Complete Bibliography. Updated July 2014. MLA 6Th Edition. Paul Revere Williams Project

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Complete Bibliography. Updated July 2014. MLA 6Th Edition. Paul Revere Williams Project Complete Bibliography. Updated July 2014. MLA 6th edition. Paul Revere Williams Project. Art Museum of the University of Memphis. "$1.1 Million Donated to Community Theater (Lear Theater)." Reno Gazette-Journal (1997): 1. "$2 Million Design: Linde Building." Jet (1958): 17. "$400,000 Estate Property Sold (Landis)." Los Angeles Times March 21 1971: I 19. "$55,000 Residence to be Constructed (Frank R. Woods)." Los Angeles Times July 25 1937, sec. E1:. "$56,000,000 Las Vegas Hotel Will Open Today (Royal Nevada Hotel)." Los Angeles Times April 19 1955: 26. "$6,500,000 Luxury Apartment-Hotel to Go Up." Los Angeles Examiner August 30 1953, sec. C 4: c4. "$7.5 Million Project Will Preview Today (Seaview)." Los Angeles Times January 31 1960, sec. VI 4:. "$7.7 Million Permits Issued in West L.A. (Linde Medical)." Los Angeles Times October 12 1960, sec. B1:. "10,000 Visit New Whittier Tract (Layne Manor)." Los Angeles Times May 1 1949, sec. E3:. "12-Story Medical Center Framework Completed (Linde Medical)." Los Angeles Times March 19 1961, sec. I 6:. "13th Annual Conclave of Builders Will be Held at Hampton, Va." The New York Age February 13 1937, sec. 2:. "14 Renamed to Commissions." Los Angeles Times July 7 1956, sec. A1:. "143-Dwelling Tract Opened (Paramount Grove Homes)." Los Angeles Times February 13 1949, sec. e3:. "1849-1949 Centennial Edition." The Palisadian Friday, June 17 1949, sec. complete issue:. The 1938 Book of Small Houses (California House and Garden Exhibition). Ed. Architectural Forum. 1938th ed. New York: Simon and Schuster, Inc., 1937. "200 Bid to Flintridge Fun Party (J.B. Green)." Los Angeles Times June 17 1956, sec. I 10:. "200 Negro Workers Walk Off Jobs at BMI Plant Today." Las Vegas Evening Review-Journal Wednesday, October 20 1943, sec. A1:. "2004 Eleven most endangered (La Concha." Preserve Nevada. 2008. 5/6/2008 <http://preservenevada.unlv.edu>. "24 to Serve as City of Hope show Advisors." Los Angeles Times May 31 1954, sec. A3:. "29 Palms." West Coast Builder (1930): 16. "3 New Directors Named to Board of Broadway Federal." Los Angeles Times January 19 1952, sec. B6:. 1 Complete Bibliography. Updated July 2014. MLA 6th edition. Paul Revere Williams Project. Art Museum of the University of Memphis. "30 Honored for Service by Magazine." Los Angeles Times December 3 1956, sec. 2:. "37 to Support Proposition 3." Los Angeles Times September 18 1956, sec. 9:. "44 Los Angeles, California, A. Qunicy Jones." The Architectural Review (1957): 368,369. "44th Annual NAACP Conference : Spingarn Medal." The Crisis: A Record of the Darker Races 60.7 (1953): 422-425. "500 Tons of Steel used in Orange County Post Office." Los Angeles Times October 15 1967, sec. J 16:. "8 AIA Members are Advanced." Los Angeles Times May 12 1957: F19. "A. Quincy Jones: Designing for the Homes of Tomorrow." Los Angeles Times September 29 1974, sec. Home 20-21: Home section p 20-21. Abbott, Bion. "Only 3,852 See Horse Racing at Las Vegas." Los Angeles Times October 6 1963: L 12. Abbott, Denise. "By Design: Los Angeles is Rich in Residential Architectural Styles, and Interest in such Properties is at an all-Time High." Hollywood Reporter.October (2002): S-1,S-2, S-3, S-16. Abercrombie, Brooke, and Irmina Kobylko. "Where Williams Walked: Pasadena Architect James V. Coane Leaves an Invisible Footprint on His Renovation of a 1928 Spanish Colonial Estate Designed by Los Angeles' Renowned Architect to the Stars." Pasadena Weekly April 1 2009: 5. 