Index to the Daily Californian, July 1991-June 1994
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2. Existing Conditions
2. EXISTING CONDITIONS This chapter provides a description of existing conditions within the City of Lafayette relevant to the Bikeways Master Plan. Information is based on site visits, existing planning documents, maps, and conversations with Lafayette residents and City of Lafayette, Contra Costa County and other agency staff. 2.1. SETTING The City of Lafayette is situated in a semi-rural valley in Contra Costa County, approximately twenty miles east of San Francisco, on the east side of the Oakland/Berkeley hills. Lafayette has a population of approximately 24,000, and encompasses about 15 square miles of land area, for a population density of about 1,500 persons per square mile. Settlement started in the late 1800s but incorporation did not occur until 1968. Lafayette developed its first general plan in 1974, and this general plan was last updated in 2002. The City is bordered on the north by Briones Regional Lafayette-Moraga Trail along St. Mary’s Park, on the east by Walnut Creek, on the south by Moraga and Road near Florence Drive the west by Orinda. Mixed in along its borders are small pockets of unincorporated Contra Costa County. Lafayette has varied terrain, with steep hills located to the north and south. Highway 24 runs through the City, San Francisco is a 25-minute BART ride away, and Oakland’s Rockridge district is just two BART stops away. LAFAYETTE LAND USES Lafayette’s existing development consists mostly of low- to medium-density single family residential, commercial, parkland and open space. Land uses reflect a somewhat older growth pattern: Commercial areas are located on both sides of Mt. -
Published Occasionally by the Friends of the Bancroft Library University of California, Berkeley, California 94720
PUBLISHED OCCASIONALLY BY THE FRIENDS OF THE BANCROFT LIBRARY UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, BERKELEY, CALIFORNIA 94720 No. J4 February 1^80 In the beginning - wet who have beginnings, Bust think in ten end, Juet for thought's sake* - in the beginning was^plaeny failve, as it always does, and we have at once dead Matter, and Energy, or on aide by aids,—in aotive eunJunuLlmi fuieyei-r /"what we* -tic universe of Force and Matter is the dead itflalduyof previous 4 •Bftofa are In the. beginning 1 Matter and Fo4 CAUWPITCA m+Hti \ aautt, thayflntoraot forever^ and are inter-dependent, -fiti xm - ^A^dju^^LJ^ waturlallstie unlv»reO| always, ^. m Lawrence's Manuscript of Fantasia of the Unconscious During the summer of 1921 D. H. Law organized the seizure of 1,000 copies of The rence sat among the roots of trees at Eber- Rainbow on grounds of obscenity. Already steinberg at the edge of the Black Forest — notorious for his elopement with Frieda "between the toes of a tree, forgetting my Weekley-Richtofen, who at the age of self against the ankle of the trunk"—writing thirty-two was the wife of his Romance Fantasia of the Unconscious. He had come Languages professor and the mother of from Taormina to be with his wife who had three children, Lawrence was accused by the been there since early April, attending her critics of producing in this novel "an orgy sick mother. There is little mention of the of sexiness." He keenly felt the unfairness of book in Lawrence's correspondence, either this criticism and raged against the suppres then or later. -
Extensions of Remarks
/ 15988 EXTENSIONS OF REMARKS May 4, 1972 EXTENSIONS OF REMARKS MARIETTA, OKLA., YOUTH WINS NA adults work together as a team, as partners, still in the future were to make his words TIONAL ORATORICAL HONORS to accomplish those goals of a better to famous. He began his speech slowly with morrow. frequent emphasis on particular words. This Youth has much to contribute--un man, Abrahia.m Linooln, had not pro bridled energy, vitality, and enthusiasm that ceeded far into his famous address when he HON. CARL ALBERT is characteristic of those starting on some uttered the words "A House divided against OF OKLAHOMA thing new. A seemingly innate desire to be itself can not stand." And only three short IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES "a. part of the a.ction"-and the time to do years later, as if fulftll1ng a