Deep Foundations Institute Membership Roster
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Vaccine Rollout Underway Governor Prioritizes Vaccinations for Those Ages 65 and Older; Local Front-Line Caregivers, fi Rst Responders Receive Doses
7A COVID-19 case count Get the latest on testing, new cases, and number of deaths in Pinellas County. 2021 the danger zone for box offi cece What movies will lure audiences back into the theaters? Check out our list of 12 of the most anticipated fi lms of 2021. 3B December 31, 2020 www.TBNweekly.com Volume 42, No. 41 * Visit TBNweekly.com/coronavirus for more TRACKING THE CORONAVIRUS CRISIS Also Inside COVID-19 Vaccine rollout underway Governor prioritizes vaccinations for those ages 65 and older; local front-line caregivers, fi rst responders receive doses and Drug Administration’s emergency use across the state have received doses of number should start going up in the near authorization Dec. 18 and is the second By SUZETTE PORTER the COVID-19 vaccines, and as a part of vaccine to receive this approval. future. their allocation, hospitals received enough Tampa Bay Newspapers Gov. Ron DeSantis released an execu- Adam Rudd, CEO of Largo Medical Cen- rst doses to vaccinate their entire frontline tive order Dec. 23 that says the state’s fi ter said, “The safety of our caregivers has As of Christmas day, 113,946 Florid- health care staff and have vaccine remain- phase of the vaccine shall only be used remained fi rst and foremost throughout ians had received their fi rst dose of the ing. St. Pete Beach on long-term care facilities residents and this pandemic and we are excited that we COVID-19 vaccine, including 8,832 in Pi- Largo Medical Center recently an- staff; persons age 65 and older; and health are now able to provide COVID-19 vac- The Game of Kings will return to the nellas County, according to a report from nounced it had started vaccination clinics cines to our frontline caregivers. -
Rule Changes Promise Exciting Season
Online Guide to the main events of the English POLO season FINANCIAL TIMES SPECIAL REPORT | Saturday May 26 2012 ft.com/polo www.ft.com/polo | twitter.com/ftreports Rule changes promise exciting season Patrons have rethought teams, raising expectations of a year of surprises, writes Bob Sherwood he English high-goal polo sea- son is shaping up to be one of the most open and unpredicta- ble for years, with all of the 16 Tor so teams that will compete at the top level having undergone significant reshuffles of professional players this year. Add to that the return of one of polo’s great forces, Ellerston – whose patron is James Packer, son of Kerry Packer, the late Australian media tycoon and polo enthusiast – to UK high goal for the first time since 2008, and expectations of a classic season have rarely been higher. Unusually, polo insiders have been loath to make predictions. Even the professionals chose to sit on the fence when contributing to the annual Polo Times predictions for the season. “So many teams and combinations have changed that it is difficult to know how it’s going to turn out,” says Max Routledge, the 21-year-old five- goal professional and one of the Eng- lish game’s rising stars. Alterations to handicaps forced Alterations designed to speed up the game and stop the best players from hogging the ball have contributed to some surprising results Reuters some of the changes. However, Routledge believes changes to polo’s best option. The combined handicap of includes Luke Tomlinson, the Eng- Cartier, the jewellery maker, switched rule book in 2011, designed to speed a high-goal team must not exceed 22. -
Publications Student Award Winner
