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Contributing Building - Brunswick Old Town Historic District - National Register of Historic Places
NRIS #79000727
Contributing Building - Calhoun Street Historic District - National Register of Historic Places
NRIS #79000677
Built ca 1841
Contributing Building - Brunswick Old Town Historic District - National Register of Historic Places
NRIS #79000727
Nearly a decade in the works; Uprise and Quiksilver joined together to develop a concept into product. This concept was inspired by a vision of true blue-collar quality product, centered on the standard Blue Collar -- Beach City Clean Up Crew Uniform. What was once only a concept, only a vision, became the most authentic product collaboration between two of the skateboard industry's most prestigious brands.
Born in Oederan (Germany) in 1944, Igor Mitoraj is a Polish artist who contributed not less than artworks at La Défense.
He studied painting at the Kraków School of Art and at the Kraków Academy of Art under Tadeusz Kantor. After graduating, he had several joint exhibitions, and held is first solo exhibition in 1967 at the Krzysztofory Gallery in Poland. In 1968, he moved to Paris to continue his studies at the National School of Art.
Shortly afterwards, he became fascinated by Latin American art and culture, spending a year painting and travelling around Mexico. The experience led him to take up sculpture.
He returned to Paris in 1974 and two years later he held another major solo exhibition at the Gallery La Hune, including some sculptural work. The success of the show persuaded him that he was first and foremost a sculptor.
Having previously worked with terracotta and bronze, a trip to Carrara, Italy, in 1979 turned him to using marble as his primary medium and in 1983 he set up a studio in Pietrasanta. In 2006, he created the new bronze doors and a statue of John the Baptist for the basilica of Santa Maria degli Angeli in Rome.
no tay syun. edited by Frank Davey; contributing editorial board includes bpNichol.
Toronto, spring 1984.
5-7/8 x 8-3/4, 48 sheets ivory zephyr antique laid perfectbound in yellow mayfair card wrappers, all except inside covers & p.4 printed offset, black interiors in red covers.
cover by Bill Bissett.
15 contributors ID'd:
Andrei Bely, Bill Bissett, Pula Claire, Frank Davey, John Donne, George Johnston, Robert Kroetsch, Jackson Mac Low, Peter Mayer, Steve McCaffery, bpNichol, Michael Sears, Edmund Spenser, Fred Wah, Karl Young.
Nichol contributes:
i) Notions of Image, with Frank Davey (pp.75-82; prose in 5 lettered parts with 2 introductions:
--1. "What follows is the second in a suite of essays in which we attempt to record" (p.75)
--2. "LITERAL IMAGERY PROVIDES THE GROUND FOR FIGURATIVE IMAGERY. IN" (p.75)
--A. Image (pp.75-76; quotes by Earle Birney, John Newlove)
--B. The Extended Image (p.76)
--C. Synecdoche and Metonymy (p.77)
--D. Simile and Metaphor (pp.77-81; in 8 numbered parts with introduction:
----[o]. "At its basic level, simile is two images joined by the word 'like' i.e. 'heart" (pp.77-78; quotes by Margaret Atwood, Edward Bulwer-Lytton, George Byron, Malcom Lowry, Charles Olson)
----1. PRECISE COMPARISON (p.78)
----2. IMPRECISE COMPARISON (p.79_
----3. 'ANCHORED' COMPARISON (p.79)
----4. ACTIVE METAPHORS (versus Copula Metaphor) (pp.79-8o; quotes by Victor Coleman, Robert Montgomery)
----5. COPULA METAPHORS (p.8o; quote by William Shakespeare)
----6. ADJECTIVAL METAPHORS: QUALITY (or Qualities)/NOUN (p.8o; quotes by Christopher Dewdney, E.J.Pratt)
----7. MACRO METAPHORS (p.8o)
----8. SOME USEFUL APPLICATIONS OF SIMILE (pp.8o-81; quotes by George Byron, S.T.Coleridge, Frank Davey, Lionel Kearns, bpNichol (from "all things loved once spoken for", lines 4-8), Jack Spicer, Gertrude Stein)
--E. The Deconstructive Image (p.82; quotes by Robert Kroetsch, Roy Orbison, Jack Spicer))
also includes:
ii) Notation and the Art of Reading, by Karl Young (pp.5-32; references Nichol's The Prosody of Open Verse pp.23-24, Nichol & Steve McCaffery's 16 Part Suite p.27 (reprinting McCaffery's "DRZKAH" section in full p.28))
iii) The Frankfurt Hauptbahnhof, by Robert Kroetsch (pp.83-93; poetry & prose in 11 numbered parts with references to Nichol in 2 parts:
--1. "keep an eye peeled" (p.83)