prophecy, the it-and finally ideals and dreams untar nation was plunged into a civil war. A civil Thursday, May 4, 1972 nished and undimmed by age. Yet those war that ripped and tore us asunder. Yet Mr. ALBERT. Mr. Speaker, a 17-year of you who come into day by day contact as a nation we survived. We survived be old constituent of mine, a resident of with young people or who follow their activi cause our country was built on a foundation Marietta, Okla., Mr. Donnie Paul Min ties in the news media are well aware that that was solid and sure. It was a foundation youthful energy and vitality can generate based on the idea that a government under yard, has won national honors in another destruction as well as enthusiasm-that de a. -
International House Times
INTERNATIONAL HOUSE Fall-Winter TIMES 2005 The Newsletter for Friends & Alumni of International House Jan Egeland is 2005 Alumnus of the Year Spring Gala is May 9, House Honors U.N. Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs Rockefeller to Keynote 75th Anniversary Events teven C. Rockefeller, grandson of an Egeland, United Nations Under-Secretary- International House founder, John Alumni, residents, and friends are General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency D. Rockefeller, Jr., will give the celebrating I-House’s birthday at events JRelief Coordinator, was honored as International S keynote address at the 75th Anniversary planned throughout 2005-2006. For House Alumnus of the Year at an October luncheon Celebration and Awards Gala on May 9, upcoming events, send us your email held at the U.N. “Living in International House 2006. An emeritus professor of religion address on the RSVP panel on page 7 or was like living in the United Nations without the visit http://ihouse.berkeley.edu/alumni. at Middlebury College, he coordinated bureaucracy,” said Mr. Egeland. “Every single day led the drafting of the Earth Charter for the to new friendships with engaging students and scholars Earth Charter Commission and chairs the Sunday Supper from all over the world. My year as a Fulbright fellow Rockefeller Brothers Fund. June 11, 2005 at Berkeley, living in I-House, was my most liberating, Alumni and residents happiest and social year ever.” enjoyed a program The annual gala is the biggest fundraiser Jan Egeland (left) and 75th Anniversary featuring speakers of the year. For more information, Acknowledged worldwide for his passionate leadership Campaign Chair Peter Robertson at the from every decade. -
BEER WEEK: of WOMEN and Don’T Worry, Be WORDS, P.16 Hoppy, P.34 Help Build a Home for 34 34 Cascadia Van Zandt Resident Jerry FOOD Bajema by Attending A
************************************************************************************************************************************************************************************************************** Land vs. Lake, P.8 * Skillshare Faire, P.12 * Skyline Divide, P.14 cascadia REPORTING FROM THE HEART OF CASCADIA WHATCOM*SKAGIT*ISLAND*LOWER B.C. {09.19.12}{#38}{V.07}{FREE} Buffalo Blowout: A wonderful week of music, p.20 Best of Bellingham: Cast your votes for glory, p.25 BODYTALK BEER WEEK: OF WOMEN AND Don’t worry, be WORDS, P.16 hoppy, p.34 Help build a home for 34 34 cascadia Van Zandt resident Jerry FOOD Bajema by attending a 27 fundraising concert with the Calico Hearts and B-BOARD A glance at what’s happening this week many others Sept. 23 at Mt. Baker High School 24 FILM FILM Meet “the worst Bellingham Children’s Theatre Glorious: 7:30pm, Bellingham Theatre Guild 20 Deathtrap: 7:30pm, Claire vg Thomas Theatre singer in the The Bike Trip: 8pm, iDiOM Theater MUSIC Harold: 9pm, Upfront Theatre world”—and laugh MUSIC 18 uproariously— Pagliacci: 7:30pm, McIntyre Hall, Mount Vernon ART ART Joan Osborne: 8pm, Skagit Valley Casino Resort when the based- WORDS 16 Book Sale: 10am-6pm, Deming Library Family Story Night: 7pm, Fairhaven Library STAGE STAGE on-a-true-story COMMUNITY comedy " International Day of Peace Celebration: 5:30pm, 14 Maritime Heritage Park opens this Bingo in the Barn: 6-9pm, Sudden Valley Dance Barn Nooksack Days Powwow: 5pm, Nooksack Tribe GET OUT weekend with Community Building, Everson 12 GET OUT Sept. 21-23 shows Nature Babies: 9:30-11am, Whatcom Falls Park WORDS at the Bellingham FOOD Bellingham Beer Week: Through Sept. 30, 8 Theatre Guild throughout Bellingham VISUAL ARTS Phoebe Carpenter Eells Exhibit: 6pm, Karibou CURRENTS Share the love at the Salon 6 Art in the Alleys: 6-9pm, First Gallery, Mount 9th annual Day of Peace Vernon VIEWS VIEWS Celebration starting with 4 ./0-4[09.yy.12] MAIL MAIL a Peace March at 5:30pm ONSTAGE How the Slug Stole Solstice Auditions: 4-6pm, 2 Fri., Sept. -
Rose, T. Prophets of Rage: Rap Music & the Politics of Black Cultural
