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Nice Business Analysis photos

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Invitation letter
business analysis
Image by faul

Nice Local Business photos

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A Better Deal for Local Businesses
local business
Image by CT Senate Democrats
State Senator Bob Duff announces a new electric security deposit policy for South Norwalk Electric and Water (SNEW) that is more advantageous for local businesses and less of an obstacle to new companies just getting started. Left to right: Rep. David Rutigliano; David Westmoreland, Commissioner of Norwalk’s Second Taxing District; John Hiscock, General Manager at SNEW; Senator Duff; Lou Montanari, Owner of the Brewhouse Restaurant; and Rep. Chris Perone. (July 16, 2013)


local business
local business
Image by catchesthelight
Another view of our local Main Street business in "zip03303" where on good weather days someone is often outdoors refinishing old furniture :>)

NIU Business Graduation Reception

Some cool best business images:


NIU Business Graduation Reception
best business
Image by NIU Business



NIU Business Graduation Reception
best business
Image by NIU Business

Nice Business Help photos

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Interactive Learners
business help
Image by Interact Egypt - Play Innovation

Interact Egypt Website
Interact Egypt Twitter Account
Interact Egypt facebook Fanpage
Interact Egypt Linkedin Page
Egypt Innovation Entrepreneurs Linkedin Group


Sticky notes of Marketing problems
business help
Image by Interact Egypt - Play Innovation

Interact Egypt Website
Interact Egypt Twitter Account
Interact Egypt facebook Fanpage
Interact Egypt Linkedin Page
Egypt Innovation Entrepreneurs Linkedin Group


Mike Ducker from the GEP
business help
Image by Interact Egypt - Play Innovation
Mike, who works for the Global Entrepreneurship Program, sharing an interesting vision about Entrepreneurs in Egypt and how this program supports them.
Also there are Abdel Rahman Wahba, founder of Iqraaly & Hady founder of Tabshora and finally Nora Kafafi from Innoventures.

Interact Egypt Website
Interact Egypt Twitter Account
Interact Egypt facebook Fanpage
Mike Ducker Twitter Account @gepEGmike
Hady Ahmed Twitter Account @l0gicpath
Abdelrahman Wahba Twitter Account @abdelrahmanw
Nora Kafafi Twitter Account @nkafafi
Interact Egypt Linkedin Page
Egypt Innovation Entrepreneurs Linkedin Group

"moo business cards"

Some cool business card size images:


"moo business cards"
business card size
Image by osde8info
moo business cards and moo mini cards boxes !
note the cards inside are completely different sizes !

Nice Find A Business photos

A few nice find a business images I found:



WABotting
find a business
Image by AR McLin
W. A. Botting, a local mechanical contractor founded in 1911, has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection after failing to find a buyer.

seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/businesstechnology/2009239...


Birdy's Back!
find a business
Image by Lachlan Hardy
She was found trotting down Homer Street near the Cooks River and picked up.

She was treated for a minor laceration on her foreleg at Stanmore Animal Hospital and kept there over night.

I found her this morning by ringing around once business hours started. Microchip proved useless, again.

She's tired and cuddly and will be stitched up today. She'll be home tonight with a cool scar and a tough story.

Thank you all for your support and help in the last 15 hours!

Cool Business Grants images

A few nice business grants images I found:


20110715-RD-LSC-0214
business grants
Image by USDAgov
Shandy Karrick (left) gathers a bundle of Half Runner heirloom beans for Janice Potts (right) who was using her Senior Farmer's Market Nutrition Program check at the Bath County Agricultural Education and Marketing Center, Owingsville, KY, on Friday, July 15, 2011. By the time Ms. Potts left, her four dollar check bought dollars of produce. The Center was the recipient of a 0,000 Rural Business Enterprise Grant. It has given farmers and producers from Bath and surrounding counties the opportunity to manufacture and market their locally grown and locally produced value-added and “Kentucky Proud” branded products, including but not limited to, fresh produce, artisan crafts and specialty food products. The Center is open year-round and allow residents to sell products in four different retail categories, including Kentucky products, regional crafts, “green” groceries and bakery/deli. Several producers expressed their gratitude for Rural Development’s assistance in making the center a reality. The project was made possible through funding the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 enacted by the 111th United States Congress in February 2009 and signed into law on February 17, 2009, by President Barack Obama. USDA Photo by Lance Cheung.


