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Oregon Country Fair Board of Directors' Meeting February 1, 2016, 7:00, NW Youth Corps, Columbia Room
Oregon Country Fair Board of Directors' Meeting February 1, 2016, 7:00, NW Youth Corps, Columbia room Board members present: Diane Albino, Casey Marks Fife, Justin Honea, Lucy Kingsley, Jack Makarchek (president), Indigo Ronlov (vice-president), Kirk Shultz, Jon Silvermoon , Lawrence Taylor (Alternate), Sue Theolass, Bear Wilner-Nugent. Peach Gallery present: Staff (Tom, Crystalyn, Robin and Shane), Officers (Hilary, Grumpy and Randy), and 41 members and guests. Indigo: I would like move the reports for committee and staff after the Old business due to the amount of business that we have to cover tonight. Everyone agreed. New Business Approve Capital Projects (Bear) Approve Caretaker job description (Jon) Appoint Caretaker hiring committee (Jon) Appoint Pablo Bristow to the Vision Action committee Appoint Carmella Fleming to the Diversity Task Force Appoint Paxton to the Community Center Committee (Kirk) Policy for naming New Area (Kirk) Appoint Becky Lamarsh as Site crew coordinator (Bear) Announcements Peggy: KOCF fundraiser is March 5, 2016 at Domaine Meriwether winery from 6:00pm to 8:30pm. It will be a silent auction and we are accepting donations. Etouffee will be the band. Gary: My wife Monica and I bought the Noti High School. We will keep it a school and open it up for camping during this year’s Fair. Sue: Sunday, February 7, 2016 is the second annual Kareng fund art bingo at the Broadway Commerce Center at 44 W Broadway. There will be select goodies from Dana’s cheesecake with all of those proceeds going to the Kareng fund. The Kareng Fund aids Oregon crafters and artisans experiencing a career-threatening crisis. -
THE M STREET J0 URNAL Published Weekly Since 1984 304 Park Avenue S 7Th Floor, New York, NY 10010 Phone (212) 473 -4668 FAX (212) 473 -4626
THE M STREET j0 URNAL Published Weekly Since 1984 304 Park Avenue S 7th Floor, New York, NY 10010 Phone (212) 473 -4668 FAX (212) 473 -4626 ROBERT UNMACHT, Editor Oct. 1, 1992 Vol. 9. No. 39 COPYRIGHT 1992 FORMAT CHANGES ( # change accompanies new ownership) ( // simulcast) formerly becomes AL Butler WPRN -1330 CHR // WQGL country // WQGL Butler WQGL -93.5 CHR country Centre (Gadsden) WRHY -105.9 new adult contemporary Talladega WNUZ -1230 arit1lt contemporary oldies AK Fairbanks KWLF -98.1 CHR JSA - AC AR Benton KEWI -690 # KBBA, silent news, talk (KBBA uses the IBN, SUN, and USA networks) Little Rock KJBN -1050 # KWNN, motivational religion CA Paradise KZZP -96.7 classic rock adds SMN- classic rock San Francisco KSFO -560 # oldies // KYA oldies, sports (KSFO will be sports talk from 7 pm - 5 am) CO Littleton (Denver) KDKO -1510 urban reported silent CT Hartford WTIC -1080 news, talk, AC adds EFM - talk Salisbury WKZE -FM -98.1 new soft AC DE Wilmington WDEL -1150 AC, talk news, talk FL Cantonment WJBW -1090 religion standards // FM, talk Chattahoochee WTCL -1580 religion urban Gretna (Tallahassee) WGWD -100.7 oldies adult contemporary Key West WKWF -1600 talk silent Key West WAIL -99.5 rock silent Lake City WDSR -1340 news, talk SMN Kool - oldies Mexico Beach (Panama) WEBZ -99.3 easy listening soft AC Pensacola WVTJ -610 WHYM, religion Southern gospel Tallahassee WNLS -1270 country talk Titusville WAMT -1060 silent oldies GA Alpharetta (Atlanta) WAZX -1400 religion Spanish Atlanta WKHX -590 country // FM SMN Real - country Dublin WQZY -95.9 CHR country Gainesville WGGA -1240 standards, talk adds S. -
Media Guide for Federal Leaders in Oklahoma
