Detailed Candidate - Office Report

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Detailed Candidate - Office Report Detailed Candidate - Office Report All Candidates; All Office Categories; All Office Types; 2012 General Election - 11/6/2012 11:59:00 PM Vigo OFFICE CATEGORY Residence Residence Mailing Mailing OFFICE TITLE CANDIDATE NAME Address 1 Address 2 Address 1 Address 2 BALLOT NAME PARTY DISTRICT Attorney General FLEMING, MARY K 4305 MANNING RD INDIANAPOLIS, IN 46228-2755 4305 MANNING RD INDIANAPOLIS, IN 46228-2755 KAY FLEMING Democratic Attorney General - Indiana ZOELLER, GREGORY F 3309 E 56TH ST INDIANAPOLIS, IN 46220-5425 3309 E 56TH ST INDIANAPOLIS, IN 46220-5425 GREG ZOELLER Republican Attorney General - Indiana Clerk of the Circuit Court MORRIS, MIKE 3205 ERIE CANAL RD TERRE HAUT E, IN 47802-9505 3205 ERIE CANAL RD TERRE HAUT E, IN 47802-9505 MIKE MORRIS Republican Clerk Of The Circuit Court (Vigo) - Vigo CROCKETT, DAVID R 5720 W WHITESELL AVE WEST TERRE HAUT E, IN 5720 W WHITESELL AVE WEST TERRE HAUT E, IN 47885-8872 DAVID R (DAVE) Democratic Clerk Of The Circuit 47885-8872 CROCKETT Court (Vigo) - Vigo County Auditor SEPRODI, TIMOTHY M 109 S 19th St Terre Haute, IN 47807-4127 109 S 19th St Terre Haute, IN 47807-4127 TIMOTHY M SEPRODI Democratic County Auditor (Vigo) - County FLESCHNER,Commissioner CALEB 430 W Country Ct West Terre Haute, IN 47885- 430 W Country Ct West Terre Haute, IN 47885-9180 CALEB FLESCHNER Republican County 9180 Commissioner - District #2 (Vigo) - ANDERSON, JUDI TH A 2811 N 4th St Terre Haute, IN 47804-1007 2811 N 4th St Terre Haute, IN 47804-1007 JUDITH A (JUDY) Democratic County ANDERSON Commissioner - District #2 (Vigo) - County ANDERSON,Commissioner BRAD 1707 E DALLAS DR TERRE HAUT E, IN 47802-9622 1707 E DALLAS DR TERRE HAUT E, IN 47802-9622 BRAD ANDERSON Republican County Commissioner - District #3 (Vigo) - MASON, PAUL 3026 E TRAVIS AVE TERRE HAUT E, IN 47805-1051 3026 E TRAVIS AVE TERRE HAUT E, IN 47805-1051 PAUL MASON Democratic County Commissioner - District #3 (Vigo) - County Coroner AMOS, SUSAN S 1408 S Paul Dresser St Terre Haute, IN 47803-3535 1408 S Paul Dresser St Terre Haute, IN 47803-3535 SUSAN SIEBENMORGEN Democratic County Coroner AMOS (Vigo) - County Council Member 9/18/2012 10:18:54 AM Page 1 of 5 BALES, CRAIG A 11320 N RENO PL WEST TERRE HAUT E, IN 11320 N RENO PL WEST TERRE HAUT E, IN 47885-9770 CRAIG A BALES Republican County Council 47885-9770 Member - At Large (Vigo) - BIRD, MARK D 19 DOUGLAS DR TERRE HAUT E, IN 47803-2001 19 DOUGLAS DR TERRE HAUT E, IN 47803-2001 MARK D BIRD Democratic County Council Member - At Large (Vigo) - BURGER, RICHARD " 15 WAYCROSS CT TERRE HAUT E, IN 47802-4924 15 WAYCROSS CT TERRE HAUT E, IN 47802-4924 RICHAR D (RICK) Democratic County Council BURGER Member - At Large (Vigo) - ELLIS, STEVE 444 E TRAILWOOD DR TERRE HAUT E, IN 47802-9606 444 E TRAILWOOD DR TERRE HAUT E, IN 47802-9606 STEVE ELLIS Republican County Council Member - At Large (Vigo) - PING, ED 3739 E HALL AVE TERRE HAUT E, IN 47805-2215 3739 E HALL AVE TERRE HAUT E, IN 47805-2215 ED PING Democratic County Council Member - At Large (Vigo) - TREADW AY, Bill 1552 PRAIRIE AVE TERRE HAUT E, IN 47804-1399 