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Hawaii, Thailand, and Washington—Have T-Shirts, Will Travel!
Kathy Baxter
Kathy Baxter, business process analyst, Planning and Development Services, Snohomish County, Washington, chose to wear her Esri T-shirt while planning her hike to the top of Diamond Head in Hawaii. Good job! |
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John Montre
John Montre, reference librarian, Pius XII Memorial Library, Saint Louis University,
St. Louis, Missouri, enjoyed an "eco-vacation" to Thailand and visited the elephants at the Maesa Elephant Camp and the Elephant Health Care Unit. Happily, he got snapped while wearing his brand-new Esri T-shirt (since his "vintage" Esri shirt from 1999 had worn out!). |
Alan B. Smith
Alan B. Smith, GIS technology specialist, Geographic Services, Washington State Department of Transportation, wore his Esri Cycling Jersey on the 2009 Tenino-Rainier-Yelm-Bucoda Bike Rally, a 100-mile ride through rural Thurston and Lewis counties. |
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|Online Only Photos|
From Rocks to Ruins
John Blackmore
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John Blackmore, GIS and mapping specialist for Luck Stone Corporation, Richmond, Virginia, wears his GIS T-shirt while working in an active rock quarry. John stands in front of a jaw crusher, producing thousands of tons of crushed stone each day. The rock quarry he stands in is hundreds of feet deep. John just loves his GIS T-shirts! |
Gary Stone
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While on vacation, Gary Stone, engineer technician 4, Design Section 170, Louisiana Department of Transportation and Development, proudly poses with his Esri T-shirt at the Dzibilchaltún Mayan ruins in Yucatán, Mexico. |
Wear an Esri T-shirt in a unique location and send a photograph to ArcNews. Photos will be considered for use in ArcNews, the expanded T-shirt section at ArcNews Online, or both. While digital photos sent via e-mail (tmiller@esri.com) are preferred, prints or slides can be sent to Thomas K. Miller, ArcNews Editor, ArcNews T-Shirt Feature, Esri, 380 New York Street, Redlands, California 92373-8100 USA.
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