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Infor Nexus (formerly known as GT Nexus) is an independent business unit of Infor LLC offering a multienterprise supply chain network. The on-demand global supply chain management platform and integrated applications are used worldwide by businesses to manage global direct procurement, supplier networks, global logistics and global trade processes. [1]
South Beach clubs lit up the night in the 1990s. There seemed to be a venue on every block. Themed nights. Celebs. DJs and drinks. Dancing and more dancing.
The proponents of anti-club measures consist principally of a relatively small group of strident professional women in metropolitan centers, the anti-Establishment news media, vote-seeking politicians, a few minority leaders, do-gooders, the radical left, and social engineers who would restructure our social system according to their own ideas ...
Pebble Beach hosted the first California Women's Amateur Championship in 1967 as well as subsequent tournaments until it was moved to Quail Lodge & Golf Club in Carmel Valley in 1987. [ 15 ] The first professional tournament at Pebble Beach was the Monterey Peninsula Open in 1926, which had a $5,000 purse.
California Coastal Access Guide, Seventh Edition, published by the University of California Press in 2014. ISBN 978-0520278172. ISBN 978-0520278172. Compiled by the California Coastal Commission, this guide provides comprehensive details on over 1150 public coastal access points along California's 1271-mile shoreline.
In 1904, the club's headquarters moved to a five-story building on Fifth and Hill streets. At various times in its history, the California Club was accused of discrimination against women, African Americans, Jews, and other minorities. [7] [8]. The California Club did not admit African Americans or women until the 1980s. [9]
Silicon Beach is the Westside region of the Los Angeles metropolitan area that is home to more than 500 technology companies, including startups.It is particularly applied to the coastal strip from Los Angeles International Airport north to the Santa Monica Mountains, [1] but the term may be applied loosely or colloquially to most anywhere in the Los Angeles Basin.
On Labor Day in 1925, the uncompleted Pacific Beach Club hosted a "negro bathing beauty parade", as coined by the Los Angeles Times. The 6,000–10,000 person crowd was composed exclusively of the African American community and was the first "black only" event of this size in Southern California, and as historian Daniel Cady quotes, "believed ...