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A simple lightbox plugin based on the bootstrap modal plugin.
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Other Name: Finca de Trujilo Alto
San Juan, Puerto Rico
Listed: October 7, 2011
This rural forest-like estate historic district was the residence of Luis Muñoz Marín from the 1940s until his death in 1980. Luis Muñoz Marín was the first Puerto Rican governor elected by the people. Luis Muñoz Marín is also called the “Father of Modern Puerto Rico,” a key figure in the development and implementation of Operation Commonwealth, Operation Bootstrap and Operation Serenity, one of the most revered leaders in Puerto Rico’s history, Luis Muñoz Marín is one of the most important political figures of the Americas in the Twentieth Century.
Previous to his tenure as the first home-rule governor, Muñoz Marín had a distinguished careers in journalism, as both a reporter and director of a newspaper, and political activism. After returning from the United States where he studied as a young man and adult, Muñoz Marín joined the Socialist Party and the Free Federation of Workers of Puerto Rico. Both groups were dedicated to fight against poverty and the inequality suffered by Puerto Ricans, causes that he fervently endorsed. He campaigned across Puerto Rico extensively and participated in workers strikes to better the conditions of workers. During the Great Depression Muñoz Marín and others popular figures effectively convinced President Roosevelt to extend the New Deal and other important efforts into Puerto Rico. All the meanwhile, Muñoz Marín and his associates were taking their political campaign to the next level and established the PPD, the Popular Democratic Party (Partido Popular Democrático), which won twenty-nine out of seventy-six municipalities in the following election. In the 1948 general elections, Luis Muñoz Marín became the first Puerto Rican governor elected by the popular vote. His election as Governor stood up against hunger, injustice, ignorance, sickness and oppression. By the 1950s, after the implementation of Operations Commonwealth and Bootstrap, an “economic miracle” was taking place in Puerto Rico; the Island was now a modern urban-industrial society.
The main house is made mostly of concrete, with the exception of wood doors and windows. One of the most impressive features is an L-shaped balcony accessible from the sizeable living area. The main house and office contain all the furniture, art, books and household items from the time Luis Muñoz Marín and his wife lived on the property.
The library/personal office is another concrete building contributing to this historic property listing. The spaces in the library have all the period furniture, books and items of its owner on display just as he left them when he died. The library/personal office was built in 1965 along with an administrative office and archive building used mostly by Mr. Marín’s staff. Both buildings are significant because these were the spaces which Marín used to write his Memoirs and the other where important documents were first stored and organized.
Down a short pathway is the bohío, built in 1948, where the family gathered for activities and important meeting with dignitaries where held. The bohío was expanded by the family many times over the years and even replaced when it was damaged by a fallen tree in 1998. Though the original bohío does not stand, the historical significance of this space is not lost. Today’s version is a rectangular wooden shed supported by five columns wide, six columns in length and two center columns. All beams and rafters are wood, the floor concrete patterns, and the ceiling is built with Palm tree foliage covered in zinc shingles.
NPS Cultural Resources Celebrates Hispanic Heritage Month
Today we sew up our awesome Bootstrap Fashion dress form shell! In our next post, we will start working on the inner structural support.
My first post can be found here.
In my last post, we are prepped our fabrics, and cut and marked our pieces!
If you are just now finding this post or pattern, you can print the pattern in a Misses size, or a Plus size.
Today we finish our Bootstrap Fashion dress form shell! In our next post, we will start working on the inner structural support.
My first post can be found here.
In my second post post, we are prepped our fabrics, and cut and marked our pieces! Last post, we constructed our shell.
If you are just now finding this post or pattern, you can print the pattern in a Misses size, or a Plus size.
My first post can be found http://kelly.hogaboom.org/?p=21094.
If you are just now finding this post or pattern, you can print the pattern in a Misses size, or a Plus size.