1552 PRAIRIE AVE TERRE HAUT E, IN 47804-1399 Bill TREADW AY Republican County Council Member - At Large (Vigo) - County Recorder ALLSUP, NANCY S 9751 N WAYNE PL WEST TERRE HAUT E, IN 9751 N WAYNE PL WEST TERRE HAUT E, IN 47885-9612 NANCY S ALLSUP Democratic County Recorder 47885-9612 (Vigo) - County Treasurer BRAMBLE, JAMES W 6725 TIMBERCREST LN WEST TERRE HAUT E, IN 6725 TIMBERCREST LN WEST TERRE HAUT E, IN 47885-9081 JAMES W (JIM) BRAMBLE Democratic County Treasurer 47885-9081 (Vigo) - Vigo Governor & Lt. Governor BONEHAM, RUPERT F 8822 DRIFTWOOD DR INDIANAPOLIS, IN 46240-2017 8822 DRIFTWOOD DR INDIANAPOLIS, IN 46240-2017 RUPERT BONEHAM Libertarian Governor & Lt. Governor - GREGG, JOHN R 20566 E JERICHO RD SANDBORN, IN 47578-8000 PO BOX 301 SANDBORN, IN 47578-0301 JOHN R. GREGG Democratic Governor & Lt. Governor - HARRIS, DONNIE H 5333 Basin Park Dr Indianapolis, IN 46239-8957 5333 Basin Park Dr Indianapolis, IN 46239-8957 DONNIE HAROLD Independent Governor & Lt. HARRIS Governor - PENCE, MICHAEL R 12955 GERMAN DR COLUMBUS, IN 47203-9690 12955 GERMAN DR COLUMBUS, IN 47203-9690 MIKE PENCE Republican Governor & Lt. Governor - Judge, Superior LEWIS,Court MICHAEL J 601 W Cedarwood Ave West Terre Haute, IN 47885- 601 W Cedarwood Ave West Terre Haute, IN 47885-9399 MICHAEL J LEW IS Democratic Judge of the Superior 9399 Court - Vigo County, No. 6 - Vigo School Board LOWER,Member JACQUELINE L 3025 COLLEGE AVE TERRE HAUT E, IN 47803-3460 3025 COLLEGE AVE TERRE HAUT E, IN 47803-3460 JACQUELINE L LOW ER Non Partisan School Board Member - District #1- 2 (Vigo) - 9/18/2012 10:18:54 AM Page 2 of 5 FAULKNER, LARRY M 615 Cherry St Apt 307 Terre Haute, IN 47807-3127 615 Cherry St Apt 307 Terre Haute, IN 47807-3127 LARRY MOSES Non Partisan School Board FAULKNER Member - District #1- 2 (Vigo) - BURKS, MEL 3427 Anthony Ln Terre Haute, IN 47803-2383 3427 Anthony Ln Terre Haute, IN 47803-2383 MEL BURKS Non Partisan School Board Member - District #1- 2 (Vigo) - School Board LOCKHART,Member PAUL G 2104 E PARK AVE TERRE HAUT E, IN 47805-1648 2104 E PARK AVE TERRE HAUT E, IN 47805-1648 PAUL G LOCKHART Non Partisan School Board Member - District #3 (Vigo) - State Representative MORRISON, ALAN P 3998 Country Wood Rd Terre Haute, IN 47805-9735 3998 Country Wood Rd Terre Haute, IN 47805-9735 ALAN P. MORRISON Republican State Representative - District 042 - SPELBRING, MARK C 902 NORTHWOOD DR ROCKVILLE, IN 47872-1237 902 NORTHWOOD DR ROCKVILLE, IN 47872-1237 MARK C. SPELBRI NG Democratic State Representative - District 042 - State Representative KERSEY, CLYDE 1463 Bay Breeze Ct Terre Haute, IN 47803-7704 1463 Bay Breeze Ct Terre Haute, IN 47803-7704 CLYDE KERSEY Democratic State Representative - District 043 - CUNNINGHAM, JOHN W 1356 Tippecanoe St Terre Haute, IN 47807-2149 1356 Tippecanoe St Terre Haute, IN 47807-2149 JOHN CUNNINGHAM Republican State Representative - District 043 - State Representative BORDERS, BRUCE A 7935 N State Road 59 Jasonville, IN 47438-6275 7935 N State Road 59 Jasonville, IN 47438-6275 BRUCE ALAN BORDERS Republican State Representative - District 045 - BATTLES, KREG S 2712 PEACHTREE TER VINCENNES, IN 47591-6711 2712 PEACHTREE TER VINCENNES, IN 47591-6711 