Rights Marches Held Despite Rain, Jeers O) O

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Rights Marches Held Despite Rain, Jeers O) O O H " 1 “ I a i . A ren«c DaUy N#t Pn w Rub F o r Am WMk bided The %eathep Aagiut 6, IN d Cloudy warm and humid night and tomorrow montUif with occasional ahowen, loaif tonight near 70; gradual clear* 13,871 ing tomorrow, high in the IOa \ Manchetter^A CUy of Village Charm VOL. LXXXV, NO. 274 (TWENTY PAGES) MANCHESTER, CONN., MONDAY, AUGUST 22, 1986 (ClBMilied Adverttslnr .on Pa*e 17) PRICE SEVEN CENTS Rights Marches Held Despite Rain, Jeers [ Dr. King Leads Group idea loahuah V Mo. 1. A In Chicago 1 lova.i ; man) 2 thouah CHICAGO (AP)—White I m ap. spectators jeered and threw rocks, bottles and H> en> firecrackers as open-hous­ ellevea ing marches were held in la ho*. This secion of Varto, Turkey, lies in rubble after tremors today did no more damage but frighten­ Chicago and suburbs yes­ Friday’s earthquakes which leveled the sun-baked ed residents of the stricken area. (AP Photofax) terday despite a driving Jreen** mud houses. The death toll has reached^2,300. New rain. la sot Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., 2 whoflo whose Southern Christian Lead­ at. la ership Conference is sparking ta aad Drive Begun to Fight Disease the protests, said, "The demon-, strations will continue.” He said the heavy rain kept » white hecklers away and "the •'6S. hostility was not as glaring as it a Into Idower might have been.” . Dan New Tremors Scare Turks Dennia However, the 600 marchers C) led by King were pelted by " -•5«. BRZURUM, Turkey (AP) — stationed in Erzurum ae an odlal^ Two new earth ehooka today American military adviser with green apples, rocks, bottles, beer cans and firecrackers as atruck nibbled towna of caatem the Turkish 3rd Army, said: "I Ruby was in my fifth-floor hotel they walked In to the East Side Soaking wet in a downpour, Dr. Martin Luther King leads a group of 600 ciiffl [.ovea, Turkey, where the government neighborhood located at the ex­ drive apartment when the earthquake Kowalski Loses Job, rights marchers in Chicago. The marchers also ignored the catcalls of nuuiy and launched a maaalve campaign hit. treme southeast of Chicago. Id way to fight hunger and disease "The hotel is the tallest and A similar reception was given hecklers along the way. Several hundred policemen along the march kept order among thousands of refugees most modem building in this a group of 250 marchers at Ev­ in the all-white neighborhood. (AP Photofax) from last week's killer earth­ city. It's a six-story reinforced Blames John Bailey ergreen Park, a suburb south­ quake. west of Chicago. Another steel frame building. MERIDEN (AP) — Political pointment designed by Bailey to The new temblors caused lit­ "Suddenly everything began march, into Chicago Heights, >lbert. tle damage and no casualties to maverick Frank Kowalski is be­ remove him a safe distance south of the city, drew few spec­ to shake back and forth — chan­ from Connecticut politics. Bell. add to the toll from Friday's deliers, lamps, everything. ing dropped from his $26,000-a- tators and no demonstrations. Twin B52 Raids Staged * <C) In discussing his political dlsaatrous quake — 2,300 bodies "When that happens and year Washington Job, it was dis­ Two of the marchers were counted, with estimates 3,000 ,career today, Kowalski acknow­ injured at Evergreen Park you're up that high in a build­ closed today. ledged that he had from the may have died. But the shocks ing, you Just sit there and gam­ "John Bailey-made me,” Ko­ when they arrived in a car and spread fear and panic among start been Bailey's creation. white youths smashed the wind­ ble it'll hold together. walski said State and National ' 'There wm no reason for me the people, many sleeping in the "We were lucky. The building shield with rocks. On South Viet Red Bases OH Democratic Chairman John M. to be made a U.S. congress­ (qien. did hold together.” Bailey, "and John Bailey's Police said 20 hecklers were SAIGON, South Viet Nam nlst supply and transport facil­ sions, an Indication that aminil* Relief crews ministered to 2,- man,” he said. "I was made at arrested at the two marches, nition or fuel stores had been A strong jolt Sunday after­ dumping me.” the will of the bosses and I'm (AP) — For the second'straight ities In North Viet Nam Sunday, 300 injured and the thousands noon hit the city of Mus, open­ Kowalski had been a member . including two white men who day, giant Air Force B52 bomb­ the U.S. military command re­ hit. left homeless. Othera dug ing dangerous cracks in the post l«mg discharged at the wUl of ^,m,bed to their knees by ers from Guam struck twin ported today. Weekend raids on tiw north A of the Subversive Activities Con­ through