©Sidelines, Inc.,Volume 2014$4.00 2601 All Rights- January Reserved 2014 For Horse People • About Horse People www.sidelinesnews.com January 2014 Stunning: Special Stallion and Breeding Section Quentin Judge and HH Dark de la Hart In this issue: • How Leah Little Beat Cancer • Foxhunting With Rita Mae Brown • Ricky Bostwick’s Polo Life FOR HORSE PEOPLE • ABOUT HORSE PEOPLE SIDELINES JANUARY 2014 1 Incorporating 20 HORSES USA PUBLISHER Samantha Charles [email protected] EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Jan Westmark [email protected] 828-575-3965 Contents ASsistant Editor Dani Moritz Senior Staff Writer Lauren Giannini What’s Happenin’ Eventing CONTRIBUTING WRITERS 34 Ingate Alexa Cheater, Arianna Delin, 76 Woodge Fulton: Sydney Masters-Durieux, 98 Off Centerline Doris Degner-Foster, Amy Herzog, When Opportunity Knocks Kathryn Murphy, Kim MacMillan, 116 Asides Katie Navarra, Jennifer Ward, 86 USC Aiken Eventing Team Marissa Quigley PHOTOGRAPHERS 102 Eric Moore: David Lominska, Jack Mancini , Features Flashpoint, Alan Fabricant, Susan Stickle Lauren R. Giannini, Shawn McMillen 16 Second Chances From Football to the Show Ring Kim & Allen MacMillan, Emily Allongo, 20 Anything Is Possible: Leah Little Anne Hoover, Beth Grant, Mandy Su SIDELINES COLUMNISTS 44 Good Food Hunting: Polo Sophie St. Clair – Juniorside Lisa Hollister, Esq - Equine Law A Taste of New Year’s 70 Ricky Bostwick’s Polo Life Ann Reilly - Sports Psychology 50 My Story: Back to the Future with Butet Maria Wynne – European Connection INTERNS 60 Foxhunting with Rita Mae Brown -
BUILDING a SUSTAINABLE FUTURE Redevelopments at Both Picton and Wellington Are Part of the Ferry Replacement Programme
STATEMENT OF CORPORATE INTENT 2022-2024 F.18a BUILDING A SUSTAINABLE FUTURE Redevelopments at both Picton and Wellington are part of the ferry replacement programme. Front cover: KiwiRail plays an important role in shi ing logs as New Zealand continues to move towards peak “Wall of Wood”. 2 KiwiRail Statement of Corporate Intent 2022-2024 CONTENTS OUR PURPOSE .....................................................................4 ENVIRONMENT AND SUSTAINABILITY ..........................22 INTRODUCTION ....................................................................6 HOW KIWIRAIL CREATES VALUE ...................................... 24 NATURE AND SCOPE ........................................................... 8 ASPIRATIONS AND OBJECTIVES ...................................... 26 COVID-19 STRATEGIC RESPONSE ...................................... 9 FINANCIAL CAPITAL ........................................................27 MARKET OUTLOOK AND ECONOMIC ASSUMPTIONS ...... 9 RELATIONSHIPS CAPITAL ............................................. 28 STRATEGIC PRIORITIES .....................................................11 ASSETS CAPITAL ............................................................ 29 FINANCIAL .....................................................................12 PEOPLE CAPITAL ............................................................31 RELATIONSHIPS ............................................................ 13 SKILLS AND KNOW-HOW CAPITAL ................................32 INVESTMENT IN ASSETS .............................................. -
The Colonial Reinvention of the Hei Tiki: Pounamu, Knowledge and Empire, 1860S-1940S
The Colonial Reinvention of the Hei Tiki: Pounamu, Knowledge and Empire, 1860s-1940s Kathryn Street A thesis submitted to Victoria University of Wellington in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in History Victoria University of Wellington Te Whare Wānanga o te Ūpoko o te Ika a Māui 2017 Abstract This thesis examines the reinvention of pounamu hei tiki between the 1860s and 1940s. It asks how colonial culture was shaped by engagement with pounamu and its analogous forms greenstone, nephrite, bowenite and jade. The study begins with the exploitation of Ngāi Tahu’s pounamu resource during the West Coast gold rush and concludes with post-World War II measures to prohibit greenstone exports. It establishes that industrially mass-produced pounamu hei tiki were available in New Zealand by 1901 and in Britain by 1903. It sheds new light on the little-known German influence on the commercial greenstone industry. The research demonstrates how Māori leaders maintained a degree of authority in the new Pākehā-dominated industry through patron-client relationships where they exercised creative