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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

 

National Register of Historic Places

 

Weekly Feature

While responding to any such proposals one should always keep in mind that the document has been created with the intention to screen multiple bidders in reduce time and filter the results based on some parameters related to web designing work. For more

information to log in my website codeshop.co

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.

Cluster A (Fig. S2) of the 16S rRNA maximum-likelihood (ML) phylogeny for Burkholderia.Similar groupings were recovered following analysis of the data using Bayesian Inference (BI). Statistical support of ? 60% for ML bootstrap (BS) and ? 0.60 BI posterior probability (PP) are indicated at the branches in the order PP/BS. Diazotrophic Burkholderia species appear in blue, nodulating isolates in red and all nodulating South African isolates in green, with those isolates from this study also appearing in bold. All strain/isolate designations are followed by the name of the legume host and country of geographic origin. Names of the indigenous legume hosts are abbreviated as in Table 1. The GenBank accession numbers for the 16S rRNA sequences are listed in Table S1. The scale bar indicates the number of nucleotide substitutions per site. There are four groups of isolates which could not be included in full (due to size constraints) the ?missing? isolates are indicated as follows: *A1? Burkholderia sp. STM3671 Mimosa pudica French Guiana, Burkholderia sp. STM6020 Mimosa pudica French Guiana; *A2 - Burkholderia sp. JPY-582 Mimosa hexandra Brazil, Burkholderia sp. Br3462 Mimosa flocculosa Brazil, Burkholderia sp. mpa4.1 Mimosa pigra Australia; *A3 - WK1.1d+WK1.1f+WK1.1g+WK1.1i+WK1.1j+WK1.1k+WK1.1m+HC1.1bh H. sophoroides and lastly *A4 - Kb13+ Kb14+ Kb16 V. oroboides, HC1.1bc H. sophoroides.

UI vtiger 5.2.1 with bootstrap

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

 

National Register of Historic Places

 

Weekly Feature

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.

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

 

National Register of Historic Places

 

Weekly Feature

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

 

National Register of Historic Places

 

Weekly Feature

Here with my Vancouver homeboys from outsourcingthingsdone.com checking out the new crop of startups.

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.

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

 

National Register of Historic Places

 

Weekly Feature

Mom, I wore your necklace! I felt very professional.

 

On Wednesday, Day Two in San Francisco...

 

Ordered in room service since I didn't feel like exploring the city in search of pre-8:30 protein. First session of the day was a liberal arts affinity group discussing various challenges and themes of foundation and corporate relations work. I had a very illuminating discussion on different models of how to organize a CFR office. In my institution, my director handles everything above the $100,000 mark, I handle everything below. But another person described a model where all proposals are collaborative, with both CFR members (director and associate director) attending meetings and working together toward deadlines, dividing work as appropriate, but sharing as well. Our model allows for very easy attribution of work (who raised how many dollars) but its weakness is that if one member of the team is missing for a day or a week or a month, the other person has no way to reconstruct their workload and pitch in where necessary. The more collaborative model requires a very close working relationship, and both members share credit for proposals; credit for a winning proposal is credited to CFR as a unit, rather than to an individual CFR member/officer. I am going to discuss this with my director when we get back to town, because I think the collaborative model has some strengths we could borrow -- though I know my director is very big on attribution and territory, so I don't think we'll adopt it whole hog, unfortunately -- but greater collaboration, especially on large proposals, would go a long way toward my professional development. I think my boss has the idea that my development should largely consist of bootstrap-style work, looking for where I can slot myself in or find work that isn't getting done, and prove myself that way. Unfortunately, when he has all the faculty and dean connections, that leaves me with precious little to work with. I hope he will be open to exploring this idea; I'll have to find a way to couch it so that it does not appear to be me encroaching on his "territory" of grantswork, but rather as a way to help us do more work as a team. He could do with a little more experience in delegation, I think. I always forget that we are the same age, he just has five extra years of field experience on me. That doesn't mean he some ace manager (though he is good); this should be a learning experience for both of us.

