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gender envy.
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decided to try and paint the abyss angel on the back of one of my t shirts w/bleach- i love it so much but the shirt’s a bit small so i might redo it on a larger size X_X
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day 1 of posting about plastic death until everyone listens to it
#mostly represented by the last ~4 songs cause theyre my favs#first one is more of the start though cause it has more actual imagery i could represent w#plastic death#glass beach#gleachers#music#albums#concept albums#i made all of these in ms paint btw#pretty fun place to make memes actually#they ahve a certain crummy quality to them makes em more funny
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this is why i am a lifelong gleacher
yes the new song called ‘the killer’ is named after the wendy williams video. not what its about but where it started from
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University of Chicago, Gleacher Center, Elevation, Lohan Associates, 1994, Art Institute of Chicago: Architecture and Design
Gift of Lohan Associates, Inc. Size: Appro×. 63.7 × 116 cm (25 1/8 × 45 3/4 in.) Medium: Ink, gouache, and airbrushed ink on paper, mounted on foam board, two pieces of polyester film applied to front of marquees above each of the two entrance doors.
https://www.artic.edu/artworks/158952/
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Venezuelan Team 💪🏻🇻🇪 . . . . . . #illinois #photogram #michigan #skyline #chicagogram #chicago #photoshake #instamood #pennsylvania #like #could #instagramers #downtownchicago #chitown #windycity #Instafamous #chicagolife #instalife #chicagoriver #bestoftheday #igdaily #gleacher #downtown #chicity #iphoneography #optinside #staydrychicago #instagood #tribunebuilding #nanojperez (at Uptown, Chicago)
#gleacher#michigan#instagood#skyline#instamood#iphoneography#instagramers#staydrychicago#instafamous#chicagogram#photogram#downtownchicago#chicago#chicity#chicagoriver#optinside#could#downtown#igdaily#tribunebuilding#pennsylvania#chicagolife#bestoftheday#chitown#nanojperez#illinois#photoshake#like#windycity#instalife
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Welcome to 2021!
I had hoped to be writing about the upcoming events for NATE UNITE 2021, but unfortunately as you know, it has been canceled. We would like to thank the many companies that sponsored the WON 5K and other WON NATE UNITE events. Even though we are not meeting in person, we are moving forward and working to adjust ways of communicating and promoting Women of NATE.
Women of NATE Education Scholarship
There are many exciting things coming up this year starting with the new Women of NATE (WON) Education Scholarship. The scholarship was designed to encourage and inspire more women to enter the tower and communications infrastructure construction, service, and maintenance industries. Women play a prominent role as leaders and visionaries in the advancement of wireless and broadcast communications.
Through the establishment of the WON initiative, the Association is proud to recognize the vital contributions of men and women in the diverse tower and communications infrastructure industry. Because an anonymous donor matched the WON Educational Scholarship amount, there will be four separate scholarships valued up to $1,000 each which may be awarded to four different applicants.
Application documents must be received in the NATE office by January 15, 2021. In addition to the one-page application form, applicants must provide an essay describing how the WON Education Scholarship will help them achieve their goals, a high school transcript, a letter of acceptance from the school they will be attending, and a letter of nomination from a current NATE member company. For more information on the WON Education Scholarship, please visit https://natehome.com/women-of-nate/woneducation-scholarship/. Award recipients will be announced on February 15, 2021.
2021 Leadership Summit
Mark your calendars for the first WON Leadership Summit, being held on Thursday, September 23 at the Gleacher Center in Chicago, Illinois. This Women of NATE (WON) one-day Leadership Summit will feature educational sessions, keynote conversations, and a Safety Self-Defense class.
For additional information and to register, please visit: https://natehome.com/women-ofnate/ won-leadership-summit/women-of-nateleadership- summit-registration/.
If you would like to become a sponsor for the Leadership Summit or Women of NATE, we have added a new level of sponsorship, “Friends of WON.” When you become a Friend of WON, you will be acknowledged on social media platforms, receive recognition in emails, Women of NATE Today e-newsletter and on the Women of NATE webpage pre and post event.