control. The history also tells a deeper story of the making of colonial culture. The transformation of the greenstone industry created a cultural legacy greater than just the tangible objects of trade. Intangible meanings are also part of the heritage. The acts of making, selling, wearing, admiring, gifting, describing and imagining pieces of greenstone pounamu were expressions of culture in practice. Everyday objects can tell some of these stories and provide accounts of relationships and ways of knowing the world. The pounamu hei tiki speaks to this history because more than merely stone, it is a cultural object and idea. -
Winner Takes All, Polo's Hilario Ulloa, Cover Story–Palm
WINNER TAKES ALLPolo player Hilario BY MICHELE MEYER | PHOTOGRAPHY BY DIEGO CAPPELLA Even while practicing alone, Hilario Ulloa performs the same fearless, focused Ulloa’s competitive moves that make him the Michael Jordan of the equine set. He’s ranked among the world’s top 10 polo players, and his confidence in the saddle hints at a history nature and equestrian steeped in horses. With his mallet behind his back, he leans far off his steed—at 40 miles per hour, no less. Somehow, he knows where the ball is and slams it home. prowess impress on the “I was practically born on horseback,” says Ulloa, offering a nonplussed expla- nation for his super-human skills. For those who know him best, it’s his drive to win field and in the stable that most sets the 34-year-old apart from his competitors. “Hilario’s very intense,” says fellow Argentine 10-goaler Guillermo “Sapo” Ca- set, who’s played with—and against—Ulloa since age 12. “He has to win, even if it’s PlayStation or ping-pong. He’s really, really competitive.” That tenacious pursuit earned Ulloa a 10-goal rank, the highest possible, in the U.S., his native Argentina, and England at age 30. He was only 24 when he became a 9-goaler. He’s played in Wellington for the past nine years, racking up triumphs such as the 2018 U.S. Polo Open Championship. 88 PALM BEACH ILLUSTRATED PALMBEACHILLUSTRATED.COM | JANUARY 2020 89 Ulloa stables 25 horses in the U.S., 12 to 14 in England, and more than 100 in Argentina. -
2019 Tournaments
2020 UNITED STATES POLO ASSOCIATION® 2019 TOURNAMENTS U.S. OPEN POLO CHAMPIONSHIP® (18-22 Goal) International Polo Club Palm Beach - Wellington, Florida March 27 - April 21, 2019 PILOT Left to Right: Facundo Pieres, Gonzalito Pieres, Curtis Pilot, Colo Gonzalez PILOT DAILY RACING FORM LA INDIANA Curtis Pilot James “Jared” Zenni III Michael D. Bickford Matias “Colo” Gonzalez Santiago Cernadas Tomas Garcia del Rio Facundo Pieres Agustin Obregon Jeffrey Hall Gonzalo Pieres Jr. Geronimo Obregon Facundo Obregon Mia Bray Bautista Ortiz de Urbina EQUULEUS ASPEN LAS MONJITAS Joseph DiMenna Camilo Bautista Stewart Armstrong Mariano Gonzalez Sr. Lucas James Matthew Coppola Christian “Magoo” Laprida Jr. Francisco Elizalde Pablo “Polito” Pieres Jr. Ignacio “Inaki” Laprida Tomas Schwencke Hilario Ulloa Milo Dorignac CESSNA OLD HICKORY BOURBON Edward “Chip” Campbell III ICONICA Stephen Orthwein Jr. Felipe “Pipe” Marquez Maureen Brennan Jason Crowder Ezequiel Martinez Ferrario Mariano “Peke” Gonzalez Jr. Will Johnston Felipe Viana Matias Magrini Miguel Novillo Astrada Eduardo Novillo Astrada Sebastian Merlos Stuart “Sugar” Erskine Raul “Gringo” Colombres PARK PLACE COCA-COLA Juan Cruz Merlos Gillian Johnston Andrey Borodin Ignatius du Plessis Juan Britos Julian de Lussaretta Cody Ellis Steven Krueger Tomas Collingwood Ignacio Novillo Astrada Nicolas Pieres Lucas Diaz Alberdi 184 UNITED STATES POLO ASSOCIATION® 2020 POSTAGE STAMP FARM SD FARMS TONKAWA Annabelle Gundlach Sayyu Dantata Jeffrey Hildebrand Mariano Aguerre Jesus “Pelon” Escapite Jr. Guillermo “Sapo” Caset Jr. Joaquin Panelo Cesar “Peco” Polledo Christian “Sterling” Giannico Valerio “Lerin” Zubiaurre Juan “Tito” Ruiz Guinazu Agustin “Tincho” Merlos Constancio “Costi” Caset Tim J. Dutta Malia Bryan Joaquin Pittaluga Leon Schwencke STABLE DOOR POLO Henry Porter SANTA CLARA Santino Magrini Luis Escobar Victorino “Torito” Ruiz Jorba Nicolas Escobar Santiago Toccalino Mariano “Nino” Obregon Jr. -