20110715-RD-LSC-0227
business grants
Image by USDAgov
Mary "The Peach Lady" Manley (left) is happy to share a peach pie recipe and make an extra special deal for Janice Potts (right) who used her Senior Farmer's Market Nutrition Program check at the Bath County Agricultural Education and Marketing Center, Owingsville, KY, on Friday, July 15, 2011. When Ms. Potts's four dollar Program check, got 's worth of beans, 3/4 peck of of "uglies" and some pretty Whopper heirloom tomatoes that day.The Center was the recipient of a 0,000 Rural Business Enterprise Grant. It has given farmers and producers from Bath and surrounding counties the opportunity to manufacture and market their locally grown and locally produced value-added and “Kentucky Proud” branded products, including but not limited to, fresh produce, artisan crafts and specialty food products. The Center is open year-round and allow residents to sell products in four different retail categories, including Kentucky products, regional crafts, “green” groceries and bakery/deli. Several producers expressed their gratitude for Rural Development’s assistance in making the center a reality. The project was made possible through funding the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 enacted by the 111th United States Congress in February 2009 and signed into law on February 17, 2009, by President Barack Obama. USDA Photo by Lance Cheung.

Nice Business Insurance photos

Check out these business insurance images:




Research vehicle sign
business insurance
Image by State Farm
The Insurance Institute for Business & Home Safety (IBHS) and State Farm are currently in the midst of continuing a major multi-faceted research effort to study hailstorms with the goal of reducing property losses. As part of this effort, IBHS and State Farm are studying hailstorms in the Central Plains region in an attempt to better understand the characteristics of damaging hail, which depends on size, density and hardness of hailstones.

Objectives of the field study include: quantify natural hailstone hardness, by evaluating the compressive force required to fracture a hailstone; deploy a ruggedized, unmanned camera probe to capture high-definition video of hail falling within storms to study hailstone trajectories and spatial coverage; and examine radar and environmental data to develop relationships between those data fields and the characteristics of fallen hailstones.

The field study will provide valuable data and insights for shaping ongoing work at the IBHS Research Center. IBHS will evaluate the hardness and density of natural hailstones in order to accurately manufacture artificial hailstones at the IBHS Research Center. Previous IBHS field study data were used when the Institute recreated a full-scale indoor hailstorm at the IBHS Research Center in February 2013. As IBHS collects additional data from natural hailstorms, this information will enable IBHS engineers to continue to appropriately recreate and analyze the impact of hail on buildings and specimens tested at the IBHS Research Center.

Severe thunderstorms frequently are accompanied by hailstorms. As population density has increased and spacing between residential and commercial buildings has decreased in many metropolitan areas, there has been rapid growth in the number of hailstorms that cause hundreds of millions of dollars – or more than a billion dollars in damage. Property owners pay for this damage in several ways, including through inconvenience and being responsible for insurance policy deductibles when losses occur. Fortunately, impact-resistant roof covers can reduce losses and associated property ownership costs.

Cool Business Card Design images

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Alt Summit Business Cards 2013 - Stack
business card design
Image by CieraHolzenthal
Blogged: cieradesign.com/2013/01/30/the-business-cards-of-alt-summ...