To become a sponsor of the 2021 Leadership summit, follow this link https://natehome.com/women-of-nate/won-leadership-summit/womenof-nate-leadership-summit-sponsorships/.
Let’s take the lessons we learned in 2020 and make the best of 2021. We have many amazing opportunities coming up this year and we will get together soon.●
Diane Mueller is a member of the Women of NATE Committee, Member Services Committee, Great Lakes WIN Ambassador and the Sales and Marketing Manager of CITCA LLC in Bradley, Illinois. She can be reached at 815-351-0355 or [email protected].
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Letters
Hayley -
Hey again
I honestly feel that, easily, if I don’t see things in a brighter and more positive light and keep going and fighting, who’s to say that I could just break down, and give up.
Do you know what it’s like to constantly fight? Fight devils? Fight people who you thought, would honestly be on your side through out your life, but just to turn your back on you, only to realize, they faltered, however, you must put things in perpective -- every rhyme has a reason, and even I resemble that rhyme so I fight for that reason.
It’s hard to hear your friends but not see them, they are around but they say to me, they have some sort of suprise while at the same time, knowing, I have a child on the way, and in my wife -- someone who is extremely vulnerable just as well and where at any instance I have my ex’s telling me they love me and asking me to write them love letters and my measurements -- So I understand.
Personally, I know my limitations, God did me a favor by almost eliminating all my wires, he hardwired them, and I am programmed not to think much of my sexual self anymore -- the first thing I think of when I see a beautiful girl is the level of must their puss has because I always recall these two girls who had the most erroneous odor in their period puss at Starbucks and that was the greatest petmal.
The greatest gift I gave my wife was that date I took her to when we went on an architectural boat ride and stopped by the top floor of gleacher center at University of Chicago and I took her on a tour of the Hall of Fame of UC Nobel Laureates -- It was where the Dean took me to when he interviewed me and gave me my acceptance letter to the Bevington Shakespeare Program.
She is now accepted to UC Geo and Publishing Program and I am giving her some sort of workshop in Lexicagraphy every now and then to boost he dialect, her style, form, her spatial awareness and her grip.
As for my son -- I know it may have seemed ill contrived to write about some of the topics I wrote about -- when I should be a little bit, maudlin of sorts-- we can talk about the Avant Guard Movement, the Unified Control, the Pathfinder Legion Annex we’re forming, and how I’ve just been busy with the Operation Pearl of the Orient Sun, and we discovered the third Amoeba Devil Water, and fought the third bactrian army, and defeated it,
for me, you are asking me, is all I want and expect from God, a brown jacket and a pen that I am paying for?
I exercised my step sister from the devil who was possessed and going under the other night, I also fought the last couple of battles for her soul and the soul of both the sanctity of our home, saved our ancestral homes, our parents temple, I always have fought for the honor of my parents lately -- even, if,
it meant, I fought every devil in the area, and God allows me to put them under my dominion...
so it’s a start. I am but 6′1 187 lb, believe me, what I asked for for us, is that whethe or not we deserve much riches I asked that we’re not burdened with so much temptation we’d lose our souls....
I’ll tell you this, when I found out my wife had a mass in her stomach that could have been there for two years, the first thing on my mind, was, what would I do, if my wife dies? she has everything, and she means everything?
she literally has all my money lol aside from mother of course
and that’s all she wrote.
Of course, I have you, as my trusted friend, my ex, the mother of child, and others, who have been there as my companions, but the women in my household have put me in such a position where monetarily I don’t have much of a leverage so I am waiting for my personal effects to come and that’ll be more even keeled later -- what I am not saying is that it could have been cancer but she may very well be pregnant as soon as the soul baby has skin totally formed all over...she also has fibroids in her uteris.
The Good news is that, I feel, the baby may have been still born for a short time which is why it is more soul than skin and we’e waiting for the skin to catch up. It’s just that it’s ressurected, and now we’re writing our own version of Sta Nina.