Interview Transcripts Peter Brant
Washington Post Peter Brant, childhood friend Peter Brant: I do consider him a friend in the sense that we knew each other so well. But by the time that he left around 13 to go to New York Military Academy, I think that I really didn’t have much contact with him until he came back to New York and was in business for -- you know, he’s a success coming into the New York. I didn’t really see him very much, hardly at all until the ‘80s and then I kind of reconnected with him in the ‘90s and we were social friends. I played golf with him. He’d been to my house several times in the ‘90s. Michael E. Miller (Washington Post): This one here or -- Brant: No. Miller: Connecticut? Brant: No, I’d been to Mar-a-Lago, not a member there but my sister is. I was a member of the golf course that he has here in Palm Beach but only because it was a corporate membership. And my partner at that time, who is my cousin, who’d been my partner for many, many years and whose father was my father’s partner, loves to play golf and he was a member. So I might have played there twice in my life, you know. So there’s no real connection then. You know, he would write me a letter every now and then, just talking about marriage or whatever and -- 1 Miller: Seeking your advice on things or -- Brant: No, no, no, no, no. -
Bursting the Backpacker Bubble: Exploring Backpacking Ideology, Practices, and Contradictions
UNLV Theses, Dissertations, Professional Papers, and Capstones December 2016 Bursting the Backpacker Bubble: Exploring Backpacking Ideology, Practices, and Contradictions Mark J. Salvaggio University of Nevada, Las Vegas Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalscholarship.unlv.edu/thesesdissertations Part of the Sociology Commons Repository Citation Salvaggio, Mark J., "Bursting the Backpacker Bubble: Exploring Backpacking Ideology, Practices, and Contradictions" (2016). UNLV Theses, Dissertations, Professional Papers, and Capstones. 2900. http://dx.doi.org/10.34917/10083212 This Dissertation is protected by copyright and/or related rights. It has been brought to you by Digital Scholarship@UNLV with permission from the rights-holder(s). You are free to use this Dissertation in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s) directly, unless additional rights are indicated by a Creative Commons license in the record and/or on the work itself. This Dissertation has been accepted for inclusion in UNLV Theses, Dissertations, Professional Papers, and Capstones by an authorized administrator of Digital Scholarship@UNLV. For more information, please contact [email protected]. BURSTING THE BACKPACKER BUBBLE: EXPLORING BACKPACKING IDEOLOGY, PRACTICES, AND CONTRADICTIONS By Mark J. Salvaggio Bachelor of Science – Business Administration California State University, Bakersfield 2002 Master of Arts – Sociology California State University, Bakersfield 2007 A dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Doctor of Philosophy – Sociology Department of Sociology College of Liberal Arts The Graduate College University of Nevada, Las Vegas December 2016 Copyright 2016 by Mark J. -
Super Summer Recaps of All the Great Action
Super Summer Recaps Of All The Great Action VOLUME 35,23, NUMBER 33, FALL 2008 Terry SchroederAcademic Leads All-American the Men’s List National Inside Team to Gold. What’s Inside... VOL. 23, NUM. 3, FALL 2008 SWEET SHOT! USA WATER POLO NATIOnaL OFFICE United States’ Brittany Hayes reects on winning ON THE COVER . 2124 Main Street, Suite 210 the gold in Beijing. Huntington Beach, CA 92648 A collage of all the Inside Water. 2 (714) 500-5445 business summer action Score (714) 500-5449 membership Super SummerRecaps Of All The Great Action Cover photos courtesy of (714) 960-2431 fax US Presswire/MAC Photo Design/ George Stransky/Simone La Pay National Team Update . 