the niina of homes in the bosses. police after the pair refused to American pilots flew 102 mis­ coot-'one UJ3, piano. An Air trol Board — a Job Bailey pulled Bailey said today he had heard blows at Communist bases in lame towns and villagea looking for (See Page Five) obey orders to clear tiie side­ South Viet Nam today. sions over North Viet Nam Sun- Force RFIC Ftakatom pbotogea- eland more vicUma. strings to get for him — since a change on__the Subversive walk. pMc reiconnaiissaiKO pldno wBs 1963. It was learned today that Activities Control Board was in One- formation of the B52s day, hitting at four missile sites IC) B Health officials were afraid a Also arrested were two m en' ba^e around Hanoi,. \six .oil storage shottdown aO'^nilM noilhiwost'Of r <C> President Johnson has nominal- the wind but that he had played bombarded a Viet Coiig ». O. cholera epidemic raging aoroaa representing anti-civil rights only 46 miles east of SaigoA. depots ai)d other targets. Bong He(.' erewtmm was the border in Iraq Mght.apread Same Old Moon ed a Republican, John Sutton no personal role in it. groups. Charged with attempt- Fliers reported they damaged nscued by a Havg bettoo|itic Patterson of Chevy Chase, Md., "They change them around Another wave of the elght-en- north to Turkey. glned Jets struck an enemy three o( the four surface-to-air For the peasants, the main Ig Reveaied in to succeed him. Bomeames,” he commented. (See Page Six) missile sites attacked. One site (80S Page Six) In recent months, Kowalski training and resupply camp 120 fear was nqt disease tut a re­ W818 nine miles south of the has repeatedly spoken out miles southwest of Saigon. currence of thc| major quake. Latest Photos A lull continued in th6 ground North Vietnamese capital and U against United States policy in Both small quakM came before fighting. Only small, scattered another was 10 miles southwest dawn this morning and followed PASADENA, CaUf. (AP) Viet Nam. Imprisoned in Wrecked Plane of Hanoi. Bob Kennedy, America's first bright, clear "This war is horrible, sense­ patrol actions were reported after shooka Saturday and Sun­ today. The U.S. fliers also claimed day. close-ups of the moon's mysteri- less, vicious," he said today in they damaged or destroyed 16 Lindsay Oash The peasants slept'W the open "We pretty much Washington in an interview with In the city of Gia Dinh, near Saigon, a terrorist threw a gre­ bridges, 26 siqiply buildings, 64 fields, under oone-atoped tenU what was expected — nothing the Meriden Journal. "It has no trucks, seven antiaircraft gun Over Aid to NY or wrapped In thick blankets. new. purpose and I'm willing to tell Helpless Six Days, nade today at a military Jeep, and four U.S. servicemen were positions, 28 boxcars and 16 Health Minister Eklip Somuno- Two good, sharply focused anyone.” barges. WASHINOTON (AP) — Itagk Kowalski, who recently made wounded, none seriously. A or John V. Ldndsay said today ghi ordered mass incoculations pietures transmitted to earth Navy pilots from the carrier against typhoid and told local Sunday by the Lunar Orbiter an unsuccessful last minute at­ Vietnamese woman passerby New York City la going to need G also was wounded. The terrorist BYsuiklln D. Roosevelt struck a health officials to add chloriAe apacecrah Just show more tempt to win the Democratic State Man Rescued $60 billion in federal money ever escaped. rail yard Just outside the city of ^ 10 year* to beeMne True to drinking water. lumps and craters — a carbon nomination for Congress in Con- MIDWjETOWN (AP) — For pinpointed the spot where Faulk- COUP. familiar necUcut's Sixth District, indicat- Sunday, B62s also hit two ene­ Thanh Hoa in North Viet Nam «t)»n»iifly Hvable," Bodiee uncovered from debris copy, almost, of the six days, Jolin T. Emmanuel sat ner thought he had seen some- and reported the area was en­ were being buried as soon as near side, od that he Will still play a role my target areas — a suspected Sen. Robert F. KennedF* Kewi. pinned in his seat in the wrecked thing. Viet Oong division headquarters gulfed in flames and a thick col­ possible, often even before Iden' Orbiter, an 860-pound Ameri- ^ coming campaign, plane. On Sunday, a State Aeronau- N.Y., toM Mm ttiat to toqimMto near the Chimbodian border 66 umn of black smoke rose to 8,- oaL tification. can shutterbug locked in orbit willing to campaign He must have heard the tics Department helicopter got 000 feet as they departed. Some survivors asked for around the moon, took the two nRxinst w r country’s Viet Nam speeding by on Merstat” low T r^ h ‘to"s^t“^l(rwe‘ck Hie .R^bHoan xnaQrov and a North Vietnamese troop con­ They destroyed 10 railroad the Democratic senator dto- picks and1 shovels to dig out shots late Friday and early Sat- position,” he said.