4/28/09 <http://pasadenaweekly.com/cms/story/detail/wh...>. Abrams, Charles. "The Housing Problem and the Negro." Daedalus: Journal of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences 95.1 (1966): 64-76. "Abstracts of Papers Presented at the Twenty-Seventh Annual Meeting of the Society of Architectural Historians (Dozier, Richard K. "Black Craftsmen and Architects in History")." Journal of Architectural Historians 33.3 (1974): 225-243. "Achievement Awards made: C.of C. Raises L.A. Sights for the Future." Los Angeles Evening Herald Express January 24 1957, sec. A5:. "Active Development Program Under Way at Holmby Hills (Rothacker)." Los Angeles Times March 14 1937, sec. E1:. "Actor Wed to Senorita (Gray)." Los Angeles Times August 8 1935: A1. "AD Additions to the Ambassador Hotel." Los Angeles Times January 3 1950, sec. D41:. "Ad Auction: The Palatial 12-Room Italian Home and Exquisite Furnishings of a very Prominent Society Matron 17711 Porto Marina Way." Los Angeles Times October 14 1934, sec. 13 part I:. "AD Beautiful Reinforced Groutlock Masonry Residence (Features Williams House)." Los Angeles Times August 12 1934, sec. 23:. "AD Presenting an Interesting Group of Fine Homes by the Eminent Architect Paul R. Williams." Los Angeles Times June 28 1953, sec. E9:. 2 Complete Bibliography. Updated July 2014. MLA 6th edition. Paul Revere Williams Project. Art Museum of the University of Memphis. "AD Truly Yours-- Exclusive Paramount Grove." Los Angeles Times August 21 1949, sec. E3:. "AD A Boundless View of the Ocean... Boundless Beauty in Every Home at Seaview Palos Verdes!" Los Angeles Times February 21 1960, sec. 14:. "AD an Island of Elegance in the Heart of the City: Hollywood Highlands Park Homes." Los Angeles Times May 22 1966, sec. J 15:. "AD Choice Corner Homes: Layne Manor." Los Angeles Times July 10 1949, sec. E3:. "AD for Carpentry and Flooring (Craig)." Arts & Architecture 57 (1940): 6. "Ad for Castaic Country Club." California Eagle May 16 1924: 12. "Ad for L.A. Cline, Inc. (Wm Powell)." Architectural Digest: An International Magazine of Fine Interior Design 9.3 (1933): 146. "Ad for Public Auction of Motley H. Flint Residence in Flintridge." Los Angeles Times January 18 1931, sec. 10:. "Ad for San Valle Tile Kilns (W Ford)." Southwest Builder and Contractor (1930): 5. "AD for Simons Brick Co (Spec House in Brentwood)." Los Angeles Times August 12 1934, sec. 23:. "AD Gladding, McBean, & Co. Manufacturers of Clay Products (Paley Pool)." Architect and Engineer (1937): 9. "AD Grand Opening in Greenacres." Los Angeles Times July 12 1953, sec. E 14:. "AD Grand Opening in Greenacres." Los Angeles Times July 5 1953, sec. D2:. "AD LEA Steel Homes." Los Angeles Times July 12 1936, sec. E4:. "AD Meet the Responsible Republican Delegation." Los Angeles Times June 2 1964, sec. Part 1, 16:. "AD Now You Decide Your Down Payment (Paramount Grove)." Los Angeles Times June 5 1949, sec. E6:. "AD our 6480th Important Air Conditioning Assignment." Los Angeles Times February 2 1966, sec. III 13:. "AD Seaview Palos Verdes and W & J Sloane Present an Exciting Exhibition: "the Art of Living"." Los Angeles Times September 18 1960, sec. H 5:. "AD Tempo Rooms Contest." Los Angeles Times April 15 1934, sec. 8:. "AD Truly California Living! Paramount Grove." Los Angeles Times February 27 1949, sec. E5:. "AD You Live in the Valley: Greenacres." Los Angeles Times July 19 1953, sec. E10:. 