KREG BATTLES Democratic State Representative - District 045 - State Representative HEATON, ROBERT A 3255 E DALLAS DR TERRE HAUT E, IN 47802-5184 3255 E DALLAS DR TERRE HAUT E, IN 47802-5184 BOB HEATON Republican State Representative - District 046 - MANN, JAMES R 5 E GATEWAY DR TERRE HAUT E, IN 47802-4908 5 E GATEWAY DR TERRE HAUT E, IN 47802-4908 JAMES R. (Jim) MANN, II Democratic State Representative - District 046 - Superintendent of Public Instruction RITZ, GLENDA S 4303 POWDERHORN CT CARMEL, IN 46033-4717 4303 POWDERHORN CT CARMEL, IN 46033-4717 GLENDA RITZ Democratic Superintendent of Public Instruction - BENNETT, CHARLES A 6264 Newark Dr Noblesville, IN 46062-4636 6264 Newark Dr Noblesville, IN 46062-4636 TONY BENNETT Republican Superintendent of Public Instruction - US President 9/18/2012 10:18:54 AM Page 3 of 5 GOODE, VIRGIL H 90 EAST CHURCH ST REET ROCKY MOUNT, VA 24151 90 EAST CHURCH ST REET ROCKY MOUNT, VA 24151 VIRGIL H. GOODE, JR. Constitution US President - US President Jones, Terry D 5805 NW 37 St. Apt. 1 Gainesville, FL 32653 5805 NW 37 St. Apt. 1 Gainesville, FL 32653 TERRY DALE JONES Independent US President & Vice President - Keyton, Nelson 1523 Compton St. NE Apt. 6 Roanoke, VA 24012 1523 Compton St. NE Apt. 6 Roanoke, VA 24012 NELSON KEYT ON Independent US President & Vice President - Knill, Dennis 45 Evening Glow Sedona, AZ 86351 45 Evening Glow Sedona, AZ 86351 DENNIS KNILL Democratic US President & Vice President - Lopez, Christina 900 Hiawatha Pl S Seattle, WA 98144 900 Hiawatha Pl S Seattle, WA 98144 CHRISTINA LOPEZ Independent US President & Vice President - Romney, Mitt 585 Commercial St Boston, MA 02109 585 Commercial St Boston, MA 02109 MITT ROMNEY Republican US President & Vice President - Reed, Jill 1460 S. Jackson Casper, WY 82601 1460 S. Jackson Casper, WY 82601 JILL REED Independent US President & Vice President - Obama, Barack P.O. Box 8102 Chicago, IL P.O. Box 8102 Chicago, IL BARACK OBAMA Democratic US President & Vice President - Stein, Jill 17 Trotting Horse Dr. Lexington, MA 02421 17 Trotting Horse Dr. Lexington, MA 02421 JILL STEIN Green US President & Vice President - Terry, Randall A 101 Cantwell Court Purgitsville, W V 26852 101 Cantwell Court Purgitsville, W V 26852 RANDALL A. T ERRY Independent US President & Vice President - Simoneux, Michael A 922 W. 9th St. Apt. 701 Dallas, TX 75208 922 W. 9th St. Apt. 701 Dallas, TX 75208 MICHAEL A. SIMONEUX, Independent US President & Vice JR. President - Alexander, Stewart 24482 Saradella Ct. Murrieta, CA 92562 24482 Saradella Ct. Murrieta, CA 92562 STEWART ALEXANDER Socialist US President & Vice Party USA President - Blair, Tracey E 51 Edison Detroit, MI 48202 51 Edison Detroit, MI 48202 MISSIONARY-TRACEY Independent US President & Vice ELAINE BLAIR President - Chehade, Paul 1020 SW 10 Ave Miami, FL 33130 1020 SW 10 Ave Miami, FL 33130 PAUL CHEHADE Independent US President & Vice President - Hoefling, Tom 101 3rd St Lohrville, IA 51453 101 3rd St Lohrville, IA 51453 TOM HOEFLING Independent US President & Vice President - Johnson, Gary N/A El Prado, NM N/A El Prado, NM GARY JOHNSON Libertarian US President & Vice President - Dummett, John A 22357 Foresthill Rd.