Recommended publications
  • The Yoshida Doctrine As a Myth
    The Japanese Journal of American Studies, No. 27 (2016) Copyright © 2016 Yoneyuki Sugita. All rights reserved. This work may be used, with this notice included, for noncommercial purposes. No copies of this work may be distributed, electronically or otherwise, in whole or in part, without permission from the author. The Yoshida Doctrine as a Myth Yoneyuki SUGITA* INTRODUCTION During the Allied occupation of Japan after World War II, Prime Minister Shigeru Yoshida developed a set of postwar foreign and security policies that came to be known as the Yoshida Doctrine. Masataka Kosaka has defined the doctrine as follows: (1) Japan ensures its national security through an alliance with the United States; (2) Japan maintains a low capacity for self-defense; and (3) Japan spends resources conserved by the first and second policies on economic activities to develop the country as a trading nation.1 The term “Yoshida Doctrine” was coined in 1977 by Masashi Nishihara, a prominent expert, as a way to define a consistent, pragmatic strategy in postwar Japan.2 It became a fixture among Japanese scholars in the late 1970s and early 1980s, when US hegemony was gradually declining and Japan was becoming an economic giant.3 This interpretation of the postwar era appropriately validated an emerging self- confidence about Japan’s role in the world. This article addresses a following research question: What were the terms and conditions for Japan, a vanquished, weak country, to be able to establish the Yoshida Doctrine? This article verifies my hypothesis that it was possible for Japan to do so *Professor, Osaka University 123 124 YONEYUKI SUGITA because the United States acquiesced to it.
    [Show full text]
  • SEPTEMBER 11Th: ART LOSS, DAMAGE, and REPERCUSSIONS Proceedings of an IFAR Symposium
    International Foundation for Art Research (IFAR) www.ifar.org This article may not be published or printed elsewhere without the express permission of IFAR. SEPTEMBER 11th: ART LOSS, DAMAGE, AND REPERCUSSIONS Proceedings of an IFAR Symposium SPEAKERS • Saul S. Wenegrat: Art Consultant; Former • Dietrich von Frank: President and CEO, AXA Art Director, Art Program, Port Authority of NY and NJ Insurance Corporation • Elyn Zimmerman: Sculptor (World Trade Center • Gregory J. Smith: Insurance Adjuster; Director, Memorial, 1993) Cunningham Lindsey International • Moukhtar Kocache: Director, Visual and Media Arts, • John Haworth: Director, George Gustav Heye Center, Lower Manhattan Cultural Council Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian • Suzanne F.W. Lemakis: Vice President and Art • Lawrence L. Reger: President, Heritage Preservation, Curator, Citigroup Heritage Emergency National Task Force IFAR SYMPOSIUM: THE ART LOST & DAMAGED ON 9/11 INTRODUCTION SHARON FLESCHER* Five months have passed since the horrific day in September that took so many lives and destroyed our sense of invulner- ability, if we were ever foolish enough to have had it in the first place. In the immediate aftermath, all we could think about was the incredible loss of life, but as we now know, there was also extensive loss of art—an estimated $100 mil- lion loss in public art and an untold amount in private and corporate collections. In addition, the tragedy impacted the art world in myriad other ways, from the precipitous drop in museum attendance, to the dislocation of downtown artists’ Left to right: Sharon Flescher, Saul S. Wenegrat, Elyn studios and arts organizations, to the decrease in philan- Zimmerman, Moukhtar Kocache, and Suzanne F.