 

Anyway! After the morning discussion session there was a fabulous keynote from a program officer at the Gates Foundation, talking about her/their work in global health issues, and a Chancellor from UC San Francisco. Very informative even though ultimately not 100% applicable to my work. That's the beauty of these CASE CFR conferences...you realize again that your particular version of CFR work is only one version, one corner of a large and vast universe of different corporate and foundation relations work.

 

Midway through the day I popped back up to my hotel room to meet up with the lovely Erin Fae, who is staying with me while I'm in town. Being a former long-term SF resident she is an EXCELLENT guide to the city. We chatted for a while before I had to go back down to the conference.

 

I managed to meet up with my old boss from the Radcliffe Institute, April, which was a lovely surprise. We chatted about our daughters (hers is now 3! hard to believe) and about San Francisco. She has moved about in various positions in CFR at Harvard but is now at HSPH, or about to be, when her 30-day sabbatical is over. I was envious, how wonderful to take such a long break for travel and family time. She knows a lot of people in the CFR world so she also introduced me to a couple other people. This conference is so heavy on the networking, which I always find a mixed bag. I have to remind myself that networking is only useful if you make meaningful connections; an introduction is not very useful unless you can get into a good topic of conversation with the person. So often I think of networking as the introduction-exchange-cards part, but that's really just the opening. I tend to ignore it in favor of introversion; it's good to get the practice even when it's hard to justify the energy to myself.

 

I don't remember what sessions I went to in the afternoon, really, because at this point I was getting a little sessioned out, tired, cranky, etc. I changed and freshened up a bit before we headed out in the evening to meet with my college friend Oona for appetizers. We went to the excellent Slanted Door in the ferry building on Embarcadero. I had a very tasty Indian Summer cocktail, an amazing shrimp spring roll, asparagus crab soup, and a bit of the rice cakes Oona ordered (a totally unexpected and absolutely mouth-melting dish!). At some point I felt the tipsiness of my cocktail (I am such a lightweight) and was no longer very hungry -- we walked out and said goodbye to Oona, and moseyed back up towards the hotel, taking a side loop past Chinatown and other interesting sights. It's funny, I enjoy a cocktail so much at the time, but I absolutely hate the slightly-sweaty feeling of the alcohol metabolizing in my body. When we got back to the hotel I was a bit desperate to change into pajamas and decompress. So Erin and I hung out and chatted, late into the night, about so many things, plans and families and friends and babies and loves and careers and all those unreconstructable slumberparty type conversations. I watched while she unpacked and repacked some of her bags, I did my physical therapy stretches as promised, and eventually we climbed into our pillow-full beds and went to sleep. After so much walking and sitting all day, I did have to take two vicodin in order to sleep, which made me realize that I was going to have to be much more careful with my body on Thursday, if I wanted to make it home without collapsing into a crippled, spasming wreck.

 

More tomorrow.

xo

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

 

National Register of Historic Places

 

Weekly Feature

Here with my Vancouver homeboys from outsourcingthingsdone.com checking out the new crop of startups.

He sailed it with some guys whose names i did not get but who were capable enough to almost outsail the 6M Whaler

Today's entry: the menswear-style shirt at Bootstrap. This sew-along includes all steps, with links to detailed tutorials and a video on button-sewing. Enjoy!

Today the world is internet driven world. All turn to the Internet when they want to know about the product or service, and you can be sure that all of your potential clients and future business partners will rely on the Internet channel to gather information about your business. For more

information to log in my website codeshop.co

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.

Robb Hamilton & Greg Sheremeta

Web/UX Designers for Red Hat

Design

Using Bootstrap to Create a Common UI Across Products

Here with my Vancouver homeboys from outsourcingthingsdone.com checking out the new crop of startups.

