List of Tax Exempt Properties in Linn County - 2013 Assessment Year

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

List of Tax Exempt Properties in Linn County - 2013 Assessment Year LIST OF TAX EXEMPT PROPERTIES IN LINN COUNTY - 2013 ASSESSMENT YEAR Tax Net Parcel Number Class Deed Owner Deed Address City, State Zip District Acres 201 142640100600000 E 7TH DAY CHURCH OF GOD 3103 PIONEER AVE SE CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52403 - 201 141925200400000 E ABBE INC 1860 COUNTY HOME RD MARION, IA 52302 - 040 170515200200000 E ABBEY CREEK CEMETERY - 286 142230101700000 E AFFORDABLE HOUSING NETWORK INC 210 2ND ST SE #300 CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52401 - 203 190420100100000 E AFFORDABLE HOUSING NETWORK INC 5400 KIRKWOOD BOULEVARD SW CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52404 - 286 142228402100000 E AFFORDABLE HOUSING NETWORK INC 5400 KIRKWOOD BLVD SW CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52404 - 286 142228403100000 E AFFORDABLE HOUSING NETWORK INC 5400 KIRKWOOD BLVD SW CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52404 - 286 142228500900000 E AFFORDABLE HOUSING NETWORK INC 5400 KIRKWOOD BLVD SW CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52404 - 286 142228501100000 E AFFORDABLE HOUSING NETWORK INC 5400 KIRKWOOD BLVD SW CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52404 - 286 142228501200000 E AFFORDABLE HOUSING NETWORK INC 5400 KIRKWOOD BLVD SW CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52404 - 286 142228501300000 E AFFORDABLE HOUSING NETWORK INC 5400 KIRKWOOD BLVD SW CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52404 - 286 142228501400000 E AFFORDABLE HOUSING NETWORK INC 5400 KIRKWOOD BLVD SW CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52404 - 286 142228502300000 E AFFORDABLE HOUSING NETWORK INC 5400 KIRKWOOD BLVD SW CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52404 - 286 142228502500000 E AFFORDABLE HOUSING NETWORK INC 5400 KIRKWOOD BLVD SW CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52404 - 286 142230103700000 E AFFORDABLE HOUSING NETWORK INC 5400 KIRKWOOD BLVD SW CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52404 - 286 142230200200000 E AFFORDABLE HOUSING NETWORK INC 5400 KIRKWOOD BLVD SW CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52404 - 286 142230201000000 E AFFORDABLE HOUSING NETWORK INC 5400 KIRKWOOD BLVD SW CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52404 - 286 142230201200000 E AFFORDABLE HOUSING NETWORK INC 5400 KIRKWOOD BLVD SW CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52404 - 286 142230202500000 E AFFORDABLE HOUSING NETWORK INC 5400 KIRKWOOD BLVD SW CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52404 - 286 142230300400000 E AFFORDABLE HOUSING NETWORK INC 5400 KIRKWOOD BLVD SW CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52404 - 286 142230400700000 E AFFORDABLE HOUSING NETWORK INC 5400 KIRKWOOD BLVD SW CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52404 - 286 142230504100000 E AFFORDABLE HOUSING NETWORK INC 5400 KIRKWOOD BLVD SW CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52404 - 286 142230801600000 E AFFORDABLE HOUSING NETWORK INC 5400 KIRKWOOD BLVD SW CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52404 - 286 142237701100000 E AFFORDABLE HOUSING NETWORK INC 5400 KIRKWOOD BLVD SW CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52404 - 286 142243100400000 E AFFORDABLE HOUSING NETWORK INC 5400 KIRKWOOD BLVD SW CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52404 - 286 142243301000000 E AFFORDABLE HOUSING NETWORK INC 5400 KIRKWOOD BLVD SW CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52404 - 286 142243400300000 E AFFORDABLE HOUSING NETWORK INC 5400 KIRKWOOD BLVD SW CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52404 - 286 142243400700000 E AFFORDABLE HOUSING NETWORK INC 5400 KIRKWOOD BLVD SW CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52404 - 286 142243401000000 E AFFORDABLE HOUSING NETWORK INC 5400 KIRKWOOD BLVD SW CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52404 - 286 142243600400000 E AFFORDABLE HOUSING NETWORK INC 5400 KIRKWOOD BLVD SW CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52404 - 286 142243700600000 E AFFORDABLE HOUSING NETWORK INC 5400 KIRKWOOD BLVD SW CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52404 - 288 142910201100000 E AFFORDABLE HOUSING NETWORK INC 5400 KIRKWOOD BLVD SW CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52404 - 286 142230202700000 E AFFORDABLE HOUSING NETWORK INC PO BOX 75006 CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52407 - 286 142230400200000 E AFFORDABLE HOUSING NETWORK INC % MICHAEL P DONOHUE PO BOX 5513 CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52406 - 201 140520800400000 E AFFORDABLE HOUSING NETWORK INC ATTN: PRESIDENT 5400 KIRKWOOD BOULEVARD SW CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52404 - 285 142840600202000 E AFRICAN AMERICAN HISTORICAL MUSEUM 55 12TH AVE SE CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52403 - 077 103235601200000 E AGING SERVICES INC 800 1ST ST NW CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52405 0.99 201 142025200800000 E AGING SERVICES INC 3100 E AVE NW SUITE 103 CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52405 - 286 142230600300000 E AHNI HOLDINGS 5400 KIRKWOOD BLVD SW CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52404 - 286 142232600700000 E AHNI HOLDINGS 5400 KIRKWOOD BLVD SW CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52404 - LIST OF TAX EXEMPT PROPERTIES IN LINN COUNTY - 2013 ASSESSMENT YEAR Tax Net Parcel Number Class Deed Owner Deed Address City, State Zip District Acres 286 142242800800000 E AHNI HOLDINGS 5400 KIRKWOOD BLVD SW CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52404 - 286 142230100500000 E AHNI HOLDINGS PO BOX 75006 CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52407 - 287 142110300600000 E AID TO WOMEN INC 701 CENTER POINT RD NE CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52402 - 087 062610302500000 E ALBURNETT CHRISTIAN CHURCH % CURTIS G SCHANTZ 2434 BURNETT STATION RD ALBURNETT, IA 52202 0.28 085 062530100500000 E ALBURNETT CITY OF - 087 062525101000000 E ALBURNETT CITY OF - 087 062532601000000 E ALBURNETT CITY OF - 196 062532600900000 E ALBURNETT CITY OF - 196 062612900400000 E ALBURNETT CITY OF - 087 062525101300000 E ALBURNETT COMMUNITY HISTORICAL SOCIETY PO BOX 395 106 S MAIN AVE ALBURNETT, IA 52202 - 087 062522601200000 E ALBURNETT COMMUNITY SCHOOL DIST 6.16 087 062525100200000 E ALBURNETT COMMUNITY SCHOOL DIST - 087 062610502000000 E ALBURNETT COMMUNITY SCHOOL DIST - 087 062617801500000 E ALBURNETT COMMUNITY SCHOOL DIST 0.18 087 062647600300000 E ALBURNETT COMMUNITY SCHOOL DISTRICT FOUNDATION PO BOX 193 ALBURNETT, IA 52202 - 085 062530100300000 E ALBURNETT TOWN OF - 087 062610200100000 E ALBURNETT TOWN OF - 087 062610200200000 E ALBURNETT TOWN OF - 087 062610500900000 E ALBURNETT TOWN OF - 087 062617600100000 E ALBURNETT TOWN OF - 196 062532600800000 E ALBURNETT TOWN OF - 087 062618300100000 E ALBURNETT UNITED METH CHURCH % ROBERT TITLER PO BOX 88 221 S MAIN AVE ALBURNETT, IA 52202 0.33 086 060535100300000 E ALICE CEMETERY 4617 ALICE RD CENTER POINT, IA 52213 1.44 086 060535100200000 E ALICE EVANGELICAL BERT CHURCH 4617 ALICE RD CENTER POINT, IA 52213 1.00 203 190810100100000 E ALL IOWA AGRICULTURE ASSN 4400 6TH ST SW CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52404 93.65 201 142345600600000 E ALL SAINTS CATHOLIC CHURCH 720 29TH ST SE CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52403 - 201 142345601800000 E ALL SAINTS CHURCH 720 29TH ST SE CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52403 - 201 142345603100000 E ALL SAINTS CHURCH 720 29TH ST SE CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52403 6.71 201 142345601900000 