Information Services & Systems Digital Course Packs Rose, T. Prophets of Rage: Rap Music & the Politics of Black Cultural Expression. In: T.Rose, Black noise : rap music and black culture in contemporary America. Hanover, University Press of New England, 1994, pp. 99-145. 7AAYCC23 - Youth Subcultures Copyright notice This Digital Copy and any digital or printed copy supplied to or made by you under the terms of this Staff and students of King's College London are Licence are for use in connection with this Course of reminded that copyright subsists in this extract and the Study. You may retain such copies after the end of the work from which it was taken. This Digital Copy has course, but strictly for your own personal use. All copies been made under the terms of a CLA licence which (including electronic copies) shall include this Copyright allows you to: Notice and shall be destroyed and/or deleted if and when required by King's College London. access and download a copy print out a copy Except as provided for by copyright law, no further copying, storage or distribution (including by e-mail) is Please note that this material is for use permitted without the consent of the copyright holder. ONLY by students registered on the course of study as stated in the section above. All The author (which term includes artists and other visual other staff and students are only entitled to creators) has moral rights in the work and neither staff browse the material and should not nor students may cause, or permit, the distortion, mutilation or other modification of the work, or any download and/or print out a copy. -
FROM BULLDOGS to SUN DEVILS the EARLY YEARS ASU BASEBALL 1907-1958 Year ...Record
THE TRADITION CONTINUES ASUBASEBALL 2005 2005 SUN DEVIL BASEBALL 2 There comes a time in a little boy’s life when baseball is introduced to him. Thus begins the long journey for those meant to play the game at a higher level, for those who love the game so much they strive to be a part of its history. Sun Devil Baseball! NCAA NATIONAL CHAMPIONS: 1965, 1967, 1969, 1977, 1981 2005 SUN DEVIL BASEBALL 3 ASU AND THE GOLDEN SPIKES AWARD > For the past 26 years, USA Baseball has honored the top amateur baseball player in the country with the Golden Spikes Award. (See winners box.) The award is presented each year to the player who exhibits exceptional athletic ability and exemplary sportsmanship. Past winners of this prestigious award include current Major League Baseball stars J. D. Drew, Pat Burrell, Jason Varitek, Jason Jennings and Mark Prior. > Arizona State’s Bob Horner won the inaugural award in 1978 after hitting .412 with 20 doubles and 25 RBI. Oddibe McDowell (1984) and Mike Kelly (1991) also won the award. > Dustin Pedroia was named one of five finalists for the 2004 Golden Spikes Award. He became the seventh all-time final- ist from ASU, including Horner (1978), McDowell (1984), Kelly (1990), Kelly (1991), Paul Lo Duca (1993) and Jacob Cruz (1994). ODDIBE MCDOWELL > With three Golden Spikes winners, ASU ranks tied for first with Florida State and Cal State Fullerton as the schools with the most players to have earned college baseball’s top honor. BOB HORNER GOLDEN SPIKES AWARD WINNERS 2004 Jered Weaver Long Beach State 2003 Rickie Weeks Southern 2002 Khalil Greene Clemson 2001 Mark Prior Southern California 2000 Kip Bouknight South Carolina 1999 Jason Jennings Baylor 1998 Pat Burrell Miami 1997 J.D. -
“I Don't Care for My Other Books, Now”