Cool Business Partner images

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108-0840_IMG
business partner
Image by bthoem

Nice Business Consulting photos

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business consulting
Image by Shadow becomes White

Cool Business Ideas images

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2010 Ideas Challenge
business ideas
Image by Mays Business School
Students take part in the 2010 Ideas Challenge

[Photo: Nathan Adams/Mays Communications]

OBAMA: COMMUNIST PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES

Some cool business review weekly images:


OBAMA: COMMUNIST PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES
business review weekly
Image by SS&SS
THIS IS A MUST READ IF YOU ARE TO UNDERSTAND THIS ADMINISTRATIONS POLICYS ARE FULLY BASED ON A SOCIALIST/MARXIST SYSTEM OF GOVERNMENT
THIS MAN IS A COMMUNIST THROUGH AND THROUGH
ALSO READ THE PREVIOUS POST TO THIS ONE


The Obama Vision

Book review of: RADICAL-IN-CHIEF BY STANLEY KURTZ, National Review

November 15, 2010
by Ronald Radosh



The charge by some conservatives that President Obama was and indeed still is a socialist has been met with disbelief or brushed aside as irrelevant by our liberal elites, most consequentially by the media. They have assigned it to the land of the “wing-nuts.” Even the conservative writer Andrew Ferguson could not resist throwing in a gratuitous remark about Stanley Kurtz’s new book, Radical-in-Chief, in a recent issue of The Weekly Standard, arguing that “there is, indeed, a name for the beliefs that motivate President Obama, but it’s not . . . even socialism. It’s liberalism!” For Ferguson, “unchecked liberalism . . . is worrisome enough.”


I have to admit that before reading and evaluating the mountain of evidence Kurtz presents in his book, I too was skeptical of the charge, regarding it as a somewhat overheated smear word that Obama’s opponents liked to throw out in the heat of political debate. It held no more water with me than did the epithets of “fascist,” “Nazi,” and “un-American” hurled at Obama by his angriest enemies. But Kurtz’s book leads me to the inescapable conclusion that indeed Barack Obama started out his adult life as a socialist, functioned within socialism’s orbit for decades, owes much of his political rise to the socialist community, and has never repudiated the ideology he adopted so long ago.


Kurtz claims that when he began research for his book he knew that Obama had had some associations with radicals like Bill Ayers and Rev. Jeremiah Wright in Chicago, but was dubious about the socialist label. These associations were brushed off by Obama and his supporters with such arguments as that he hardly knew Ayers and his wife Bernardine Dohrn, and, in any event, was only eight years old when the couple were engaging in their violent Weathermen activities. As for Wright, well, Obama just wasn’t in church when the reverend was damning America.


Kurtz wanted to find out whether there was anything behind the socialist charge by digging deeper and tracing Obama’s path to the presidency. He approached his subject as any good historian would, by going to the primary sources, looking at the records and internal publications of the many groups and organizations that Obama had been associated with: the Socialist Scholars Conference, the Democratic Socialists of America, the Democratic Socialist Organizing Committee, ACORN, the Black Theology Project, the Harold Washington mayoral administration, the Midwest Academy, the New American Movement, the Service Employees International Union (SEIU), the Chicago Annenberg Challenge, and the Woods Charitable Fund.


Kurtz traces Obama’s exposure to socialist politics and circles back to the early 1980s, when he was a student at Columbia University. A pivotal experience was Obama’s attendance at the 1983 and 1984 Socialist Scholars Conference (SSC) held in New York’s Cooper Union. (This was a world I was most familiar with. At the time, I was on the SSC’s planning committee, which was based at the sociology department of the Graduate Center of the City University of New York.) The SSC was attended by enthusiastic members of various socialist sects; there was in fact little scholarly about it. Most of the sessions addressed various pressing political questions: the state of rebellion in Central America, the strategies for moving America towards socialism, etc. It would be interesting to know what sessions Obama attended and why he went to it in the first place. After all, most attendees were activists, committed socialist intellectuals, or both.


The answers would never be brought forth, because no one in the media sought to ask him about it. Kurtz reports that Obama did address it once, in an offhand manner. In his bestselling 1995 memoir, Dreams from My Father, Obama wrote that while living in New York, he engaged in political discussions that “came to take on the flavor of the socialist conferences I sometimes attended at Cooper Union. . . . [They were among] the many diversions New York had to offer, like going to a foreign film or ice-skating at Rockefeller Center.” Since it was so inconsequential, why did Obama take care to mention it? Perhaps the ambitious Obama knew that since he had registered for it in his own name, someone might find he had attended; so “why not,” Kurtz writes, “acknowledge the fact in such a way as to minimize attention and defuse the power of eventual revelation?”