Recommended publications
  • Hoosier Hard Times - Life Was a Strange, Colorful Kaleidoscopic Welter Then
    one Hoosier Hard Times - Life was a strange, colorful kaleidoscopic welter then. It has remained so ever since. A HOOSIER HOLIDAY since her marriage in 1851, Sarah Schänäb Dreiser had given birth al- most every seventeen or eighteen months. Twelve years younger than her husband, this woman of Moravian-German stock had eloped with John Paul Dreiser at the age of seventeen. If the primordial urge to reproduce weren’t enough to keep her regularly enceinte, religious forces were. For Theodore Dreiser’s father, a German immigrant from a walled city near the French border more than ninety percent Catholic, was committed to prop- agating a faith his famous son would grow up to despise. Sarah’s parents were Mennonite farmers near Dayton, Ohio, their Czechoslovakian ances- tors having migrated west through the Dunkard communities of German- town, Bethlehem, and Beaver Falls, Pennsylvania. Sarah’s father disowned his daughter for marrying a Catholic and converting to his faith. At 8:30 in the morning of August 27, 1871, Hermann Theodor Dreiser became her twelfth child. He began in a haze of superstition and summer fog in Terre Haute, Indiana, a soot-darkened industrial town on the banks of the Wabash about seventy-five miles southwest of Indianapolis. His mother, however, seems to have been a somewhat ambivalent par- ent even from the start. After bearing her first three children in as many years, Sarah apparently began to shrink from her maternal responsibilities, as such quick and repeated motherhood sapped her youth. Her restlessness drove her to wish herself single again.
    [Show full text]
  • A Regional Study of Secular and Sectarian Orphanages and Their Response to Progressive Era Child-Saving Reforms, 1880-1930
    Closer Connections: A Regional Study of Secular and Sectarian Orphanages and Their Response to Progressive Era Child-Saving Reforms, 1880-1930 A dissertation submitted to the Graduate School of the University of Cincinnati in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy In the Department of History of the College of Arts and Sciences by Debra K. Burgess B.A. University of Cincinnati June 2012 M.A. University of Cincinnati April 2014 Committee Chair: Mark A. Raider, Ph.D. 24:11 Abstract Closer Connections: A Regional Study of Secular and Sectarian Orphanages and Their Response to Progressive Era Child-Saving Reforms, 1880-1930 by Debra K. Burgess Child welfare programs in the United States have their foundation in the religious traditions brought to the country up through the late nineteenth century by immigrants from many European nations. These programs were sometimes managed within the auspices of organized religious institutions but were also found among the ad hoc efforts of religiously- motivated individuals. This study analyzes how the religious traditions of Catholicism, Judaism, and Protestantism established and maintained institutions of all sizes along the lines of faith- based dogma and their relationship to American cultural influences in the Midwest cities of Cincinnati, Cleveland, and Pittsburgh during the period of 1880-1930. These influences included: the close ties between (or constructive indifference exhibited by) the secular and sectarian stakeholders involved in child-welfare efforts, the daily needs of children of immigrants orphaned by parental disease, death, or desertion, and the rising influence of social welfare professionals and proponents of the foster care system.