Other Name: Finca de Trujilo Alto
San Juan, Puerto Rico
Listed: October 7, 2011
This rural forest-like estate historic district was the residence of Luis Muñoz Marín from the 1940s until his death in 1980. Luis Muñoz Marín was the first Puerto Rican governor elected by the people. Luis Muñoz Marín is also called the “Father of Modern Puerto Rico,” a key figure in the development and implementation of Operation Commonwealth, Operation Bootstrap and Operation Serenity, one of the most revered leaders in Puerto Rico’s history, Luis Muñoz Marín is one of the most important political figures of the Americas in the Twentieth Century.
Previous to his tenure as the first home-rule governor, Muñoz Marín had a distinguished careers in journalism, as both a reporter and director of a newspaper, and political activism. After returning from the United States where he studied as a young man and adult, Muñoz Marín joined the Socialist Party and the Free Federation of Workers of Puerto Rico. Both groups were dedicated to fight against poverty and the inequality suffered by Puerto Ricans, causes that he fervently endorsed. He campaigned across Puerto Rico extensively and participated in workers strikes to better the conditions of workers. During the Great Depression Muñoz Marín and others popular figures effectively convinced President Roosevelt to extend the New Deal and other important efforts into Puerto Rico. All the meanwhile, Muñoz Marín and his associates were taking their political campaign to the next level and established the PPD, the Popular Democratic Party (Partido Popular Democrático), which won twenty-nine out of seventy-six municipalities in the following election. In the 1948 general elections, Luis Muñoz Marín became the first Puerto Rican governor elected by the popular vote. His election as Governor stood up against hunger, injustice, ignorance, sickness and oppression. By the 1950s, after the implementation of Operations Commonwealth and Bootstrap, an “economic miracle” was taking place in Puerto Rico; the Island was now a modern urban-industrial society.
The main house is made mostly of concrete, with the exception of wood doors and windows. One of the most impressive features is an L-shaped balcony accessible from the sizeable living area. The main house and office contain all the furniture, art, books and household items from the time Luis Muñoz Marín and his wife lived on the property.
The library/personal office is another concrete building contributing to this historic property listing. The spaces in the library have all the period furniture, books and items of its owner on display just as he left them when he died. The library/personal office was built in 1965 along with an administrative office and archive building used mostly by Mr. Marín’s staff. Both buildings are significant because these were the spaces which Marín used to write his Memoirs and the other where important documents were first stored and organized.
Down a short pathway is the bohío, built in 1948, where the family gathered for activities and important meeting with dignitaries where held. The bohío was expanded by the family many times over the years and even replaced when it was damaged by a fallen tree in 1998. Though the original bohío does not stand, the historical significance of this space is not lost. Today’s version is a rectangular wooden shed supported by five columns wide, six columns in length and two center columns. All beams and rafters are wood, the floor concrete patterns, and the ceiling is built with Palm tree foliage covered in zinc shingles.
NPS Cultural Resources Celebrates Hispanic Heritage Month
Other Name: Finca de Trujilo Alto
San Juan, Puerto Rico
Listed: October 7, 2011
This rural forest-like estate historic district was the residence of Luis Muñoz Marín from the 1940s until his death in 1980. Luis Muñoz Marín was the first Puerto Rican governor elected by the people. Luis Muñoz Marín is also called the “Father of Modern Puerto Rico,” a key figure in the development and implementation of Operation Commonwealth, Operation Bootstrap and Operation Serenity, one of the most revered leaders in Puerto Rico’s history, Luis Muñoz Marín is one of the most important political figures of the Americas in the Twentieth Century.
Previous to his tenure as the first home-rule governor, Muñoz Marín had a distinguished careers in journalism, as both a reporter and director of a newspaper, and political activism. After returning from the United States where he studied as a young man and adult, Muñoz Marín joined the Socialist Party and the Free Federation of Workers of Puerto Rico. Both groups were dedicated to fight against poverty and the inequality suffered by Puerto Ricans, causes that he fervently endorsed. He campaigned across Puerto Rico extensively and participated in workers strikes to better the conditions of workers. During the Great Depression Muñoz Marín and others popular figures effectively convinced President Roosevelt to extend the New Deal and other important efforts into Puerto Rico. All the meanwhile, Muñoz Marín and his associates were taking their political campaign to the next level and established the PPD, the Popular Democratic Party (Partido Popular Democrático), which won twenty-nine out of seventy-six municipalities in the following election. In the 1948 general elections, Luis Muñoz Marín became the first Puerto Rican governor elected by the popular vote. His election as Governor stood up against hunger, injustice, ignorance, sickness and oppression. By the 1950s, after the implementation of Operations Commonwealth and Bootstrap, an “economic miracle” was taking place in Puerto Rico; the Island was now a modern urban-industrial society.
