Smart Specialisation in U.S. Regional Policy: Successes, Setbacks
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Russ Ebeid: KEEPING IT SIMPLE
NOVEMBER 2015 VOLUME 6 • ISSUE NO. 10 PRESIDENT’S DINNER 2015 KEYNOTE SPEAKER Russ Ebeid: KEEPING IT SIMPLE PAGE 6 TOLEDO CLUB OFFICERS PRESIDENT Aaron Swiggum VICE PRESIDENT Brett Seymour TREASURER Manager’sMESSAGE Greg Wagoner SECRETARY Rebecca Shope Roger Parker, General Manager TOLEDO CLUB STAFF ADMINISTRATION 419-254-2988 • [email protected] Roger Parker, General Manager 419-254-2988 [email protected] Nathalie Helm, Executive Assistant 419-254-2980 [email protected] FOOD & BEVERAGE SERVICE Nancy LaFountaine, Catering Manager 419-254-2981 [email protected] Debra Rutkowski, Catering Assistant Manager 419-254-2981 [email protected] Ed Mackiewicz Food and Beverage Director It’s with great excitement that I can announce that Eric Nittolo has accepted the Executive Eric Nittolo, Executive Chef 419-243-2200 ext. 2964 [email protected] Chef position at The Toledo Club. To highlight some of his credentials: Charlotte Hall Concierge and Member Relations Manager Eric was the chef at Traverse City’s nationally renowned Boathouse Restaurant for several years. FACILITY Mark Hoffman, Facilities Manager He graduated from the Great Lakes Culinary 419-243-2200 MEMBERSHIP Institute with honors in May 2008, and he also Russ Wozniak, Membership Director has a degree in analytical biochemistry. He has 419-254-2997 [email protected] ACCOUNTING won several culinary awards and is renowned Joe Monks, Finance Director 419-254-2970 [email protected] for his use of locally grown seasonal products. Paula Martin, Accounting Analyst He has created unique menus that focus on 419-254-2996 [email protected] Kobe beef and regional European contemporary ATHLETIC John Seidel, Director/Squash Pro cuisines, as well as Escoffier classics. -
Glasstech Builds on Its Pioneering Ideas Company’S Major Accomplishments Include: Company and Founders Played Major Role in Development of Photovoltaic Modules
® Special Edition Solar Cells, Inc. Solar Energy: This Glasstech-related Glasstech Builds On Its Pioneering Ideas company’s major accomplishments include: Company and founders played major role in development of photovoltaic modules. Impact continues to be felt in the recently • Evaluated semiconductor announced Solar Products Business Unit. materials. Analyzed 7ORLD amorphous silicon Today, the world is going “green.” and cadmium telluride and selected cadmium The green movement is toward natural telluride as the products and processes that do not harm semiconductor material. the environment, yet still provide for progress and mankind’s comfort. One of the best • Created deposition and production examples of this movement is solar energy systems. Designed development. Today, companies are forming a continuous deposition or expanding at a rapid pace to provide and encapsulation line energy from the sun’s rays. and built a prototype. Also constructed a Many may think solar energy is a 21st full-scale deposition line century development. To the contrary, in Perrysburg, Ohio. there has been experimentation with solar This was the initial Mark D. Christman, Glasstech President and CEO and First Solar, Inc., energy devices going back many decades. Norman C. Nitschke, Glasstech’s Co-founder production line. Glasstech Inc.’s founders, Harold A. In a recent series of interviews, Nitschke, a • Increased McMaster and Norman C. Nitschke, first true pioneer in the glass processing field and conversion efficiency began investigating solar energy during the now a senior spokesman, talked about his of cells. In the late energy crisis of 1973 – 1974, just three years and Glasstech’s involvement in solar energy 1990s, a Solar Cells’ after Glasstech was formed and eventually development, primarily from the mid-1970s unit with cadmium settled in Perrysburg, Ohio. -
Spring 2011 Face of Glasstech in China and India
5 6 Press-forming technology caters to the glass needs of any vehicle. Glass Demand Grows in China, India ® Their names are Yang Ping and The Chinese market has evolved into needs on a real-time basis. Ramesh Srinivasan, and they are the one of the largest world markets for Ping is Glasstech’s Chief Spring 2011 face of Glasstech in China and India. automotive glass such as produced Representative – China and heads on the company’s Deep Bend 4 the company’s Shanghai office. system (DB 4™). The demand for glass Previously, he was a Chinese Forty Years of Glasstech Celebrates 40-Year Legacy parts for solar energy production marketing consultant for a United Innovation AUTOMOTIVE also is robust, especially for the large With Transition Into the Future States company, and an assistant LS4-sized, bent and tempered glass Innovation established Glasstech, manager in the supervision and and innovation continues to It was a hot, dusty August day in 1971. Nitschke joined McMaster in 1951 and Press-Forming Technology Produces Compound parts produced on Glasstech’s new control department of China Chemical spur the company’s growth into Three friends, all veterans of the glass Larimer joined in 1952. Cylindrical Radius Bender (CRB-S™ systems that produce glass and Complex Lites Quickly. Building Materials Company. He holds business, met in the second-floor offices 1900). The demand for the ultra-flat parts for solar energy production. In 1969, Permaglass merged with Guardian Yang Ping Ramesh Srinivasan a Master of Business Administration Glasstech’s innovations are of a building in the small Northwest Ohio You see them everywhere. -