    [Show full text]
  • 84.1966.1 Birthplace of Paul Dresser (1859-1906) 84.1966.3 Birthplace of Paul Dresser (1859) Vigo County Marker Text Review Report 3/21/2013
    84.1966.1 Birthplace of Paul Dresser (1859-1906) 84.1966.3 Birthplace of Paul Dresser (1859) Vigo County Marker Text Review Report 3/21/2013 Marker Texts Composer of Indiana State Song, “On the Banks of the Wabash,” and other songs popular in the Gay Nineties. His famous brother, Theodore Dreiser, wrote An American Tragedy and other novels. Composer of Indiana State Song, “On the Banks of the Wabash,” “My Gal Sal,” and many more, popular in the gay 90’s era. His famous brother, author Theodore Dreiser, wrote An American Tragedy and other novels. Report The markers commemorating Paul Dresser (born Dreiser) have been reviewed because their files contained inadequate primary sources to verify the marker texts. This report also provides additional information about Dresser and the significance of his song “On the Banks of the Wabash.” Both markers report Dresser’s birth date in 1859, but sources disagree and claim that he was born in 1857, 1858, or 1859.1 The U.S. Federal Census for the years 1860, 1870, and 1880 all list his birth year as “about 1858.” Both the 1860 and 1880 census records place him in Terre Haute, Indiana, but newspapers disagree on the exact location of his birth.2 A pamphlet issued by the Vigo County Historical Society states that the house he reportedly grew up in was moved to Fairbanks Park on Dresser Dr. in Terre Haute in the 1960s, where it still stands today.3 The rest of the text is accurate for both markers, but each omits quite a bit of detail regarding Dresser’s life.
    [Show full text]
  • EMAIL Community Welcome Packet
    k at T oo er L r a Chicago e 3.5 hours g H n a i INDIANA OHIO u Indianapolis k 1 hour t a ILLINOIS Cincinnati e 3 hours T Terre Haute Louisville St. Louis 3 hours MISSOURI 2.5 hours KENTUCKY We invite you to take a closer look at Terre Haute. You’ll nd there’s a lot more than meets the eye and even more reasons to stay. Welcome Dear Friend, On behalf of the over 790 members of the Terre Haute Chamber of Commerce, we are pleased to provide you with information about Terre Haute. As the heart of the Wabash Valley, Terre Haute serves over a quarter-of-a-million residents throughout 16 counties as a major regional shopping, healthcare, manufacturing, and service hub in West Central Indiana. Terre Haute is a modern Midwest city with a proud heritage. Located along the beautiful Wabash River in Vigo County, Indiana, we are a progressive and vibrant community with a bright vision for the future. We are also home to a wide array of small, medium and Fortune 500 industries, four colleges, a state university, state-of-the-art public schools, wonderful parks, great shopping, a variety of restaurants and an experienced and educated workforce. Throughout this booklet, you will nd a variety of information, providing valuable details on many aspects of our community, including education, industry and recreation. If you feel this information does not adequately answer your questions about our ne city, please feel free to contact us and we will be happy to provide additional details.
    [Show full text]
  • Chapter Outline
    CHAPTER TWO: “AFTER THE BALL”: POPULAR MUSIC OF THE NINETEENTH AND EARLY TWENTIETH CENTURIES Chapter Outline I. Minstrelsy A. The minstrel show 1. The first form of musical and theatrical entertainment to be regarded by European audiences as distinctively American in character 2. Featured mainly white performers who artificially blackened their skin and carried out parodies of African American music, dance, dress, and dialect 3. Emerged from rough-and-tumble, predominantly working-class neighborhoods such as New York City’s Seventh Ward, commercial urban zones where interracial interaction was common 4. Early blackface performers were the first expression of a distinctively American popular culture. B. George Washington Dixon 1. The first white performer to establish a wide reputation as a “blackface” entertainer 2. Made his New York debut in 1828 3. His act featured two of the earliest “Ethiopian” songs, “Long Tail Blue” and “Coal Black Rose.” CHAPTER TWO: “AFTER THE BALL”: POPULAR MUSIC OF THE NINETEENTH AND EARLY TWENTIETH CENTURIES a) Simple melodies from European tradition C. Thomas Dartmouth Rice (1808–60) 1. White actor born into a poor family in New York’s Seventh Ward 2. Demonstrated the potential popularity and profitability of minstrelsy with the song “Jim Crow” (1829), which became the first international American song hit 3. Sang this song in blackface while imitating a dance step called the “cakewalk,” an Africanized version of the European quadrille (a kind of square dance) 4. The cakewalk was developed by slaves as a parody of the “refined” dance movements of the white slave owners. a) The rhythms of the music used to accompany the cakewalk exemplify the principle of syncopation.