But, as Kurtz shows, after the SSC, where Obama was exposed to both Black Liberation theology and community organizing, he decided to leave the field of foreign relations and nuclear disarmament — about which he had written a now well-known article — and instead started on the new career path of community organizing. Moreover, the speaker at one of the major sessions developed the theoretical concept of working for “socialist incubators,” the effort to combine different community groups into one national movement, which would then “democratize control of major social, economic and political institutions.” This was not an old-style nationalization of the commanding heights of the economy; it was, rather, an attempt to achieve socialism from below. The theorist was Peter Dreier, who later became a major strategist for ACORN and, during the 2008 campaign, an adviser to Sen. Barack Obama. These groups, or “incubators,” would push the U.S. towards socialism and socialist programs like universal single-payer health care.


Dreier’s theory coincided with the popular view of the French Marxist André Gorz, who developed the concept of working for “transitional” or “non-reformist reforms,” seemingly small steps that would help destroy market capitalism and build the basis for complete structural change and the adoption of a socialist economy in Western societies. When a crisis finally occurred, especially a “fiscal crisis of the state,” the moment would be ripe to transform the economy into a publicly owned statist entity.


As the years went by, and Barack Obama moved from community organizing to Harvard Law and then back to Chicago, Kurtz shows that one thing remained constant: Obama continued to move in the same socialist circles that he had first come across at the SSC at Cooper Union. It was there that he probably heard a young Cornel West talk at a panel on race and class in Marxism, and was introduced to the father of Black Liberation theology, James Cone, the mentor to a minister named Rev. Jeremiah Wright. It was also at the SSC that he most likely came across a leader of Michael Harrington’s Democratic Socialists of America, the Yugoslav-born Bogdan Denitch, who wrote an essay on the importance of Harold Washington’s mayoral campaign in Chicago, in uniting the black and white Left in a new class politics that would produce victory and socialist momentum.


These ideas and theories motivated Obama and helped him choose his own career path — that of community organizing as the way to lead a coalition of blacks, whites, and Hispanics to create a socialist “redefinition” of America, with one caveat: The concept and advocacy of socialism as the final goal would consciously be hidden from sight. As Kurtz reveals, the socialist theorists openly talked about what they called “stealth socialism” or “incremental radicalism,” small steps that move the nation forward until the ultimate goal of a socialist transformation is obtained. One moves apparently without an ideological plan, but working for measures that will end with an irreversible move to a statist economy based on public control through groups run by labor and community organizations. As Kurtz writes: “Obama’s college socialism, the influence of socialist conferences on his career, his choice of a profession dominated by socialists, and his extensive alliances with the most influential stealth-socialist community organizers in the country give the game away. Obama has adopted the gradualist socialist strategy of his mentors. . . . Eventually, this will transform American capitalism into something resembling a socialist-inspired Scandinavian welfare state.”


With this fundamental transformation finally obtained, wealth would be redistributed from individuals and businesses to the state and especially to the public-employee unions, which would effectively run state and national governments. Seemingly minor adjustments would be the effective “non-reformist reforms” advocated by Gorz and others, and would eventually undermine the current system. When Michelle Obama inadvertently let the cat out of the bag and told an audience that her husband was essentially a community organizer using politics to achieve the ends he always wanted, she confirmed Kurtz’s analysis.


All of this fit well with the political strategy developed by the late Michael Harrington, the last socialist leader of national prominence since Norman Thomas; Harrington’s followers play a major role in national government and the Democratic party today. Harrington favored what I call Browderism without Browder and the old Soviet tie; i.e., working in the Democratic party with non-socialists, helping to transform it into, in effect, an “invisible social democracy.” The so-called Democratic Left — under the guidance of conscious socialists who assumed leadership positions in various mass movements including unions, women’s groups, and community organizations — would help to develop their programs until all converged to create the structural socialist transformation of society.