    [Show full text]
  • Frank Kowalski Papers
    Frank Kowalski Papers A Finding Aid to the Collection in the Library of Congress Manuscript Division, Library of Congress Washington, D.C. 2010 Contact information: http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.mss/mss.contact Additional search options available at: http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.mss/eadmss.ms011061 LC Online Catalog record: http://lccn.loc.gov/mm90079561 Prepared by Marqaret H. McAleer Collection Summary Title: Frank Kowalski Papers Span Dates: 1925-1976 Bulk Dates: (bulk 1948-1963) ID No.: MSS79561 Creator: Kowalski, Frank, 1907-1974 Extent: 7,500 items ; 20 containers plus 1 classified and 1 oversize ; 11 linear feet Language: Collection material in English Location: Manuscript Division, Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. Summary: Army officer and United States representative from Connecticut. Correspondence, memoranda, writings, speeches, reports, military orders, patents, newspaper clippings, printed materials, scrapbooks, drawings, and photographs pertaining primarily to Kowalski's career in the United States Army (1925-1958) and in the House of Representatives (1959-1963). Selected Search Terms The following terms have been used to index the description of this collection in the Library's online catalog. They are grouped by name of person or organization, by subject or location, and by occupation and listed alphabetically therein. People Akama, Bunzō, 1898- --Correspondence. Bailey, John M. (John Moran), 1904-1975. Benton, William, 1900-1973--Correspondence. Bowles, Chester, 1901-1986--Correspondence. Brucker, Wilber Marion, 1894-1968--Correspondence. Burke, Arleigh A., 1901-1996--Correspondence. Davis, Chester R., 1896-1966--Correspondence. Hayashi, Keizo, 1907- --Correspondence. Huie, William Bradford, 1910-1986--Correspondence. Kennedy, Robert F., 1925-1968--Correspondence. Konda, Hiroo--Correspondence. Kowalski, Frank, 1907-1974.
    [Show full text]
  • Save Outdoor Sculpture!
    Save Outdoor Sculpture! . A Survey of Sculpture in Vtrginia Compiled by Sarah Shields Driggs with John L. Orrock J ' Save Outdoor Sculpture! A Survey of Sculpture in Virginia Compiled by Sarah Shields Driggs with John L. Orrock SAVE OUTDOOR SCULPTURE Table of Contents Virginia Save Outdoor Sculpture! by Sarah Shields Driggs . I Confederate Monuments by Gaines M Foster . 3 An Embarrassment of Riches: Virginia's Sculpture by Richard Guy Wilson . 5 Why Adopt A Monument? by Richard K Kneipper . 7 List of Sculpture in Vrrginia . 9 List ofVolunteers . 35 Copyright Vuginia Department of Historic Resources Richmond, Vrrginia 1996 Save Outdoor Sculpture!, was designed and SOS! is a project of the National Museum of American Art, Smithsonian Institution, and the National prepared for publication by Grace Ng Institute for the Conservation of Cultural Property. SOS! is supported by major contributions from Office of Graphic Communications the Pew Charitable Trusts, the Getty Grant Program and the Henry Luce Foundation. Additional assis­ Virginia Department of General Services tance has been provided by the National Endowment for the Arts, Ogilvy Adams & Rinehart, Inc., TimeWarner Inc., the Contributing Membership of the Smithsonian National Associates Program and Cover illustration: ''Ligne Indeterminee'~ Norfolk. Members of its Board, as well as many other concerned individuals. (Photo by David Ha=rd) items like lawn ornaments or commercial signs, formed around the state, but more are needed. and museum collections, since curators would be By the fall of 1995, survey reports were Virginia SOS! expected to survey their own holdings. pouring in, and the results were engrossing. Not The definition was thoroughly analyzed at only were our tastes and priorities as a Common­ by Sarah Shields Driggs the workshops, but gradually the DHR staff wealth being examined, but each individual sur­ reached the conclusion that it was best to allow veyor's forms were telling us what they had dis~ volunteers to survey whatever caught their eye.