The main house is made mostly of concrete, with the exception of wood doors and windows. One of the most impressive features is an L-shaped balcony accessible from the sizeable living area. The main house and office contain all the furniture, art, books and household items from the time Luis Muñoz Marín and his wife lived on the property.
The library/personal office is another concrete building contributing to this historic property listing. The spaces in the library have all the period furniture, books and items of its owner on display just as he left them when he died. The library/personal office was built in 1965 along with an administrative office and archive building used mostly by Mr. Marín’s staff. Both buildings are significant because these were the spaces which Marín used to write his Memoirs and the other where important documents were first stored and organized.
Down a short pathway is the bohío, built in 1948, where the family gathered for activities and important meeting with dignitaries where held. The bohío was expanded by the family many times over the years and even replaced when it was damaged by a fallen tree in 1998. Though the original bohío does not stand, the historical significance of this space is not lost. Today’s version is a rectangular wooden shed supported by five columns wide, six columns in length and two center columns. All beams and rafters are wood, the floor concrete patterns, and the ceiling is built with Palm tree foliage covered in zinc shingles.
NPS Cultural Resources Celebrates Hispanic Heritage Month
Here with my Vancouver homeboys from outsourcingthingsdone.com checking out the new crop of startups.
Today we sew up our awesome Bootstrap Fashion dress form shell! In our next post, we will start working on the inner structural support.
My first post can be found here.
In my last post, we are prepped our fabrics, and cut and marked our pieces!
If you are just now finding this post or pattern, you can print the pattern in a Misses size, or a Plus size.
Phylogenetic trees of archaeal 16S rRNA gene sequences from rhizosphere soil samples from soybean grown at ambient and elevated [CO2].
The colored bars represent the relative abundances of representative sequences from individual plots for each [CO2] treatment (Table S1). Each colored bar in each phylogenetic tree represents data from a different plot. Starting from the root, the colors for the leaf ranges indicate crenarchaeota group 1.1a (green), crenarchaeota group 1.1c (dark blue), euryarchaeota (tan), and crenarchaeota group 1.1b (light blue). Clusters within crenarchaeota group 1.1b were further divided into arbitrarily named groups as shown (e.g. 1.1b_1). Only branches with bootstrap support >60 are shown, and identical branch lengths are shown.
A comparison of topologies from our DNA barcoding analyses with topologies from multigene analyses for 5 genera of squamates with endemic Comoran lineages.Nodes with at least two values out of Bayesian PP, ML bootstrap, or Parsimony bootstrap support ≥ 90% are marked with filled black circles, nodes with at least one value out of Bayesian PP, ML bootstrap, or Parsimony bootstrap support ≥ 90% are marked with empty black circles. If only a single support value is available for the phylogeny, black circles filled with grey mark nodes with support values of ≥ 90%, and 'X' mark nodes with support values of ≥ 80%. The topologies were cropped to highlight lineages that are endemic to a single island, marked by color. Lineages that are present in the Comoros, but not endemic, are not highlighted. The multigene topologies are taken from the following studies: Cryptoblepharus[25], Ebenavia (unpublished data by O. Hawlitschek), Lycodryas[31], Paroedura[31], Phelsuma[27].
jQuery plugin for Twitter Bootstrap. Use Bootstrap Popovers as confirmation dialogs. Simple and easy.