E ALL SAINTS CHURCH CORP 720 29TH ST SE CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52403 - 201 142445100601019 E ALL-SAINTS CHURCH CORP 720 29TH ST SE CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52403 - 168 201612801200000 E AMERICAN LEGION PEKOMY POST #572 % DON YOUNG PO BOX 276 FAIRFAX, IA 52228 0.23 047 040445700300000 E AMERICAN LEGION RAY POST #376 PO BOX 248 214 GREENE ST WALKER, IA 52352 0.08 152 070337700704000 E AMERICAN LEGION WAPSIE POST #421 5050 SHADY OAK AVE CENTRAL CITY, IA 52214 0.45 152 070316000104000 E AMVETS-AMER VETS OF WW2 POST 37 % JERALD DREISMEIER PO BOX 325 CENTRAL CITY, IA 52214 - 001 152120100104000 E ANTIOCH CHRISTIAN CHURCH PO BOX 187 MARION, IA 52302 - 001 152127600104000 E ANTIOCH CHRISTIAN CHURCH PO BOX 187 MARION, IA 52302 - 001 152130100200000 E ANTIOCH CHRISTIAN CHURCH PO BOX 187 MARION, IA 52302 9.39 206 142813400300000 E ARC OF EAST CENTRAL IOWA 680 2ND ST SE STE 200 CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52401 - 031 200410100500000 E ARCHDIOCESE OF DUBUQUE 1229 MT LORETTA AVE DUBUQUE, IA 52004 - 272 143237600700000 E AREA AMBULANCE AUTHORITY 1230 12TH ST SW CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52404 3.00 LIST OF TAX EXEMPT PROPERTIES IN LINN COUNTY - 2013 ASSESSMENT YEAR Tax Net Parcel Number Class Deed Owner Deed Address City, State Zip District Acres 203 190440200200000 E AREA SUBSTANCE ABUSE COUNCIL 3601 16TH AVE SW CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52404 - 201 133610100300000 E AREA SUBSTANCE ABUSE COUNCIL INC 3601 16TH AVE SW CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52404 - 201 133610100400000 E AREA SUBSTANCE ABUSE COUNCIL INC 3601 16TH AVE SW CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52404 - 201 133610100800000 E AREA SUBSTANCE ABUSE COUNCIL INC 3601 16TH AVE SW CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52404 - 203 191520100100000 E AREA TEN COMMUNITY COLLEGE 6301 KIRKWOOD BLVD SW CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52401 - 203 191530100101001 E AREA TEN COMMUNITY COLLEGE 6301 KIRKWOOD BLVD SW CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52404 - 203 191530100101002 E AREA TEN COMMUNITY COLLEGE 6301 KIRKWOOD BLVD SW CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52404 - 203 191530100300000 E AREA TEN COMMUNITY COLLEGE 6301 KIRKWOOD BLVD SW CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52404 148.39 283 143213201500000 E AREA TEN COMMUNITY COLLEGE 6301 KIRKWOOD BLVD SW CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52404 - 201 143337700200000 E ASBURY METHODIST CHURCH 336 27TH AVE SW CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52404 - 201 143335400100000 E ASBURY UNITED METHODIST CHURCH OF CEDAR RAPIDS 350 27TH AVE SW CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52404 - 201 143335402500000 E ASBURY UNITED METHODIST CHURCH OF CEDAR RAPIDS FOUNDATION378 27TH AVE SW CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52404 - 073 150645501600000 E ASCENSION LUTHERAN CHURCH % CHURCH TREASURER 2210 GRAND AVE MARION, IA 52302 4.02 203 190232600200000 E BAKER CEMETERY - 286 142230202400000 E BECK KATHRYN D - 205 112625100100000 E BELIEVERS IN GRACE FELLOWSHIP 8600 C AVE NE MARION, IA 52302 - 001 153037600200000 E BENA ROSE I 3.00 201 140427800100000 E BEREAN BAPTIST CHURCH 5037 CENTER POINT RD NE CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52402 - 004 153438400400000 E BERTRAM CITY OF - 004 153438400500000 E BERTRAM CITY OF - 006 180410100600000 E BERTRAM CITY OF 10.44 006 180410400100000 E BERTRAM CITY OF - 004 153437800300000 E BERTRAM METHODIST CHURCH 211 ANGLE ST - BERTRAM CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52403 0.24 006 180322700100000 E BERTRAM TOWN OF - 001 152722600300000 E BERTRAM TOWNSHIP - 201 141432901400000 E BETHANY EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN CHURCH 2204 FOREST DR SE CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52403 - 201 141432900100000 E BETHANY LUTHERAN CHURCH 2202 FOREST DR SE CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52403 - 428 142148600900000 E BETHEL AFRICAN METHODIST CHURCH 512 6TH ST SE CEDAR RAPIDS, IA 52401 - 201 132630201000000 E BETHEL AFRICAN METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH 120 EASTVIEW DR NW CEDAR