    [Show full text]
  • Commemorative Works Catalog
    DRAFT Commemorative Works by Proposed Theme for Public Comment February 18, 2010 Note: This database is part of a joint study, Washington as Commemoration, by the National Capital Planning Commission and the National Park Service. Contact Lucy Kempf (NCPC) for more information: 202-482-7257 or [email protected]. CURRENT DATABASE This DRAFT working database includes major and many minor statues, monuments, memorials, plaques, landscapes, and gardens located on federal land in Washington, DC. Most are located on National Park Service lands and were established by separate acts of Congress. The authorization law is available upon request. The database can be mapped in GIS for spatial analysis. Many other works contribute to the capital's commemorative landscape. A Supplementary Database, found at the end of this list, includes selected works: -- Within interior courtyards of federal buildings; -- On federal land in the National Capital Region; -- Within cemeteries; -- On District of Columbia lands, private land, and land outside of embassies; -- On land belonging to universities and religious institutions -- That were authorized but never built Explanation of Database Fields: A. Lists the subject of commemoration (person, event, group, concept, etc.) and the title of the work. Alphabetized by Major Themes ("Achievement…", "America…," etc.). B. Provides address or other location information, such as building or park name. C. Descriptions of subject may include details surrounding the commemorated event or the contributions of the group or individual being commemorated. The purpose may include information about why the commemoration was established, such as a symbolic gesture or event. D. Identifies the type of land where the commemoration is located such as public, private, religious, academic; federal/local; and management agency.
    [Show full text]
  • Romise on U.S. Nuclear Test
    ■ ' - 7 ' r - th / Aytragc Daily 'Net PrcM Rtn ^ror tlM Weelj KbM Th« Weather taM,tO, IMt foracMt of O. 8. Weather Bw fw 1 3 ,6 0 1 Chance of ocattred liKfct ■Bowen toBlght and Tneaday, hnr toalflit t . a:’-- » «f tk* AndH itfOM idktfaa near M degreea, tomorrow araoad Cky o f VUiage Charm m . VOL. UDPO, NO. 242 (FOUirrEEK PAGES) MANCHESTER, CONN, MONDAY, JULY 16, 1962 ,.x AdvortWng aa ^ago PRICE FIVE CENTS e S ta te N e w s Rountfup romise Qlimax Two-Car Crash W A S H IN G T O N ( A P ) — ftho chair for aBout three of the Oaims Cbie Life conferences on 14 regular money The predtige fight Between Bills. All chairmanships in the the ^nate and House Appro­ TRUMBULL (AP) — A. past have gone to the Senate. U.S. Navy sailw was kiUed i On U.S. Nuclear Test Ban priations committees, appear­ The Senate’s demand to origi­ ed close to settlement t^ay. nate half of the money Bills ap­ stantly early today in a two But another Battle was shap­ parently has gone down the drain car accident on the Merritt for this session. Agreement has Parkway that sent 11 othw ing up Between tiie two Agri­ Been reached to hold conferences Kowaldd Plans culture committees. in the old-Supreme Court cham­ persons to a Bridgeport hos­ Money bUla have Been tied up Ber near the center .of the Ospitol, pital with minor injuries. Joint P lan lor more than three months while instead of on the ter side of the Dead on the scene was 20-year- Still Uncertain the Appropriations groups squaB­ Senate wing.
    [Show full text]
  • RDAY SPECIALS for Kowalski
    .V / ■4 ' i- , r ■'/. ■ • \ FRIDAY, JULY 18, 1962 4— 4. f ACS SrXTBEN I V Avorage Dafly NSt Pren Ron idlanrilfsstrr lEvraing For the Week BadeS The Weather Foreeeet et B. 8. Weatlhr I C’ Jaae 8*. 1M8 I state maintenance on July 9. 81 north a quarter o f a mile to the line. Bishop Rd. and the remainder Ht-i'v- ■ .. Area Roads Go of Boston Hill Rd. In Coventry, Bread and. Milk St. end of state maintenance. 13,601 'Partly chMidy, little ohaage la About/Tow n from Rt. .44A to the Tolland town The state will maintain New London Rd. tn Hebron from RL temperature toalght aad Soaday. T o State Control llnb becomes part of Rt. 81; and Boston Rd. in Andover from the 85 to the Andover. town line will MMaber e< the AaOt toalght 66 to 85. High Simday -f..- Stonehouse and Bagleville Rds. Hebroh town line to Wales Rd., and pass to qtate maintenance. Hebron BiiTedia ef Oinalatloa aear M . Members oftheKiwanis Club of will assume maintenance, of Gilead Manchester will be g;uesta of the from Rt. 81 to the Mansfield town Boston Hill Rd. from Biahop to He­ MoMhe»ter—~A City o f Village Chahn The State Highway Department line are designated as State Route bron Rds., designating them as Rd., Martin Rd.. Gilead St. .East Balvattop^Army for luncheon Tues­ St., and Hartford Rd. from the day nobn at C^mp Nathan Hale, has announced assignment of route 575. State Route 603'. In exchange An­ numbers to roads in Coventry, An­ In exchange, Coventry to<dt over dover will maintain Long Hill Rd.
