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#Warren Garst
politicaldilfs · 8 months
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Iowa Governor DILFs
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Belated Governor DILF entry that I started doing on the day of the caucus.
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petsincollections · 2 years
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Common wombat standing near burrow
Garst, Warren, 1922-2016, photographer
35 mm slide; color. Scientific Classification: Kingdom: Animalia; Phylum: Chordata; Class: Mammalia; Order: Marsupialia; Family: Vombatidae; Genus: Vombatus; Genus species: Vombatus ursinus. Animal characteristics: Head-Body Length: 90-115 cm; Height: 36 cm; Weight: 22-39 kg; Identification: The wombat has coarse, brown or gray fur and a bare muzzle; Habitat: Temperate forests, heaths, mountains; Diet: Herbivore: grasses; Reproduction: Young wombats can be born any time of the year. They stay in their mother's pouch for 6-7 months and nurse until they are 15 months old; Social Structure: Common wombats will often form stable social relationships with minimal close-quarter contact to minimize aggression; Behavior: Being nocturnal, wombats spend days in underground burrows; Status: No special status; Interesting Facts: The closest relative to the wombat is the koala.
CSU - Garst (Warren and Genevieve) Collection
Mountain Scholar Digital Collections of Colorado
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i-love-hyenas · 4 months
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Warren Garst, 1922-2016
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I see people like giving Varré wolf traits, which is understandable because of the whole symbolic relationship wolf and lamb but he is a brown hyena/strandwolf to me.
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Brown hyena, Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park
flickr
Photos by Derek Keats
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Photo by Warren Garst
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itsbestsales · 5 years
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Male Enhancement Coach 2020
Motivation learning step by step- http://bit.ly/2Qo4S2g Male Enhancement Coach- http://bit.ly/2PZyc01 Eat and sleep burn fat- http://bit.ly/353LJYt The Amazing You, motivation ebook- http://bit.ly/2rvCqTz “The worst thing I can be is the same as everybody else.” – Arnold Schwarzenegger “Everybody wants to be a bodybuilder but don’t nobody want to lift heavy ass weights!” – Ronnie Coleman “If you’re capable of sending a legible text message between sets, you probably aren’t working hard enough.” – Dave Tate “Rule of thumb: Eat for what you’re going to be doing and not for what you have done. Don’t take in more than you’re willing to burn off.” – Lee Haney “If I Have To Die Tonight , If This Weight Is Going To Kill Me Tonight, SO BE IT! I’m Dying Where I Wanna Be…” -Kai Greene “Being negative and lazy is a disease that leads to pain, hardships, depression, poor health and failure. Be proactive and give a damn to achieve success!” – Phil Heath “It took me 20 years of hard training to get the physique I have today. What you need is what I had – belief in yourself! – Branch Warren “The road to nowhere is paved with excuses.” – Mark Bell “Vision creates faith and faith creates willpower. With faith there is no anxiety and no doubt – just absolute confidence in yourself.” -Arnold Schwarzenegger “The Iron never lies to you. You can walk outside and listen to all kinds of talk, get told that you’re a god or a total bastard. The Iron will always kick you the real deal. The Iron is the great reference point, the all-knowing perspective giver. Always there like a beacon in the pitch black. I have found the Iron to be my greatest friend. It never freaks out on me, never runs. Friends may come and go. But two hundred pounds is always two hundred pounds.” 1. "If you want to achieve greatness stop asking for permission." --Anonymous 2. "Things work out best for those who make the best of how things work out." --John Wooden 3. "To live a creative life, we must lose our fear of being wrong." --Anonymous 4. "If you are not willing to risk the usual you will have to settle for the ordinary." --Jim Rohn 5. "Trust because you are willing to accept the risk, not because it's safe or certain." --Anonymous 6. "Take up one idea. Make that one idea your life--think of it, dream of it, live on that idea. Let the brain, muscles, nerves, every part of your body, be full of that idea, and just leave every other idea alone. This is the way to success." --Swami Vivekananda 7. "All our dreams can come true if we have the