Recommended publications
  • Rmte6 MAY 16 1978
    THERMAL DELIGHT IN ARCHITECTURE by Lisa Heschong B.Sc., University of California at Berkeley 1973 submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Architecture at the MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY June, 1978 Signature of Author ............. Department of Architecture Februa. 14, 978 Certified by......................................................... Edward B. Allen, Thesis Supervisor Associate Professor of Architecture Accepted by...0. ..... ... Ch ter Sprague, Chairman Departmental Committee for Graduate Students Copyright 1978, Lisa Heschong RMte6 MAY 16 1978 Abstract THERMAL DELIGHT IN ARCHITECTURE Lisa Heschong Submitted to the Department of Architecture on February 14, 1978 in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Architecture. This thesis examines the broad range of influences that thermal qualities have on architectural space and peoples' response to it. It begins with the observation that proper thermal conditions are necessary for all life forms, and examines the various strategies used by plants and animals to survive in spite of adverse thermal conditions. Human beings have available to them the widest range of thermal strategies. These include the skillful use of building technologies to create favorable microclimates, and the use of ar- tificial power to maintain a comfortable thermal environment. Survival strategies and the provision of thermal comfort are only the most basic levels of our relationship to the thermal en- vironment. Our experience of the world is through our senses, in- cluding the thermal sense. Many examples demonstrate the relation- ship of the thermal sense to the other senses. The more sensory input we experience, and the more varied the contrasts, the richer is the experience and its associated feelings of delight.
    [Show full text]
  • Bosnian Muslim Reformists Between the Habsburg and Ottoman Empires, 1901-1914 Harun Buljina
    Empire, Nation, and the Islamic World: Bosnian Muslim Reformists between the Habsburg and Ottoman Empires, 1901-1914 Harun Buljina Submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY 2019 © 2019 Harun Buljina All rights reserved ABSTRACT Empire, Nation, and the Islamic World: Bosnian Muslim Reformists between the Habsburg and Ottoman Empires, 1901-1914 Harun Buljina This dissertation is a study of the early 20th-century Pan-Islamist reform movement in Bosnia-Herzegovina, tracing its origins and trans-imperial development with a focus on the years 1901-1914. Its central figure is the theologian and print entrepreneur Mehmed Džemaludin Čaušević (1870-1938), who returned to his Austro-Hungarian-occupied home province from extended studies in the Ottoman lands at the start of this period with an ambitious agenda of communal reform. Čaušević’s project centered on tying his native land and its Muslim inhabitants to the wider “Islamic World”—a novel geo-cultural construct he portrayed as a viable model for communal modernization. Over the subsequent decade, he and his followers founded a printing press, standardized the writing of Bosnian in a modified Arabic script, organized the country’s Ulema, and linked these initiatives together in a string of successful Arabic-script, Ulema-led, and theologically modernist print publications. By 1914, Čaušević’s supporters even brought him to a position of institutional power as Bosnia-Herzegovina’s Reis-ul-Ulema (A: raʾīs al-ʿulamāʾ), the country’s highest Islamic religious authority and a figure of regional influence between two empires.