    [Show full text]
  • Wabash River Heritage Corridor Management Plan 2004
    Wabash River Heritage Corridor Management Plan 2004 Wabash River Heritage Corridor Commission 102 North Third Street, Suite 302 Lafayette, IN 47901 www.in.gov/wrhcc www.in.gov/wrhcc 1 WABASH RIVER HERITAGE CORRIDOR MANAGEMENT PLAN - TABLE OF CONTENTS Page Acknowledgements …………………………………………………………… 2 Executive Summary …………………………………………………………… 3 Introduction …………………………………………………………………… 5 Wabash River Heritage Corridor Fund …………………………………… 6 Past Planning Process ………………………………………………….... 7 The Vision and Need for a Revised Corridor Management Plan …………… 8 VALUES ……………………………………………………………………. 9 Land Use and Population – Resource Description …………………………… 10 Land Use - Implementation Strategies and Responsibilities …………………… 12 Case Study – Land Use Planning Approach in Elkhart County…………………… 13 Natural Resources – Resource Description …………………………… 15 Natural Resource Implementation Strategies and Responsibilities ……………….. 19 and Best Management Practices Historical/Cultural Overview and Resources …………………………… 23 Historic Resources Implementation Strategies and Responsibilities …………… 27 Historic Preservation Successes in the Wabash River Heritage Corridor ………… 28 Recreation Overview and Resources …………………………………… 30 Recreation Implementation Strategies and Responsibilities …………………… 31 Corridor Connections and Linkages …………………………………… 33 Corridor Trail Linkages – Overview and Resources …………………… 33 Trail Implementation Strategies and Responsibilities …………………………… 33 River/Watertrail Linkages - Overview and Resources …………………… 34 Watertrail Implementation Strategies
    [Show full text]
  • You Are There 1914 the Violin Maker Upstairs Popular Music of the 1900S
    CURRICULUM GUIDE Popular Music of the 1900s by Bob Guernsey and Jane Hedeen for the Indiana Historical Society Indiana Experience You Are There 1914 The Violin Maker Upstairs This is a publication of the Indiana Historical Society Eugene and Marilyn Glick Indiana History Center 450 West Ohio Street Indianapolis, IN 46202-3269 USA Teacher Resource available online: http://www.indianahistory.org Cover Image: “Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Conrath in the Violin Shop ” (Indiana Historicl Society, Digital Image Collections, Item ID: P0404_FOLDER1_MR_AND_MRS_CONRATH) Copyright 2010 Indiana Historical Society All rights reserved Except for copying portions of the teacher resources by educators for classroom use, or for quoting of brief passages for re- views, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise), without written permission of the copyright owner. All inquiries should be addressed to the Public Programs Division, Indiana Historical Society. Introduction States joined the Allied powers of Serbia, Russia, This lesson coordinates with the You Are There France, and Great Britain in declaring war on the 1914: The Violin Maker Upstairs component of the Central powers of Germany and Austria-Hungary. Indiana Experience at the Eugene and Marilyn Glick Leading up to and after America’s entry into the Indiana History Center in Indianapolis. In this war, there was growing anti-German sentiment in experience, visitors are invited to step back in time the United States. to 1914 to visit the re-created workshop of stringed This curriculum is intended to provide historical instrument maker Joseph Conrath.