Hayley --one other way can get our money without waiting forever for these papers to come into effect is when we sell our property, if we ever do that. After the war, the two wars in the Philippines against JI and the Devil Amoeba Huk force, our property value rose, and now it’s worth 100 Million, who is splitting it upon whom I am not sure,
so, first things first -- we all fought a battle, a war for our self preservation, to beat the devil....let us beat the devil, and remain victorious from it forever once and for all. And fully heal. And sell our home --our ancestral home, and rotate to our new heaven and be with our family, our new and bigger family
I just had a child, in Kaylee, and hopefully, soon in Lucky
if you want to know my answer -- it’s not so much that I am rich or poor, but rather, we’re lucky
I’d do anything to be with my family......now that I feel God’s will is done, in every sense of the word, the other answer is everlasting life and mercy, these promises I worked hard for will come I am sure, but if everlasting life comes first, than that’s fine, for all of us.
If you want to know what’s in my heart? I never imagined I’d be a father in this fashion...where, I am away always to my children, and to my wife, I am, too ominous such that I’m a little bit too standoffish.
Love Anyhow
Rene Justin B Ocampo
Head of Now and Marine Military Intelligence
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Well! Today went well! I woke up drunk lol but then got my shit together and wrote my booth essay and went to my first class which went well and I made myself aware of what the homework entails so I won't cram! And I submitted my booth app! And now I'm going to Barrington! And I ordered my textbook! And after my physical tomorrow I'm gonna get started on my homework, just the writing part because that'll be easier. I'll save the programming part for Friday. The programming won't be THAT hard, but I want to preemptively make it able to handle multiple threads which might be hard. If I can't then it doesn't matter and I'll just do it next week but hopefully I can at least try.
I like that a lot of my office hours are in the gleacher center because it's much closer to me than Hyde Park is. But I missed Hyde Park and I was glad to go back into the Ryerson laboratory of physical sciences. And I'm excited for my class tomorrow.
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A great day to complete my Digital Marketing and Integrated Communications course. /// Awesome experience, with excellent instructors and really smart classmates. /// I’ll miss going to the Gleacher Center. /// 📷: @shuting.chiu ///// (at The University of Chicago, Gleacher Center, Room 621) https://www.instagram.com/p/B2-o7qUngAT/?igshid=f2h2qxdnyxrb
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Booth: Leadership lessons from singing in a choir
Watch the documentary, Learning Leadership: Lessons from a Pop-Up Choir here.
“It struck me that singing in a choral setting might have a great deal of connections to people dealing with a lot of issues in business about leadership, followership and listening,” said Davis. “Wouldn’t it be terrific to put together a workshop so that instead of just talking about it, we could experience it?”
Davis reached out to Mollie Stone, choral director and lecturer at the University of Chicago, and the two worked with Patty Cuyler of Village Harmony to a one-time workshop for students to learn about leadership by singing together.
There were no auditions. Instead, since most of the students had no prior musical training, the pair invited several professional singers to serve as ringers. That was a lesson in itself, said Linda Ginzel, Clinical Professor of Managerial Psychology at Booth, who participated in the pop-up choir. “I like to sit next to someone who is better than me. They bring me up.”
The students learned three songs: a Corsican Kyrie, an American hymn, and a South African call-and-response song in Zulu. In between notes, they talked about how what they were experiencing could be applied to their business and personal lives, including how to listen to one another.
At the end of the class, the pop-up choir held a performance at the Gleacher Center’s Midway Club attended by students in Booth’s weekend MBA program.
“The major takeaway I had was about the importance of trust,” said recent Booth graduate Purva Joshi. “When you’re singing, you can’t be too involved in evaluating how the other people in the group are doing or it will throw off your rhythm. You have to do your part and trust that everyone else is doing their parts. I realized how beautiful it sounds when people trust each other.”
Here are four leadership lessons they learned:
Lesson No. 1: Learning leadership through followership
When singing in a choir, you have to learn when to lead and when to take a step back and listen. In the South African song Asimbonanga, the students learned through the call-and-response structure how to dynamically lead and follow at the same time.