3 Complete Bibliography. Updated July 2014. MLA 6th edition. Paul Revere Williams Project. Art Museum of the University of Memphis. "Ad: Cannot be Equallled in the Los Angeles Area (SeaView)." Los Angeles Times December 25 1960, sec. CS9:. Adams, Michael. "The Incomparable Success of Paul R. Williams." African American Architects in Current Practice. Ed. Jack Travis. 1st ed. New York: Princeton Architectural Press, 1991. 20-21. ---. "Perspectives: Historical Essay, Black Architects - A Legacy of Shadows." Progressive Architecture (1991): 85-7. Adams, Walter. "What America Wants to Build." Better Homes and Gardens 24 (1946): 23-25,96. "Add Stairway and Penthouse (Roberts Mortuary)." Southwest Contractor (1916): 34 col 2. "Addition to Beverly Hills Hotel, Beverly Hills, California." National Architect 6.3 (1950): 1-2. "Addition to Shop Building." Southwest Builder and Contractor (1928): 60 col 1. "Admirably Suited to "Country-Style" Living (Longridge Manor)." Los Angeles Times May 15 1938, sec. E2:. "Ads for Layne Manor and Paramount Grove." Los Angeles Times July 24 1949: E6. "Adult Community Set Near Hollywood Bowl (Hollywood Highlands)." Los Angeles Times March 17 1963, sec. I 4:. "African Church to Build $1 Million Edifice here: 500 Will use $100 Shovels to Break Ground for Center at Ceremony Sunday (AME Church)." Los Angeles Times August 3 1963, sec. 15:. "African-American Historical Site may Face the Wrecking Ball." The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education.46 (2004/2005): 52. "AIA, Southern California Chapter Selects Southwest Builder and Contractor as its Official Organ." Southwest Builder and Contractor 57.3 (1921): 9 col 1. "Air-Conditioned to a Vile Mood." Los Angeles Times October 21 1959: B4. Albrecht, Donald. "The I.S. Goes Hollywood... how the Public Learned about Modern Architecture." Skyline (1982): 30-31. ---. World War II and the American Dream: How Wartime Building Changed a Nation. Washington, DC: National Building Museum and Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1995. Alleman, Richard. Hollywood: The Movie Lover's Guide: The Ultimate Insider Tour of Movie L.A. 1st paper ed. NY: Broadway Books, 2005. Allen, Barbara L. "The Ranch-Style House in America: A Cultural and Environmental Discourse (1984- )." Journal of Architectural Education 49.3 (1996): 156-65. Allen, Harris C. "The Influence of Concrete on Design in California." Journal of the American Institute of Architects 16 (1928): 389-391. 4 Complete Bibliography. Updated July 2014. MLA 6th edition. Paul Revere Williams Project. Art Museum of the University of Memphis. Allen, Harris. "Architecture in Los Angeles." Overland Monthly and the Out West Magazine 85 (1927): 138. Allen, Walter B. "A World Port at our Door (Allen)." Los Angeles Times May 18 1930: I 5. "Allied Architects Association Formed for the Advancement of Public Architecture." Southwest Builder and Contractor 58.1476 (1921): 10-11.