--8. "Notation, in Field Notes, Barrie, is the reader in the text. The narrator, always," (p.9o))
iv) OPEN LETTER Back Issues, by [Frank Davey?] (p.94; advertisement; Nichol references)
v) introducing SWIFT CURRENT an annual Canadian literary database, by [Frank Davey?] (p.85; advertisement; Nichol noted as contributing editor)
vi) Long-liners!, by [Frank Davey?] (p.96; advertisement; Nichol referenced)
Contributing Building - Ocala Historic District - National Register of Historic Places
NRIS #84000912
Built ca 1891
Style: Classic Revival
Contributing Building - Wesleyan College Historic District - National Register of Historic Places
NRIS #04000242
Built 1928
Style: Georgian Revival
Architects: Walker & Weeks
Contributing Building - Fernandina Beach Historic District - National Register of Historic Places
NRIS #73000593 and #87000195
Built 1888
Former St Peter Claver Catholic Church.
Contributing Building - Warrenton Historic District - National Register of Historic Places
NRIS #83004243
Built 1925
Style: Colonial Revival
IMMIGRANTS CONTRIBUTE: AMERICA, WE SING BACK! community event at the All Souls Unitarian Church at 1500 Harvard Street, NW, Washington DC on Saturday afternoon, 28 September 2013 by Elvert Barnes Photography
Performances
Abisola Kusimo (Ghana)
Follow DC Office of Human Rights / IMMIGRANTS CONTRIBUTE: AMERICA, WE SING BACK! facebook event page at www.facebook.com/events/530488973690958/
Contributing Building - West DeLand Residential District - National Register of Historic Places
NRIS #92001617
Built 1926
The courthouse is a contributing part of the Russellville Commercial Historic District on the National Register of Historic Places. Here is the writeup from the nominating form:
46. 410 N. Jackson Avenue. 1954-55. CONTRIBUTING. At this location is the Franklin County Courthouse completed in 1955 although its cornerstone was laid in 1954. This courthouse replaced the 1890 courthouse on the same site which burned in January of 1953. This building has a flat asphalt roof, an exterior of smooth limestone panels and a concrete foundation. The building has a full basement. On the main (west) façade is a five-bay projecting portico with each bay divided by limestone piers. The central bay contains the main entrance which has original single-light aluminum and glass doors and a rectangular transom. Above the entrance on the second floor is a metal grille and clock. In the ceiling of the portico bays are metal grilles with light fixtures. Windows are original one-over-one aluminum sash design. Between the windows in the portico are rectangular stone spandrels. Flanking the portico bay are three window bays with marble spandrels inset with circular aluminum medallions inscribed with an eagle figure and the words “Liberty” and “Justice”. Below the roofline is a stone fascia panel with aluminum inset stars. At the roofline is a stone cornice. The north elevation has an entrance on the first floor with an original single-light glass and aluminum door and rectangular transom. Over this entrance is a flat roof stone canopy with concrete scroll brackets. Windows on this elevation have marble spandrels. The south elevation of the courthouse has a similar design to the north. The building has several concrete stairs which lead to the basement level. The basement has a sunken light well on the three primary elevations and this light well has a steel railing. The courthouse interior has original terrazzo floors and dropped acoustical tile ceilings. The lobby has marble walls and two staircases which connect with the second floor. The hallways have marble wainscoting panels and plaster walls above. Interior doors are original solid wood design. The interior of the annex was remodeled in 1983. The courtroom has linoleum floors and plaster walls. Johnston and Jones, Starkville, MS/Architect and Craig and Baskerville/Contractors The courthouse lawn has two memorials, which are included as contributing objects to the historic district:
47. Confederate Monument – CONTRIBUTING. The Confederate Monument was erected by the John W. Harris Chapter of the United Daughters of the Confederacy on January 28, 1910 at a cost of $1,500. Originally located at the intersection of Jackson Avenue and Franklin Street, the monument was damaged by a motorist and it was then repaired and moved to the courthouse lawn
.