Media Guide for Federal Agencies Discussing the traditional forms of Media Interaction AND addressing the topic of Social Media! Oklahoma Federal Executive Board 215 Dean A. McGee, Suite 320 Oklahoma City, OK 73102 (405) 231-4167 www.oklahoma.feb.gov Distributed July 2011 INTRODUCTION Federal agencies have a responsibility to provide accurate and timely information to the general public and the media. In many cases, however, agencies do not have a person designated and trained as a Public Affairs Officer (PAO). In such instances, the CEO or a front-line employee must act as the agency's representative to the public. Many times, the intended message may be lost during the interview; often lack of planning or an inability to relay the message in succinct, easy to understand terms is the cause. Dealing with the media can be a daunting, nerve-wracking experience, whether it is in a face-to-face interview, phone interview or on camera. It is important to be at your best when communicating your message. This guide has been developed to assist those individuals called upon to speak on behalf of their agency to the press, both managerial and non-managerial employees. Whether you are responding to inquiries, arranging or participating in an interview, or simply providing information for print or broadcast, it is hoped that this media guide will provide you with useful information and some important tips to assist you. The purpose of this Media Guide is informational in nature for public employees. As in the past, the guidance is based on the principle that the business of Government is vital to serving the public everywhere. -
In Remembrance Chief Cumshewa Chief Skidegate
April 2008 SEEING WHAT AN HUMMING- OTHER NATIONS UNBROKEN BIRD BOOK ARE UP TO THREAD page 11 page 16 page 6 HAIDA LAAS HAIDANewsletter of the Haida Nation LAAS April 2008 In Remembrance Chief Cumshewa Chief Skidegate 1 Haida Laas - Newsletter of the Haida Nation Haida Laas, Haawa Chief Skidegate ... for your generosity in providing for your people for these many years ... for your courage and conviction in standing up for your people and our lands HAIDA LAAS Haawa Chief Cumshewa NEWSLETTER OF THE HAIDA NATION ... for giving of yourself and being there for your people when they needed you published by the Council of the Haida Nation ... for the dignity in which you carried yourself in representing your Clan and the Nation Managing Editor Cindy Boyko (temporary) [email protected] ... Haawa to our Chiefs for your devotion to the unity of our p.250.559.8755 people and well being of our lands Council of the Haida Nation for showing us the power of respect Administrator Box 589, Old Massett we have to accept your well earned rest Haida Gwaii V0T 1M0 p.250.636.5252 we will take what you have given us and finish f.250.626.3404 the good fight 1.888.638.7778 [email protected] ... we will miss you Council of the Haida Nation Haawa Kilslii Administrator Box 98, Queen Charlotte Haida Gwaii V0T 1S0 p.250.559.4468 f.250.559.8951 1.877.559.4468 [email protected] In Remembrance www.haidanation.ca Old Massett Skidegate Gerald Williams Chief Sgiidagids, Dempsey Collinson APRIL 2008 Bertha Williams s Earl Jones The Council of the Haida Nation haidanation.ca extends its deepest sympathies program reports : haida laas links : diplomacy : agreements to the families. -
Agencies, Boards, & Commissions
Agencies, Boards, & Commissions 228 229 Profiles of Agencies, Boards, and Commissions For information about boards or board members, contact the administrator. In the case of subordinate entities, unless a separate address and phone number are given, contact the main agency for information. For governor’s task forces, for example, contact the governor’s office; for legislative committees, contact the Legislative Service Bureau (405/521–4144). If the entity is not listed, consult the index, as it may be listed alphabetically beneath a par- ent entity. Personnel figures are provided by the agency. Interagency Mail availability is indicated by (IA). 2–1–1 Oklahoma Coordinating Council (56 O.S. § 3021) Formerly named the 2–1–1 Advisory Collaborative, Oklahoma www.211oklahoma.org Abstractors Board, Oklahoma (1 O.S. § 22) Re-created until July 1, 2019 Agency Code 022 (IA) www.abstract.ok.gov 2401 NW 23 Street, Suite 60B, Oklahoma City 73107 405/522–5019, fax 405/522–5503 Mission Statement The Oklahoma Abstractors Board regulates the abstracting industry and issues abstractor licenses, certificates of authority, and permits to construct abstract plants. Administration Glynda Reppond, Executive Director Personnel 2 unclassified History and Function The board consists of nine members, six of whom are in the abstracting industry, one real estate representative, one banking representative, and one attorney. All members are appointed by the governor and serve staggered four year terms. The board is responsible for promulgating rules, setting forth guidelines for agency operations, and governing the professional practices of the licensees. The entity is self-supporting through fees. Accountancy Board, Oklahoma (59 O.S. -