Recommended publications
  • Minutes BOARD of MUSEUMS and HISTORY June 19, 2015
    Minutes BOARD OF MUSEUMS AND HISTORY June 19, 2015 Location University of Nevada Mathewson – IGT Knowledge Center Room KC 110 1164 N. Virginia Street Reno, NV 89503 With a video link to * Nevada Department of Environmental Protection Red Rock Conference Room Suite 230 2030 E. Flamingo Road Las Vegas, NV 89119 BOARD MEMBERS PRESENT BOARD MEMBERS EXCUSED Robert Stoldal, Chairman Pete Dubé Bryan Allison Alicia Barber Sarah Cowie Renee Diamond Doris Dwyer Daniel Markoff Robert Ostrovsky Janice Pine Seth Schorr DEPARTMENT OF TOURISM AND CULTURAL AFFAIRS, DEPARTMENT OF CONSERVATION AND NATURAL RESOURCES STAFF PRESENT Claudia Vecchio, Director, Department of Tourism and Cultural Affairs Felicia Archer, Public Information Officer, Department of Tourism and Cultural Affairs Peter Barton, Administrator, Division of Museums and History Henna Rasul, Senior Deputy Attorney General, Attorney General’s Office Greg Corbin, Director, Nevada State Railroad Museum, Carson City Jim Barmore, Director, Nevada State Museum, Carson City Dennis McBride, Director, Nevada State Museum, Las Vegas * Sheryln Hayes-Zorn, Acting Director, Nevada Historical Society Karyn deDufour, Deputy State Historic Preservation Officer, State Historic Preservation Office Jim Bertolini, Historic Preservation Specialist II, State Historic Preservation Office Carrie Edlefsen, Administrative Services Officer II, Division of Museums and History Lauri Brown, Administrative Assistant IV, Division of Museums and History GUESTS IN ATTENDANCE Michael Bertrand, Bertrand & Associates, LLC Kathy Flanagan, Las Vegas Valley Water District/Springs Preserve Robert Chattel, La Concha Motel, Clark County, Las Vegas 1 Maurice White, Board Member, Nevada State Prison Preservation Society Brian Hutchins, Counsel, Nevada State Prison Preservation Society Glen Whorton, President, Nevada State Prison Preservation Society Tom Porada, Vice President, Nevada State Prison Preservation Society Ricki Barlow, Las Vegas City Councilman Joseph Mitchell, Branch No.
    [Show full text]
  • Industrial Context Work Plan
    LOS ANGELES CITYWIDE HISTORIC CONTEXT STATEMENT Context: Industrial Development, 1850-1980 Prepared for: City of Los Angeles Department of City Planning Office of Historic Resources September 2011; rev. February 2018 The activity which is the subject of this historic context statement has been financed in part with Federal funds from the National Park Service, Department of the Interior, through the California Office of Historic Preservation. However, the contents and opinions do not necessarily reflect the views or policies of the Department of the Interior or the California Office of Historic Preservation, nor does mention of trade names or commercial products constitute endorsement or recommendation by the Department of the Interior or the California Office of Historic Preservation. This program receives Federal financial assistance for identification and protection of historic properties. Under Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, and the Age Discrimination Act of 1975, as amended, the U.S. Department of the Interior prohibits discrimination on the basis of race, color, national origin, disability, or age in its federally assisted programs. If you believe you have been discriminated against in any program, activity, or facility as described above, or if you desire further information, please write to: Office of Equal Opportunity, National Park Service; 1849 C Street, N.W.; Washington, D.C. 20240 SurveyLA Citywide Historic Context Statement Industrial Development, 1850-1980 TABLE
    [Show full text]
  • Eternal Lies Addendum – Local Newspapers
    ETERNAL LIES ADDENDUM – LOCAL NEWSPAPERS This addendum to the Alexandrian Remix of Eternal Lies adds historically-sourced local newspapers to all of the major locations of the campaign. I have not researched papers for New York (the PCs spend so little time there; and, if in doubt, use the New York Times) or Thibet (the PCs are in such an isolated location that newspapers are unlikely to be available, except perhaps for an international edition of a paper like the Paris Herald Tribune, as described under Bangkok newspapers). Hitting up the morgues of local papers for leads has become such a standard procedural element for Cthulhu-esque investigators that I probably don’t need to pontificate upon it at any great length here. It should be noted that the original campaign references a number of specific newspapers in which specific articles of note are published; those are generally not mentioned here (although obviously they also exist). The purpose of this resource is to provide a firm foundation for the GM to improvise from when the PCs go off the beaten path and begin performing unanticipated background research. When I originally ran the campaign, I also found that it was not particularly uncommon for the globetrotting PCs to specifically request a local newspaper upon checking into a new hotel. Being able to reference specific papers (with a few personalizing factoids to distinguish one broadsheet from another) proved to be a remarkably effective and immersive technique that can contribute greatly to the meaningful sensation of the campaign moving through space and culture.