courage to pursue them." --Walt Disney 8. "Good things come to people who wait, but better things come to those who go out and get them." --Anonymous 9. "If you do what you always did, you will get what you always got." --Anonymous 10. "Success is walking from failure to failure with no loss of enthusiasm." --Winston Churchill 11. "Just when the caterpillar thought the world was ending, he turned into a butterfly." --Proverb 12. "Successful entrepreneurs are givers and not takers of positive energy." --Anonymous 13. "Whenever you see a successful person you only see the public glories, never the private sacrifices to reach them." --Vaibhav Shah 14. "Opportunities don't happen, you create them." --Chris Grosser 15. "Try not to become a person of success, but rather try to become a person of value." --Albert Einstein 16. "Great minds discuss ideas; average minds discuss events; small minds discuss people." --Eleanor Roosevelt 17. "I have not failed. I've just found 10,000 ways that won't work." --Thomas A. Edison 18. "If you don't value your time, neither will others. Stop giving away your time and talents--start charging for it." --Kim Garst 19. "A successful man is one who can lay a firm foundation with the bricks others have thrown at him." --David Brinkley 20. "No one can make you feel inferior without your consent." --Eleanor Roosevelt 21. "The whole secret of a successful life is to find out what is one's destiny to do, and then do it." --Henry Ford 22. "If you're going through hell keep going." --Winston Churchill 23. "The ones who are crazy enough to think they can change the world, are the ones who do." --Anonymous 24. "Don't raise your voice, improve your argument." --Anonymous 25. "What seems to us as bitter trials are often blessings in disguise." --Oscar Wilde 26. "The meaning of life is to find your gift. The purpose of life is to give it away." --Anonymous 27. "The distance between insanity and genius is measured only by success." --Bruce Feirstein 28. "When you stop chasing the wrong things, you give the right things a chance to catch you." --Lolly Daskal 29. "I believe that the only courage anybody ever needs is the courage to follow your own dreams." --Oprah Winfrey 30. "No masterpiece was ever created by a lazy artist." --Anonymous #Male #Motivation #Fitness
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nhlabornews · 7 years
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Today in labor history for the week of September 18, 2017
September 18 The Teamsters for a Democratic Union (TDU) is formally founded at an Ohio convention, during a period of serious corruption in the union. Two years earlier at an IBT convention in Las Vegas, a union reform leader who (unsuccessfully) called for direct election of officers and a limit on officers’ salaries had been beaten by thugs - 1978 Nine strikebreakers are killed in an explosion at Giant (gold) Mine near Yellowknife, in Canada’s Northwest Territories. Miner Roger Warren confessed that he planted the explosives that caused the deaths. He recanted the confession but later confessed once again - 1992 A 20-month illegal lockout of 2,900 Steelworkers members at Kaiser Aluminum plants in three states ends when an arbitrator orders a new contract. Kaiser was forced to fire scabs and fork over tens of millions of dollars in back pay to union members - 1999 One week after the September 11, 2001, attacks, anthrax spores are mailed by an unknown party to several news media offices and two U.S. senators. Five people exposed to the spores died, including two workers at Washington, D.C.’s USPS Brentwood facility: Thomas Morris, Jr. and Joseph Curseen, who were to die of their exposure within the month – 2001 September 19 Chinese coal miners forced out of Black Diamond, Wash. - 1885 Between 400,000 and 500,000 unionists converge on Washington D.C., for a Solidarity Day march and rally protesting Republican policies – 1981 Musician and labor educator Joe Glazer, often referred to as “Labor’s Troubadour,” died today at age 88.  