Readers of Kurtz’s book will see example after example of how Obama’s otherwise inexplicable actions — such as pushing health care ahead of jobs in a time of economic downturn — make perfect sense if he is acting according to the theories and programs of the mentors he took along with him when he moved into the political arena. By keeping his real views hidden — the chosen policy of the descendants of Saul Alinsky who argue for masking socialist convictions — the political organizers can push the country in a direction it may not want.


Once one realizes that this is indeed Obama’s chosen course, it becomes clear why, during the campaign, he went out of his way to downplay and deny his actual close involvement over the years with major socialist players. In his important and detailed chapter on ACORN, for example, Kurtz spells out better than anyone has how the group fought tooth and nail to get banks to lower lending standards and to provide loans for those without good credit and even without any demonstrable ability to pay a mortgage. The housing group, despite its many denials, is shown by Kurtz to be a major factor in the development of the subprime-lending spree that crashed the housing bubble. ACORN pressured the banks by pressuring the Clinton administration and working with HUD secretary Henry Cisneros. Together, they used a direct-action campaign to draw the entire financial system into unwise lending schemes that helped foment today’s housing crisis.


Not only did Obama work closely with ACORN, he also cooperated intimately with the quasi-socialist Midwest Academy. He had lengthy and sustained relationships with both Jeremiah Wright and Bill Ayers — who, Kurtz demonstrates, knew and worked with Obama way before anyone else imagined. Ayers appointed him to boards that, in turn, quickly acted under Obama’s leadership to fund Ayers’s extremist and Marxist educational programs, as well as the radical projects of his wife, Bernardine Dohrn.


Thus does Obama’s past explain his policies today. He adopted the ACORN leaders’ strategy of transforming the economy through expanding entitlements, and combined it with Michael Harrington’s plan to realign American politics through polarizing the electorate along class lines. By radicalizing the Democratic party — a goal already pretty much accomplished — he would have the ability, once in power, to push America to a left-wing “social democracy” in which business would be demonized. (This strategy is very much in evidence in the 2010 midterm campaign, with the administration’s noxious attack on the Chamber of Commerce.)


As for health care, Kurtz speculates that Obama hopes that if Republicans succeed in repealing the new law, the repeal will ignite a political movement of the Left that will further radicalize the Democratic party — a class-based strategy that would put into effect Harrington’s “realignment,” in which, finally, the poor and the educated middle classes would push the country to socialism. Thus public-employee unions, minorities, and the poor would stop the “haves” from running the country, and — as Obama told Joe the Plumber in that eventful campaign stop in 2008 — we would move to fairness by redistributing the wealth to those who deserve it and don’t have what they need. In the Obama administration, we have Saul Alinsky, Richard Cloward, and Frances Fox Piven’s advocacy of pushing the system to its limits united with ACORN’s stealth socialism and socialist incubation.


Stanley Kurtz succeeds, then, in showing the “consistency of [Obama’s] convictions.” Beginning in his college days, and possibly even in late high school, Obama gravitated towards socialism as the answer for America. His entire political advance depended upon the backing, support, and work of the Chicago socialist community. It was a stealth-socialist circle, carefully hidden from the public, but now unearthed brilliantly by Kurtz. With a “thoroughgoing pattern of deception,” he misled the American people into believing that he was a post-ideological pragmatist. “Obama has made concerted efforts to hide his socialist convictions from the voters who put him in office,” in a “systematic deception” that “corrodes democracy itself.”


For these reasons, Stanley Kurtz has written what I believe is the most important political book in years. I would go so far as to say that had he or someone else done this work during the 2008 election campaign, Barack Obama would not have been elected president — because it would have been clear that Obama is simply not who he claimed to be. During the election, Obama presented himself as a post-partisan figure who would unite the country and work with Republicans to find practical solutions to America’s problems. He would heal the country’s racial wounds. Instead, he has divided us. At a time when Europe is digging itself out from under the weight of its social-democratic policies, Obama is pushing us in that direction: out-of-control deficits, unsustainable entitlements, high taxes, and a sluggish economy. That is not where the American people want to go.