DEMO
DOWNLOAD
2 total views, 2 views today
Other Name: Finca de Trujilo Alto
San Juan, Puerto Rico
Listed: October 7, 2011
This rural forest-like estate historic district was the residence of Luis Muñoz Marín from the 1940s until his death in 1980. Luis Muñoz Marín was the first Puerto Rican governor elected by the people. Luis Muñoz Marín is also called the “Father of Modern Puerto Rico,” a key figure in the development and implementation of Operation Commonwealth, Operation Bootstrap and Operation Serenity, one of the most revered leaders in Puerto Rico’s history, Luis Muñoz Marín is one of the most important political figures of the Americas in the Twentieth Century.
Previous to his tenure as the first home-rule governor, Muñoz Marín had a distinguished careers in journalism, as both a reporter and director of a newspaper, and political activism. After returning from the United States where he studied as a young man and adult, Muñoz Marín joined the Socialist Party and the Free Federation of Workers of Puerto Rico. Both groups were dedicated to fight against poverty and the inequality suffered by Puerto Ricans, causes that he fervently endorsed. He campaigned across Puerto Rico extensively and participated in workers strikes to better the conditions of workers. During the Great Depression Muñoz Marín and others popular figures effectively convinced President Roosevelt to extend the New Deal and other important efforts into Puerto Rico. All the meanwhile, Muñoz Marín and his associates were taking their political campaign to the next level and established the PPD, the Popular Democratic Party (Partido Popular Democrático), which won twenty-nine out of seventy-six municipalities in the following election. In the 1948 general elections, Luis Muñoz Marín became the first Puerto Rican governor elected by the popular vote. His election as Governor stood up against hunger, injustice, ignorance, sickness and oppression. By the 1950s, after the implementation of Operations Commonwealth and Bootstrap, an “economic miracle” was taking place in Puerto Rico; the Island was now a modern urban-industrial society.
The main house is made mostly of concrete, with the exception of wood doors and windows. One of the most impressive features is an L-shaped balcony accessible from the sizeable living area. The main house and office contain all the furniture, art, books and household items from the time Luis Muñoz Marín and his wife lived on the property.
The library/personal office is another concrete building contributing to this historic property listing. The spaces in the library have all the period furniture, books and items of its owner on display just as he left them when he died. The library/personal office was built in 1965 along with an administrative office and archive building used mostly by Mr. Marín’s staff. Both buildings are significant because these were the spaces which Marín used to write his Memoirs and the other where important documents were first stored and organized.
Down a short pathway is the bohío, built in 1948, where the family gathered for activities and important meeting with dignitaries where held. The bohío was expanded by the family many times over the years and even replaced when it was damaged by a fallen tree in 1998. Though the original bohío does not stand, the historical significance of this space is not lost. Today’s version is a rectangular wooden shed supported by five columns wide, six columns in length and two center columns. All beams and rafters are wood, the floor concrete patterns, and the ceiling is built with Palm tree foliage covered in zinc shingles.
NPS Cultural Resources Celebrates Hispanic Heritage Month
Today we finish our Bootstrap Fashion dress form shell! In our next post, we will start working on the inner structural support.
My first post can be found here.
In my second post post, we are prepped our fabrics, and cut and marked our pieces! Last post, we constructed our shell.
If you are just now finding this post or pattern, you can print the pattern in a Misses size, or a Plus size.
Today we sew up our awesome Bootstrap Fashion dress form shell! In our next post, we will start working on the inner structural support.
My first post can be found here.
In my last post, we are prepped our fabrics, and cut and marked our pieces!
If you are just now finding this post or pattern, you can print the pattern in a Misses size, or a Plus size.
Today we sew up our awesome Bootstrap Fashion dress form shell! In our next post, we will start working on the inner structural support.
My first post can be found here.
In my last post, we are prepped our fabrics, and cut and marked our pieces!
If you are just now finding this post or pattern, you can print the pattern in a Misses size, or a Plus size.
Today we sew up our awesome Bootstrap Fashion dress form shell! In our next post, we will start working on the inner structural support.
My first post can be found here.
In my last post, we are prepped our fabrics, and cut and marked our pieces!
If you are just now finding this post or pattern, you can print the pattern in a Misses size, or a Plus size.
Here with my Vancouver homeboys from outsourcingthingsdone.com checking out the new crop of startups.