Some of his more acclaimed songs include "The Mill Was Made of Marble," "Too Old To Work" and "Automaton." In 1979 he and labor folklorist Archie Green convened a meeting of 14 other labor musicians to begin what was to become the annual Great Labor Arts Exchange and, soon thereafter, the Labor Heritage Foundation - 2006 September 20 Upton Sinclair, socialist and author of The Jungle—published on this day in 1906—born in Baltimore, Md. - 1878 According to folklorist John Garst, steel-drivin’ man John Henry, born a slave, outperformed a steam hammer on this date at the Coosa Mountain Tunnel or the Oak Mountain Tunnel of the Columbus and Western Railway (now part of the Norfolk Southern) near Leeds, Ala. Other researchers place the contest near Talcott, W. Va. - 1887 Int’l Hod Carriers, Building & Common Laborers Union of America changes name to Laborers' Int’l Union - 1965 September 21 Militia sent to Leadville, Colo., to break miners’ strike - 1896 Mother Jones leads a march of miners' children through the streets of Charleston, W. Va. - 1912 (Changing Roles, Changing Lives: Stories of Women During the Industrial Revolution: During the Industrial Revolution, workers were forced to endure dangerous working conditions for miserable wages. Among those who courageously spoke out against this poor treatment were some remarkable women, including Mary Harris “Mother” Jones and Sarah G. Bagley, whose stories are told here for young readers.)  National Football League Players Association members begin what is to become a 57-day strike, their first regular-season walkout ever - 1982 Members of five unions at the Frontier Hotel-Casino in Las Vegas begin what was to become the longest successful hotel strike in U.S. history. All 550 workers honored the picket line for the entirety of the 6-year, 4-month, 10-day fight against management’s insistence on cutting wages and eliminating pensions - 1991 September 22 Emancipation Proclamation signed - 1862 Eighteen-year-old Hannah (Annie) Shapiro leads a spontaneous walkout of 17 women at a Hart Schaffner & Marx garment factory in Chicago. It grows into a months-long mass strike involving 40,000 garment workers across the city, protesting 10-hour days, bullying bosses and cuts in already-low wages - 1910 Great Steel Strike begins; 350,000 workers demand union recognition. The AFL Iron and Steel Organizing Committee calls off the strike, their goal unmet, 108 days later - 1919 Martial law rescinded in Mingo County, W. Va., after police, U.S. troops and hired goons finally quell coal miners' strike - 1922 U.S. Steel announces it will cut the wages of 220,000 workers by 10 percent - 1931 United Textile Workers strike committee orders strikers back to work after 22 days out, ending what was at that point the greatest single industrial conflict in the history of American organized labor. The strike involved some 400,000 workers in New England, the mid-Atlantic states and the South - 1934 Some 400,000 coal miners strike for higher wages in Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Illinois and Ohio - 1935 The AFL expels the Int’l Longshoremen's Association for racketeering; six years later the AFL-CIO accepted them back into the house of labor - 1953 OSHA reaches its largest ever settlement agreement, $21 million, with BP Products North America following an explosion at BP's Texas City, Texas, plant earlier in the year that killed 15 and injured 170 - 2005 Eleven Domino's employees in Pensacola, Fla., form the nation's first union of pizza delivery drivers - 2006 San Francisco hotel workers end a 2-year contract fight, ratify a new 5-year pact with their employers - 2006 September 23 The Workingman's Advocate of Chicago publishes the first installment of The Other Side, by Martin A. Foran, president of the Coopers' Int’l Union. Believed to be the first novel by a trade union leader and some say the first working-class novel ever published in the U.S. - 1868 A coalition of Knights of Labor and trade unionists in Chicago launch the United Labor party, calling for an 8-hour day, government ownership of telegraph and telephone companies, and monetary and land reform. The party elects seven state assembly men and one senator - 1886 A 42-month strike by Steelworkers at Bayou Steel in Louisiana ends in a new contract and the ousting of scabs - 1996 California Gov. Gray Davis (D) signs legislation making the state the first to offer workers paid family leave - 2002 September 24 Canada declares the Wobblies illegal - 1918 —Compiled and edited by David Prosten
Today in labor history for the week of September 18, 2017 was originally published on NH LABOR NEWS
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mikeelgan · 8 years
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95 Experts Reveal Their 3 “Must-Do’s” for Solopreneur Success - Solo Build It…
If you could ask the best and brightest minds in the world one question, what would you ask? How profound would the answer be to your life or business?
Well, I did have such an opportunity, to create a massive roundup for +Solo Build It! by +SiteSell, and the answers were amazing.
I asked over 90 brilliant entrepreneurs and marketers an important question - a question that every business new or old would find the answer to be extremely insightful:
What are the three most important best practices that a solopreneur must do well in order to succeed online?
And their answers did not disappoint.
