ACCOUNTANT's DREAM Tent 1 (NEW YORK & MARYLAND ELIGIBLE) Row B 623 BROWN COLT Foaled April 5, 2019 Stall 87 Reg

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

ACCOUNTANT's DREAM Tent 1 (NEW YORK & MARYLAND ELIGIBLE) Row B 623 BROWN COLT Foaled April 5, 2019 Stall 87 Reg Consigned by and Raised at WINBAK FARM, Chesapeake City, MD ACCOUNTANT'S DREAM Tent 1 (NEW YORK & MARYLAND ELIGIBLE) Row B 623 BROWN COLT Foaled April 5, 2019 Stall 87 Reg. No. 2T569 Microchip No. 985141001154067 Super Bowl 3,1:56.2 American Winner 3,1:52.3 -------------- B J's Pleasure 3,1:59.4f Credit Winner 3,1:54 --------------- Armbro Goal 3,1:54.3 Lawn Tennis -------------------------------- Grassbed 2,1:59.1 ACCOUNTANT'S DREAM Pine Chip 4,T1:51 Dream Vacation 4,1:52 ------------------ Dream On Victory 3,Q1:58.2 Ashlee's Dream 1:56.2f ----------- Sturdy Sahbra 4,2:03.2f Mary's Dreamweaver 1:58.1 ----------- Loyal Sahbra 1st Dam ASHLEE'S DREAM 2,2:01.1f; 3,1:58.1f; 1:56.2f; BT1:55.1z ($228,888) by Dream Vacation. 19 wins, 2 thru 6. At 2, second in leg New Jersey Sires S. at Freehold, Maryland Stbd. Race Fund at Rosecroft; third in Arden Downs S., John Simpson Mem., Maryland Stbd. Race Fund at Rosecroft. At 3, winner leg New Jersey Sires S. - Green Acres at Freehold; second in Final New Jersey Sires S. - Green Acres at Freehold. From 2 previous foals, dam of 1 winner, 1 in 1:58, including: CREDIT LIST 2,2:01.3h; 3,1:58; 4,1:57.4h; BT1:55.3s ($133,320) (Credit Winner). 11 wins, 2 thru 4. At 2, winner New York County Fair S.; second in leg Excelsior Ser. - A at Batavia, Monticello, Saratoga, Yonkers, New York County Fair S.; third in leg Excelsior Ser. - A at Yonkers, Final Excelsior Ser. - A at Vernon. At 3, winner leg Jim Derue Mem. at Saratoga, leg Excelsior Ser. - B at Batavia; second in leg Excelsior Ser. - B at Yonkers, New York County Fair S. At 4, second in Final Star Spangled Ser. at Saratoga; third in leg Star Spangled Ser. at Saratoga. IMPULSE BUY (M) 3,1:58.2f-'20; BT1:56f-’20 ($12,288) (Andover Hall). Winner at 3. At 3, third in leg Pennsylvania Stallion Ser. at The Meadows. 2nd Dam MARY'S DREAMWEAVER 2,2:05h; 3,Q2:04.3h; 1:58.1 ($51,429) by Sturdy Sahbra. 9 wins, 2 thru 5. At 2, winner leg Ohio Sires S. at Northfield; second in leg Ohio Sires S. at Scioto, Ohio Fair S. at Northfield. At 3, third in leg Ohio Sires S. at Raceway, leg Success Acres Ser. at Northfield (2). From 4 living foals, dam of 3 winners, 3 in 1:59, including: DONE DREAMEN 2,1:58.2z; 3,1:58.2f; 1:56.2f; BT1:55.2f ($195,531) (Donerail). 24 wins, 2 thru 9. At 2, winner elim. and Final Virginia Breeders S. at Colonial, leg New Jersey Sires S. at Meadowlands, Maryland Stbd. Race Fund at Ocean; third in leg New Jersey Sires S. at Meadowlands, Maryland Stbd. Race Fund at Rosecroft. At 3, winner Maryland Stbd. Race Fund at Rosecroft; second in Final Virginia Breeders S. at Colonial, Maryland Stbd. Race Fund at Ocean, leg New Jersey Sires S. - Green Acres at Freehold; third in elim. Virginia Breeders S. at Colonial. GAMEWORKS (M) 2,Q2:04.3; 3,1:59.2f; 1:58.1; BT1:56.4z ($125,328) (Giant Hit). 18 wins, 2 thru 7. At 2, winner leg New York Sire S. at Saratoga, Yonkers; third in leg New York Sire S. at Yonkers. At 3, winner New York State Fair S. at Syracuse; second in leg New York Sire S. at Buffalo, Saratoga; third in leg New York Sire S. at Yonkers. At 4, second in leg Spring Training Ser. at Pocono; third in leg Spring Training Ser. at Pocono. 3rd Dam LOYAL SAHBRA by Bonefish. From 11 foals, dam of 8 winners, 4 in 2:00, including: MELLOW SAHBRA (M) 2,2:01.4f; 3,1:59.2h; BT1:59f ($200,272) (Sturdy Sahbra). 