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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
George "G." Yamazawa Jr. (Japan)
Follow DC Office of Human Rights / IMMIGRANTS CONTRIBUTE: AMERICA, WE SING BACK! facebook event page at www.facebook.com/events/530488973690958/
If you have any questions or would like to contribute to this archive, please visit www.tigerjams.art and contact me on Twitter DM or Telegram ♥
Contributing Building - Lincolnville Historic District - National Register of Historic Places
NRIS #91000979
Contributing Building - Seth Lore and Irvinton Historic District - National Register of Historic Places
NRIS #86001534
Built ca 1910-15
Contributing Building - Carthage Courthouse Square Historic District - National Register of Historic Places
NRIS #80002370
These commercial structures are contributing properties to the Somerset Downtown Commercial District, which includes two blocks of late-19th and early-20th-century commercial storefront buildings along East Mount Vernon Street, directly east of the historic Somerset Public Square. It was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982.
Somerset, Kentucky is a lovely Appalachian community located near the eastern edge of Lake Cumberland. It serves as the seat of Pulaski County.
Contributing Building - Dawson Historic District - National Register of Historic Places
NRIS #97001090
Contributing Building - Railroad Avenue Historic District - National Register of Historic Places
NRIS #84000640
Contributing Building - St Marys Historic District - National Register of Historic Places
NRIS #76000609
Built 1911
Contributing Building - Model Land Company Historic District - National Register of Historic Places
NRIS #83001439
Contributing Building - Americus Historic District - National Register of Historic Places
NRIS #76000648
Built ca 1850
Pacific Women aims to develop and deliver evidence-based activities that contribute to the advancement of gender equality in the region. To do this strategically, Pacific Women undertakes targeted activities that help to define the direction of the program, called ‘direction-setting activities’. These include planning, evaluation and research activities that inform program activities supported by Pacific Women.
Direction-setting activities include Country Plan review activities. Country Plans are the mechanism through which Pacific Women activities are planned and agreed between DFAT and counterpart governments. Country Plans are developed to cover a three to four-year period and are informed by extensive national consultations. They provide detail on activities to be funded and how funding decisions are made. Country Plan Summaries can be downloaded from the Pacific Women website.
Teams from the Support Unit and Australian High Commission Posts engage with Pacific governments and stakeholders to review these plans. Country Plan reviews measure progress towards Pacific Women’s outcomes and identify barriers to implementing activities and changes in country context. The reviews include recommendations for future directions.
In February 2018, country plan review activities took place in the Republic of the Marshall Islands (RMI).
Read more about Pacific Women’s partnerships in RMI: pacificwomen.org/our-work/locations/republic-of-the-marsh...
Pictured: Marie Maddison (National Consultant for RMI Country Plan Review) and Kathryn Relang (SPC RRRT) at the workshop
Photo credit: Pacific Women Support Unit.
Contributing Building - Longwood Historic District - National Register of Historic Places
NRIS #90001480
Raakhee Mirchandani | Anchor & Contributing Editor, The Trust, Dow Jones, talks with Sue Preston, Vice President, WW Advisory & Professional Services, HPE Global at MWC 2023 in Barcelona, on Wednesday, March 1, 2023. Photo by Maurizio Martorana for The Wall Street Journal
Contributing Building - Tifton Commercial Historic District - National Register of Historic Places
NRIS #86000382
Contributing Building - Fernandina Beach Historic District - National Register of Historic Places
NRIS #73000593
Built 1891
Contributing Building - Joplin Downtown Historic District - National Register of Historic Places
NRIS #08000661
Built 1902
**Beale Street Historic District** - National Register of Historic Places Ref # 66000731, date listed 19661015
Beale St. from 2nd to 4th Sts.
Memphis, TN (Shelby County)
183 Beale St; contributing
Beale Street's entertainment district is an important site in the history of the blues, that influential musical form which has had an impact on American rock, jazz, pop, and symphonic music. Beale Street played a major role in the career of W. C. Handy. Handy's works brought the blues to new heights of general popularity, and made him a preeminent figure in the establishment of composed blues as a form of American popular song.
