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Prom 2018 Event Store List 1.17.18
State City Mall/Shopping Center Name Address AK Anchorage 5th Avenue Mall-Sur 406 W 5th Ave AL Birmingham Tutwiler Farm 5060 Pinnacle Sq AL Dothan Wiregrass Commons 900 Commons Dr Ste 900 AL Hoover Riverchase Galleria 2300 Riverchase Galleria AL Mobile Bel Air Mall 3400 Bell Air Mall AL Montgomery Eastdale Mall 1236 Eastdale Mall AL Prattville High Point Town Ctr 550 Pinnacle Pl AL Spanish Fort Spanish Fort Twn Ctr 22500 Town Center Ave AL Tuscaloosa University Mall 1701 Macfarland Blvd E AR Fayetteville Nw Arkansas Mall 4201 N Shiloh Dr AR Fort Smith Central Mall 5111 Rogers Ave AR Jonesboro Mall @ Turtle Creek 3000 E Highland Dr Ste 516 AR North Little Rock Mc Cain Shopg Cntr 3929 Mccain Blvd Ste 500 AR Rogers Pinnacle Hlls Promde 2202 Bellview Rd AR Russellville Valley Park Center 3057 E Main AZ Casa Grande Promnde@ Casa Grande 1041 N Promenade Pkwy AZ Flagstaff Flagstaff Mall 4600 N Us Hwy 89 AZ Glendale Arrowhead Towne Center 7750 W Arrowhead Towne Center AZ Goodyear Palm Valley Cornerst 13333 W Mcdowell Rd AZ Lake Havasu City Shops @ Lake Havasu 5651 Hwy 95 N AZ Mesa Superst'N Springs Ml 6525 E Southern Ave AZ Phoenix Paradise Valley Mall 4510 E Cactus Rd AZ Tucson Tucson Mall 4530 N Oracle Rd AZ Tucson El Con Shpg Cntr 3501 E Broadway AZ Tucson Tucson Spectrum 5265 S Calle Santa Cruz AZ Yuma Yuma Palms S/C 1375 S Yuma Palms Pkwy CA Antioch Orchard @Slatten Rch 4951 Slatten Ranch Rd CA Arcadia Westfld Santa Anita 400 S Baldwin Ave CA Bakersfield Valley Plaza 2501 Ming Ave CA Brea Brea Mall 400 Brea Mall CA Carlsbad Shoppes At Carlsbad -
General Growth Properties, Inc. Case Number: 09-11977
General Growth Properties, Inc. Attachment 4a Case Number: 09-11977 4a. Suits and Administrative Proceedings - Debtor as Plaintiff Case Name Case Number Court Name and Location GENERAL GROWTH PROPERTIES, INC. V. CHICAGO DEPARTMENT OF REVENUECASE NO. 08 TX 0182 DEPARTMENT OF ADMINISTRATIVE HEARINGS, TAX SECTION OF THE CITY OF CHICAGO If a Debtor entity does not appear as a named party in a particular line item on this Statement of Financial Affairs it is because that Debtor is named under the full case name rather than the abbreviated case caption set forth on this Schedule. If multiple Debtors are parties in a given proceeding, that proceeding will be listed on Attachment 4(a) of the Statement for each Debtor named. Attachment 4(a)(i) lists those suits where the Debtor is a Plaintiff; Attachment 4(a)(ii) lists those suits where the Debtor is a Defendant. LID: 1 1 General Growth Properties, Inc. Attachment 4a(ii) Case Number: 09-11977 4a(ii). Suits and Administrative Proceedings - Debtor as Defendant Case Name Case Number Court Name and Location ACCESS FOR THE DISABLED, INC., A FLORIDA NOT FOR PROFIT CORPORATION, AND DENISE 6:08-CV-1645-ORL-31- UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT MIDDLE DISTRICT OF PAYNE, INDIVIDUALLY, V. GENERAL GROWTH PROPERTIES, A FOREIGN TRUST DAB FLORIDA; FLORIDA ACCESS FOR THE DISABLED, INC., A FLORIDA NOT-FOR-PROFIT CORPORATION, AND DENISE CASE NO. 1:09-CV-43 U.S. DISTRICT COURT FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF PAYNE, INDIVIDUALLY V. GENERAL GROWTH PROPERTIES, INC., A DELAWARE CORPORATION MICHIGAN, SOUTHERN DIVISION; MICHIGAN AILEEN BETANCOURT-ESPADA V. -
No Change in the Recent Lunar Impact Flux Required Based On
Geophysical Research Letters RESEARCH LETTER No Change in the Recent Lunar Impact Flux Required Based 10.1029/2018GL077254 on Modeling of Impact Glass Spherule Age Distributions Key Points: • An excess of young lunar impact glass Ya-Huei Huang1 , David A. Minton1, Nicolle E. B. Zellner2 , Masatoshi Hirabayashi3 , spherules <500 Ma likely results from 4 5 limited sampling depths where lunar James E. Richardson , and Caleb I. Fassett soils were collected • Sampling biases can explain the 1Department of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Science, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN, USA, 2Department of excess of young spherules, rather than Physics, Albion College, Albion, MI, USA, 3Department of Aerospace Engineering, Auburn University, Auburn, AL, USA, a significant change in the impact flux 4Planetary