Oklahoma Bar Journal 753 754 the Oklahoma Bar Journal Vol
ALSO INSIDE • Fair Debt Collection Practices Act • Juvenile Court • Members Celebrate Significant Anniversaries ALSO INSIDE • Fair Debt Collection Practices Act • Juvenile Court • Members Celebrate Significant Anniversaries The New Lawyer Experience: Hit the Ground Running Oklahoma City • April 30th OPENING A BUSINESS TRUST ACCOUNTING & LEGAL ETHICS • Resources for starting a law practice • The role of OBA Ethics Counsel • Being an employee versus the business owner • The role of OBA General Counsel • Business entity selection • Most common questions of the Ethics Counsel • Physical location/practice setting options • Trustworthy Trust Accounts • Liability insurance and other aspects of risk management • File and document retention • Business planning • Ethical issues facing small firm lawyers Jim Calloway, Director,OBAManagementAssistance • Simple guidelines for ethical conduct Program,OklahomaCity • Ethics resources • Q&A MANAGEMENT - MANAGING YOUR FINANCES, GinaHendryx,OBAEthicsCounsel,OklahomaCity YOUR FILES, AND YOUR STAFF • Profit, loss, and the importance of good financial reports MARKETING • Establishing practice areas • Developing a marketing plan • Setting fees • Ethical marketing strategies • The importance of building work flow systems and tracking • Differences in marketing vs. public relations work in progress • Budgeting - Marketing on a tight budget or no budget • Client file management • Generating referrals - Word of mouth is your best • Billing (retainers, mechanics of billing, “alternative billing,” marketing tool getting -
The Magazine for TV and FM Dxers
The Official Publication of the Worldwide TV-FM DX Association JANUARY 2013 The Magazine for TV and FM DXers Beginning OUR 45th YEAR Serving TV/FM DXers Ode to Dxing - Paul Mitschler WTFDA NOW ON FACEBOOK! Visit Us At www.wtfda.org THE WORLDWIDE TV-FM DX ASSOCIATION Serving the UHF-VHF Enthusiast THE VHF-UHF DIGEST IS THE OFFICIAL PUBLICATION OF THE WORLDWIDE TV-FM DX ASSOCIATION DEDICATED TO THE OBSERVATION AND STUDY OF THE PROPAGATION OF LONG DISTANCE TELEVISION AND FM BROADCASTING SIGNALS AT VHF AND UHF. WTFDA IS GOVERNED BY A BOARD OF DIRECTORS: DOUG SMITH, GREG CONIGLIO, KEITH McGINNIS AND MIKE BUGAJ. Editor and publisher: Mike Bugaj Treasurer: Keith McGinnis wtfda.org Webmaster: Tim McVey wtfda.info Site Administrator: Chris Cervantez Editorial Staff: Jeff Kruszka, Keith McGinnis, Fred Nordquist, Nick Langan, Doug Smith, Peter Baskind, Bill Hale and John Zondlo, Our website: www.wtfda.org; Our forums: www.wtfda.info _______________________________________________________________________________________ JANUARY 2013 Welcome to the January VUD! This issue all members. Some WTFDA members who use marks the 45th anniversary of the WTFDA! TV neither the email list nor the forum site use and FM Dxing has changed considerably since Facebook instead. the club began in 1968. DXing is much harder The Facebook group is here to stay along now but we’ve got more tools than ever to help with the email lists and the WTFDA Forums, so deal with it. Let’s hope that OTA television participate in whatever form you want. It’s all stays around for at least ten more years and good. -
Cultural Feature Identification Standards Manual