While working in Memphis from 1905 to 1917 or 1918, Handy wrote songs such as the "Memphis Blues" and "St. Louis Blues" that gained a wide audience. On Beale Street was the headquarters for Handy's band. At least once, he rented a room on Beale Street to avoid distractions while he worked on his music. Though Handy left Memphis for Chicago and New York City around 1917 or 1918, Beale Street continued, into the years of the Great Depression, to represent important facets of a time and milieu in which the blues began to exert a major influence in the history of mainstream American music. (1)
References (1) NRHP Nomination Form npgallery.nps.gov/pdfhost/docs/NHLS/Text/66000731.pdf
Contributing Building - Florence Downtown Historic District - National Register of Historic Places
NRIS #13000060
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
George "G." Yamazawa Jr. (Japan)
Follow DC Office of Human Rights / IMMIGRANTS CONTRIBUTE: AMERICA, WE SING BACK! facebook event page at www.facebook.com/events/530488973690958/
Contributing Building - Cherry Valley Village Historic District - National Register of Historic Places
NRIS #88000472
Built ca 1815
Contributing Building - North Patterson Street Historic District - National Register of Historic Places
NRIS #84001151
1110 N Patterson St
Built 1902
Contributing Element - Chickamauga and Chattanooga National Military Park - National Register of Historic Places
NRIS #66000274
Artist: Perry, Roland Hinton, 1870-1941, designer.
Zabriskie, A. J., engineer.
G. H. Cutting Granite Company, contractor.
Title: New York Peace Monument, (sculpture).
Date: Dedicated Nov. 15, 1910.
Medium: Sculpture: bronze; Column: pink granite; Base: Tennessee marble.
Owner: Administered by United States Department of the Interior, National Park Service, Washington, District of Columbia
Administered by Chickamauga and Chattanooga National Military Park, Ft. Oglethorpe, Georgia
Located Chickamauga and Chattanooga National Military Park, Chattanooga, Tennessee
Contributing Building - Bridge Street Historic District - National Register of Historic Places
NRIS #78001824
Built 1882
Contributing Building - Gainesville Commercial Historic District - National Register of Historic Places
NRIS #02000873
Contributing Building – Jekyll Island Historic District – National Historic Landmarks Program
Built ca 1900
Architect: Charles Alling Gifford
Contributing Building - Paris Historic District - National Register of Historic Places
NRIS #07000192
Built ca 1820
Style: Federal
Contributing Building – Macon Historic District – National Register of Historic Places
NRIS #74000658 and #95000233
Contributing Building - City of Alachua Downtown Historic District - National Register of Historic Places
NRIS #00000787
Contributing Building - Florida Agricultural and Mechanical College Historic District - National Register of Historic Places
NRIS #96000530
Contributing Building - Carthage Courthouse Square Historic District - National Register of Historic Places
NRIS #80002370
Contributing Building - Halifax Historic District - National Register of Historic Places
NRIS #70000456
Built ca 1832
Style: Gothic Revival
Contributing Building - Uptown Residential Historic District - National Register of Historic Places
NRIS #82002479
Contributing Building - West Tampa Historic District - National Register of Historic Places
NRIS #83003539
Contributing Building - Downtown Millen Historic District - National Register of Historic Places
NRIS #96001340
Contributing Building - Sixth Street Historic District - National Register of Historic Places
NRIS #75002132
Originally the American Bank
Built 1910-12
The Catalyst Open Source Academy 2018 took place at Catalyst IT in Wellington, New Zealand, from 8 to 19 January 2018.
catalyst.net.nz/open-source-academy
Day 7 to 10 are dedicated to the open source projects to which the students contribute. Mentors support them throughout.
Credit: Salzburg Global Seminar/Ela Grieshaber
October 11 to 16, 2014
One of the fundamental responsibilities of higher education is to provide open and equal opportunities for students to learn, succeed, and positively contribute to their local, national, and global societies. Great strides are being made in increasing educational access, retention completion, and success, yet there is still work to be done particularly for students from disadvantaged or marginalized groups. Unprecedented shifts in migration patterns are causing demographic changes around the world. Additionally, governments, societies, and higher education institutions are increasingly recognizing the need and responsibility to create legal and institutional frameworks for providing more and better opportunities for people from historically marginalized groups to gain access and achieve success at the university level.
From South Africa’s “Historically Disadvantaged Institutions,” to Brazil’s “Law of Social Quotas,” and a long tradition of “Minority Serving Institutions” in the United States, just to name a few, higher education institutions committed to providing educational opportunities for local communities marginalized along ethnic, racial, religious or other lines can be found on every continent. What’s more, in light of shifting demographics and the growing focus on educational opportunity and access, increasing numbers of colleges and universities will be serving students from marginalized groups. For too long, institutions serving students at the margins have operated in a vacuum, failing to collaborate across institutional types and across nations. This Salzburg session will bring together leaders from institutions serving marginalized populations with policy makers and researchers to develop a platform for finding solutions to these institutions’ common challenges and capitalizing on their strengths.
This program is being designed and implemented in partnership with the recently launched Center for Minority Serving Institutions at the University of Pennsylvania’s Graduate School of Education and with Educational Testing Service. From 2010 to 2012, Salzburg Global and Educational Testing Service collaborated on a series of sessions on “Optimizing Talent: Closing Educational and Social Mobility Gaps Worldwide.”
Contributing Building – Jekyll Island Historic District – National Historic Landmarks Program
Built ca 1900