Science Institute, Tucson, AZ, USA, 5NASA Marshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville, AL, USA in the last 500 Ma • Using lunar impact glass spherule ages to constrain the impact flux may 40 39 be less biased if collected beyond the Abstract The distributions of Ar/ Ar-derived ages of impact glass spherules in lunar regolith uppermost lunar surface samples show an excess at <500 Ma relative to older ages. It has not been well understood whether this excess of young ages reflects an increase in the recent lunar impact flux or is due to a bias in the samples. Supporting Information: We developed a model to simulate the production, transport, destruction, and sampling of lunar glass • Supporting Information S1 spherules. A modeled bias is seen when either (1) the simulated sampling depth is 10 cm, consistent with the typical depth from which Apollo soil samples were taken, or (2) when glass occurrence in the ejecta is > Correspondence to: limited to 10 crater radii from the crater, consistent with terrestrial microtektite observations. -
November 25,1897
The Republican Journal. V0LlME li9'_ BELFAST, MAINE, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1897. NUMBER 47 political movement, the A. P. A. has Busy Brooks. good business in stoves, tinware, etc. M. J. Associated THE REPUBLICAN JOURNAL. given up the ghost, the national organiza- Charities. The Water Works in Brooks Village. PERSONAL. Dow has a store filled with a handsome tion having surrendered its charter and A Write-up of this Enterprising Village. of in Two preliminary meetings looking to the gone out of business.The new recita- assortment everything ladies’ wear, The Consolidated Water Co. of Portland C.W. Frederick visited It is the of a Augusta yesterday. PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY MORNING BY THE tion hall which verdict of all who visit Brooks F. establishing society for associated char- John D. Rockefeller has millinery, etc. B. Stantial’s stock of dry has put in a system of water works at Brooks that have been Mr. E. O. Thorndike returned to Boston just built for Vassal- at a cost of village it is one of the busiest and most and is and ity held in this city and some College fancy goods complete, Chas. H. Village and water is now supplied to about was dedicated Nov. 19th. The progress made. At the Nov. Saturday. Journal Pub. Co. $100,000 enterprising places of its size in the State. has a well store. meeting 19th Republican Irving equipped jewelry 60 buildings. The company was incorporated same day Mr. Rockefeller telegraphed to The is N. E. Keen was elected chairman Hon. R. W. went to Boston yester- village situated on the Belfast branch The mechanics include Chas. -
1922 Elizabeth T
co.rYRIG HT, 192' The Moootainetro !scot1oror,d The MOUNTAINEER VOLUME FIFTEEN Number One D EC E M BER 15, 1 9 2 2 ffiount Adams, ffiount St. Helens and the (!oat Rocks I ncoq)Ora,tecl 1913 Organized 190!i EDITORlAL ST AitF 1922 Elizabeth T. Kirk,vood, Eclttor Margaret W. Hazard, Associate Editor· Fairman B. L�e, Publication Manager Arthur L. Loveless Effie L. Chapman Subsc1·iption Price. $2.00 per year. Annual ·(onl�') Se,·ent�·-Five Cents. Published by The Mountaineers lncorJ,orated Seattle, Washington Enlerecl as second-class matter December 15, 19t0. at the Post Office . at . eattle, "\Yash., under the .-\0t of March 3. 1879. .... I MOUNT ADAMS lllobcl Furrs AND REFLEC'rION POOL .. <§rtttings from Aristibes (. Jhoutribes Author of "ll3ith the <6obs on lltount ®l!!mµus" �. • � J� �·,,. ., .. e,..:,L....._d.L.. F_,,,.... cL.. ��-_, _..__ f.. pt",- 1-� r�._ '-';a_ ..ll.-�· t'� 1- tt.. �ti.. ..._.._....L- -.L.--e-- a';. ��c..L. 41- �. C4v(, � � �·,,-- �JL.,�f w/U. J/,--«---fi:( -A- -tr·�� �, : 'JJ! -, Y .,..._, e� .,...,____,� � � t-..__., ,..._ -u..,·,- .,..,_, ;-:.. � --r J /-e,-i L,J i-.,( '"'; 1..........,.- e..r- ,';z__ /-t.-.--,r� ;.,-.,.....__ � � ..-...,.,-<. ,.,.f--· :tL. ��- ''F.....- ,',L � .,.__ � 'f- f-� --"- ��7 � �. � �;')'... f ><- -a.c__ c/ � r v-f'.fl,'7'71.. I /!,,-e..-,K-// ,l...,"4/YL... t:l,._ c.J.� J..,_-...A 'f ',y-r/� �- lL.. ��•-/IC,/ ,V l j I '/ ;· , CONTENTS i Page Greetings .......................................................................tlristicles }!}, Phoiitricles ........ r The Mount Adams, Mount St. Helens, and the Goat Rocks Outing .......................................... B1/.ith Page Bennett 9 1 Selected References from Preceding Mount Adams and Mount St. -