6 USA WATER POLO NATIONAL TRAINING CENTER with funky 11360 Valley Forge Ave. Los Alamitos, CA 90720 , NUMBER 3 VOLUME 35 In the Club. 18 (562) 799-8506 business ® (562) 799-8508 fax Terry SchroederAcademic LeadsAll-American the Men’s List National Inside Team to Gold. Flipturns ! WEB SITE 5 Meters. 21 www.usawaterpolo.org CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER Christopher Ramsey In the Area. 26 EXECUTIVE AssISTanT TO THE CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER Chelsea Johnson Calendar of Events. 28 CONTROLLER Ulises Sam DIRECTOR OF PLannIng and ADMINISTRATION Susan Warner Hopkins Also In This Issue... DIRECTOR OF MaRKETIng and COMMunICATIOns Christine Bird DIRECTOR OF OLYMPIC DEVELOPMENT Academic All-Americans . 4 Guy Baker MEDIA RELATIOns ManagER S&R Junior Olympics . 12 Greg Mescall DIRECTOR OF REGIOnaL SPORT DEVELOPMENt (EasT) Liz Grimes Hot Shots . 20 States include: Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, 2008 Olympic Games Summary Rhode Island, Connecticut, New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Virginia, West Virginia, Ohio, Kentucky, Tennessee, Alabama, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida. -
RULEBOOK the UNITED STATES POLO ASSOCIATION 2020 ORGANIZATIONAL DOCUMENTS, RULES, TOURNAMENT CONDITIONS and POLICIES of the UNITED STATES POLO ASSOCIATION® 2020
OF RULEBOOK THE UNITED STATES POLO ASSOCIATION 2020 ORGANIZATIONAL DOCUMENTS, RULES, TOURNAMENT CONDITIONS AND POLICIES of the UNITED STATES POLO ASSOCIATION® 2020 United States Polo Association® 9011 Lake Worth Rd. Lake Worth, Florida 33467 (800) 232-USPA Copyright By United States Polo Association® 9011 Lake Worth Rd. Lake Worth, Florida 33467 (800) 232-USPA TABLE OF CONTENTS FORWARD �����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������i USPA OFFICERS AND GOVERNORS ��������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������ii USPA LLC BOARDS �����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������iv USPA STAFF ������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������v USPA COMMITTEES ����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������vi CONSTITUTION �������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������1 BY-LAWS �����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������15 OUTDOOR RULES ������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������35 -
Profiting from War New Zealand’S Weapons and Military-Related Industry
Profiting from war New Zealand’s weapons and military-related industry Profiting from war: New Zealand’s weapons and military-related industry Peace Action Wellington November 2015 Contents Executive Summary 1. Introduction 7 2. Scope of this report 7 3. Purpose of this report 8 4. Background on New Zealand weapons and dual-use technology export controls 8 9 6.5. GovernmentDefinitions support for the weapons & military-related industry 9 Current government contracts 10 Support for industry lobby 11 Trade related support for companies 12 Defence Industry Advisory Council, Ministry of Defence Industry Liaison Staff & NZDF Defence Attachés 13 Research & Development funding 14 Defence Technology Agency 15 Super Fund investments 15 7. Overseas buyers of New Zealand manufactured industry goods and services 17 8. Size of the New Zealand weapons & military–related export industry 18 18 10.9. Profiles Related of issues company of concern activities 34 11. Conclusions and further questions 35 Appendix: additional company listings 37 Executive Summary This report is an overview of the weapons & military-related industry in New Zealand. It outlines links between the New Zealand Government and the local and international weapons and military- related industry. It provides background information about the companies involved, their clients and the New Zealand government’s support for that industry. There are at least 258 companies in New Zealand involved in the provision of weapons or military- related products and services. The New Zealand Defence Industy Association (NZDIA) represents 83 of these companies. Despite NZ participating in numerous arms control treaties, it is actively encouraging the export of military-related goods and services.