Council of the Haida Nation Cultural Feature Identification Standards Manual Version 4.0 January 2016 Contents Purpose of this Document ............................................................................................................................. 1 Background and the Connection to Higher Level Objectives ....................................................................... 1 Use of the Standards ..................................................................................................................................... 1 1.0 Cultural Features ..................................................................................................................................... 2 1.1 Haida Traditional Heritage Features .................................................................................................. 3 Class 1 Haida Traditional Heritage Features ........................................................................................ 3 Class 2 Haida Traditional Heritage Features ........................................................................................ 3 1.2 Haida Traditional Forest Features ....................................................................................................... 3 Class 1 Haida Traditional Forest Features ............................................................................................ 3 Class 2 Haida Traditional Forest Features ............................................................................................ 4 Class 3 Haida Traditional -
Haida Laas Journal - March 2009
Haida Laas Journal - March 2009 HAIDA LAAS JOURNAL of the HAIDA NATION March 2009 1 Haida Laas Journal - March 2009 Haida Laas Journal - March 2009 HAIDA LAAS JOURNAL of the HAIDA NATION published by the Council of the Haida Nation [ March 2009 ] 2 3 Haida Laas Journal - March 2009 Haida Laas Journal - March 2009 > A TIMELINE SHOWING SOME OF THE DISEASES THAT SCOURGED THE ISLANDS. From 1774 - 1890 waves of disease ran through populations on the coast up into Alaska and across the Arctic. These wave of disease originated with newcomers and swept down from the north CONTENTS coast and up from the south. Smallpox was the most deadly but in the mix were measles, influenza, cholera, mumps, venerial diseases and others. Strange New Sickness - Kil’iljuss, Barb Wilson ii From a pre-contact population estimate of 180,000 First Nations (in the area now known as British Smallpox: what it is 3 Columbia) only 35 - 40,000 survived this period. Diseases in the western Arctic introduced by whalers kill over a ten year period nine For those of us at Bones Bay: Speaking about the 4 On Haida Gwaii, from an estimated population out of ten people. of 20,0000, approximately 600 survived - only potlatch held at Alert Bay to honour the Haida .03% of the population. at Bones Bay 1647 - influenza 1692 - measles epidemic 1920 - First Nations’ population reachest lowest point. Sometimes, it’s all right there - Kil’iljuss, Barb Wilson 6 For those of us at Bones Bay: Kwiaahwah Jones 7 1600 1700 1800 1900 2000 1740 - 1770s Amherst Way 12 Russians begin trading on the coast. -
The University of Chicago Unsettling Futures: Haida
THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO UNSETTLING FUTURES: HAIDA FUTURE-MAKING, POLITICS AND MOBILITY IN THE SETTLER COLONIAL PRESENT A DISSERTATION SUBMITTED TO THE FACULTY OF THE DIVISION OF THE SOCIAL SCIENCES IN CANDIDACY FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY DEPARTMENT OF ANTHROPOLOGY BY JOSEPH J.Z. WEISS CHICAGO, ILLINOIS DECEMBER 2015 To Hilary Table of Contents Table of Figures ............................................................................................................................. iv Acknowledgments........................................................................................................................... v Chapter 1: An Introduction to Haida Future-Making in Old Massett ............................................. 1 Part 1: Home Chapter 2: Coming Home to Haida Gwaii: Haida Departures and Returns in the Future- Perfect ...................................................................................................................................... 52 Chapter 3: Of Hippies and Haida: Fantasy, Future-Making, and the Alluring Power of Haida Gwaii ............................................................................................................................................. 93 Transition .................................................................................................................................... 136 Part 2: Care Chapter 4: Leading “from the Bottom of the Pole:” Care and Governance in the Haida World 138 Chapter 5: Precarious Authority: Arendt, Endangerment and Environmental -