    [Show full text]
  • Other Social Effects Report
    OTHER SOCIAL EFFECTS REPORT City of Cedar Rapids, Iowa - Flood of 2008 Created on June 7, 2010 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Abbe Center for Mental Health Cedar Rapids Community School District Cedar Rapids Area Chamber of Commerce Corridor Recovery Cedar Rapids Downtown District City of Cedar Rapids Departments - Community Development - Public Works - Utilities (Water Department and Water Pollution Control) - Parks and Recreation - Finance - Police Department - Fire Department - Code Enforcement - CR Transit - City Manager‘s Office Dennis P. Robinson Gerry Galloway JMS Communications & Research Linn County Long Term Recovery Coalition Ken Potter, Professor of Civil & Environmental Engineering, University of Wisconsin Red Cross Salvation Army Sasaki Associates The Greater Cedar Rapids Community Foundation United States Army Corps of Engineers, Rock Island District Other Social Effects Report TABLE OF CONTENTS Executive Summary .................................................................................................... 1 Introduction ................................................................................................................. 4 Overview ................................................................................................................................. 4 Scope of Report....................................................................................................................... 6 Key Messages ........................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Portrait of Cedar Rapids
    Portrait of Cedar Rapids One of the oldest mosques in America, and the first Muslim cemetery in the U.S., can be found in a surprising place: Cedar Rapids, Iowa. Cedar Rapids is one of the least ethnically diverse cities in the U.S.,1 and Iowa, a largely agricultural state, has more cows than people.2 Here, the “heartland” of America, is home to five generations of Muslim Americans. In the late 1800s, immigrants from Syria and Lebanon made their way across the U.S. Their main business was selling goods to the farmers as pacK-peddlers; they later established small stores, and many settled in Cedar Rapids. These early Syrian-Lebanese immigrants, both Christian and Muslim, slowly grew in number; once they began having families, they recognized the need for places of worship in Cedar Rapids. The earlyPost Muslim and Christian immigrant families were close-knit and supportive of each other: after the completion of St. George’s Orthodox Church, the Muslim community purchased a cross for the new building; shortly after, the two communities would celebrate the establishment of the mosque in 1934. Today, the “Mother Mosque of America” is on the National Register of Historic Places. The small, simple structure is an unassuming landmark, surrounded by a chain linK fence and tucKedOr into a modest neighborhood of Cedar Rapids. The green awning, dome, and crescent announce its presence as a mosque, yet the one-story building evokes a prairie schoolhouse. Over the years, the building went by many different names: in the early days, some referred to it as the nadi (“club” in Arabic),“The Rose of Fraternity Lodge,” and “The Moslem Temple”; later, it was Known as “The Islamic Center.”3 The community sold the building in the 1970s in order to build a new center; the original structure later fell into disrepair and was abandoned.