    [Show full text]
  • GC 1346 Miscellaneous Serials File
    1346 Miscellaneous Serials File Repository: Seaver Center for Western History Research, Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County Span Dates: 1826 – 2009, undated (bulk is 1880s – 1950s) Extent: (Boxes: 8 legal, 2 1/2 legal, 2 flat ov) Language: Primarily English Conditions Governing Use: Permission to publish, quote or reproduce must be secured from the repository and the copyright holder Conditions Governing Access: Research is by appointment only Preferred Citation: Miscellaneous Serials File, Seaver Center for Western History Research, Los Angeles County Museum of Natural History Abstract: An artificial collection of single issues, or scattered issues of periodicals, bulletins, and magazines published by companies; educational and religious entities; clubs; and associations; and tourism groups. From all geographic locations, including several foreign items. Related Holdings: GC 1037 Government Publications GC 1137 Political Materials GC 1233 Associations and Clubs GC 1299 Ephemera Seaver Center for Western History Research 1346 Scope and Content: An artificial collection of single issues, or scattered issues of periodicals, bulletins, and magazines published by companies; educational and religious entities; clubs; and associations; and tourism groups. From all geographic locations, including several foreign items. Boxes 1 through 9 arranged alphabetically by title of publication. Oversize items in boxes 10 through 11 arranged alphabetically by title of publication. Container List: See spreadsheet on following pages Miscellaneous Serials File 7/5/2019 2 of 2 Seaver Center for Western History Research GC 1346 CATALOG NUMBER TITLE DESCRIPTION DATE GC-1346-1-1 Academy News Letter California Academy of Sciences, San Francisco, Calif. Apr. 1940 American Christian Palestine Committee of Los Angeles, Los GC-1346-1-2 A.C.P.C News Angeles, Calif.
    [Show full text]
  • Scouted an Inadvertent Archive from the Search for a Cinematic Vegas Catherine Borg
    Number 31 February 2015 Center for Gaming Research Occasional Paper Series University Libraries University of Nevada, Las Vegas Scouted An Inadvertent Archive from the Search for a Cinematic Vegas Catherine Borg ABSTRACT: This paper highlights the transformation of materials within the Mancuso Collection from utilitarian location scouting materials in the service of a film to historical record of the Vegas valley in 1994-95. Destined for disposal, these displaced artifacts are also an important record and reminder of the hidden labor and creative output of the many people who contribute to cultural products. Keywords: Las Vegas; location scouting; Casino; appropriation art; archive Preferred Citation: Catherine Borg. “Scouted: An Inadvertent Archive from the Search for a Cinematic Vegas.” Occasional Paper Series, 31. Las Vegas: Center for Gaming Research, 2015. The Mancuso Collection in UNLV’s Special Collec- takably to evoke nostalgia for an earlier era and present tions contains photographs that were taken and arranged a cinematic 1970s Vegas. Like the shards of a fractured by the location scouts for the movie Casino. Their im- mirror, this archive of pictures reflect the complexity of ages document places photographed in the mid-1990s the landscape where they were taken -- quintessential and considered as stand-in locations for a fictionalized “Las Vegas” recedes in the daylight and vantage point of narrative based on actual events -- many erased or sig- the 24/7 back-lot of daily life. Destined for disposal, these nificantly altered since then. From the distance of two displaced artifacts from the “culture industrial complex” decades they, like many photographs, allow us in essence instead are an inadvertent but important record of the to “see” time.