    [Show full text]
  • New-Church Messenger
    7L NEW-CHURCH MESSENGER March 3, 1956 rThe Best is Yet to Be THE PARTIAL LIST PUBLISHERS & NEW-CHURCH OF CHURCHES DIRECTORY OF MESSENGER BOOK ROOMS BALTIMORE, MD. Official organ of The General Convention THE NEW-CHURCH PRESS Calvert Street, near Chase of the New Jerusalem In the United States (Hoard of Publication) of America. Convention founded in 1817. BATH, ME. 108 Clark Street. Brooklyn 1, N. Y. (Swedenborslon) Middle and Winter Streets American and foreign publications of • BOSTON, MASS. all New-Church Publishing Houses. Re Bowdoin Street, opp. State House ligious and Children's books of other Member of the Associated Church Press BIIIDGEWATER, MASS. publishers. • Central Square Convention service books & The Mes Published bi-weekly at 153 South Jeffer senger. BROCKTON, MASS. son Street, Berne, Indiana, by The New 34 Crescent Street, near Main NEW-CHURCH BOOK CENTER Church Press, 108 Clark St., Brooklyn, American New-Church Tract & Pub. New York. CAMBRIDGE, MASS. Quincy Street, corner Klrkland Society, 2129 Chestnut St., Philadelphia, Entered as second-class matter at the Pa. CHICAGO. ILL. Post Office, Berne, Ind., under Act of New-Church collateral. Our Daily Bread. Kenwood, 3710 So. Woodlawn Ave. Congress of March 3, 1879. Acceptance Book Room. for mailing at special rate of postage Northslde Parish. 912 W. Sheridan provided for in Section 1103. Act of Oc CINCINNATI. OHIO MASSACHUSETTS NEW-CHURCH tober 3, 1917, authorized on July 30, 1918. Oak Street and Winslow Avenue UNION 134 Bowdoin St., Boston, Mass. • CLEVELAND, OHIO 12600 Euclid Avenue, E. Cleveland New-Church Publications. Convention Subscription $3.00 a year; foreign pos Journal.
    [Show full text]
  • My Brother Paul: the Musical Life of Paul Dresser
    MY BROTHER PAUL: THE MUSICAL LIFE OF PAUL DRESSER A Play with Music Book by Donald E. Baker Suggested by the Writings of Theodore Dreiser Music and Lyrics by Paul Dresser Edited and with Additional Lyrics by Donald E. Baker 3M, 1W (doubling) “Paul, the good son, the loving brother…. Jailbird, writer of pointless ballads, singer of trivial songs—even so, write his name large as one who loved his fellowmen!” Theodore Dreiser, Dawn 109 Ella Kinley Circle Unit 401 Myrtle Beach SC 29588 910.228.1734 Copyright © 2018 by Donald E. Baker [email protected] All rights reserved https://newplayexchange.org/users/13449/donald-e-baker ii SYNOPSIS Paul Dresser, largely unknown today, was one of the most popular American song writers of the late nineteenth century. His younger brother, the novelist Theodore Dreiser, at the time was much less successful. There was both love and rivalry between them. The play uses Paul’s songs and Theodore’s memoirs to explore that sibling rivalry as Paul escapes from his stifling Indiana childhood; becomes a wealthy and successful vaudeville comedian, character actor, song writer, and darling of the New York theater world. It also explores his relationships with women, including his ever-forgiving mother; the bordello madam who was the love of his life; the burlesque queen who was the mother of his child; and the protégé to whom he loaned his last name. Paul’s career declined rapidly ragtime eclipsed the romantic ballads that were his stock in trade. He gave away much of his wealth and died young, at age forty-seven.
