View allAll Photos Tagged coerver
Team Elmhurst Soccer Club (TESC) is a non-profit organization whose mission is to provide a professional, safe and positive environment in the process of developing talented youth players capable of competing at the highest levels of competitive youth soccer in the Illinois Youth Soccer Association (IYSA) leagues.
We seek to provide an equal opportunity for all soccer players to participate in a competitive environment that develops a player's skills, knowledge and appreciation for the game of soccer by incorporating the best training, structure and development through positive coaching.
Through experiences derived from playing competitive soccer, we strive to help players mature as people and will encourage the development of important life skills such as good sportsmanship, teamwork, goal setting and fair play. TESC's offerings include:
FUTSAL Leagues
Street Soccer
Goalkeeper Program
Elite Academy Program
Pre K - K Skills Academy
1st - 4th Grade Skills Academy
Skills Summer Camps
KNVB Dutch Summer Academy
Coerver Skills Camps
Team Elmhurst Soccer Club serves the western suburbs of Chicago, Illinois, including: ELMHURST, ADDISON, VILLA PARK, LOMBARD, LISLE, GLEN ELLYN, WHEATON, OAK BROOK, DOWNERS GROVE, HINSDALE, WESTERN SPRINGS, WESTMONT, CLARENDON HILLS LAGRANGE, RIVERSIDE, BROOKFIELD, WESTCHESTER, OAK PARK, FOREST PART, RIVER FOREST, MAYWOOD, BELLWOOD, MELROSE PARK, BERKLEY, HILLSIDE, NORTHLAKE, ELMWOOD PARK, RIVER GROVE, FRANKLIN PARK, SCHILLER PARK, BENSENVILLE, WOOD DALE, ITASCA, ELK GROVE VILLAGE, ROSELLE, BLOOMINGDALE, GLENDALE HEIGHTS, CAROL STREAM
Team Elmhurst Soccer Club (TESC) is a non-profit organization whose mission is to provide a professional, safe and positive environment in the process of developing talented youth players capable of competing at the highest levels of competitive youth soccer in the Illinois Youth Soccer Association (IYSA) leagues.
We seek to provide an equal opportunity for all soccer players to participate in a competitive environment that develops a player's skills, knowledge and appreciation for the game of soccer by incorporating the best training, structure and development through positive coaching.
Through experiences derived from playing competitive soccer, we strive to help players mature as people and will encourage the development of important life skills such as good sportsmanship, teamwork, goal setting and fair play. TESC's offerings include:
FUTSAL Leagues
Street Soccer
Goalkeeper Program
Elite Academy Program
Pre K - K Skills Academy
1st - 4th Grade Skills Academy
Skills Summer Camps
KNVB Dutch Summer Academy
Coerver Skills Camps
Team Elmhurst Soccer Club serves the western suburbs of Chicago, Illinois, including: ELMHURST, ADDISON, VILLA PARK, LOMBARD, LISLE, GLEN ELLYN, WHEATON, OAK BROOK, DOWNERS GROVE, HINSDALE, WESTERN SPRINGS, WESTMONT, CLARENDON HILLS LAGRANGE, RIVERSIDE, BROOKFIELD, WESTCHESTER, OAK PARK, FOREST PART, RIVER FOREST, MAYWOOD, BELLWOOD, MELROSE PARK, BERKLEY, HILLSIDE, NORTHLAKE, ELMWOOD PARK, RIVER GROVE, FRANKLIN PARK, SCHILLER PARK, BENSENVILLE, WOOD DALE, ITASCA, ELK GROVE VILLAGE, ROSELLE, BLOOMINGDALE, GLENDALE HEIGHTS, CAROL STREAM
Cabinet card by John Coerver, Staunton, Illinois, 1890's. Photographer John Coerver was born in Staunton, Macoupin County, Illinois, January 1, 1869. He was the son of John Coerver, Sr., and his wife, Matilda Gardner. He married Catherine M. Helfrich, October 15, 1895, in Evansville, Indiana. They became parents of five children. John N. Coerver died November 2, 1935, in Staunton, Illinois.
I do not belive that John Coerver was a full time photographer, but instead practiced photography as a sideline. He is always listed as a barber, in census records and other sources, as was his father, John Coerver, Sr. A cabinet card wedding photo of John N. Coerver and his wife Catherine, appears on Ancestry.com, and also carries his photograper's mark. It would have been taken in 1895.
208
One of my fellow coaches and friends at Coerver.
This is technically from yesterday, but there isn't enough time in the day, so this will just have to do.
I just like how clear the Ray-Ban logo is on his glasses.
PRINT STORE | WEBSITE | TUMBLR
Cabinet card by John Coerver, Staunton, Illinois, 1890's. Photographer John Coerver was born in Staunton, Macoupin County, Illinois, January 1, 1869. He was the son of John Coerver, Sr., and his wife, Matilda Gardner. He married Catherine M. Helfrich, October 15, 1895, in Evansville, Indiana. They became parents of five children. John N. Coerver died November 2, 1935, in Staunton, Illinois.
I do not belive that John Coerver was a full time photographer, but instead practiced photography as a sideline. He is always listed as a barber, in census records and other sources, as was his father, John Coerver, Sr. A cabinet card wedding photo of John N. Coerver and his wife Catherine, appears on Ancestry.com, and also carries his photograper's mark. It would have been taken in 1895.
217
Charlie Cooke is the USA director of Coerver Coaching, who played for the english premier league team Chelsea (and others) back in the day.
His accent and multitude of stories make him an awesome person to meet and be around.
I had a good day.
PRINT STORE | WEBSITE | TUMBLR
207
All the kids are wearing them, for some reason.
This guy isn't on my team this week, so I don't know his name, but it seems to me that his headband really isn't holding back his hair.
I like this one slightly better than yesterday's, just because of the focus. Can't go wrong with the 50mm.
PRINT STORE | WEBSITE | TUMBLR
n November 2008, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA) launched a redesigned website, www.sfmoma.org. In keeping with SFMOMA’ institutional mission to stimulate greater engagement with modern and contemporary art, the site offers a fluid space of exploration in which visitors can easily navigate between the online collection of over 7,000 artworks, hundreds of videos, audio files, and interactive features about art and artists in the collection, and information about special exhibitions and events. One of the primary goals of the site is to provide the Museum’s online audience with a much fuller set of stories about the art and artists in the collection, with layered access to different levels of information aimed at users with varying interests and amounts of knowledge.
The site would not have been possible without grants from the Evelyn and Walter Haas, Jr. Fund and the Institute of Museum and Library Services. The website design was undertaken by Hot Studio (www.hotstudio.com), with technical implementation by Carbon Five (www.carbonfive.com). The in-house team was led by Chad Coerver, Director of Publications, Graphic Design, and Web; Dana Mitroff Silvers, Head of Online Services; and Andrew Delaney, Web Production Coordinator.
Extra!
Larger version of the top photo in this diptych.
This little guy's hair/headband are awesome.
View this one in lightbox! It's worth it. Press L.
PRINT STORE | WEBSITE | TUMBLR