Official Rules
OFFICIAL RULES NO PURCHASE OR PAYMENT NECESSARY TO ENTER OR WIN. A PURCHASE OR PAYMENT WILL NOT INCREASE AN ENTRANT’S CHANCES OF WINNING. OPEN TO LEGAL RESIDENTS OF THE UNITED STATES AND THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA (EXCLUDING FLORIDA, NEW YORK AND RHODE ISLAND) WHO ARE AT LEAST 18 YEARS OF AGE AT THE TIME OF ENTRY. VOID IN FLORIDA, NEW YORK, RHODE ISLAND AND WHERE PROHIBITED OR RESTRICTED BY LAW. To Enter: NO PURCHASE NECESSARY. PURCHASE WILL NOT INCREASE YOUR CHANCES OF WINNING. To be eligible, entrant (“Entrant”) must provide the Administrator (as defined herein) of this promotion (the “Promotion”), Pro Silver Star, Ltd. (the “Administrator”) and J.C. Penney Corporation Inc. (the “Sponsor”), with its full name, email address, phone number, zip code and date of birth. Limit one (1) entry per person. Administrator will not be responsible for entries lost, delayed, incomplete or misdirected. Entries will become the sole property of Administrator and by entering, Entrant expressly consents to adding his/her name to receive future promotional offers, and using Entrant’s name for advertising, publicity or any other purposes whatsoever, as determined by Administrator in its sole discretion, without compensation and with or without attribution to Entrant, as Sponsor and/or Administrator in their sole discretion, without compensation and with Method of Entry: A. Purchase and Online Entry: Entry codes are available with the purchase of one (1) limited edition fleece bearing The Salvation Army and Dallas Cowboys trademarks (the “Fleece”) at select JCPenney stores in Texas as listed in the Appendix of these Official Rules (each a “Participating Store” and collectively the “Participating Stores”), while supplies last. -
BEYOND Alumni Share How the Gordon and Judy Dutile Honors Program Has Prepared Them for a Lifetime of Excellence
A B O V E &BEYOND Alumni share how the Gordon and Judy Dutile Honors Program has prepared them for a lifetime of excellence INSIDE: 2015 PRESIDENT’S REPORT PB SBUlife Winter 2015 www.SBUniv.edu SBUlife 1 >> Be Social Read what students are sharing about SBU. sbu is the best; they brought We had a FANTASTIC visit day to- puppies to the union for us to play day with 90+ on campus! Thanks with #sbuniv for making the time to come! (via @elizaburris on Instagram) #futurebearcats #SBUniv @ SBU_Kim Awesome job @SBUbearcatsWBB!! We are so proud of you girls!! Great win!! #bearcatroar #SBUniv @Dewey_Dogger Love this university. Being sur- rounded by so many people who have a deep desire to serve Jesus is truly incredible. #SBUniv @sward2013 In honor of finals and first semester being over, #tbt to when we first became a family. #woodythird #woodygott #sbuniv (via @mary_rose_18 on Instagram) Good morning, SBU. #sbuniv #jantermsnotsobad #midwestisbest (via @courtney_kliment on Instagram) Check out “The Hub” – Southwest Baptist University’s social media mash-up site showcasing what people are saying about SBU online. Go to social.SBUniv.edu to see Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, YouTube and news release postings all in one place. And be sure to use #SBUniv when you post about SBU on social media and you may see your post featured on “The Hub” as well! Be social with SBU on Twitter, Facebook, 2 SBUlife Google+ and Instagram. #SBUniv Winter 2015 www.SBUniv.edu SBUlife 3 SBUlife Magazine of Southwest Baptist University Winter 2016 10th Anniversary of the Gordon and Judy Dutile Honors Program 2 5 Questions with Diana Gallamore 4 Guess Who? 22 SBU News 23 Keeping in Touch 24 Volume 101 Issue 1 ADDRESS CHANGE SBUlife highlights the University’s mission: to be USPS 507-500 POSTMASTER: Send address changes to a Christ-centered, caring academic community SBU 1600 University Avenue, preparing students to be servant leaders in a global PRESIDENT Bolivar, MO 65613-2597 society. -
Discovering the Lost Race Story: Writing Science Fiction, Writing Temporality