    [Show full text]
  • Pioneer Las Vegas Bowl Sees Its Allotment of Public Tickets Gone Nearly a Month Earlier Than the Previous Record Set in 2006 to Mark a Third-Straight Sellout
    LAS VEGAS BOWL 2016 MEDIA GUIDE A UNIQUE BLEND OF EXCITEMENT ian attraction at Bellagio. The world-famous Fountains of Bellagio will speak to your heart as opera, classical and whimsical musical selections are carefully choreo- graphed with the movements of more than 1,000 water- emitting devices. Next stop: Paris. Take an elevator ride to the observation deck atop the 50-story replica of the Eiffel Tower at Paris Las Vegas for a panoramic view of the Las Vegas Valley. For decades, Las Vegas has occupied a singular place in America’s cultural spectrum. Showgirls and neon lights are some of the most familiar emblems of Las Vegas’ culture, but they are only part of the story. In recent years, Las Vegas has secured its place on the cultural map. Visitors can immerse themselves in the cultural offerings that are unique to the destination, de- livering a well-rounded dose of art and culture. Swiss artist Ugo Rondinone’s colorful, public artwork Seven Magic Mountains is a two-year exhibition located in the desert outside of Las Vegas, which features seven towering dayglow totems comprised of painted, locally- sourced boulders. Each “mountain” is over 30 feet high to exhibit the presence of color and expression in the There are countless “excuses” for making a trip to Las feet, 2-story welcome center features indoor and out- Vegas, from the amazing entertainment, to the world- door observation decks, meetings and event space and desert of the Ivanpah Valley. class dining, shopping and golf, to the sizzling nightlife much more. Creating a city-wide art gallery, artists from around that only Vegas delivers.
    [Show full text]
  • U. S. Radio Stations As of June 30, 1922 the Following List of U. S. Radio
    U. S. Radio Stations as of June 30, 1922 The following list of U. S. radio stations was taken from the official Department of Commerce publication of June, 1922. Stations generally operated on 360 meters (833 kHz) at this time. Thanks to Barry Mishkind for supplying the original document. Call City State Licensee KDKA East Pittsburgh PA Westinghouse Electric & Manufacturing Co. KDN San Francisco CA Leo J. Meyberg Co. KDPT San Diego CA Southern Electrical Co. KDYL Salt Lake City UT Telegram Publishing Co. KDYM San Diego CA Savoy Theater KDYN Redwood City CA Great Western Radio Corp. KDYO San Diego CA Carlson & Simpson KDYQ Portland OR Oregon Institute of Technology KDYR Pasadena CA Pasadena Star-News Publishing Co. KDYS Great Falls MT The Tribune KDYU Klamath Falls OR Herald Publishing Co. KDYV Salt Lake City UT Cope & Cornwell Co. KDYW Phoenix AZ Smith Hughes & Co. KDYX Honolulu HI Star Bulletin KDYY Denver CO Rocky Mountain Radio Corp. KDZA Tucson AZ Arizona Daily Star KDZB Bakersfield CA Frank E. Siefert KDZD Los Angeles CA W. R. Mitchell KDZE Seattle WA The Rhodes Co. KDZF Los Angeles CA Automobile Club of Southern California KDZG San Francisco CA Cyrus Peirce & Co. KDZH Fresno CA Fresno Evening Herald KDZI Wenatchee WA Electric Supply Co. KDZJ Eugene OR Excelsior Radio Co. KDZK Reno NV Nevada Machinery & Electric Co. KDZL Ogden UT Rocky Mountain Radio Corp. KDZM Centralia WA E. A. Hollingworth KDZP Los Angeles CA Newbery Electric Corp. KDZQ Denver CO Motor Generator Co. KDZR Bellingham WA Bellingham Publishing Co. KDZW San Francisco CA Claude W.