21 wins, 2 thru 4. At 2, winner Final Ohio State Fair S., leg Ohio Sires S. (2), elim. Ohio Breeders Champ., Night Of Champions S., Ohio Fair S. (3); second in elim. Ohio State Fair S., elim. and Final Ohio Fair S. At 3, winner Ohio Breeders Champ., leg Ohio Sires S. (3), Ohio Fair S. (2); second in leg and Final Ohio Sires S., elim. Ohio State Fair S., leg (3) and Final Northern Farms Ser. Dam of MOTOWN MELLOW 3,2:00; 4,1:58.3, SUE'S DREAM BOY 3,2:04.3h; 4,1:58.4. Grandam of CEE CEE COMER 3,2:06.1h; 1:59.2h. SINCERE SAHBRA (M) 3,2:00.2f ($73,174) (Solid Sahbra). 12 wins, 3 thru 5. At 3, winner elim. Ohio State Fair S., Final Ohio Fair S., Ohio Fair S., leg Diet Pepsi Ser.; second in leg Ohio Sires S., elim. Ohio Breeders Champ., heat Ohio Fair S, Ohio Fair S., elim. Ohio Fair S. (2), leg Diet Pepsi Ser. Dam of MIRACLE SAHBRA 3,1:56.1f; 1:55 ($216,582), BARON SAHBRA 2,Q2:03.4; 3,2:01.3f; 1:58.3f ($159,273). Producers: LOFTY SAHBRA 2,2:02.3h; 3,2:01.3f; 4,Q2:00.1f ($54,806) (dam of LOFTY LOOKER 2,Q2:05.1f; 3,2:00.2f; 1:58f-$103,051, LOOKS DIGNIFIED 2,2:11h; 3,1:58.3f; 4,1:57.1h, SAMMY MERLOT 3,2:01h; 1:57.4f, LOFTY MOM 2,2:09.3h; 3,2:05.1h; 4,1:59f), Cavalier Sahbra ($2,334) (dam of STRIKING LAUREN 2,Q2:07.2f; 3,1:58f; 1:55.3f-$140,222, LIMA COUNTESS 3,1:58.4f; grandam of STRIKINGBRO 2,1:59.1h). Next Dam - SPECIAL SAHBRA 2:02h (Speedy Crown-VELVET SAHBRA 4,T2:03.3-O'Brien Hanover) STAKES ENGAGEMENTS Arden Downs Currier & Ives Hoosier Stake Maryland Stdb. Race Fund Simcoe Ralph Wilfong Bluegrass Series Dexter Cup Horseman New York Sires Standardbred Yonkers Trot Breeders Crown Empire Breeders International Stallion Parshall Memorial Swedish Breeders Crown Zweig Memorial Champlain Hambletonian Kentucky Futurity Old Oaken Bucket .
Recommended publications
  • The Digital Media and Learning Competition, Now in Its Second Year
    Supported by Administered by The Digital Media and Learning Competition, now in its second year, is an annual effort designed to find — and to inspire — the most novel uses of new media in support of learning. In April 2009, the Competition awarded $2 million to individuals, for-profit companies, universities, and community organizations for projects that employ games, mobile phone applications, virtual worlds, social networks, wikis, and video blogs to explore how digital technologies are changing the way that people learn and participate in daily life. To broaden the search for innovative ideas, this year’s Competition was expanded to include international submissions and proposals from young people aged 18-25. The 19 winning projects are those that best engaged the theme of “participatory learning,” or the ways in which new technologies enable learners to contribute in diverse ways to individual and shared learning experiences. The Competition is supported by the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation and administered by the Humanities, Arts, Science, and Technology Advanced Collaboratory (HASTAC). Winners of the Competition were drawn from two categories: Playpower is helping people create educational 8-bit games. Innovation in Participatory Learning ($30,000 to $250,000) Photo credit: Derek Lomas. Artist: Daniel Rehn and Young Innovators ($5,000 to $30,000). Innovation awards support projects that demonstrate new modes of participatory young people aged 18-25 to think boldly about “what comes learning, in which people take part in virtual communities, next” in participatory learning and to contribute to making it share ideas, comment on one another’s projects, and advance happen — will aid recipients in bringing their most visionary goals together.