Here with my Vancouver homeboys from outsourcingthingsdone.com checking out the new crop of startups.

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.

Today's entry: the menswear-style shirt at Bootstrap. This sew-along includes all steps, with links to detailed tutorials and a video on button-sewing. Enjoy!

In the cut throat world of business that thrives on the level of precision a brand name brings into the equation, it is necessary to have all the power tools that can boost your image in the market.

 

Phylogenetic analyses showing the unique status of plathyhelminth ?-integrins.Phylogram of the analysis of the full-length sequences of the S. mansoni ?-integrin receptors Sm?-Int1, Sm?-Int2, Sm?-Int3, and other ?-integrin receptors using CLUSTAL X (www.clustal.org) and TreeViewX. The phylogenetic relationship was deduced using the Bootstrap Neighbour-Joining (N?J) method and the bootstrap values were generated based on 1000 bootstrap trails with a random number generator seed of 100. Sequences were obtained from the National Centre for Biotechnology Information using the WWW Entrez Browser (www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov), Swiss-Prot (www.uniprot.org), GeneDB (www.genedb.org), and the Schmidtea mediterranea Genome Database (smedgd.neuro.utah.edu/). The corresponding protein numbers are: Sha a1 (?-integrin 1 receptor, S. haematobium; Sha_102401), Sm a1 (?-integrin 1 receptor, S. mansoni; FR749887), Sjp a1 (?-integrin 1 receptor, S. japonicum; Sjp_0037690), Cs a5 (?-integrin 5 receptor, Clonorchis sinesis; GAA56616.1), Em a1 (?-integrin 1 receptor, Echinococcus multilocularis; EmuJ_000215000 ), Sm a4 (?-integrin 4 receptor, S. mansoni; Smp_1735401, Smp_181010), Sha a4 (?-integrin 4 receptor, S. haematobium; Sha_104436, Sha_106831), Sjp a4 (?-integrin 4 receptor, S. japonicum; Sjp_0046780, Sjp_0046790), Cs a4 (?-integrin 4 receptor, Clonorchis sinesis; GAA28731), Em a4 (?-integrin 4 receptor, Echinococcus multilocularis; EmuJ_000573500), Sha a2 (?-integrin 2 receptor, S. haematobium; Sha_106921), Sm a2 (?-integrin 2 receptor, S. mansoni; FR749888), Sjp a2 (?-integrin 2 receptor, S. japonicum; Sjp_0069490), Cs a-ps (?-integrin-ps receptor, Clonorchis sinesis; GAA54095, GAA49531, GAA49530), Em a2 (?-integrin 2 receptor, Echinococcus multilocularis; EmuJ_000192500 ), Smed a3 (?-integrin 3 receptor, Schmidtea mediterranea; lcl|mk4.000046.14.01), Smed a1 (?-integrin 1 receptor, Schmidtea mediterranea; lcl|mk4.001411.00.01), Smed a2 (?-integrin 2 receptor, Schmidtea mediterranea; lcl|mk4.003797. 00.01), Sha a3 (?-integrin 3 receptor, S. haematobium; Sha_102914), Sm a3 (?-integrin 3 receptor, S. mansoni; FR749889, Smp_156610, Smp_156620), Sjp a3 (?-integrin 3 receptor, S. japonicum; Sjp_0063430, Sjp_0063420), Cs a7 (?-integrin 7 receptor, Clonorchis sinesis; GAA52225.1), Em a3 (?-integrin 3 receptor, Echinococcus multilocularis; EmuJ_000782500), Sp aP (?-integrin P receptor, Strongylocentrotus purpuratus, AF177914), Dm aPS2 (?-integrin PS2 receptor, Drosophila melanogaster, Q24247), Mm a2b (?-integrin 2b receptor, Mus musculus; EDL34136.1), Hs a2b (?-integrin 2b receptor, Homo sapiens; EAW51595.1), Xl a2b (?-integrin 2b receptor, Xenopus laevis; NP_001088223.1), Mm a5 (?-integrin 5 receptor, Mus musculus; CAA55638.1), Rn a5 (?-integrin 5 receptor, Rattus norvegicus; NP_001101588.1), Hs a5 (?-integrin 5 receptor, Homo sapiens; NP_002196.2), Xl a5 (?-integrin 5 receptor, Xenopus laevis; NP_001081072.1), Hs aV (?-integrin V receptor, Homo sapiens; P06756), Hs a8 (?-integrin 8 receptor, Homo sapiens; P53708), Ce a-pat2 (?-integrin pat-2, Ceanorhabditis elegans; P34446), Gc a (?-integrin receptor, Geodia cydonium; X97283), Hs a1 (?-integrin 1 receptor, Homo sapiens; P56199), Hs a2 (?-integrin 2 receptor, Homo sapiens; P17301), Hs a10 (?-integrin 10 receptor, Homo sapiens; O75578), Hs a11 (?-integrin 11 receptor, Homo sapiens; Q9UKX5), Hs aD (?-integrin D receptor, Homo sapiens; Q13349), Hs aX (?-integrin X receptor, Homo sapiens; P20702), Hs aM (?-integrin M receptor, Homo sapiens; P11215), Hs aL (?-integrin L receptor, Homo sapiens; P20701), Hs aE (?-integrin E receptor, Homo sapiens; P38579), Hs a4 (?-integrin 4 receptor, Homo sapiens; P13612), Hs a9 (?-integrin 9 receptor, Homo sapiens; Q13797), Mm a7 (?-integrin 7 receptor, Mus musculus; AAA16600.1), Rn a7 (?-integrin 7 receptor, Rattus norvegicus; NP_110469.1), Hs a7 (?-integrin 7 receptor, Homo sapiens; EAW96822.1), Hs a6 (?-integrin 6 receptor, Homo sapiens; P23229), Hs a3 (?-integrin 3 receptor, Homo sapiens; P26006), Dm aPSI (?-integrin PSI receptor, Drosophila melanogaster, Q24247), and Ce a-ina1 (?-integrin ina1, Ceanorhabditis elegans; Q03600).