    [Show full text]
  • Historic Preservation. Updated July 2014. MLA 6Th Edition. Paul Revere Williams Project
    Historic Preservation. Updated July 2014. MLA 6th edition. Paul Revere Williams Project. Art Museum of the University of Memphis. "$1.1 Million Donated to Community Theater (Lear Theater)." Reno Gazette-Journal (1997): 1. "2004 Eleven most endangered (La Concha." Preserve Nevada. 2008. 5/6/2008 <http://preservenevada.unlv.edu>. Abercrombie, Brooke, and Irmina Kobylko. "Where Williams Walked: Pasadena Architect James V. Coane Leaves an Invisible Footprint on His Renovation of a 1928 Spanish Colonial Estate Designed by Los Angeles' Renowned Architect to the Stars." Pasadena Weekly April 1 2009: 5. 4/28/09 <http://pasadenaweekly.com/cms/story/detail/wh...>. "African-American Historical Site may Face the Wrecking Ball." The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education.46 (2004/2005): 52. "Ambassador Hotel Saga Ends: LA Conservancy Moves on." Forum News: National Trust for Historic Preservation XIV.5 (2008): 8. "Ambassador Hotel Updates." Los Angeles Conservancy: Preservation Issues.February (2004): 1/30/2008. google. 1/30/2008 <http://www.laconservancy.org/issues/ambassador-dec.php4>. Anderson, Lisa. "Historic Preservation--Las Vegas Style: A Masterpiece of Motel Architecture from the Era of the Rat Pack is being Preserved (La Concha)." Chicago Tribune December 21 2006. Gale: General OneFile Print. 4/24/2009 <http://find.galegroup.com>. "Los Angeles Airport Theme Building is Designated Landmark." Historic Preservation News 33.3 (1993): 4. "Los Angeles' Newest Historic-Cultural Monuments (Castera 2007)." City of Los Angles, Department of City Planning. Office of Historic Resources 2.1 (2008): 5-6. "Los Angeles' Newest Historic-Cultural Monuments (St. Philip HCM 988)." City of Los Angeles, Department of City Planning: Office of Historic Resources.
    [Show full text]
  • 2020 Weekly Planner : the Las Vegas Strip (1967): Vintage Topo Map Cover Pdf, Epub, Ebook
    2020 WEEKLY PLANNER : THE LAS VEGAS STRIP (1967): VINTAGE TOPO MAP COVER PDF, EPUB, EBOOK Noon Sun Handy Books | 58 pages | 23 Feb 2019 | Amazon Digital Services LLC - Kdp Print Us | 9781797864778 | English | none 2020 Weekly Planner : The Las Vegas Strip (1967): Vintage Topo Map Cover PDF Book These maps should help you find your way around town. Atlanta Motor Speedway. Our Tools Compare two cities Use our city comparison tool to analyze and compare two cities. What items are prohibited inside the gates? Today the Neon Museum has a visitor center inside the retro lobby of the former La Concha Motel and a 2-acre display yard known as the Boneyard. Mesquite 4. This tool will help you find ideal meeting places between points, as well as the "travel radius" of a single point using different transportation modes. In its heyday, Atomic Liquors had a local clientele bolstered by regular visits from celebrities looking to avoid the attention they attracted on the Strip or Downtown Las Vegas. The Las Vegas Monorail operates along a 3. Assuming both cars consistently run their "Dialed-In" times every run, the Race is now won or lost based on the driver's reaction times! Take the escalator to the parking garage and follow the Monorail sign outside through the automatic doors. In most classes, a burnout precedes every run down the drag strip. Texas Motor Speedway. Retrieved December 28, What features are popular in which type of homes? Can I bring a cooler to the race? Las Vegas Free Maps! Fremont Casino :. If you want to get a feel for Old Las Vegas and the and the real roots of the city, you need to head Downtown to Fremont Street.