    [Show full text]
  • The Iconography of Oregon's Twentieth-Century Utopian Myth
    Portland State University PDXScholar Dissertations and Theses Dissertations and Theses 5-3-1995 From Promised Lands to Promised Landfill: The Iconography of Oregon's Twentieth-Century Utopian Myth Jeffry Lloyd Uecker Portland State University Follow this and additional works at: https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/open_access_etds Part of the History Commons, and the History of Art, Architecture, and Archaeology Commons Let us know how access to this document benefits ou.y Recommended Citation Uecker, Jeffry Lloyd, "From Promised Lands to Promised Landfill: The Iconography of Oregon's Twentieth- Century Utopian Myth" (1995). Dissertations and Theses. Paper 5026. https://doi.org/10.15760/etd.6902 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access. It has been accepted for inclusion in Dissertations and Theses by an authorized administrator of PDXScholar. Please contact us if we can make this document more accessible: [email protected]. THESIS APPROVAL The abstract and thesis of Jeffry Lloyd Uecker for the Master of Arts in History were presented May 3, 1995, and accepted by the thesis committee and the department. COMMITTEE APPROVALS: Lisa Andrus-Rivera Representative of the Office of Graduate Studie DEPARTMENT APPROVAL: David A. Johns Department of .L. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * ACCEPTED FOR PORTLAND STATE UNIVERSITY BY THE LIBRARY By ont.f!G ~4= .,,K/9S- ABSTRACT An abstract of the thesis of Jeffry Lloyd Uecker for the Master of Arts in History presented May 3, 1995. Title: From Promised Land to Promised Landfill: The Iconography of Oregon's Twentieth-Century Utopian Myth The state of Oregon often has been viewed as a utopia. Figures of speech borrowed from the romantic sublime, biblical pilgrimage, economic boosterism, and millenialist fatalism have been used to characterize it.
    [Show full text]
  • Public Public of Variety a Includes Brochure *This % Friday
    CL HQ DU Michael T. Hensley, Outside In Mural In Outside Hensley, T. Michael Esplanade Eastbank Katz Vera the along RIGGA, , Gate Echo , at Central Library Central at , Stair Garden Kirkland, Larry CN ! GL , at the Portland Center for the Performing Arts Performing the for Center Portland the at , Bollards Folly Otani, Valerie Park Waterfront McCall Tom , Shift River Gregoire, Mathieu in the North Park Blocks Park North the in Bao Bao Xi'an & Tung Da as well. as artworks commissioned by other agencies agencies other by commissioned artworks *This brochure includes a variety of public public of variety a includes brochure *This % Friday. through Monday 8:00-6:00, are IL GQ CN Manuel Izquierdo, Izquierdo, Manuel Ilan Averbuch, Ilan Averbuch, Dana LynnLouis, James Carpenter, Portland Building at 1120 SW 5th. Hours 5th. SW 1120 at Building Portland Art Gallery on the second floor of the of floor second the on Gallery Art www.racc.org/publicart or visit the Public the visit or www.racc.org/publicart Terra Incognita to go collection, the about more out Spectral Dome Light Metabolic Shift Metabolic Dreamer leading Percent-for-Art programs.* To find To programs.* Percent-for-Art leading County, and manages one of the country’s the of one manages and County, , Pettygrove Park , Pettygrove , Rose Quarter , Rose Multnomah and Portland of City the for art , Pearl District commissions and maintains public maintains and commissions (RACC) , PCPA Regional Arts & Culture Council Culture & Arts Regional The P ORTLAND C ULTURAL T OURS EN J. Seward Johnson, Allow Me, in Pioneer Courthouse Square.