    [Show full text]
  • 51 West 28Th Street Building, Tin Pan Alley
    DESIGNATION REPORT 51 West 28th Street Building, Tin Pan Alley Landmarks Preservation Designation Report Designation List 516 Commission 51 West 28th Street LP-2628 December 10, 2019 DESIGNATION REPORT 51 West 28th Street Building, Tin Pan Alley LOCATION Borough of Manhattan 51 West 28th Street LANDMARK TYPE Individual SIGNIFICANCE Built c.1852 as an Italianate-style row house, 49 West 28th Street was the site of numerous musicians’ and sheet music publishers’ offices in the 1890s-1900s, part of a block known as “Tin Pan Alley.” Landmarks Preservation Designation Report Designation List 516 Commission 51 West 28th Street LP-2628 December 10, 2019 47, 49, 51, 53, and 55 West 28th Street, December 2019 LANDMARKS PRESERVATION COMMISSION COMMISSIONERS Lisa Kersavage, Executive Director Sarah Carroll, Chair Mark Silberman, General Counsel Frederick Bland, Vice Chair Timothy Frye, Director of Special Projects and Diana Chapin Strategic Planning Wellington Chen Kate Lemos McHale, Director of Research Michael Devonshire Cory Herrala, Director of Preservation Michael Goldblum John Gustafsson REPORT BY Anne Holford-Smith Sarah Moses, Research Department Everardo Jefferson Jeanne Lutfy Adi Shamir-Baron EDITED BY Kate Lemos McHale PHOTOGRAPHS BY Sarah Moses Landmarks Preservation Designation Report Designation List 516 Commission 51 West 28th Street LP-2628 December 10, 2019 3 of 50 Table of Contents 5 Testimony at the Public Hearing 6 Editorial Note 8 Summary 10 Building Description 11 History and Significance of Tin Pan Alley 11 Early Site History
    [Show full text]
  • Library Sesquicentennial Exhibit, November 28, 1966
    Upon the Occasion of the Lilly Library Sesquicentennial Exhibit, November 28, 1966 Roger D. Branigin* Here in this warm and safe place lie many of the literary and historical treasures of Indiana. How appropriate in this one hundred fiftieth Birthday Year to display many of them and to join in tribute to the benefactor whose name this rich collection bears. As you turn the pages of this exquisite catalog, each item brings a host of recollections and stirs our Hoosier pride. “The Old Swimmin’-Hole’’ and ’Leven More Poems by Benjamin F. Johnson. of Boone, the first published work of the beloved James Whitcomb Riley, carries one down memory lane from Greenfield to Lockerbie Street. In the mind’s eye we see again the old home on the National Road, where the skilled hand of his father, more woodworker than lawyer, carved the newel posts and the trundle bed. With the ear attuned we can hear his talented mother at the organ and the patter of little feet from cubby hole to press. The scene may shift to the travels with Old Doc McCrillus and the canvases the poet painted for his display of patented med- icines-and the nostrums of bygone day. Or again to his exciting and reckless lecture tours with Bill Nye and his proper conduct with William Lyon Phelps, defender of Riley and his rhymes. * On Monday evening, November 28, 1966, President Elvis J. Stahr of Indiana University presided at a brief program which formally opened an exhibit of rare books and manuscripts from the university’s Lilly Library in commemoration of the Indiana Sesquicentennial.
    [Show full text]
  • Hoosier Artists Page 1 of 5
    IUPUI/IMA Community Project > Activities > Instructional Units > Hoosier Artists Page 1 of 5 HOOSIER ARTISTS By Jill Fairhurst Taylor and Diana Helton Rennels Unit Description: "The Hoosier Group" . Integrating Art Across the Curriculum Keywords: Indiana; artists; Cecil Head; William Forsyth; T.C. Steele; Gene Stratton Porter; Paul Dresser; Robert Frost; landscape; farm; rural; Impressionists; Herron Curriculum Area: Thematic or cross disciplinary/subject matter; Language Arts; Social Studies; Science; Math; Fine Arts; Technology Grade Level(s): Elementary or secondary Appropriate Group Size(s): Whole Class Time Expected to Complete Instructional Plan: Two weeks Instructional Objectives: Students will: 1. be introduced to the paintings of T.C. Steele, Cecil Head and William Forsyth leading to a discussion of what is a painting 2. use writing skills tying together the artists' paintings and literature 3. use landscapes for social studies curriculum of Native Americans 4. learn about Indiana literature and legends 5. use map skills 6. reflect on the Indiana artists' paintings in the early 1900's 7. study Indiana history 8. research the artists and Indiana history 9. apply scientific knowledge with seeds 10. learn about rock formations and types of rocks in Indiana 11. research and study animals of Indiana 12. find information about an archaeological dig 13. write story problems with regard to their research 14. use graphing skills 15. measure and calculate using a map 16. participate and use various technology 17. study the music and musicians of Indiana 18. enjoy field experiences Indiana State Standards: l Curriculum Area: Language Arts http://www.doe.state.in.us/standards/welcome.html file://C:\Documents%20and%20Settings\Administrator\My%20Documents\OliveTree\IMLS\site\ac..
    [Show full text]