    [Show full text]
  • The Year of the River Incredible Damage
    THE YEAR OF THE RIVER Long before the floodwaters arrived, Cedar Rapids had designated 2008 as “The Year of the River” to celebrate the city’s connection to the Cedar River. The slogan also commemorated the 100th anniversary of the city’s purchase of May’s Island, a downtown, midchannel slice of land about the size and shape of a battleship. But the phrase quickly took on a new meaning after the river crested at over 31 feet above flood stage — and more than 11 feet above the previous record of 19.66 feet set National Czech and Slovak Museum and Library. in 1961. About 60 percent of Iowa’s total 2008 flood damage occurred in Cedar Rapids. Rising Above the Waters is a documentary of the floods of 2008 produced by KGAN-TV in Cedar Cedar Rapids is an industrial city founded on a Rapids. In it, U.S. Representative Bruce Braley said, floodplain. It is also Iowa’s second-largest “One of the most vivid memories I have was flying metropolitan area with a 2008 population of about down the Cedar River from the Waterloo airport to 125,000. It has no upstream flood protection. the Cedar Rapids airport and seeing from the air Much of its manufacturing and chemical industries, the devastation all along the river and particularly governmental and public buildings, and historic the overwhelming devastation to downtown Cedar residential and commercial neighborhoods are Rapids.” low-lying. Depending on their location, they were either unprotected from flooding in 2008 or The flood affected every aspect of Cedar Rapids: shielded by a patchwork of modest levees that Commerce.
    [Show full text]
  • American Stories by Kambiz Ghaneabassiri
    Presented by National Endowment for the Humanities in cooperation with American Library Association and Ali Vural Ak Center for Global Islamic Studies, George Mason University new world of almost limitless potential. When the Khan. By the sixteenth century, this empire had painting is seen from this perspective, virtually faded into distant memory. But in our painting, the only possibility the artist seems to exclude is its cultural legacy can still be seen in the sweeping the presence of any people other than the Spanish zigzag of the landscape, and the angular energy of themselves. And in this sense, for all its exuberance, the rocks and trees—both features highly evocative his painting conveys an image of history that is of Chinese visual styles. anything but connected, one in which Europeans are the only real protagonists, and the world exists only Such details helped to ensure that our painting for them to explore—and, eventually, to conquer. would appeal to Sultan Murad, a famously generous patron of the arts with the tastes of a connoisseur. But look again—for this painting, much like But why, from the comfort of his palace in Istanbul, history itself, holds many lessons to uncover, some would the sultan have been interested in a book obvious at first glance and others scribbled in the about Spanish America in the first place? The answer margins or hidden just beneath the surface. To begin is to be found not in the painting itself, but in the with, look at the unfamiliar writing at the top of the sweeping political events of that moment in world page.
    [Show full text]
  • American Protestantism and the Kyrias School for Girls, Albania By
    Of Women, Faith, and Nation: American Protestantism and the Kyrias School For Girls, Albania by Nevila Pahumi A dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy (History) in the University of Michigan 2016 Doctoral Committee: Professor Pamela Ballinger, Co-Chair Professor John V.A. Fine, Co-Chair Professor Fatma Müge Göçek Professor Mary Kelley Professor Rudi Lindner Barbara Reeves-Ellington, University of Oxford © Nevila Pahumi 2016 For my family ii Acknowledgements This project has come to life thanks to the support of people on both sides of the Atlantic. It is now the time and my great pleasure to acknowledge each of them and their efforts here. My long-time advisor John Fine set me on this path. John’s recovery, ten years ago, was instrumental in directing my plans for doctoral study. My parents, like many well-intended first generation immigrants before and after them, wanted me to become a different kind of doctor. Indeed, I made a now-broken promise to my father that I would follow in my mother’s footsteps, and study medicine. But then, I was his daughter, and like him, I followed my own dream. When made, the choice was not easy. But I will always be grateful to John for the years of unmatched guidance and support. In graduate school, I had the great fortune to study with outstanding teacher-scholars. It is my committee members whom I thank first and foremost: Pamela Ballinger, John Fine, Rudi Lindner, Müge Göcek, Mary Kelley, and Barbara Reeves-Ellington.