Today’s roundup, and the number 95, is brought to you by:
+Mark Schaefer, +Mike Elgan, +Kim Garst, +Mari Smith, +Peg Fitzpatrick, +Joel Comm, +Rebekah Radice, Nathan Chan, +Jeff Bullas, +Donna Moritz, +Christoph Trappe, +Codrut Turcanu, +Ron Sela, +Minuca Elena, +Eric Enge, +Alois Bělaška, +John Martin, +Tor Refsland, +Andy Crestodina, +Gina Fiedel, +Michael Kawula, +Craig Carpenter +Dennis Yu, +MaAnna Stephenson, +Ben Fisher, +Neal Schaffer, +Gail Gardner, +Sue B. Zimmerman, +Ted Rubin, +Ian Anderson Gray, +martin shervington, +Sarah Arrow, +Bryan Kramer, +Dan R Morris, +David Leonhardt, +Ryan Biddulph, +Michael Q Todd, +Melonie Dodaro, +Michael Brenner, +Jacob Warwick, +Rich Brooks, +Lukasz Zelezny, +Jason Quey, +Warren Whitlock, +Nicholas Scalice, +Christian Karasiewicz, Jonathan Aufray, +Andrea Beltrami, +Reginald Chan, Sam Hurley , Timothy Hughes, +Amy Schmittauer, +Donna Merrill, +Col Gray, Tomasz Górski, +Aaron Lee, +Lilach Bullock, Molly Marshall, +Dorien Morin-van Dam, +Mike Gingerich, +Denise Wakeman, +jan gordon, +Charlie Patel, Erika Kessler, +Dave Schneider, +Jeff Sieh, +Guillaume Decugis, +Gini Dietrich, +David Amerland, +John Paul Aguiar, +Jessica Ann, +Alisa Meredith, +Jenn Herman, +Vincenzo Landino, +Emeric Ernoult, +Mia Voss, +Pam Moore, +Ann Handley, +Joe Pulizzi, +Jeff Goins, +Andrea Vahl, +Ana Hoffman, +Vincent Orleck, +Mitch Jackson, +Adel de Meyer, +Daniel Newman, +Katie Wagner Social Media, +Ashley Faulkes, +Matthew Kaboomis Loomis, +Evan Carmichael, Aleksander Saiyan, +Dennis Seymour, +Heidi Cohen, +Ken Evoy and myself.
Thanks to all of the above for lending me their thoughts and minds. I hope you’ll take the time to learn from them in the collection below!
-> http://fpme.link/ssLPey
http://fpme.link/ssLPey
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wildkingdom · 8 years
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Cinematographer Warren Garst captured wildlife on film for hundreds of our episodes. He also helped create camera equipment designed to simultaneously capture close-up and wide-angle action shots of wildlife. 
Photo: Don Meier
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petsincollections · 1 year
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Black-tailed prairie dog sitting in grass
CSU - Garst (Warren and Genevieve) Collection
Colorado State University, Mountain Scholar
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petsincollections · 1 year
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Giant armadillo walking on grass close up, 1965
CSU - Garst (Warren and Genevieve) Collection
Mountain Scholar
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petsincollections · 1 year
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Three marabou storks walking in shallow water
CSU - Garst (Warren and Genevieve) Collection
Mountain Scholar Digital Collections
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petsincollections · 1 year
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Square-lipped rhinoceros standing close up, Southeastern Africa, ca. 1958-1988
Garst, Warren, 1922-2016, photographer
CSU - Garst (Warren and Genevieve) Collection
Mountain Scholar, Digital Collections of Colorado
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petsincollections · 2 years
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Alpaca standing at Machu Picchu, ca. 1973
35 mm slide; color. Scientific Classification: Kingdom: Animalia; Phylum: Chordata; Class: Mammalia; Order: Artiodactyla; Family: Camelidae; Genus: Lama; Genus species: Lama pacos. Animal characteristics: Head-Body Length: 120-225 cm; Height: 94-104 cm; Weight: 55-65 kg; Identification: Alpacas are either uniformly colored or multicolored with white, brown, gray, and/or black hair; Habitat: Alpine grasslands, meadows, marshes; Reproduction: These seasonal breeders are also induced ovulators. They mate lying down, usually within two weeks of giving birth to a single offspring. Gestation lasts 342-345 days; Social Structure: Because all of the current populations of alpacas have been domesticated, their social organization is unknown; Status: No special status; Interesting Facts: There are two known breeds of alpaca that are often used as a source of wool and meat or for pack animals.