    [Show full text]
  • The Block at Orange Orange, California
    The Block at Orange Orange, California Project Type: Commercial/Industrial Case No: C030008 Year: 2000 SUMMARY An 812,000-square-foot retail/entertainment center located about 2.5 miles from Disneyland in Orange, California. Although the center, which has drawn more than 12 million visitors in its first year of operation, has a racetrack-shaped circulation pattern, its design is meant to resemble a city grid featuring two principal parallel "streets" connected by smaller streets. The project is anchored by a 30-theater AMC Cineplex at the center of the site. An ever-changing choreography of signs, lighting, and special effects helps to keep the project fresh and exciting. FEATURES Urban entertainment center Innovative signage Tourist attraction Urban design The Block at Orange Orange, California Project Type: Retail/Entertainment Volume 30 Number 08 April-June 2000 Case Number: C030008 PROJECT TYPE An 812,000-square-foot retail/entertainment center located about 2.5 miles from Disneyland in Orange, California. Although the center, which has drawn more than 12 million visitors in its first year of operation, has a racetrack-shaped circulation pattern, its design is meant to resemble a city grid featuring two principal parallel "streets" connected by smaller streets. The project is anchored by a 30-theater AMC Cineplex at the center of the site. An ever-changing choreography of signs, lighting, and special effects helps to keep the project fresh and exciting. SPECIAL FEATURES Urban entertainment center Innovative signage Tourist attraction Urban design DEVELOPMENT TEAM DEVELOPER The Mills Corporation 1300 Wilson Boulevard Suite 400 Arlington, Virginia 22309 703-526-5000 ARCHITECT D'AIQ 1310 Broadway Somerville, Massachusetts 02144 617-623-3000 DESIGN CONSULTANT Communication Arts 1112 Pearl Street Boulder, Colorado 80302 303-447-8202 SITE PLANNER Site Signatures 2120 Freeport Road New Kensington, Pennsylvania 15068 724-339-1899 LIGHTING CONSULTANT Frances Krahe & Associates Inc.
    [Show full text]
  • ® Sp E C I a L Fx® Li G H T I N G Wo R L Dw I D E Pro J E C T Li
    S P E C I A L F X ® L I G H T I N G W O R L D W I D E P R O J E C T L I S T DICHRO•X AND EZ GLASS LENSES, FADE•NOT® POLY TUBES, FADENOT® GEL, LIGHTBULBS, AND CUSTOM COATED PRODUCTS WERE SPECIFIED IN THE FOLLOWING SELECTED PROJECTS H i s t o r i c a l S i t e s a n d H o t e l s a n d C a s i n o s M u s e u m s Mohegan Sun/Wombi Planetarium - Uncaseville Jefferson Memorial - Washington DC The Clift Hotel - San Francisco, CA Lincoln Memorial - Washington DC Motor City Casino - Detroit, MI Bridge of the Americas - Panama Canal Bellagio - Las Vegas, NV McArthur Causeway - Miami, FL Caesar’s Palace - Las Vegas, NV Space Needle - Seattle, WA Grand TriBeCa Hotel - New York, NY Henry Ford Museum - Detroit, MI Hard Rock Cafe & Casino - Tampa, FL Puerto Rico Convention Center - Puerto Rico America West Arena - Phoenix, AZ B u s i n e s s e s , S t o r e s , a n d Fourth Street Live - Lexington, KY R e s t a u r a n t s Guggenheim Museum - Las Vegas, NV Bank of Quebec - Quebec, Canada US Holocaust Museum - Washington DC Victoria’s Secret Stores - Nationwide Pennsylvania State Museum - Harrisburg, PA Equinox Health Club - Nationwide Museum of Tolerance - New York, NY Macy’s Las Vegas - Las Vegas, NV Harvard Depository - Southboro, MA Vanderbuilt Children’s Hospital - Nashville,TN St.