Ronald Radosh is an adjunct fellow at the Hudson Institute; Prof. Emeritus of History at the City University of New York, and the author of many books, including "The Rosenberg File;" "Divided They Fell: The Demise of the Democratic Party, 1964-1996," and most recently, "Commies: A Journey Through the Old Left, the New Left and the Leftover Left."

www.hudson.org/

progressive/liberalism explained for the simple minded (other liberals)

www.youtube.com/watch?v=fZrqdZFFb5c&feature=related


Anne Frank in the World
business review weekly
Image by elycefeliz
www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/reviews/frankrev.html
In Anne Frank in the World: 1929-1945, the Anne Frank House has produced a compendium of photographs telling her heroic story. This unique work, designed for younger audiences (grades 7 and up), puts pictures to the life of perhaps the most famous Holocaust victim. Although Anne Frank perished at age 15 in 1945 in a Nazi concentration camp, her memory, her short and tragic life, remain with us through her legendary diary and the photographs of this book which not only capture proud family portraits of the Franks, but also more somber scenes of the rise of Nazism and its terrible effects.

By looking at the photographs, Anne appeared to have a happy childhood, with scenes of her on the beach and playing with friends. However, darkness lingered on the horizon. In 1933, Hitler became absolute ruler of Germany and began instituting oppressive measures against Jews. Anne Frank in the World: 1929-1945 shows pictures of burning synagogues, Jewish shopkeepers sweeping up after Kristallnacht and Jewish World War One veterans proudly display their war medals as they face discrimination amid signs and posters of anti-Jewish propaganda.

Anne Frank in the World: 1929-1945 gives haunting scenes of Nazis rounding up and deporting Jews, sending them to concentration camps. In 1942, Anne Frank and her family hid in what they called the Secret Annex in Amsterdam, until their discovery by an SS agent in 1944. The Nazis split up the Frank family, sending Anne and her sister Margot to disease ridden Bergen-Belsen, where, tragically, they both died within a year.

Anne Frank in the World: 1929-1945 tells the unforgettable story of Anne Frank and the events surrounding her life through more than 225 photographs revealing what she saw as a young woman growing up in the 1930s and 40s in Europe amidst Nazism. The book concludes with daunting pictures of contemporary hate organizations such as the Ku Klux Klan, neo-Nazis and other hate groups, reminding us that intolerance still plagues us.

www.amazon.com/Anne-Frank-World-House/dp/0375911774
From Publishers Weekly: A much improved version of the identically titled catalogue published in 1985 to accompany a traveling exhibit, this volume joins an already large number of distinctive, accomplished books that magnify Anne Frank's experience to teach young readers about the climate in which she perished. While other titles (including the Anne Frank House's Anne Frank: Beyond the Diary by Ruud van der Rol and Rian Verhoeven) focus intimately on Anne Frank, this volume stresses history, detailing the rise of Nazism and its immediate effects on the Frank family. Photographs, several on every spread, tell even more of the story than does the compressed text. Readers see not only the by-now-familiar photos of the young Anne, but a view of a Jewish man, wearing the military decorations he earned fighting for Germany in WWI, standing outside his store in 1933 Cologne in response to the boycott of Jewish stores ordered by Goebbels; happy Dutch families with arms extended in a Heil Hitler; an anguished-looking naked girl, described as "mentally disabled," restrained by uniformed nurses right before she is to be killed through Hitler's "Euthanasia Project." The concluding sections, with views of Bosnian Muslims and Serbian soldiers, contemporary Ku Klux Klan rallies, a Londoner injured in an attack on a gay bar and other shocking instances of racism and racial crimes, explicitly connect prejudice with violence in an eloquent plea for tolerance. Ages 10-up. Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.


2012 College of Business Early Career Achievement Awards

A few nice business degree images I found:


2012 College of Business Early Career Achievement Awards
business degree
Image by Homecoming at Illinois State
Early Career Achievement Awards (ECAA) recognize younger graduates who have demonstrated innovative and responsible professional leadership, the potential for future distinction, and a commitment to serving others. One honoree is selected from each degree program. They return to campus to receive their award and share advice with current students through panel discussions during Homecoming celebrations at Illinois State University. View more photos at www.illinoisstatehomecoming.com.