    [Show full text]
  • Summary of Sexual Abuse Claims in Chapter 11 Cases of Boy Scouts of America
    Summary of Sexual Abuse Claims in Chapter 11 Cases of Boy Scouts of America There are approximately 101,135sexual abuse claims filed. Of those claims, the Tort Claimants’ Committee estimates that there are approximately 83,807 unique claims if the amended and superseded and multiple claims filed on account of the same survivor are removed. The summary of sexual abuse claims below uses the set of 83,807 of claim for purposes of claims summary below.1 The Tort Claimants’ Committee has broken down the sexual abuse claims in various categories for the purpose of disclosing where and when the sexual abuse claims arose and the identity of certain of the parties that are implicated in the alleged sexual abuse. Attached hereto as Exhibit 1 is a chart that shows the sexual abuse claims broken down by the year in which they first arose. Please note that there approximately 10,500 claims did not provide a date for when the sexual abuse occurred. As a result, those claims have not been assigned a year in which the abuse first arose. Attached hereto as Exhibit 2 is a chart that shows the claims broken down by the state or jurisdiction in which they arose. Please note there are approximately 7,186 claims that did not provide a location of abuse. Those claims are reflected by YY or ZZ in the codes used to identify the applicable state or jurisdiction. Those claims have not been assigned a state or other jurisdiction. Attached hereto as Exhibit 3 is a chart that shows the claims broken down by the Local Council implicated in the sexual abuse.
    [Show full text]
  • BY the NUMBERS Cedar Rapids Flood Damage $384,514,096 In
    BY THE NUMBERS 7,749 properties were flooded, including: Cedar Rapids Flood Damage • 5,900 residential (56 percent of these were owner-occupied and 34 percent were rental units) • 1,049 commercial units • 84 industrial units • 51 agricultural units • 41 units of other types 6,580 properties were assessed for damages as of July 21, 2008. Of these: • 47 were destroyed • 457 had major damage • 4,340 had minor damage • 1,636 were damaged but habitable 1,356 properties were bought out, including 1,259 funded entirely by CDBG grant money. May's Island, FEMA Photo 700 businesses were affected by the flood. $384,514,096 in CDBG-Disaster Recovery funding was administered by IEDA to help 700 National Guard personnel secured the Cedar Rapids recover. (For a graph illustrating perimeter and brought their own vehicles, how the funds were spent, see “Where the trailers, and supplies. Money Went” in the resources area of the Cedar Rapids page). 310 city facilities were affected, costing an estimated $500 million to repair and rebuild, 10+ square miles of Cedar Rapids were flooded including: — 14 percent of the city’s land area. That • Veterans Memorial Building (then home to amounts to 1,126 city blocks, half of which City Hall) were severely damaged. Districts affected • Central Fire Station included Downtown, Czech Village, New • Police Station Bohemia, Oakhill Jackson, Rompot/Cedar • Animal Control building Valley, the Taylor School neighborhood, and • Public Works building Time Check. • Ground Transportation Center, the city’s transportation hub (Cedar Rapids Transit was back in modified operation one week 4 football stadiums worth of flood debris was after the flood) removed from Cedar Rapids neighborhoods by • Main public library the end of 2008 at a cost of $9 million.
    [Show full text]
  • Coe College Board of Trustees Profiles
    COE COLLEGE BOARD OF TRUSTEES PROFILES J. DAVID CARSON – CHAIR (2000-2019) Dave Carson is originally from Chicago and presently lives in Northville, Michigan (west suburb of Detroit). Dave was a member of the senior global finance executive team at Ford Motor Company when he retired in January 2007; during his 33–year career he was based both in Detroit and in Europe. Since retiring, he has been an advisor to several companies. Dave graduated from Coe in 1972, majoring in economics and business administration, and earned an MBA from the University of Iowa. Prior to joining Ford, he taught at Coe for two years. He has been a member of the Coe Board of Trustees since 2000. He and his wife, Mary (Bridenstine) Carson ’73, have an adult son and daughter. Dave loves golf, reading and traveling. KEN GOLDER – VICE CHAIR (2007-2019) Ken Golder, originally from Winnetka, Illinois, is a “semi-retired” Real Estate Investor and Hotelier. He graduated from Coe in 1982 with an interdisciplinary bachelor’s degree in communication techniques. Ken has almost 30 years of experience in the hotel industry and has held various positions with Americana, Registry, Holiday Inn Corporation and Promus Hotels (Embassy Suites). He is a Certified Hospitality Marketing Executive (CHME), past Board Member of the St. Paul Convention & Visitors Authority, and former President of the Minnesota Hospitality Sales & Marketing Association. Since 2000, Ken has acquired and manages a variety of hotel properties including: Holiday Inn – St. Paul Downtown; Holiday Inn Express – Deerfield, Illinois; and Staybridge Suites Airport – Columbus, Ohio. He and his wife, Sue (Roe) Golder ’82, have lived in Apple Valley, Minnesota since 1986.