The students discovered that the song was nothing like the traditional call from the pulpit and response from the congregation, but rather a cyclical movement of energy, said Stone. They were always leading and following at the same time, listening in the moment and responding to what their fellow singers were doing.
“The melody passed from one part to another and allowed for a certain amount of improvisation, so you could not just be in your silo doing your specialty,” said Davis. “I’m a tenor, but I couldn’t just care about my part. I had to care about the group and be fully present for them. And that’s a good metaphor for organizations.”
Every choir member was leading as much as following.
Lesson No. 2: Learning leadership through failure
Gather people together with limited singing experience, and it is inevitable that they are going to hit some sour notes. That is ok. In fact, that is the point.
“I spend a lot of time in teaching leadership getting people to experiment,” said Davis. “And people often say, ‘What happens if it doesn’t work out? What if it’s a failure? I say, that is often the best way to learn.”
Through choral singing, the students discovered that they have to keep singing even when they make a mistake, otherwise the song stops. They also experienced a sense of power when they used their voice in a completely new way.
“We are all afraid of failure,” said Stone. “Until you try all sorts of different approaches, you can’t succeed, because you have to know what not to do often times before you know what to do.”
Lesson No. 3: Learning leadership through respect and humility
There are often subtle and powerful differences that leaders overlook when working with other people from other cultures.
If leaders can let go of their predispositions and open themselves up to differences and appreciate them, they can better understand how to engage people from other cultures in ways that are productive.
There is magic in learning how to learn the music of other cultures, said Stone. “It takes the attention off of yourself, because you’re so busy paying attention to such intricate detail.”
Lesson No. 4. Learning leadership through vulnerability
Leadership training often touches on the need for leaders to be vulnerable. It is a frightening prospect for most leaders, said Davis.
Yet, when a leader practices vulnerability, it can embolden followers to respond in a more active way.
Singing in the pop-up choir, the students experienced first-hand how much they could learn when they allowed themselves the freedom to take risks. By singing three challenging songs as novices, the students had an opportunity to feel unsure of themselves and still make it through the performance by relying on one another.
“I realized that even when you’re in a leadership position there are times when you don’t feel completely confident,” said Booth student Julianna Suarez, “and you have to lean in and allow the team to give you the energy to move forward.”
—This story first appeared on the Chicago Booth website.
Source: https://news.uchicago.edu/story/booth-leadership-lessons-singing-choir
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#25 Kevin P. Murphy, Founder & CEO at Acreage Holdings
Corporate Bio
Kevin P. Murphy is currently a Managing Member of High Street Capital Partners Management, the Managing Member of Acreage Holdings, and Chief Executive Officer of Acreage Holdings.
Prior to his role at Acreage Holdings, Mr. Murphy was most recently a Founding Member and Managing Partner of Tandem Global Partners, a boutique investment firm focused on the emerging markets. Previously Mr. Murphy was Managing Partner at Stanfield Capital Partners, where he served as a member of the Operating and Management team that oversaw all aspects of Stanfield’s business, including risk management, sales and distribution, client services, legal, compliance and operations. Mr. Murphy also previously worked at Gleacher NatWest (Partner and Dir. of Marketing), Schroders (Sr. VP of Sales), Lazard Freres (VP) and Cantor Fitzgerald (VP). Mr. Murphy graduated with a B.A. from Holy Cross College.
Social Media Links: Twitter Linked In Instagram
How did you get involved with the Cannabis Industry?
What is your biggest accomplishment to date in the Cannabis Industry?
What are your future goals?
Who/what Inspires you?
Do you use Cannabis products?
If yes, what are your favorite Cannabis products/brands?
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UChicago offers new resource for military-affiliated students, faculty and staff
The University of Chicago has created the Office for Military-Affiliated Communities to provide a new resource for prospective and current students, faculty and staff, including those who serve in the military, veterans and members of military families.