2012 College of Business Early Career Achievement Awards
business degree
Image by Homecoming at Illinois State
Early Career Achievement Awards (ECAA) recognize younger graduates who have demonstrated innovative and responsible professional leadership, the potential for future distinction, and a commitment to serving others. One honoree is selected from each degree program. They return to campus to receive their award and share advice with current students through panel discussions during Homecoming celebrations at Illinois State University. View more photos at www.illinoisstatehomecoming.com.

Cool Business Technology images

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Technology Stewardship Workshop on 17 May 2010
business technology
Image by tony4carr
Workshop on Technology Stewardship for Communities of Practice on 17 May 2010 led by Nancy White at the UCT Graduate School of Business.

Cool Design Business Cards images

A few nice design business cards images I found:


New flip cards - mine
design business cards
Image by adventurejournalist
Because we work together on a lot of our projects, and because it just sounded like a fun, new idea -- Shane designed a set of double-sided business cards for us. His on one side, mine on the other.


Business Card - Back
design business cards
Image by Brandon Heyer

Nice On Line Business photos

A few nice on line business images I found:


Monroe Street Businesses, 1946
on line business
Image by OSU Special Collections & Archives : Commons
Original Collection: Harriet's Collection

Item Number: HC0596

Image Description: View of businesses on Monroe Street at 21st street. Photo was used in the Oregon Stater

You can find this image by searching for the item number by clicking here.

Want more? You can find more digital resources online.

We're happy for you to share this digital image within the spirit of The Commons; however, certain restrictions on high quality reproductions of the original physical version may apply. To read more about what “no known restrictions” means, please visit the Special Collections & Archives website, or contact staff at the OSU Special Collections & Archives Research Center for details.


Another Good Photo Shoot of the High Line - IMG_4540
on line business
Image by catchesthelight
A view to the north on the High Line with the outdoor theater in the foreground and the very modern building toward right.


The line at Georgetown Cupcake
on line business
Image by voteprime
The anticipation builds as we wait and wait (for about 30 minutes) to buy our cupcakes.

It was totally worth the wait. I am skeptical about this cupcake craze. Scratch that, I was skeptical.

A store employee walked while we waited, giving us all updates on the status of cupcakes remaining. There was a bit of a murmur among the crowd when we learned only a few Red Velvets remained. I was a staunch supporter of the Key Lime cupcake. Kristen poo-pooed the flavor. I insisted it had to be popular. During one of these cupcake updates the employee said something like this:
Empoyee: There are only a few Red Velvets remaining. But if you want Key Lime we have plenty remaining.
Me: Yes!
Her: Oh, I'm glad you're excited, because there are a lot left!
Me: [internally] WHATEVER!

While in the line, we heard of a new business venture that will be started by the woman behind us. She didn't have a name for her new cupcake store, but let me just say this: Tuna Cupcakes. Mmm! On the plus side, the lines will be significantly shorter.

Nice Grants For Business photos

Check out these grants for business images:


EXILE ISLAND-Childrens Wish Foundation-MapleRidge Chrysler-Return It-photos by RonSombilonGallery and PacBlue Priting (1086)
grants for business
Image by SOMBILON ART, MEDIA and PHOTOGRAPHY
EXILE ISLAND – Outsmart, Outplay, Out Pledge - In Support of the CHILDREN’S WISH FOUNDATION
www.ExileIsland.ca/Region/British-Columbia-Vancouver
www.ChildrensWish.ca

Platinum Event Sponsor: MAPLE RIDGE CHRYSLER JEEP DODGE
www.MapleRidgeChrysler.com

Event Challenge Sponsor: RETURN-IT
www.Encorp.ca

Media Event Photography Sponsor: RON SOMBILON GALLERY and PACBLUE PRINTING
www.RonSombilonGallery.com
www.PacBluePrinting.com

.