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.

If you are seeking proficient web design services, your initial step might entail searching for "Web Designing services" on Google or an additional search engine. This would reveal a plethora of options to select from, which in turn would make it a difficult task for you to choose the apt one. For more information to login my website codeshop.co

Wayne Eteveneaux in his Houdini "Akaroa" and Richard Smith in "Bootstrap" pass like boats in the daytime.

Results of phylogenetic analyses.

Maximum parsimony phylogram of selected FoxO proteins rooted using Mus musculus FoxA1. Numbers at nodes are bootstrap support values calculated by 1000 replicates of Maximum Parsimony/Maximum Likelihood/Neighbor Joining. Bootstrap values under 50 are not shown. Asterisks at nodes indicate Bayesian PP greater than 95%. Species name abbreviations: Aa: Aedes aegypti; Aq: Amphimedon queenslandica; Bf: Branchiostoma floridae; Ce: Caenorhabditis elegans; Ch: Clytia hemisphaerica; Ci: Ciona intestinalis; Dm: Drosophila melanogaster; Dr: Danio rerio; Gg: Gallus gallus; Hm: Hydra magnipapillata; Hs: Homo sapiens; Hv: Hydra vulgaris; Mm: Mus musculus; Ms: Metridium senile; Nv: Nematostella vectensis; Sp: Strongylocentrotus purpuratus; Ta: Trichoplax adhaerens; Xl: Xenopus laevis; and Xm: Xiphophorus maculatus.

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.

Atlas 72D Details: Missile 72D; LOX Bootstrap Flexline Date: 03/03/1966--Please tag these photos so information can be recorded.---Note: This material may be protected by Copyright Law (Title 17 U.S.C.)--Repository: San Diego Air and Space Museum

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.

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