THE LIBRARY University of California, Berkeley | No. 29 Fall 2013 | lib.berkeley.edu/give Fiat Lux “I don’t care for my other books, now” MARK TWAIN’S AUTOBIOGRAPHY CONTINUED by Benjamin Griffin, Mark Twain Project, Bancroft Library Mark Twain’s complete, uncensored Autobiography was an instant bestseller when the first volume was published in 2010, on the centennial of the author’s death, as he requested. The eagerly-awaited Volume 2 delves deeper into Twain’s life, uncovering the many roles he played in his private and public worlds. Affectionate and scathing by turns, his intractable curiosity and candor are everywhere on view. Like its predecessor, Volume 2 mingles a dia- ry-like record of Mark Twain’s daily thoughts and doings with fragmented and pungent portraits of his earlier life. And, as before, anything which Mark Twain had written but hadn’t, as of 1906–7, found a place to publish yet, might go in: Other autobiographies patiently and dutifully“ follow a planned and undivergent course through gardens and deserts and interesting cities and dreary solitudes, and when at last they reach their appointed goal they are pretty tired—and they The one-hundred-year edition comprises what have been frequently tired during the journey, too. could be called a director’s cut, says editor Ben But this is not that kind of autobiography. This one Griffin. “It hasn’t been cut to size or made to fit is only a pleasure excursion. the requirements of the market or brought into ” continued on page 6-7 line with notions of public decency. -
25 Great Ideas of New Urbanism
25 Great Ideas of New Urbanism 1 Cover photo: Lancaster Boulevard in Lancaster, California. Source: City of Lancaster. Photo by Tamara Leigh Photography. Street design by Moule & Polyzoides. 25 GREAT IDEAS OF NEW URBANISM Author: Robert Steuteville, CNU Senior Dyer, Victor Dover, Hank Dittmar, Brian Communications Advisor and Public Square Falk, Tom Low, Paul Crabtree, Dan Burden, editor Wesley Marshall, Dhiru Thadani, Howard Blackson, Elizabeth Moule, Emily Talen, CNU staff contributors: Benjamin Crowther, Andres Duany, Sandy Sorlien, Norman Program Fellow; Mallory Baches, Program Garrick, Marcy McInelly, Shelley Poticha, Coordinator; Moira Albanese, Program Christopher Coes, Jennifer Hurley, Bill Assistant; Luke Miller, Project Assistant; Lisa Lennertz, Susan Henderson, David Dixon, Schamess, Communications Manager Doug Farr, Jessica Millman, Daniel Solomon, Murphy Antoine, Peter Park, Patrick Kennedy The 25 great idea interviews were published as articles on Public Square: A CNU The Congress for the New Urbanism (CNU) Journal, and edited for this book. See www. helps create vibrant and walkable cities, towns, cnu.org/publicsquare/category/great-ideas and neighborhoods where people have diverse choices for how they live, work, shop, and get Interviewees: Elizabeth Plater-Zyberk, Jeff around. People want to live in well-designed Speck, Dan Parolek, Karen Parolek, Paddy places that are unique and authentic. CNU’s Steinschneider, Donald Shoup, Jeffrey Tumlin, mission is to help build those places. John Anderson, Eric Kronberg, Marianne Cusato, Bruce Tolar, Charles Marohn, Joe Public Square: A CNU Journal is a Minicozzi, Mike Lydon, Tony Garcia, Seth publication dedicated to illuminating and Harry, Robert Gibbs, Ellen Dunham-Jones, cultivating best practices in urbanism in the Galina Tachieva, Stefanos Polyzoides, John US and beyond. -
TR-060, the East Bay Hills Fire Oakland-Berkeley, California, October 1991* United States Fire Administration Technical Report Series
TR-060, The East Bay Hills Fire Oakland-Berkeley, California, October 1991* United States Fire Administration Technical Report Series The East Bay Hills Fire Oakland-Berkeley, California Federal Emergency Management Agency United States Fire Administration National Fire Data Center United States Fire Administration Fire Investigations Program The United States Fire Administration develops reports on selected major fires throughout the country. The fires usually involve multiple deaths or a large loss of property. But the primary criterion for deciding to do a report is whether it will result in significant "lessons learned." In some cases these lessons bring to light new knowledge about fire -the effect of building construction or contents, human behavior in fire, etc In other cases, the lessons are not new but are serious enough to highhght once again, with yet another fire tragedy report. The reports are Sent to fire magazines and are distributed at national and regional fire meetings. The International Association of Fire Chiefs assists USFA in disseminating the findings throughout the fire service.. On a continuing