Underlined in a warm soft flannel and lined in a black and white floral rayon challis. Such fun faux fur!
A cladogram of family B1 GPCRs obtained following a maximum parsimonious analysis (1000 bootstrap replicates).The taxa are labelled using GenBank accession numbers and the species names. Drosophilamelanogaster metabotropic glutamate receptor is utilized as an outgroup. Black symbols are used to denote sequences from Homosapiens and colored symbols denote insect sequences. Note that the three receptor subtypes (CRF, PDF and CT/DH) form monophyletic clades.
Today we finish our Bootstrap Fashion dress form shell! In our next post, we will start working on the inner structural support.
My first post can be found here.
In my second post post, we are prepped our fabrics, and cut and marked our pieces! Last post, we constructed our shell.
If you are just now finding this post or pattern, you can print the pattern in a Misses size, or a Plus size.
Here with my Vancouver homeboys from outsourcingthingsdone.com checking out the new crop of startups.
There are hundreds of thousands of blogs out there every day. The majority of them are about how cute someone's cat is, or helpful gardening tips etc. However, there are a few creative entrepreneurs that have used blogs to create financial freedom. For more information to log in my website codeshop.co
The flannel is from the Kaufman "Mammoth" collection - mid/heavyweight and gorgeous! - and the denim from my favorite denim shop, Pacific Blue Denim. Blogged.
Today we finish our Bootstrap Fashion dress form shell! In our next post, we will start working on the inner structural support.
My first post can be found here.
In my second post post, we are prepped our fabrics, and cut and marked our pieces! Last post, we constructed our shell.
If you are just now finding this post or pattern, you can print the pattern in a Misses size, or a Plus size.
Today we sew up our awesome Bootstrap Fashion dress form shell! In our next post, we will start working on the inner structural support.
My first post can be found here.
In my last post, we are prepped our fabrics, and cut and marked our pieces!
If you are just now finding this post or pattern, you can print the pattern in a Misses size, or a Plus size.
Here with my Vancouver homeboys from outsourcingthingsdone.com checking out the new crop of startups.
Today we sew up our awesome Bootstrap Fashion dress form shell! In our next post, we will start working on the inner structural support.
My first post can be found here.
In my last post, we are prepped our fabrics, and cut and marked our pieces!
If you are just now finding this post or pattern, you can print the pattern in a Misses size, or a Plus size.
Mary Thompson, "Bootstrap Methods in Complex Surveys" in the session in honour of Jon N.K. Rao’s 75th birthday.
A phylogenetic tree of the FEZ protein family.
The tree was derived by the parsimony method (Phylip protpars). The bootstrap multidataset and resampling method was employed and the numbers on the branches indicate the number of times the partition of the species into the two sets which are separated by that branch occurred among the trees out of 999.96 trees. The arrow indicates the probable point of FEZ gene duplication. Ag – Anopheles gambiae, Am – Apis mellifera, Ap – Acyrthosiphon pisum, Bf – Branchiostoma floridae (Bfa and Bfb refer to two sequences [polymorphisms] of selected hypothetical genes in this species), Bm – Brugia malayi, Bt – Bos taurus, Ce – Caenorhabditis elegans, Cf – Canis familiaris, Ci – Ciona intestinalis, Da – Drosophila ananassae, Dg – Drosophila grimshawi, Dm – Drosophila melanogaster, Dmj – Drosophila mojavensis, Dp – Drosophila persimilis, Dpo – Drosophila pseudoobscura, Dr – Danio rerio, Ds – Drosophila sechellia, Dv – Drosophila virilis, Dw – Drosophila willistoni, Dy – Drosophila yakuba, Ec – Equus caballus, Gg –Gallus gallus, Hs – Homo sapiens, Md – Monodelphis domestica, Mf – Macaca fascicularis, Mm – Mus musculus, Mmt – Macaca mulatta, Nv – Nasonia vitripennis, Ph – Pediculus humanus, Pt – Pan troglodytes, Rn – Rattus norvegicus, Ss – Salmo salar, Tc – Tribolium castaneum, Tg –Taeniopygia guttata, Tn – Tetraodon nigroviridis, Xl – Xenopus laevis, Xt – Xenopus tropicalis.