Extensions of Remarks E2103 EXTENSIONS of REMARKS
October 21, 2003 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD — Extensions of Remarks E2103 EXTENSIONS OF REMARKS RECOGNIZING JOSEPH J. TRIBUTE TO JOHNNY J. BUTLER, the North Carolina Country Store, in Brooklyn, TARANTINO ESQUIRE NY, as vice president of Marketing and Busi- ness Operations. Her hard work paid divi- HON. ROBERT A. BRADY dends, and in 1988, she expanded the busi- HON. JIM GERLACH OF PENNSYLVANIA ness by opening a restaurant, The Carolina Country Kitchen, which has been in Brooklyn OF PENNSYLVANIA IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES for 13 years. The restaurant is now located in IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Tuesday, October 21, 2003 the country store. Mr. BRADY of Pennsylvania. Mr. Speaker, I Patricia is an active member of New Jeru- Tuesday, October 21, 2003 rise to honor the accomplishments of Mr. salem Baptist Church in Jamaica, NY. She Mr. GERLACH. Mr. Speaker. I rise today to Johnny J. Butler, Esquire, recipient of the has also been involved in numerous commu- recognize Joseph J. Tarantino, recipient of this 2003 Laborers’ Local Union 332 Outstanding nity efforts including her membership on the 73rd Community Council and the Bedford year’s Montgomery County Chamber of Com- Community Leader Award. It is a privilege to recognize a person whose commitment to Stuyvesant Community Planning Board. Addi- merce Outstanding Citizen of the Year Award, community has enriched the lives of countless tionally, she is a contributor to several block for his numerous years of service to our com- individuals. associations and is very active in her commu- munity. Mr. Butler is an attorney with the law firm of nity and neighborhood schools. -
Photovoltaics and the Environment 1998
BNL52557 Photovoltaics and the Environment 1998 Report on the Workshop Photovoltaics and the Environment 1998 July 23-24, 1998 Keystone Inn, Keystone, Colorado Organized by Brookhaven Natior$Laboratory (BNL) National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) Thin Film Partnership Vasilis Fthenakis Ken Zwei be1 Paul Moskowitz February 1999 DEPARTMENT OF ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY ‘BROOKEKAVEN NATIONAL LABORATORY UPTON, NEW YORK 11973 Prepared for the U.S. Department of Energy Photovoltaic Energy Division Contract No. DE-AC02-98-CHI 0886 OFFICIAL FILE COPY DISCLAIMER This report was prepared as an account of work sponsored by an agency of the United States Government. Neither the United States Government nor any agency thereof, nor any of their employees, not any of their contractors, subcontractors, or their employees, makes any warranty, express or implied, or assumes any legal liability or responsibility for the accuracy, completeress, or usefulness of any information, apparatus, product, or process disclosed, or represents that its use would not infringe privately owned rights. Reference herein to any specific commercial product, process, or service by trade name, trademark, manufacturer, or otherwise, does not necessarily constitute or imply its endorsement, recommendation, or favoring by the United States government or any agency, contractor or subcontractor thereof. The views and opinions of authors expressed herein do not necessarily state or reflect those of the United States Government or any agency, contractor or subcontractor thereof. BNL52557 Photovoltaics and the Environment 1998 Report on the Workshop Photovoltaics and the Environment 1998 . July 23-24,1998 Keystone Inn, Keystone, Colorado Organized by Brookhaven Natio;;LLaboratory (BNL) National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) Thin Film Partnership Vasilis Fthenakis Ken Zwei be1 Paul Moskowitz February 1999 DEPARTMENT OF ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY ‘BROOKHAVEN NATIONAL LABORATORY UPTON, NEW YORK 11973 Prepared for the U.S. -
I Want for the Toledo Club! Scott Libbe and His Committee Are in Full-Tilt Membership Mode See Page 6
SEPTEMBER 2018 VOLUME 9 • ISSUE NO.8 I WANT FOR THE TOLEDO CLUB! SCOTT LIBBE AND HIS COMMITTEE ARE IN FULL-TILT MEMBERSHIP MODE SEE PAGE 6 TOLEDO CLUB OFFICERS MARK YOUR PRESIDENT Brett Seymour VICE PRESIDENT CALENDAR! Greg Wagoner TREASURER Doug Kearns SECRETARY Kathy Mikolajczak SEPTEMBER CLUB events TOLEDO CLUB STAFF ADMINISTRATION SEPTEMBER 1 Club Closed Roger Parker, General Manager 419-254-2988 [email protected] SEPTEMBER 2 Club Closed Dawn Miller, Executive Assistant 419-254-2980 [email protected] SEPTEMBER 3 Labor Day: Club Closed FOOD & BEVERAGE SERVICE Ed Mackiewicz, Food and Beverage Director SEPTEMBER 4 First Tuesday [email protected] Theresa Carroll, Catering Manager 419-254-2981 [email protected] SEPTEMBER 7 Party in the Parking Lot (see page 10) Devon Layman, Assistant Catering Manager 419-254-2993 [email protected] SEPTEMBER 8 Babysitting available 9 AM – 2 PM Sean Moran, Executive Chef 419-243-2200 ext. 2964 [email protected] SEPTEMBER 10 ZIPZ Dinner - Flavors of India by the Seymours (see page 20) Charlotte Hall Concierge and Member Relations Manager SEPTEMBER 11 New Menu Items Tasting (see page 20 and back cover) FACILITY Mark Hoffman, Facilities Manager SEPTEMBER Ben DeLong at the Piano 419-243-2200 14 MEMBERSHIP SEPTEMBER 15 Babysitting available 9 AM – 2 PM Russ Wozniak, Membership Director 419-254-2997 [email protected] SEPTEMBER 20 Great Books Group (see page 21) ACCOUNTING Joe Monks, Finance Director Third Thursday 419-254-2970 [email protected] Dawn Miller, Accounting