The new office serves as a central home for the University’s military-affiliated work, helping to amplify a range of programs, support services and partnerships currently in place across UChicago. Overseeing the office is Bridget Collier, associate provost for Equal Opportunity Programs at the University.
“Those who serve in the military, veterans and their families are an essential part of the University of Chicago, adding a vibrant and diverse array of perspectives and experiences. The Office for Military-Affiliated Communities provides an important new resource for members of our community,” Collier said.
The University-wide office will help coordinate and advance varied programs and partnerships in place across UChicago. They include:
The College’s increase in the recruitment, enrollment and support of veterans and their dependents through partnerships with, among others, the Posse Foundation. The Foundation’s Posse Veterans Program works to prepare veterans for their undergraduate education and provides mentoring to them throughout their undergraduate experience. To ensure the success of the increased number of enrolled veterans, the College will have a dedicated adviser in its Career Advancement office who, in close collaboration with the new Office for Military-Affiliated Communities, will coordinate veteran students’ participation in Career Advancement programs and in the life of the College more broadly.
University of Chicago Booth School of Business’ recent doubling of its contributions under the Yellow Ribbon Program, a part of the Post-9/11 GI Bill. Qualifying veterans now receive up to $30,000 in benefits from Chicago Booth. This is a significant expansion of Booth’s participation in the program, which has been in place at the school since the revised federal bill passed in 2008.
The annual Veterans Day recognition event for our campus community, which will be held Friday, Nov. 9 from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. in the School of Social Service Administration lobby at 969 E. 60th St. This year’s program, which you can register to attend here, will feature keynote speaker Eric Gleacher, MBA’67, a Marine Corps veteran who has generously established a permanent scholarship fund for veterans seeking an MBA from Chicago Booth.
The University’s partnership with the Army Research Laboratory, announced in November 2017, with the establishment of ARL Central, a regional headquarters for research and technology development based at the Polsky Center for Entrepreneurship and Innovation on 53rd Street.
Faculty research focused on improving health care for veterans. For example, in September 2017, Prof. Robert L. Grossman, director of the University’s Center for Translational Data Science and chief architect of the National Cancer Institute’s Genomic Data Commons, began collaborating with the Boston VA to develop a system that will enable the better analysis of one of the largest datasets in the nation for cancer genomics and clinical data, and improved insight into cancer, the second leading cause of death in the U.S.
Additional information about these and other efforts and resources can be found on the new Office for Military-Affiliated Communities website.
Source: https://news.uchicago.edu/story/uchicago-offers-new-resource-military-affiliated-students-faculty-and-staff
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University of Chicago, Gleacher Center, Elevation, Lohan Associates, 1994, Art Institute of Chicago: Architecture and Design
Gift of Lohan Associates, Inc. Size: Appro×. 63.7 × 116 cm (25 1/8 × 45 3/4 in.) Medium: Ink, gouache, and airbrushed ink on paper, mounted on foam board, two pieces of polyester film applied to front of marquees above each of the two entrance doors.
https://www.artic.edu/artworks/158952/
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No matter where you are, but the moment you live and more if they are with the people you love, Thanks guys @raphyoga 😘@jonanyeling_1 😘 . . . . . . #illinois #photogram #michigan #skyline #chicagogram #chicago #photoshake #instamood #pennsylvania #like #could #instagramers #downtownchicago #chitown #windycity #Instafamous #chicagolife #instalife #chicagoriver #bestoftheday #igdaily #gleacher #downtown #chicity #iphoneography #optinside #staydrychicago #instagood #tribunebuilding #nanojperez (at The Dearborn)
#chicagoriver#igdaily#instagramers#gleacher#instagood#like#photoshake#downtownchicago#chicago#instafamous#instalife#chicity#photogram#staydrychicago#skyline#windycity#chicagolife#optinside#downtown#instamood#illinois#pennsylvania#bestoftheday#michigan#nanojperez#chitown#iphoneography#chicagogram#could#tribunebuilding
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Booth: Leadership lessons from singing in a choir
Watch the documentary, Learning Leadership: Lessons from a Pop-Up Choir here.