    [Show full text]
  • Minimalist Sculpture: the Consequences of Artifice
    Minimalist Sculpture: The Consequences of Artifice. John Edward Penny Submitted in accordance with the requirements of PhD. The University of Leeds Department of Fine Art August 2002 The candidate confirms that the work submitted is his own work and that appropriate credit has been given where reference has been made to the work of others. IMAGING SERVICES NORTH Boston Spa, Wetherby West Yorkshire, LS23 7BQ www.bl,uk TEXT CUT OFF IN THE ORIGINAL Abstract. This study, "Minimalist Sculpture: The Consequences of Artifice", was initially prompted by the wish to examine the case for a materialist approach to modern sculpture. Such an inquiry needed to address not only the substantiality of material and its process, but also the formative role of ideology on those choices of governing materials and procedures. The crux of this study began as, and remains, an inquiry into physical presence, and, by extension, the idea that Minimalist sculpture somehow returns the viewer to the viewer. At the core of any materialist position is the certainty that experience contains an element of passivity. If nothing exists but matter and its movements and modifications, then consciousness and volition depend entirely on material agency. The hierarchy of such a scheme underpins the socio-economic and cultural level with that of the biological, and, in turn, the biological with the physical. However, perception is not a matter of automatically recording external stimuli, but requires active elaboration. A hermeneutic process, therefore, is not one of unbridled pure thought; rather, it requires the recognition of an external and constant measure that gives form to thought.
    [Show full text]
  • National Register of Historic Places Registration Form
    NPS Form 10900 OMB No. 10240018 (Expires 5/31/2012) United States Department of the Interior National Park Service National Register of Historic Places Registration Form This form is for use in nominating or requesting determinations for individual properties and districts. See instructions in National Register Bulletin, How to Complete the National Register of Historic Places Registration Form. If any item does not apply to the property being documented, enter "N/A" for "not applicable." For functions, architectural classification, materials, and areas of significance, enter only categories and subcategories from the instructions. Place additional certification comments, entries, and narrative items on continuation sheets if needed (NPS Form 10-900a). 1. Name of Property historic name Allegheny Commons other names/site number N/A 2. Location street & number Roughly bounded by North Ave., Cedar Ave., Stockton St., Ridge not for publication N/A Ave., Brighton Rd. city or town Pittsburgh City Vicinity N/A state Pennsylvania code PA county Allegheny code 003 zip code 15212 3. State/Federal Agency Certification As the designated authority under the National Historic Preservation Act, as amended, I hereby certify that this nomination _ request for determination of eligibility meets the documentation standards for registering properties in the National Register of Historic Places and meets the procedural and professional requirements set forth in 36 CFR Part 60. In my opinion, the property _ meets _ does not meet the National Register Criteria. I recommend that this property be considered significant at the following level(s) of significance: national statewide local Signature of certifying official/Title Date State or Federal agency/bureau or Tribal Government In my opinion, the property meets does not meet the National Register criteria.
    [Show full text]
  • Acrobat Distiller, Job 59
    INTERPETING CITY IDENTITY THROUGH THE MEDIUM OF THE STREET by LAURA L. KRAUL BBA, The University of Michigan, 1980 MBA, The University of Michigan, 1983 A Thesis Submitted to the Graduate Faculty of The University of Georgia in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree MASTER OF LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE ATHENS, GEORGIA 2002 2002 Laura L. Kraul All Rights Reserved INTERPETING CITY IDENTITY THROUGH THE MEDIUM OF THE STREET by LAURA L. KRAUL Approved: Major Professor: Mary Anne Akers Committee: Ian Firth Deborah Martin Paul Kelman Electronic Version Approved: Gordhan L. Patel Dean of the Graduate School The University of Georgia May 2002 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS I would like to thank my Major Professor, Mary Anne Akers, and the members of my Reading Committee, Ian Firth, Deb Martin and Paul Kelman for their guidance and advice given for this thesis. I especially want to thank my husband Douglas for his support and encouragement during my graduate years at UGA. iv TABLE OF CONTENTS Page ACKNOWLEDGMENTS ...............................................................................................................................iv CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION ..............................................................................................................................1 2 IDENTITY, IMAGE AND PLACE................................................................................................5 Review of Literature...............................................................................................................5 Synthesis
    [Show full text]