Discovering the Lost Race Story: Writing Science Fiction, Writing Temporality This thesis is presented for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy of The University of Western Australia 2008 Karen Peta Hall Bachelor of Arts (Honours) Discipline of English and Cultural Studies School of Social and Cultural Studies ii Abstract Genres are constituted, implicitly and explicitly, through their construction of the past. Genres continually reconstitute themselves, as authors, producers and, most importantly, readers situate texts in relation to one another; each text implies a reader who will locate the text on a spectrum of previously developed generic characteristics. Though science fiction appears to be a genre concerned with the future, I argue that the persistent presence of lost race stories – where the contemporary world and groups of people thought to exist only in the past intersect – in science fiction demonstrates that the past is crucial in the operation of the genre. By tracing the origins and evolution of the lost race story from late nineteenth-century novels through the early twentieth-century American pulp science fiction magazines to novel-length narratives, and narrative series, at the end of the twentieth century, this thesis shows how the consistent presence, and varied uses, of lost race stories in science fiction complicates previous critical narratives of the history and definitions of science fiction. In examining the implicit and explicit aspects of temporality and genre, this thesis works through close readings of exemplar texts as well as historicist, structural and theoretically informed readings. It focuses particularly on women writers, thus extending previous accounts of women’s participation in science fiction and demonstrating that gender inflects constructions of authority, genre and temporality. -
Armies and Ecosystems in Premodern Europe: the Meuse Region, 1250–1850
WCP ARMIES AND ECOSYSTEMS IN PREMODERN EUROPE THE MEUSE REGION, 1250–1850 Using the ecosystem concept as his starting point, the author examines the complex relationship between premodern armed forces and their environ- and Conflict in War ment at three levels: landscapes, living beings, and diseases. The study focuses Societies Premodern on Europe’s Meuse Region, well-known among historians of war as a battle- ground between France and Germany. By analyzing soldiers’ long-term inter- actions with nature, this book engages with current debates about the eco- ARMIES AND ECOSYSTEMS IN PREMODERN EUROPE IN PREMODERN logical impact of the military, and provides new impetus for contemporary armed forces to make greater effort to reduce their environmental footprint. “This is an impressive interdisciplinary study, contributing to environmental history, the history of war and historical geography. The book advances an original and intriguing argument that armed forces have had a vested interest in preserving the environments and habitats in which they operate, and have thus contributed to envi- ronmental conservation long before this became a popular cause of wider humanity. The work will provide a template for how this topic can be researched for other parts of the world or for other time periods.” Peter H. Wilson, Chichele Professor of the History of War, University of Oxford War and Confl ict in Premodern Societies is a pioneering series that moves away from strategies, battles, and chronicle histories in order to provide a home for work that places warfare in broader contexts, and contributes new insights ARMIES AND ECOSYSTEMS on everyday experiences of confl ict and violence. -
CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SE.Rtate. 5869