    [Show full text]
  • Coming of Age in Multiracial America: South Asian Political Incorporation
    Coming of Age in Multiracial America: South Asian Political Incorporation Sayu V. Bhojwani Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy under the Executive Committee of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY 2014 © 2014 Sayu V. Bhojwani All rights reserved ABSTRACT Coming of Age in Multiracial America: South Asian Political Incorporation Sayu Bhojwani America has long been a nation of immigrants, but never before has it been as multiracial as it is today. This diversity coincides with an evolving political landscape, in which the role of political parties is declining, and nonprofits are increasingly more relevant in immigrant mobilization. In this multiracial and dynamic political arena, racial and ethnic groups are learning both how to build political power and how to negotiate for power across racial and ethnic lines. Among the many groups engaged in this process of political incorporation are South Asians, and this research looks at their political incorporation through a case study of New York City using elite interviews of nonprofit leaders, elected officials and political candidates. Often portrayed as a model minority, South Asians are perceived as well- integrated into American life. This study sought to assess whether in fact this perception applies to political incorporation, through the exploration of these questions: (1) In what ways do South Asians participate in electoral and non-electoral activities? What does their participation or nonparticipation indicate
    [Show full text]
  • Folk Arts in Education: a Resource Handbook. INSTITUTION Michigan Stat Univ., East
    DOCUMENT RESUME ED 390 743 SO 025 598 AUTHOR MacDowell, Marsha, Ed. TITLE Folk Arts in Education: A Resource Handbook. INSTITUTION Michigan Stat Univ., East. Lansing. University Museum. PUB DATE 87 NOTE 349p. PUB TYPE Guides Non-Classroom Use (055) Reports Descriptive (141) EDRS PRICE MFOI/PC14 Plus Postage. DESCRIPTORS Art Education; Cultural Pluralism; Curriculum Design: Curriculum Guides; *Educational Resources; Elementary Secondary Education; *Folk Culture; *Instructional Materials; *Program Descriptions; Program Design; Program Development; Teaching Guides; Traditionalism IDENTIFIERS *Folk Art; *Folk Patterns ABSTRACT This compendium of resources is designed for use by teachers, art educators, museum staff, youth leaders, program planners, and folklorists. Organized in the following way, chapter 1, "Folk Arts in Education," provides an overview of the development of folk-arts-in-education programs; chapter 2, "Reports from the Field," contains short reports from indiv:duals who have developed or participated in a variety of folk-arts-in education projects and programs; chapter 3, "Resources," is a listing of individuals and organizations who cuuld provide professional assistance for folk arts programming; chapter 4, "Bibliography," includes entries chosen to give general overviews of folklore study and specific references to folklife in education; and chapter 5, "Glossary," contains a short list of folklife and education terms. The remaining portion of this handbook contains excerpts from a wide range of materials developed for folk-arts-in-education projects. These excerpts indicate the variety of formats, approaches, and curriculum models used in the development of some projects. Each section of excerpts has been prefaced itri a short description. (MM) kebroduclions supplied by LDRS are the bestthat .an be made from the original document.
    [Show full text]