Here with my Vancouver homeboys from outsourcingthingsdone.com checking out the new crop of startups.
The flannel is from the Kaufman "Mammoth" collection - mid/heavyweight and gorgeous! - and the denim from my favorite denim shop, Pacific Blue Denim. Blogged.
Here with my Vancouver homeboys from outsourcingthingsdone.com checking out the new crop of startups.
Today we sew up our awesome Bootstrap Fashion dress form shell! In our next post, we will start working on the inner structural support.
My first post can be found here.
In my last post, we are prepped our fabrics, and cut and marked our pieces!
If you are just now finding this post or pattern, you can print the pattern in a Misses size, or a Plus size.
He says God gave us the gift to smile, so brighten someone's day with your smile. It will do the world some good.
I was checking out at the grocery store yesterday (not my favorite thing to do), and the check out ladies were smiling and just enjoying each other. They really made my day so much brighter.
Here with my Vancouver homeboys from outsourcingthingsdone.com checking out the new crop of startups.
Other Name: Finca de Trujilo Alto
San Juan, Puerto Rico
Listed: October 7, 2011
This rural forest-like estate historic district was the residence of Luis Muñoz Marín from the 1940s until his death in 1980. Luis Muñoz Marín was the first Puerto Rican governor elected by the people. Luis Muñoz Marín is also called the “Father of Modern Puerto Rico,” a key figure in the development and implementation of Operation Commonwealth, Operation Bootstrap and Operation Serenity, one of the most revered leaders in Puerto Rico’s history, Luis Muñoz Marín is one of the most important political figures of the Americas in the Twentieth Century.
Previous to his tenure as the first home-rule governor, Muñoz Marín had a distinguished careers in journalism, as both a reporter and director of a newspaper, and political activism. After returning from the United States where he studied as a young man and adult, Muñoz Marín joined the Socialist Party and the Free Federation of Workers of Puerto Rico. Both groups were dedicated to fight against poverty and the inequality suffered by Puerto Ricans, causes that he fervently endorsed. He campaigned across Puerto Rico extensively and participated in workers strikes to better the conditions of workers. During the Great Depression Muñoz Marín and others popular figures effectively convinced President Roosevelt to extend the New Deal and other important efforts into Puerto Rico. All the meanwhile, Muñoz Marín and his associates were taking their political campaign to the next level and established the PPD, the Popular Democratic Party (Partido Popular Democrático), which won twenty-nine out of seventy-six municipalities in the following election. In the 1948 general elections, Luis Muñoz Marín became the first Puerto Rican governor elected by the popular vote. His election as Governor stood up against hunger, injustice, ignorance, sickness and oppression. By the 1950s, after the implementation of Operations Commonwealth and Bootstrap, an “economic miracle” was taking place in Puerto Rico; the Island was now a modern urban-industrial society.
The main house is made mostly of concrete, with the exception of wood doors and windows. One of the most impressive features is an L-shaped balcony accessible from the sizeable living area. The main house and office contain all the furniture, art, books and household items from the time Luis Muñoz Marín and his wife lived on the property.
The library/personal office is another concrete building contributing to this historic property listing. The spaces in the library have all the period furniture, books and items of its owner on display just as he left them when he died. The library/personal office was built in 1965 along with an administrative office and archive building used mostly by Mr. Marín’s staff. Both buildings are significant because these were the spaces which Marín used to write his Memoirs and the other where important documents were first stored and organized.
Down a short pathway is the bohío, built in 1948, where the family gathered for activities and important meeting with dignitaries where held. The bohío was expanded by the family many times over the years and even replaced when it was damaged by a fallen tree in 1998. Though the original bohío does not stand, the historical significance of this space is not lost. Today’s version is a rectangular wooden shed supported by five columns wide, six columns in length and two center columns. All beams and rafters are wood, the floor concrete patterns, and the ceiling is built with Palm tree foliage covered in zinc shingles.
NPS Cultural Resources Celebrates Hispanic Heritage Month