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The third season of Leverage is being filmed here in Portland Oregon. One venue is the Portland Art Museum of which the top two floors have been taken over by the film crew. Timothy Hutton is in there somewhere.
It is your priority to keep your data managed and safe, so you need to leverage the top Tableau Services like Tableau Desktop, Tableau Online, or Tableau Server, etc. Visit the website and check out more information!
170/365 The North side of the city was hit pretty hard by high winds last week. There are hundreds of trees like this down every street.
NEW YORK, NY - SEPTEMBER 19: Scott Price, Executive VP for Global Leverage of Walmart International speaks at The 2017 Concordia Annual Summit at Grand Hyatt New York on September 19, 2017 in New York City. (Photo by Riccardo Savi/Getty Images for Concordia Summit)
The third of four Leverage filk lyrics set to popular holiday tunes. This one, set to "It Must Have Been the Mistletoe" (written by Doug Konecky and Justin Wilde and first released by Barbara Mandrell in 1984), explores the relationship of the show's popular OT3: Alec Hardison (Hacker), Parker (Thief), and Eliot Spencer (Hitter). The song, a first person POV by Parker, posits that they first kissed as a threesome on Christmas Eve, when Parker stole some mistletoe (and diamonds) from a mark. There is a photographic illustration of the Lego minifigs of the OT3 standing together holding useful/favourite things (a large flashlight, money, and a pretzel, which refers to Parker's initial declaration of feeling for Hardison).
Parisian night life was characterized by personal freedom, a revolution of fashion, luxurious parties, theater shows, and jazz music – people lived luminous lives and knew how to have fun. The 2014 Suenos de Dali leveraged the defining elements of Parisian night life in the 1920’s with a modern twist. The soiree entertained the combined identities of two extraordinary cultures as guests revel in the décor and fashion that defined the Spanish and Parisian night life from different eras.
Keeping business records is a skill Rosa has learned from Heifer. She holds up a list of veterinarian medicines and their cost.
Tim Stall presents ALM: Empowering Teams with Automation and Build Servers
ALM tooling: Empowering teams with build servers and metrics
Everyone knows that automated builds are a good thing, but many teams don't leverage them fully because it's hard to get started. Tim will go over practical techniques and concepts for automating builds with TFS and MSbuild. Once you have an automated build, there are dozens of steps you can hook into it, such as metrics. Tim will walk through several core metrics, including line count, code churn, duplication, complexity, and test code coverage, as well as the concepts and pitfalls for adopting these within a team.
About Tim Stall:
Tim Stall is a Software Architect. He blogs at www.timstall.com. Tim specializes in .Net and has a passion for empowering teams with process, automation, builds, tools, continual education, and enjoys writing blogs and developing side projects. Tim has an MCAD.Net certification. He lives in Chicago with his wife and three children.
Meeting space provided by the Microsoft Store
content.microsoftstore.com/store/detail/Oak-Brook-IL
Platinum Consulting Services Provided pizza and beverages to members attending meetings
Pre-Meeting videos provided by
www.pluralsight-training.net/microsoft/
Picture taken by Michael Kappel
Check out the high resolution photos on my photography website
Hundreds of runners got their pink on for the BAF in Pink Breast Cancer Awareness run Oct. 6. Thanks for supporting this great cause. HOOAH!!!
About the 401st:
The 401st Army field Support Brigade provides Soldiers, Sailors, Airman, and Marines, the tools and resources necessary to complete the mission. If they shoot, drive it, fly it, wear it, eat it or communicate with it, the 401st helps provide it. The brigade assists coalition partners with many of their logistical and sustainment needs. The brigade also handles the responsible disposition of equipment in Afghanistan to support evolving missions. We are the single link between Warfighters in the field, and working through Army Sustainment Command, we leverage Army Materiel Command’s worldwide Materiel Enterprise to develop, deliver, and sustain materiel to ensure a dominant joint force for the U.S. and our Allies.
For More information please visit us online:
Sugar production was Brooklyn’s most important industry in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Of various factories that once lined the East River, the former Havemeyers & Elder Refinery, later known as the Domino Sugar Refinery, is the largest and most significant structure to survive. The three conjoined properties – the Filter House, Pan House, and Finishing House – are located on Kent Avenue in Williamsburg, between South 2nd Street and South 3rd Street. The Filter House, which was once the tallest structure on the Brooklyn waterfront, rises to a height of approximately 155 feet. The processing of the raw sugar began in this building, where it was mixed with water and filtered through canvas and charcoal. As foreign materials were removed, the solution flowed to the Pan House, a nine-story structure at the southwest corner of Kent Avenue and South 2nd Street. Then reduced to syrup, it was pumped to the Finishing House to be dried and graded for sale. Frederick C. Havemeyer, Jr., son of the company’s founder, first began operating a refinery in Williamsburg during 1856. Raw sugar was supplied from America’s deep south, mainly Louisiana, and the Caribbean, where it was primarily harvested by slaves. Though slavery ended in the United States in 1865, it continued in Cuba, the world’s largest exporter of raw sugar, until 1886. Most accounts of the refinery state that the Filter, Pan & Finishing House were built to replace an earlier facility that was destroyed by fire. Research, however, indicates that plans for the Filter House had already been filed with the Brooklyn Bureau of Buildings two months earlier, in November 1881. This building, as well as the Pan & Finishing House, was designed by Frederick’s eldest son, Theodore A. Havemeyer, in association with Thomas Winslow and J. E. James, who are variously listed in contemporary journals as architects and builders. Like many contemporary industrial buildings, it was designed in the American round-arch style, a variant of the German Rundbogenstil and the Romanesque Revival style. Rooted in practical needs, the new refinery was conceived to be as fireproof as possible, with iron columns, beams and girders, as well as four hundred electric lights. A large oval smokestack dominates the west façade of the Filter House, facing Manhattan. Though the base of the chimney is original, most of the section that rises above the roof was added following a major expansion during the 1920s. Planned to produce at least 1,200 tons of sugar each day, the refinery’s capacity gave the company a considerable competitive edge, allowing it to dominate the American market for several decades. This leverage also led to the creation of the Sugar Refineries Company in 1887. Originally consisting of as many as twenty firms, it was a monopoly that sought to control labor costs and prices. Renamed the American Sugar Refining Company in 1891, the “Domino” brand name was introduced in 1901. The Williamsburg refinery was sold to Tate & Lyle in 1988 and renamed the Domino Sugar Corporation in 1991. In subsequent years, the company ceased refining raw sugar at this location and the three buildings became vacant. The plant closed in 2004 and the site was acquired by C. P. C. Resources, the development arm of the Community Preservation Corporation.
- From the 2007 NYCLPC Landmark Designation Report