1910. CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SE.rTATE. 5869 PETITIONS, ETC. Also, petition of Connecticut Fair Assoclation, fa>oring Honso bill 15422, the agricultural extension bill-to the Coil.lillittee on, Under clause 1 of Rule XXII, petitions and papers were laid Agriculture. on the Clerk's de k and referred us follows : By Mr. AlTDEHSOL T: l etition of D. A. Dewey, of Fostoria, Alm, petition ofJ. R.Dutton, of Colchester, Conn., for a parcels Ohio, for House bill 2223!:>-to the Committee on the Post-Office post bill-to the Committee on the Post-Office and Post-Roads. n.ncl Post-Road . Al o, petition of Connecticut State Association of Let!er C:ir Also, petition of William II. Gibson Post, No. 31, Department riers, fnyoring the pro rata bill and the Worcester classification of Ohio, Grnncl Army of tile Repul>llc, against statues being bill-to the Committee on the Post-Office and Po t-Roads. placctl in Statuary Hall that perpetuate memory of the southern By Mr. HOLLINGSWORTH : Paper to accompany bill for confeueracy-to the Committee on the Library. relief of Cicero Williams-to the Committee on Invalid Pensions. By Mr. HOWELL of Utah: Petition of Wasatch Lodge, .i.. To. Also, petition of Champion Grange, Patrons of Husband~·y, of Upper Sanclu k-y, Ohio, for Senate bill 6!)31, for an appropr1i;i. 370, of the Brotherhood of Railway Carmen of America, of tion of $WO,OOO for extension of work of the Office of Public Ogden, Utah, for granting leave of absence with pay to em Roads-to tlle Committee on Agriculture. -
Appendix I Lunar and Martian Nomenclature
APPENDIX I LUNAR AND MARTIAN NOMENCLATURE LUNAR AND MARTIAN NOMENCLATURE A large number of names of craters and other features on the Moon and Mars, were accepted by the IAU General Assemblies X (Moscow, 1958), XI (Berkeley, 1961), XII (Hamburg, 1964), XIV (Brighton, 1970), and XV (Sydney, 1973). The names were suggested by the appropriate IAU Commissions (16 and 17). In particular the Lunar names accepted at the XIVth and XVth General Assemblies were recommended by the 'Working Group on Lunar Nomenclature' under the Chairmanship of Dr D. H. Menzel. The Martian names were suggested by the 'Working Group on Martian Nomenclature' under the Chairmanship of Dr G. de Vaucouleurs. At the XVth General Assembly a new 'Working Group on Planetary System Nomenclature' was formed (Chairman: Dr P. M. Millman) comprising various Task Groups, one for each particular subject. For further references see: [AU Trans. X, 259-263, 1960; XIB, 236-238, 1962; Xlffi, 203-204, 1966; xnffi, 99-105, 1968; XIVB, 63, 129, 139, 1971; Space Sci. Rev. 12, 136-186, 1971. Because at the recent General Assemblies some small changes, or corrections, were made, the complete list of Lunar and Martian Topographic Features is published here. Table 1 Lunar Craters Abbe 58S,174E Balboa 19N,83W Abbot 6N,55E Baldet 54S, 151W Abel 34S,85E Balmer 20S,70E Abul Wafa 2N,ll7E Banachiewicz 5N,80E Adams 32S,69E Banting 26N,16E Aitken 17S,173E Barbier 248, 158E AI-Biruni 18N,93E Barnard 30S,86E Alden 24S, lllE Barringer 29S,151W Aldrin I.4N,22.1E Bartels 24N,90W Alekhin 68S,131W Becquerei -
Tv Jockeys for Position in Digital-Marketing
www.spotsndots.com Subscriptions: $350 per year. This publication cannot be distributed beyond the office of the actual subscriber. Need us? 888-884-2630 or [email protected] The Daily News of TV Sales Thursday, April 25, 2019 Copyright 2018. TV JOCKEYS FOR POSITION IN DIGITAL-MARKETING AGE SCALE, EMOTION MAKE TV ‘THE MAIN DRIVER’ ADVERTISER NEWS Many digital markets claim TV is an ailing ad medium, but Ford Motor, in another move to shore up its electrification Bob Feinberg, vice president of Yonkers Honda in greater efforts, says it’s investing $500 million in electric vehicle New York City, says no way. “Discount (the influence) of TV startup Rivian and plans to build a battery EV using Rivian’s at your own peril,” he says, indicating many dealers like him flexible skateboard platform. The move comes weeks after consider television advertising alive and well and adapting talks between Rivian and General Motors reportedly broke to the digital age. down. GM reportedly was interested in becoming an equity He finds it ironic, Wards Auto reports, investor in Rivian, much like Amazon, that many digital enterprises nonetheless which invested $700 million in the startup advertise on TV. That group includes in February. For Ford, Automotive News Carvana, Google, Amazon and Netflix. reports, the deal secures another ally to Digital marketers who claim TV has lost manage costs and development in a hyper- power as an advertising outlet are flat- competitive space where it has so far lagged out wrong, contends Danielle DeLauro, behind much of the competition... Amazon executive vice president of the Video has started delivering packages inside Advertising Bureau.