48. Franklin County War Dead Monument – CONTRIBUTING. This monument was erected c. 1955 and consists of a limestone base and steel plaque which commemorates county residents who died in World War I, World War II and the Korean War.
August 3, 2017. Boston, MA.
Faith leaders and concerned citizens gathered outside the Suffolk House of Corrections to publicly ask ICE officials to release Francisco Rodriguez, an MIT janitor whose son Josué Mateo Rodriguez was born on Monday evening in an emergency delivery. ICE officials offered no response to a request by Mr. Rodriguezâs lawyers for his 24-hour release from detention as his wife underwent labor.
ICE detained Mr. Rodriguez at his last check-in on July 13, despite his compliance with their requests. The federal government was prevented from deporting him by stays issued on July 14 by the Massachusetts District Court and the Board of Immigration Appeals.
Francisco Rodriguez has lived in the U.S. since 2006. He has lived in the greater Boston area for 10 years, specifically in Chelsea for the last 6 years. He is the father of two American citizen children, 10-year-old Mellanie and a 5-year-old Jessica, with a third child on the way next month. For the past five years, he has been a janitor at MIT. In addition, he runs his own carpet cleaning company. He is a member of his childrenâs school parent committee, of the community organization Chelsea Collaborative, of the Church Tabernaculo biblico seguidores de Jesus, and a union member of 32BJ SEIU (Service Employees International Union) at MIT. Mr. Rodriguez has no criminal record, pays his taxes, and contributes to his community, church, childrenâs school and workplace.
When Mr. Rodriguez arrived to the country, he applied for asylum in 2007. He was denied asylum in December of 2009, and his appeal was denied in July of 2011. He was later granted prosecutorial discretion and has received a Stay of Removal every year since that time. However this past month, when Francisco applied for a Stay, it was denied. If ICE grants Mr. Rodriguez a Stay of Removal, he can continue to work, take care of his family, and contribute to our community. In addition, next year Mr. Rodriguezâs mother, who is a legal permanent resident, will become a citizen. Soon afterwards, a pathway to residency will open for Francisco when his mother files a petition on his behalf.
© 2017 Marilyn Humphries
Isolation has contributed to a culture of estrangement and confrontation in communities such as CDD. This is often expressed through elaborate graffiti. The establishment of a Casa de Direitos is part of a bid by the Brazilian authorities to win the hearts and minds of favela dwellers by bringing the state and its services closer to where they live.
Contributing Building - Downtown Deming Historic District - National Register of Historic Places
NRIS #13000769
Originally a residence built ca 1913; converted to law office.
Built ca 1913
Contributing Building - Tifton Commercial Historic District - National Register of Historic Places
NRIS #94000371
Built 1899
Contributing Building - Springfield Historic District - National Register of Historic Places
Built 1915
To contribute to Pakistan’s “Ten Billion Tree Tsunami” afforestation initiative, former U.S. Ambassador to Pakistan, Paul Jones, and Federal Minister and Prime Minister’s advisor on Climate Change, Malik Amin Aslam planted a Moringa tree on the U.S. Embas
Contributing Building - University of Notre Dame: Main and South Quadrangles Historic District - National Register of Historic Places
NRIS #78000053
Since 1999, Bill has contributed to the Canadian Cancer Society. He is just finishing a 6 year term as the President of the North Eastern Unit and as a member of the division board.
At the unit board level, Bill leads from the perspective of “volunteering should be fun.” While the business to be done is taken seriously, he mentors a family festive atmosphere among the unit board members. They joke together and celebrate together, and are there for each other during rough times. This makes meetings and volunteer activities successful for the Society and good memories for those involved.
