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Army Presentation evening.
More information will be added to the images as we receive it and can access the newspapers. In the meantime, please help us know if you have any information to add such as location. Thank you.
A medal presentation at Bushnell Memorial Hall.
Date Created: 11/29/44
Contributor: U.S. Army Air Corps
Source: Connecticut State Library, State Archives, PG 048
Format Medium: black-and-white photographs
Format Extent: 5 x 4 in.
Type: Image
Format: jpeg
The SNRE Capstone Conference incorporates thesis students, practicum teams and master's project team presentations.
Photo by Dave Brenner
Students give presentations to community members as the culmination of Deep Creek Middle School's "School Without Walls" program.
Stage presentation from Market America's top executives and trainers at this years 2011 International Convention. To learn more about becoming an Unfranchise® Owner, click here.
www.gpb.org/news/2013/07/10/state-patrol-honors-1st-slain...
www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GSln=Black&...;
These 14 photographs are of the wreath-laying ceremony to honor the final resting place of Sgt. Black.
He was the first member of the Georgia State Patrol to be killed in the line of duty, in December 1940. He was 29.
Earlier today a section of Interstate 16 was named for him.
Posted to the Riverside Cemetery and Conservancy Facebook page on 7 August 2013.
www.facebook.com/HistoricRiversideCemeteryConservancy?dir...
The label reads,"This whisk was presented to W. K. Vanderbilt at Apia Samoa, September 5th, 1931, by a group of Samoan chiefs who visited the "Alva" and, in a colorful ceremony, adopted him into the tribe with the title of "Logoituma Aumai Teta Ua Tau." It is interesting to note how insidiously white man's culture gradually undermines that of the native, as exemplified by this whisk. The shaft is a rung of a white man's chair, while the whisk itself is horse-hair; a material non-existant, before the introduction of the horse into the islands. Thus is native art and culture dommed to evenutally disappear under white influence. Collected on "Alva" World Cruise of 1931-1932."
The Vanderbilt Museum on Long Island, New York is housed in the mansion once owned by William K. Venderbilt ll (the great-grandson of Cornelius Vanderbilt, founder of the New York Central Railroad and the Staten Island Ferry). "Willie K." was an avid sailor and collector. He travelled around the globe, collecting artifacts and natural history specimens, some from the ocean floor by Willie K. himself, as he loved to dive. The mansion is known as the Eagle's Nest, which was opened to the public as a museum at Willie K.'s bequest in 1922.