“It struck me that singing in a choral setting might have a great deal of connections to people dealing with a lot of issues in business about leadership, followership and listening,” said Davis. “Wouldn’t it be terrific to put together a workshop so that instead of just talking about it, we could experience it?”
Davis reached out to Mollie Stone, choral director and lecturer at the University of Chicago, and the two worked with Patty Cuyler of Village Harmony to a one-time workshop for students to learn about leadership by singing together.
There were no auditions. Instead, since most of the students had no prior musical training, the pair invited several professional singers to serve as ringers. That was a lesson in itself, said Linda Ginzel, Clinical Professor of Managerial Psychology at Booth, who participated in the pop-up choir. “I like to sit next to someone who is better than me. They bring me up.”
The students learned three songs: a Corsican Kyrie, an American hymn, and a South African call-and-response song in Zulu. In between notes, they talked about how what they were experiencing could be applied to their business and personal lives, including how to listen to one another.
At the end of the class, the pop-up choir held a performance at the Gleacher Center’s Midway Club attended by students in Booth’s weekend MBA program.
“The major takeaway I had was about the importance of trust,” said recent Booth graduate Purva Joshi. “When you’re singing, you can’t be too involved in evaluating how the other people in the group are doing or it will throw off your rhythm. You have to do your part and trust that everyone else is doing their parts. I realized how beautiful it sounds when people trust each other.”
Here are four leadership lessons they learned:
Lesson No. 1: Learning leadership through followership
When singing in a choir, you have to learn when to lead and when to take a step back and listen. In the South African song Asimbonanga, the students learned through the call-and-response structure how to dynamically lead and follow at the same time.
The students discovered that the song was nothing like the traditional call from the pulpit and response from the congregation, but rather a cyclical movement of energy, said Stone. They were always leading and following at the same time, listening in the moment and responding to what their fellow singers were doing.
“The melody passed from one part to another and allowed for a certain amount of improvisation, so you could not just be in your silo doing your specialty,” said Davis. “I’m a tenor, but I couldn’t just care about my part. I had to care about the group and be fully present for them. And that’s a good metaphor for organizations.”
Every choir member was leading as much as following.
Lesson No. 2: Learning leadership through failure
Gather people together with limited singing experience, and it is inevitable that they are going to hit some sour notes. That is ok. In fact, that is the point.
“I spend a lot of time in teaching leadership getting people to experiment,” said Davis. “And people often say, ‘What happens if it doesn’t work out? What if it’s a failure? I say, that is often the best way to learn.”
Through choral singing, the students discovered that they have to keep singing even when they make a mistake, otherwise the song stops. They also experienced a sense of power when they used their voice in a completely new way.
“We are all afraid of failure,” said Stone. “Until you try all sorts of different approaches, you can’t succeed, because you have to know what not to do often times before you know what to do.”
Lesson No. 3: Learning leadership through respect and humility
There are often subtle and powerful differences that leaders overlook when working with other people from other cultures.
If leaders can let go of their predispositions and open themselves up to differences and appreciate them, they can better understand how to engage people from other cultures in ways that are productive.
There is magic in learning how to learn the music of other cultures, said Stone. “It takes the attention off of yourself, because you’re so busy paying attention to such intricate detail.”
Lesson No. 4. Learning leadership through vulnerability
Leadership training often touches on the need for leaders to be vulnerable. It is a frightening prospect for most leaders, said Davis.
Yet, when a leader practices vulnerability, it can embolden followers to respond in a more active way.
Singing in the pop-up choir, the students experienced first-hand how much they could learn when they allowed themselves the freedom to take risks. By singing three challenging songs as novices, the students had an opportunity to feel unsure of themselves and still make it through the performance by relying on one another.
“I realized that even when you’re in a leadership position there are times when you don’t feel completely confident,” said Booth student Julianna Suarez, “and you have to lean in and allow the team to give you the energy to move forward.”
—This story first appeared on the Chicago Booth website.
Source: https://news.uchicago.edu/story/booth-leadership-lessons-singing-choir
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