This family atmosphere is wed together with another of Bill and the unit’s thoughts on volunteering – the more the merrier. It is because this attitude is fostered that this unit is envied by other units in Saskatchewan for having so many rural communities represented on its unit board.
Bill is a strong supporter of Relay For Life and has been the MC and entertainment person for all the Relays held in the North Eastern Unit. The 2012 Relay in Tisdale will mark the 12th Relay in a row he served as master of ceremonies. An astounding $1.5 million has been raised from the previous year’s events, which are rotated between Nipawin, Melfort and Tisdale each year.
Bill’s 38 years with CJVR and his commitment to the Society has provided the Society with wonderful exposure in the North Eastern Unit community. He constantly goes above and beyond being of service to the Society. In 2003 CJVR was presented with the National Special Recognition award for their support of the Society.
At the division board level, Bill takes his stewardship role seriously. Bill comes to each meeting prepared to discuss, question, understand and offer alternatives or caution. He communicates with the unit board regularly about division business and solicits their thoughts, bringing this information to the division board table. Bill can clearly advocate for a direction he feels passionately about which is an asset to in-depth division board discussion. He also does not hesitate to offer public and private appreciation to volunteers or staff he has noticed doing their own best in their work.
In learning about his receipt of this award, Bill had this response: I’m honored – but at the same time humbled to receive any award. Like many volunteers we feel we’re part of a collective and we feel like we should not be singled out. I will accept any award on behalf of the Unit I represent. It’s Manager, committee members and volunteers within that unit.
I don’t think much about awards – I think a lot about those who are living with cancer and how I can support them.
Whether Bill is mentoring an atmosphere of fun and family among the volunteers he leads, or whether Bill is preparing, advocating for, and making board decisions, Bill has proven himself to be deserving of a National Citation of Merit. We would be remiss if we did not also use this opportunity to thank him with a certificate marking his 6 years of service on the division board.
Contributing Building - Dawson Street Residential Historic District - National Register of Historic Places
NRIS #84001251
Contributing Building - St Augustine Town Plan Historic District - National Register of Historic Places
NRIS #70000847
Contributing Building - Savannah Avenue Historic District - National Register of Historic Places
NRIS #96001339
Contributing Building - Crossnore School Historic District - National Register of Historic Places NRIS #09000059
Contributing Building - Town of Halifax Historic District - National Register of Historic Places
NRIS #10001128
Built 1905-06
IMMIGRANTS CONTRIBUTE: AMERICA, WE SING BACK! community event at the All Souls Unitarian Church at 1500 Harvard Street, NW, Washington DC on Saturday afternoon, 28 September 2013 by Elvert Barnes Photography
Assemblance Before
Follow DC Office of Human Rights / IMMIGRANTS CONTRIBUTE: AMERICA, WE SING BACK! facebook event page at www.facebook.com/events/530488973690958/
Contributing Building - Broad Street Historic District - National Register of Historic Places
NRIS #84001264
Contributing Building - Bainbridge Commercial Historic District - National Register of Historic Places
NRIS #87001908
Contributing Building - Wakulla Springs Archeological and Historic District - National Register of Historic Places
NRIS #92001760
Built 1937
Style: Mediterranean Revival
Architects: Marsh and Saxelbye
Contributing Building - Wilmington Historic District - National Register of Historic Places
NRIS #74001364 or #03000344
aka Elizabeth Bridgers Mansion
Built 1905
Style: Neoclassical
Architect: Charles McMillen
Contributing Building - Siloam Historic District - National Register of Historic Places
NRIS #01000740
Contributing Building - St Augustine Town Plan Historic District - National Register of Historic Places
NRIS #70000847
Contributing Building - Post Office Historic District - National Register of Historic Places
NRIS #86001968
Opened: 1936
Style: Art Deco
Contributing Building - Rocky Mount Central City Historic District - National Register of Historic Places
NRIS #80002826
Built ca 1925
Contributing Building - Tifton Commercial Historic District - National Register of Historic Places
NRIS #86000382
Built 1937
Style: Art Deco
Contributing Building - Main Street Commercial District - National Register of Historic Places
NRIS #83002984