with another student to go through half of those suggestions. Raising money through Indiegogo will allow me to hire someone to review suggestions on a regular basis. This year, my goal is to surpass 1,000 books. In 2016, the Cooperative Children’s Book Center (CCBC) at the University of Wisconsin determined that 12% of children’s books were written or illustrated by people of color. (View the full statistics of the CCBC here). Believe it or not, the CCBC has been collecting this data since 1994, yet no central resource exists. Before creating We Read Too, during the end of 2013, I spent weeks looking for a central resource for children’s and young adult books with characters of color that were written by authors of the same background. When I didn’t find that resource, I knew I had to create it myself. I want We Read Too to be the central resource where authors of colors can know their work is being celebrated and readers can find books with diverse representation. For more information and to support, check out the Indiegogo.
Neal Fox Photo - Janice Owen (Morris Owen's daughter) - 1955 Graduate - Lincoln Highschool.
More at pchs.org/resources/1997-040-057
(Neal Fox Photo) - Knox School PTA & School Album 1953-1956 - 1954-1955 - K - Ella Fiskerbeck - Unknown names.
More at pchs.org/resources/1997-093-735
Aaron Root & Brooke Cooper
Best Couple
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Brooke Cooper
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American Legion Post 117 Donation of American & Canadian Flags to the Chamber of Commerce - Julie Olson, Bob Bergan, & Larry Molstad - "Where Two Rivers Meet" - 1996 - p121 - newsprint image.
More at pchs.org/resources/1997-063-054
twitter.com/AdimFone/status/1552676806800470016
This photo is posted for design inspiration. The design content and photos posted in this album are not my own, but posts from external sources around the web. For use in commercial and personal projects contact the original source of the content posted in the Album "Web Graphic Design Resources".
Postcard - Two men (father and son?) both in suits - older man sitting, younger man standing with hand in pocket.
More at pchs.org/resources/2005-071-021
Vehicles line up April 27, 2020 to receive food during a drive-thru distribution at Moore Food & Resource Center.
Brussels , Belgium , 04 June 2014 - Green Week 2014 - SIde Events - Green and Circular - Resource Efficient Economies for Sustainability - a SIDS Perspective, UNEP © EU - Patrick Mascart
Otters are seen by Quileute Tribal Council Vice Chair Tony Foster, U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Natural Resource Conservation Service (NRCS) Tribal Liaison for Washington State Robin Slate, and Quileute Tribal Water Quality Biologist Nicole Rasmussen as they return from la seafch for signs of erosion (risk erosion) of the bank at and about Smith Sough, the source of water that flows through the culverts of the NRCS Thunder Road project, that addresses four fish barriers that block more than 22 acres of fish habitat, in La Push, Washington, Aug 22, 2018. This conservation planning effort lead to an unusual partnership where the Quileute Tribe requested access to WDWF fish passage biologist and engineers through a NRCS/WDFW Contribution agreement. This partnership resulted in a coordinated effort to bring conservation actions to life in a remote location. The Thunder Road Project addressed the need for floodplain connectivity to restore natural flow of water across floodplain, restore access to off-channel fish habitat in wetlands and stream complex. The project also improved the roadway and reduced sediment runoff from tribal members using road to access the river during the wet season (peak fishing season). The conservation plans identified aquatic habitat, water quality, and plant pest resource concerns, along with a social resource concern related to the Tribe’s use of the degraded Thunder Road for fishing and recreational access. Additionally, conservation planning determined soils information was needed and resulted in a Soil Survey mapping effort on the Reservation. Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP) funding in two successive years was used to provide the Tribe financial assistance. The tribe used State Salmon Recovery Funding Board funding to provide the balance of the implementation cost. EQIP 2015 contract included invasive species control aquatic organism passage and access road improvement=$60,964. EQIP 2016 contract included aquatic organism passage and access road improvement = $117,101. USDA Photo by Lance Cheung.
Postcard - Middle River, MN - Street Scene - Garage, Livery, Restaurant - Postmarked 1918.
More at pchs.org/resources/2006-071-013