CSU - Garst (Warren and Genevieve) Collection
Mountain Scholar - Digital Collections of Colorado
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petsincollections · 4 months
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Indian star tortoise walking on ground
35 mm slide; color. Scientific Classification: Kingdom: Animalia; Phylum: Chordata; Class: Reptilia; Order: Testudines; Family: Testudinidae; Genus: Geochelone; Genus species: Geochelone elegans. Animal characteristics: Head-Body Length: 25 cm; Identification: The Indian star tortoise has a grayish-brown shell with a star pattern in cream or golden brown. Its carapace is elongated with elevated plates; Habitat: Dry lowland forests, high grassy jungles; Diet: Herbivore: fruit, grass, cacti, flowers; Reproduction: Females can have as many as nine clutches a year, each one containing 5-7 eggs. The eggs hatch after incubating for 110 days; Behavior: The Indian star tortoise does not hibernate during periods of colder weather; Status: Endangered; Interesting Facts: The star pattern on the shell is used for camouflage in tall grass. This is the smallest species of the genus Geochelone.
CSU - Garst (Warren and Genevieve) Collection
Mountain Scholar - Digital Collections of Colorado
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petsincollections · 2 years
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Western spotted skunk lying against rock near cactus, ca. 1965
35 mm slide; color. Scientific Classification: Kingdom: Animalia; Phylum: Chordata; Class: Mammalia; Order: Carnivora; Family: Mustelidae; Genus: Spilogale; Genus species: Spilogale gracilis. Animal characteristics: Head-Body Length: 23-34 cm; Identification: The Western spotted skunk is mostly black with variable white spots and stripes on its body; Habitat: Wastelands, brush, wooded areas; Diet: Omnivore: rodents, birds, eggs, insects, fruit; Reproduction: While mating occurs only during the late summer, females give birth either year-round or only in the spring depending on their location. Implantation of the fertilized eggs is delayed, followed by a four-month gestation period. On average, 4-5 young are born at a time; Social Structure: The skunk, as a general rule, is not a social animal; but the spotted skunk is more social than other skunks, and it will share dens in the winter; Behavior: Spotted skunks are nocturnal. Although they are mainly terrestrial, they will sometimes take shelter in trees. If threatened, a skunk will stamp its front feet, raise its tail, and walk with stiff legs. It will then spray a foul-smelling substance, aiming for the attacker's face; Status: No special status; Interesting Facts: A skunk's spray can cause intense irritation of the eyes and temporary blindness. Their aim is accurate up to 2 meters. Rabies is commonly carried by skunks in the United States.
CSU - Garst (Warren and Genevieve) Collection
Colorado State University digital collections
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petsincollections · 1 year
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Two capybaras standing in grass
35 mm slide; color. Scientific Classification: Kingdom: Animalia; Phylum: Chordata; Class: Mammalia; Order: Rodentia; Family: Hydrochoeridae; Genus: Hydrochoerus; Genus species: Hydrochoerus hydrochaeris. Animal characteristics: Head-Body Length: 1-1.3 m; Height: 50-62 cm; Weight: 35-66 kg; Identification: The capybara has light brown coloration, long bristle-like hairs, no tail, and partial webbing between its toes; Habitat: Forests, open grasslands; Diet: Herbivore: aquatic plants, grasses; Reproduction: Mating is done in the spring. Gestation takes 15-18 weeks and females can give birth to up to seven young at a time. Females will suckle any young within their family group. The young can eat grass within a week after birth. Life expectancy for capybaras is 5-10 years; Social Structure: Family groups change by the season. During the wet season, 10-40 capybaras may belong to a single group. These groups usually have one dominant male, 1+ females, several young, and 1+ subordinate males. When conditions are more dry, up to 100 animals will gather together; Behavior: Much of the capybara's time is spent in the water; Status: No special status; Interesting Facts: Capybaras, the largest living rodents, are excellent swimmers and divers.
CSU - Garst (Warren and Genevieve) Collection
Mountain Scholar - Digital Collections of Colorado
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