List of Radio Stations in Oklahoma
Not logged in Talk Contributions Create account Log in Article Talk Read Edit View history Search Wikipedia List of radio stations in Oklahoma From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Main page The following is a list of FCC-licensed radio stations in the U.S. state of Oklahoma, which can be Contents sorted by their call signs, frequencies, cities of license, licensees, and programming formats. Featured content Current events Contents [hide] Random article 1 List of radio stations Donate to Wikipedia 2 Defunct Wikipedia store 3 See also 4 References Interaction 5 Bibliography Help 6 External links About Wikipedia 7 Images Community portal Recent changes Contact page List of radio stations [edit] Tools This list is complete and up to date as of January 29, 2019. What links here Related changes City of Upload file Call Frequency License Licensee[3] Branding / Format [4][5] Special pages sign [1][2] open in browser PRO version Are you a developer? Try out the HTML to PDF API pdfcrowd.com [1][2] Permanent link Page information Perry Broadcasting of Apache, KACO 98.5 FM Apache Country Wikidata item Inc. Cite this page KADA 1230 AM Ada The Chickasaw Nation Modern Rock Print/export KADA- 99.3 FM Ada The Chickasaw Nation Adult Contemporary Create a book FM Download as PDF KADS 1240 AM Elk City Paragon Communications, Inc. Sports Printable version Family Worship Center In other projects KAJT 88.7 FM Ada Gospel Church, Inc. Wikimedia Commons Clear Channel Broadcasting KAKC 1300 AM Tulsa Sports Languages Licenses, Inc. Add links American Family Radio / KAKO 91.3 FM Ada American Family Association Religious Talk KALU 89.3 FM Langston Langston University Urban Contemporary KALV 1430 AM Alva MM&K of Alva, Inc. -
Politics of Repatriation: Formalizing Indigenous Cultural Property Rights by Ashleigh ML Breske
Politics of Repatriation: Formalizing Indigenous Cultural Property Rights By Ashleigh ML Breske Dissertation submitted to the faculty of the Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy In Planning, Governance, and Globalization Timothy W. Luke, Chair Ann-Marie Knoblauch Aaron Ansell Tom Skuzinski June 25, 2018 Blacksburg Virginia Keywords: Repatriation, NAGPRA, cultural property indigenism, institutions Copyright 2018 Politics of Repatriation: Formalizing Indigenous Cultural Property Rights Ashleigh ML Breske ABstract This project will be an empirical study into repatriation as a political practice. This theoretically-oriented project investigates how institutions and cultural values mediate changes in the governance of repatriation policy, specifically its formalization and rescaling in the United States. I propose a critical approach to understanding repatriation; specifically, I will draw together issues surrounding museums, repatriation claims, and indigenous communities throughout the development of the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA) in 1990 and current repatriation policy. The interdisciplinary academic narrative I build will explore practices of repatriation and how it relates to the subject of indigenous cultural rights. Using the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology in Philadelphia, PA and the Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago, IL as models for the repatriation process, I will show the historic political tensions and later attempts to repatriate culturally significant objects and human remains in the United States. By examining entrenched discourses prior to NAGPRA and what changed to allow a new dominant discourse in the debates over repatriation claims, I will show that culturally- structured views on repatriation and narratives surrounding indigenous cultural property were transformed.