basis the reports are available on request from USFA; announcements of their availability are published widely in fire journals and newsletters This body of work provides detailed information on the nature of the fire problem for policymakers who must decide on allocations of resources between fire and other pressing problems, and within the fire service to improve codes and code enforcement, training, public tire education, building technology, and other related areas The Fire Administration, which has no regulatory authority, sends an cxperienced fire investigator into a community after a major incident only after having conferred with the local tire authorities to insure that USFA's assistance and presence would be supportive and would in no way interfere with any review of the incident they are themselves conducting. -
The Social and Environmental Turn in Late 20Th Century Art
THE SOCIAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL TURN IN LATE 20TH CENTURY ART: A CASE STUDY OF HELEN AND NEWTON HARRISON AFTER MODERNISM A DISSERTATION SUBMITTED TO THE PROGRAM IN MODERN THOUGHT AND LITERATURE AND THE COMMITTEE ON GRADUATE STUDIES OF STANFORD UNIVERSITY IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY LAURA CASSIDY ROGERS JUNE 2017 © 2017 by Laura Cassidy Rogers. All Rights Reserved. Re-distributed by Stanford University under license with the author. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution- Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 United States License. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/us/ This dissertation is online at: http://purl.stanford.edu/gy939rt6115 Includes supplemental files: 1. (Rogers_Circular Dendrogram.pdf) 2. (Rogers_Table_1_Primary.pdf) 3. (Rogers_Table_2_Projects.pdf) 4. (Rogers_Table_3_Places.pdf) 5. (Rogers_Table_4_People.pdf) 6. (Rogers_Table_5_Institutions.pdf) 7. (Rogers_Table_6_Media.pdf) 8. (Rogers_Table_7_Topics.pdf) 9. (Rogers_Table_8_ExhibitionsPerformances.pdf) 10. (Rogers_Table_9_Acquisitions.pdf) ii I certify that I have read this dissertation and that, in my opinion, it is fully adequate in scope and quality as a dissertation for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. Zephyr Frank, Primary Adviser I certify that I have read this dissertation and that, in my opinion, it is fully adequate in scope and quality as a dissertation for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. Gail Wight I certify that I have read this dissertation and that, in my opinion, it is fully adequate in scope and quality as a dissertation for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. Ursula Heise Approved for the Stanford University Committee on Graduate Studies. Patricia J. -
04 Baseball Gd P31-60
CALIFORNIA Golden Bears CaliforniaCalifornia HistoryHistory 2006 VOLLEYBALL MEDIA GUIDE2007 California Golden Bears Baseball Media Guide 4141 CALIFORNIA Golden Bears CALIFORNIA ALL-TIME RECORDS The 1957 National Champion California Golden Bears, coached by George Wolfman (back row, far right), defeated Penn State 1-0 in the NCAA championship game. TEAM BATTING - SEASON Most Assists ................................................................ 867 (1985) Highest Batting Average ............................................ .321 (1991) Most Errors .................................................................. 158 (1983) Most At Bats ............................................................... 2355 (1980) Most Double Plays ........................................................ 89 (1980) Most Runs Scored ...................................................... 520 (1991) Game ..................................................... 6 vs. Missouri (5-24-80) Most Hits ..................................................................... 732 (1991) Highest Fielding Percentage ..................................... .975 (1947) Most RBI ...................................................................... 460 (1991) Most Doubles .............................................................. 141 (1984) INDIVIDUAL BATTING - CAREER Most Triples ................................................................... 39 (1957) Most Games ..................... 244 by Lance Blankenship (1983-86) Most Home Runs .........................................................