The Padre Motel offers 12 units of lodging. All units consist of air conditioning, 150+ channels of satellite television, and free high-speed Ethernet Internet access (1.5Mbps download / 512Kbps upload). We have 5 'mini-suite' units with 2 Queen beds in separate bedrooms, 4 units with King beds and 3 units with Queen beds. The Padre is littered throughout with its horror influences, from the rich religious iconography of the plot, through the dark sepia colour tones, to the monsters inspired by classic horror villains from zombies to the devil to the Elder Gods. It is the perfect game for any horror culture nerd who will pick up on the wry references scattered. The Padre Motel offers 12 units of lodging. All units consist of air conditioning, 150+ channels of satellite television, and free high-speed Ethernet Internet access (1.5Mbps download / 512Kbps upload). We have 5 'mini-suite' units with 2 Queen beds in separate bedrooms, 4 units with King beds and 3 units with Queen beds.
Padre, the Perl IDE
Padre is a Perl IDE, an integrated development environment, or in other words a text editorthat is simple to use for new Perl programmers but also supports large multi-lingual and multi-technology projects.
Our primary focus is to create a peerless environment for learning Perl andcreating Perl scripts, modules and distributions, with an extensible plug-insystem to support the addition of related functionality and languages andto support advanced developers taking the editor anywhere they want it to go.
Features
The Padre Pio Foundation Of America
- Customizable syntax highlighting for many languages and visual editor effects
- Refactoring tools for Perl 5 and Perl 6
- Context sensitive help and code completion
- Beginner-friendly
- Extra features for advanced programmers
- Multi-platform: Runs on Windows, Linux, Mac OS X
- Free and Open Source under the 'Perl license'
- Written in Perl 5
- .. list of features
Learning Perl
Once you have Perl and Padre installed, you could check out the PerlTutorial written by Gabor Szabo, the original creator of Padre.
last updated 2016-02-26; Contact us - Code of Conduct and Diversity Statement - IRC
The Padre Hotel | |
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The Padre Hotel is a longtime landmark in downtown Bakersfield. | |
General information | |
Type | Hotel |
Architectural style | Spanish Colonial Revival |
Location | Bakersfield, California |
Address | 1702 18th St |
Coordinates | 35°22′31″N119°01′18″W / 35.3754°N 119.0217°WCoordinates: 35°22′31″N119°01′18″W / 35.3754°N 119.0217°W |
Completed | 1928 |
Renovated | 2002-2010 |
Owner | Padre Partners, LP |
Height | 113.8 feet (34.7 m) |
Technical details | |
Structural system | Brick and mortar construction |
Floor count | 8 |
Lifts/elevators | 2 |
Design and construction | |
Architect | John M. Cooper (1928) |
Renovating team | |
Architect | Graham Downes |
Website | |
http://www.thepadrehotel.com | |
References | |
The Padre Hotel[1] Kern County Museum[2] |
The Padre Hotel is a historical landmark hotel located on the corner of 18th and H streets in Bakersfield, California. Originally constructed in 1928 as a luxury hotel and restaurant, the eight-story building recently went through an extensive renovation and reopened in 2010.[3] The Padre Hotel features 112 rooms and suites, several meeting spaces, a restaurant, a bar, a cafe, a bistro, and an outdoor bar with a cabana and firepits. The Padre Hotel has an on-site caterer and can accommodate a variety of special events. Guests of the hotel are required to be at least 21 years of age, unless accompanied by an adult.[4]
History[edit]
Originally built in 1928, the eight-story Spanish Colonial Revival hotel had an auspicious and flamboyant beginning in the Central Valley’s early and notorious Oil Rush days, but none quite so colorful as that of Milton “Spartacus” Miller, who purchased The Padre in 1954. For the next 45 years, he did spirited battle with Bakersfield’s city fathers over a myriad of issues, even mounting a fake missile on the roof, defiantly directed at City Hall with no small disdain. Command tab plus 1 90. Miller died in 1999.
San Diego Padres Official Website
A fire on the seventh floor in the 1950s resulted in many deaths, including children. Several children were tragically trapped and died in the basement during the 1952 earthquake. There have also been many suicides from the roof of the Padre Hotel.
The Padre Hotel fell into disrepair and was a derelict hotel from the 1960s until its most recent renovation in 2010. Prior to that renovation, the upper floors were condemned but often had squatters occupying the rooms. The bar downstairs stayed open during this time and was a meeting place for the city's misfits and barflies.
Padre Hotel Bar in the 1980s
References[edit]
- ^Media KitArchived 2012-03-28 at the Wayback Machine. The Padre Hotel. Accessed: Oct 9, 2012.
- ^Architects Who Designed Buildings in Kern County. Kern County Museum. Accessed: Oct 9, 2012.
- ^KBAK NewsArchived 2013-10-20 at the Wayback Machine 'New owners reveal plans for future of historic Padre Hotel' Published: March 4, 2008 Accessed: Oct 9, 2012
- ^Home Page. The Padre Hotel. Accessed: Oct 9, 2012.
Earthquake safety[edit]
Legends of haunting[edit]
External links[edit]
The Padre Of Isleta
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