    [Show full text]
  • Photo Contest Brings Exposure Las Vegas Ranked Among Top Cities for Young Artists
    Volume V, 2011 Photo Contest Brings Exposure Capture Downtown!, a photo competition designed to focus attention on and create greater awareness about downtown Las Vegas’ assets and evolution, is currently being held. Entries will be accepted from both amateurs and professionals — though they will compete in different categories — through Aug. 15. Photo enthusiasts who are 21 years or older are encouraged to make digital submissions in three categories: Lifestyle: Everyday life/work/play in downtown Stars: Interesting people who live or work downtown Icons: Downtown landmarks, neon signs and historic buildings Las Vegas Ranked Among Top Cities for Young Artists A jury of professional photographers will select the winners, with prizes being awarded for first, second and In declaring the city one of the top destinations for third place in each of the three categories. Winning emerging young artists, FLAVORWIRE, a website photos will be exhibited during an Oct. 12 presentation offering cultural news and critiques, recently at the Historic Fifth Street School and other advised: “Crawl away…from the uber-glitter of the downtown locations, as well as in a special downtown Vegas Strip for a much more down to earth view of section produced by the Las Vegas Review-Journal. Sin City. Good old Fremont Street, the Vegas of yesteryear, is back and better than ever, harboring There is no cost to enter. For details, visit: creatives from all walks of life.” Downtown’s www.downtownlasvegasalliance.com/capturedowntown Emergency Arts at 520 Fremont St., which combines The Beat Coffeehouse and artists’ The contest is being sponsored by the city of Las studio galleries under one roof, gets prominent Vegas, the Las Vegas Redevelopment Agency, the mention in this online assessment.
    [Show full text]
  • Herald-Examiner Project: Broadway, Hill Street & 12Th Street Sites
    APPENDIX IV.L Cultural Resources Study CULTURAL RESOURCES TECHNICAL REPORT PROPOSED HERALD-EXAMINER PROJECT: BROADWAY, HILL STREET & 12TH STREET SITES Prepared by: HISTORIC RESOURCES GROUP, LLC 1728 Whitley Avenue Hollywood, CA 90028-4809 October 2005 (Updated February 2006) TABLE OF CONTENTS I. INTRODUCTION...........................................................................................................................................2 II. EVALUATION OF POTENTIAL HISTORICAL RESOURCES .................................................................4 National Register of Historic Places ..............................................................................................................4 California Register of Historical Resources ...................................................................................................5 City of Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monuments .........................................................................................6 Potential Resources on Project Sites...............................................................................................................6 Identified Resource on Project Site...............................................................................................................11 A. History and Architectural Significance of the Herald-Examiner Building ...............................11 B. Architectural Description of the Herald-Examiner Building.....................................................16 III. DETERMINATION OF PROJECT IMPACTS............................................................................................19
    [Show full text]
  • William H. Parker and the Thin Blue Line: Politics, Public
    WILLIAM H. PARKER AND THE THIN BLUE LINE: POLITICS, PUBLIC RELATIONS AND POLICING IN POSTWAR LOS ANGELES By Alisa Sarah Kramer Submitted to the Faculty of the College of Arts and Sciences of American University in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy In History Chair: Michael Kazin, Kimberly Sims1 Dean o f the College of Arts and Sciences 3 ^ Date 2007 American University Washington, D.C. 20016 AMERICAN UNIVERSITY UBRARY Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission. UMI Number: 3286654 Copyright 2007 by Kramer, Alisa Sarah All rights reserved. INFORMATION TO USERS The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. Broken or indistinct print, colored or poor quality illustrations and photographs, print bleed-through, substandard margins, and improper alignment can adversely affect reproduction. In the unlikely event that the author did not send a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if unauthorized copyright material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. ® UMI UMI Microform 3286654 Copyright 2008 by ProQuest Information and Learning Company. All rights reserved. This microform edition is protected against unauthorized copying under Title 17, United States Code. ProQuest Information and Learning Company 300 North Zeeb Road P.O. Box 1346 Ann Arbor, Ml 48106-1346 Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission. © COPYRIGHT by Alisa Sarah Kramer 2007 ALL RIGHTS RESERVED Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission. I dedicate this dissertation in memory of my sister Debby.
    [Show full text]