EXILE ISLAND-Childrens Wish Foundation-MapleRidge Chrysler-Return It-photos by RonSombilonGallery and PacBlue Priting (1189)
grants for business
Image by SOMBILON ART, MEDIA and PHOTOGRAPHY
EXILE ISLAND – Outsmart, Outplay, Out Pledge - In Support of the CHILDREN’S WISH FOUNDATION
www.ExileIsland.ca/Region/British-Columbia-Vancouver
www.ChildrensWish.ca

Platinum Event Sponsor: MAPLE RIDGE CHRYSLER JEEP DODGE
www.MapleRidgeChrysler.com

Event Challenge Sponsor: RETURN-IT
www.Encorp.ca

Media Event Photography Sponsor: RON SOMBILON GALLERY and PACBLUE PRINTING
www.RonSombilonGallery.com
www.PacBluePrinting.com

.

Cool Selling Business images

Check out these selling business images:


Milwaukee Road Business Car "Milwaukee" - Drawing Room
selling business
Image by skytop45
Milwaukee Road Business Car "Milwaukee". Ordered: 5/1947, Delivered: 12/1948. Ran as "Bluebonnet" in the Frisco 1522 excursions. Recently sold to the 261 and stored at Harrison street.


Milwaukee Road Business Car "Milwaukee" - Hallway View
selling business
Image by skytop45
Milwaukee Road Business Car "Milwaukee". Ordered: 5/1947, Delivered: 12/1948. Ran as "Bluebonnet" in the Frisco 1522 excursions. Recently sold to the 261 and stored at Harrison street.

business card designs

Check out these free business cards images:


business card designs
free business cards
Image by Ashim Adhikari
Copyright- Ashimadhikari.com.np
If you want a business card for yourself, contact me. da.paribartan@gmail.com


business card designs
free business cards
Image by Ashim Adhikari
Copyright- Ashimadhikari.com.np
If you want a business card for yourself, contact me. da.paribartan@gmail.com

Up-Start! Competition 2012

Some cool start a business images:


Up-Start! Competition 2012
start a business
Image by mars_discovery_district
The Up-Start! Competition is an annual business pitch competition for Entrepreneurship 101 students.

Nice Business Account photos

Some cool business account images:


2011 California Accounting & Business Show Photo 2086
business account
Image by Grant Wickes
Conference details at 2011 California Accounting Show Los Angelas, CA June 6-7, 2011. (cc) Grant Wickes VP Businss Development Wasp Barcode Technologies. Please copy and credit as above if using this picture.
In picture: Sherrill Sleeter, Greg LaFollette, David Pollak, Eric Asgeirsson


2011 California Accounting & Business Show Photo 2075
business account
Image by Grant Wickes
Conference details at 2011 California Accounting Show Los Angelas, CA June 6-7, 2011. (cc) Grant Wickes VP Businss Development Wasp Barcode Technologies. Please copy and credit as above if using this picture.
In picture: Jon Baron, Scott Fleszar

Nice Business Insurance photos

Some cool business insurance images:



070401 heron_002
business insurance
Image by in-world professionals
www.inworldmomentum.com/

Cool Business Grants images

A few nice business grants images I found:


Grant Sims visits Mays
business grants
Image by Mays Business School
Grant Sims speaks to undergraduate Business Honors students at Texas A&M University's Mays Business School. [Photo:Mays Communications]


Grant Sims visits Mays
business grants
Image by Mays Business School
Grant Sims speaks to undergraduate Business Honors students at Texas A&M University's Mays Business School. [Photo:Mays Communications]

Austin Small Business Think Tank - #SmallBizATX

Check out these marketing business images:


Austin Small Business Think Tank - #SmallBizATX
marketing business
Image by Dell's Official Flickr Page
Austin Small Business Think Tank - #SmallBizATX

출간기념파티 27

Check out these business presentation images:


출간기념파티 27
business presentation
Image by Jinho.Jung


출간기념파티 33
business presentation
Image by Jinho.Jung

Business of Software - Dharmesh Shah

Check out these business software images:


Business of Software - Dharmesh Shah
business software
Image by betsyweber
Business of Software 2010, Boston - businessofsoftware.org/


Business of Software - Youngme Moon
business software
Image by betsyweber
Business of Software 2010, Boston - businessofsoftware.org/

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