Includes:
Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee and Virginia
Several trips to Florida for work and play!
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Articles – Good topics for articles include anything related to your company – recent changes to operations, the latest company softball game – or the industry you’re in. General business trends (think national and even international) are great article fodder, too.
Mission statements – You can tell a lot about a company by its mission statement. Don’t have one? Now might be a good time to create one and post it here. A good mission statement tells you what drives a company to do what it does.
Company policies – Are there company policies that are particularly important to your business? Perhaps your unlimited paternity/maternity leave policy has endeared you to employees across the company. This is a good place to talk about that.
Executive profiles – A company is only as strong as its executive leadership. This is a good place to show off who’s occupying the corner offices. Write a nice bio about each executive that includes what they do, how long they’ve been at it, and what got them to where they are.
I've made several trips to Louisiana for work, most of the gallery are photos from New Orleans, shot on my first trip to Louisiana in 2003.
When New Orleans was founded, it was nothing more than a French trading camp. After a few years, the camp was organized into a formal colony, and was subdivided into "city blocks," with streets that ran perpendicular and parallel to the Mississippi River. In the center of this layout, right on the river, was a one-block common area: the Place d'Armes, designed by architect Louis Pilié.
The Place d'Armes (or Plaza de Armas, as the Spanish called it) was used as a public square, military parade ground and open-air market. On the northwest side, Chartres Street, stood a church (now Saint Louis Cathedral) and the governor's mansion (the Cabildo). Because of its central location, proximity to the river port, and the presence of both a church and seat of government, the square was the epicenter of New Orleans life and the hub of local shipping and commerce. The Place d'Armes continued to function in this capacity throughout the rule of the French, the Spanish, the French again, and American rule after the Louisiana Purchase.
Lorsque la Nouvelle-Orléans a été fondée, ce n'était rien de plus qu'un camp commercial français. Après quelques années, le camp a été organisé en une colonie formelle, et a été subdivisé en «pâtés de maisons», avec des rues perpendiculaires et parallèles au fleuve Mississippi. Au centre de ce tracé, au bord de la rivière, se trouvait un espace commun d'un pâté de maisons: la Place d'Armes, conçue par l'architecte Louis Pilié.
La Place d'Armes (ou Plaza de Armas, comme l'appelaient les Espagnols) était utilisée comme place publique, terrain de parade militaire et marché en plein air. Du côté nord-ouest, rue de Chartres, se dressaient une église (aujourd'hui cathédrale Saint-Louis) et le manoir du gouverneur (le Cabildo). En raison de son emplacement central, de la proximité du port fluvial et de la présence à la fois d'une église et d'un siège du gouvernement, la place était l'épicentre de la vie de la Nouvelle-Orléans et le centre de la navigation et du commerce locaux. La Place d'Armes a continué à fonctionner à ce titre tout au long du règne des Français, des Espagnols, des Français à nouveau et des États-Unis après l'achat de la Louisiane.
Work trip to Columbia
This is a long form text area designed for your content that you can fill up with as many words as your heart desires. You can write articles, long mission statements, company policies, executive profiles, company awards/distinctions, office locations, shareholder reports, whitepapers, media mentions and other pieces of content that don’t fit into a shorter, more succinct space.
Articles – Good topics for articles include anything related to your company – recent changes to operations, the latest company softball game – or the industry you’re in. General business trends (think national and even international) are great article fodder, too.
Mission statements – You can tell a lot about a company by its mission statement. Don’t have one? Now might be a good time to create one and post it here. A good mission statement tells you what drives a company to do what it does.
Company policies – Are there company policies that are particularly important to your business? Perhaps your unlimited paternity/maternity leave policy has endeared you to employees across the company. This is a good place to talk about that.
Executive profiles – A company is only as strong as its executive leadership. This is a good place to show off who’s occupying the corner offices. Write a nice bio about each executive that includes what they do, how long they’ve been at it, and what got them to where they are.
Welcome to our travel site. This is an ongoing project of the many places we have traveled. We will continue to update the site and hope to include many new adventures along the way, enjoy.
Bienvenue sur notre site de voyage. Il s'agit d'un projet en cours des nombreux endroits que nous avons parcourus. Nous continuerons de mettre à jour le site et espérons inclure de nombreuses nouvelles aventures en cours de route, profitez-en.
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