    [Show full text]
  • Ontario (Riverside), California a High-Profile Opportunity
    BUSINESS CARD DIE AREA 5425 Wisconsin Avenue, Suite 300 Chevy Chase, MD 20815 (301) 968-6000 simon.com Information as of 5/1/16 Simon is a global leader in retail real estate ownership, management and development and an S&P 100 company (Simon Property Group, NYSE:SPG). ONTARIO (RIVERSIDE), CALIFORNIA A HIGH-PROFILE OPPORTUNITY Ontario Mills® is located in San Bernardino County, the fifth largest county in California with over 2.1 million residents. — Ontario Mills is well positioned at the intersection of I-10 and I-15, two of the most heavily trafficked interstates in southern California. — Many day trippers and tourist shoppers visit Ontario Mills from Los Angeles and Orange County, which are approximately 35 miles away. — The busy LA/Ontario International Airport is only five minutes away. — Multiple single-family home developments are under construction and scheduled to open over the next several years. — Ontario, California, is home to the Citizens Business Bank Arena, hosting local sporting events and concerts. AN ATTRACTIVE DESTINATION Ontario Mills is California’s largest outlet and value shopping destination. — 100,000-square-foot development now open with new small shops and restaurants, including The North Face, Original Penguin, Samsonite, and Blaze Pizza. Coach, Tommy Hilfiger, and Nautica will be relocating to this new area. — UNIQLO will join the lineup in August 2016 with ULTA Beauty following this Fall. — More than 200 retailers offer a diverse selection of women’s and children’s apparel, sportswear, dining, entertainment, and more. — Ample open-air parking is available. — Millions of area residents and tourists shop at Ontario Mills every year.
    [Show full text]
  • Event Date Venue City State Country Region Winner Name 6/3/2017 Microsoft Store at Uvillage Seattle Washington United States AM
    Event Date Venue City State Country Region Winner Name 6/3/2017 Microsoft Store at Uvillage Seattle Washington United States AM Alpha 6/4/2017 IHeart Gaming Fel Spire Tavern San Diego California United States AM Poetikc 6/4/2017 Battle and Brew Sandy Springs Georgia United States AM MagnumMiles 6/4/2017 GameWorks in Town Square Las Vegas Nevada United States AM SmokedSalmon 6/7/2017 The Cave Gaming Center Fairfax Virginia United States AM EmailSupport 6/9/2017 Odisea Store Montevideo Montevideo Uruguay AM Niconr 6/10/2017 Garbonzo's Pizza Pub Winnipeg Manitoba Canada AM Tonzo204 6/10/2017 Evo Gaming Flushing New York United States AM Ropecoach 6/11/2017 Buffalo Wild Wings West Palm Beach Florida United States AM Newbiee 6/11/2017 The Office Milwaukie Oregon United States AM Yoko 6/14/2017 The Cave Gaming Center Fairfax Virginia United States AM Ginge 6/17/2017 Showcase Comic Books And Collectibles Slidell Louisiana United States AM hec400 6/17/2017 Legends of Gamers Tualatin Oregon United States AM xLucario 6/17/2017 Game Grid Salt Lake City Utah United States AM PbEem 6/17/2017 Raiders Esports Centre Toronto Ontario Canada AM Olive 6/17/2017 WangYu Cyber Café Richmond British Columbia Canada AM Ananta 6/17/2017 Microsoft Store at Uvillage Seattle Washington United States AM nerdcube 6/18/2017 Centro Cultural comfandi Cali Valle del Cauca Colombia AM oba12 6/21/2017 Gamer's Gauntlet Charter Township of Clinton Michigan United States AM Hambone 6/21/2017 The Cave Gaming Center Fairfax Virginia United States AM Marcopolo101 6/23/2017 Odisea
    [Show full text]
  • Class a Office Now Pre-Leasing
    CLASS A OFFICE NOW PRE-LEASING OVATION DEVELOPMENT 200 West 3rd Street Newport, Kentucky 1 The Premier Development Opportunity in the Midwest The stage is set and the curtain is rising. Come be a part of it! Ovation Riverfront View 3 COMING FALL 2021 100,000 SF CLASS A OFFICE Building Signage Available for Anchor Tenant 4 The latest addition to the OVATION development comprised of a hotel and office building are now in the final stages of design and development. The southernmost building being a hotel and northernmost being a 100,000 square foot Class A office building with unique signage opportunities and street level retail. A parking garage directly below will offer 570 spaces. NOW PRE-LEASING 50,000 – 100,000 SF The hotel, a 125-room Homewood Suites by Hilton will feature select suites with skyline views, expanded fitness area, and two bars – one located on the rooftop and the Ovation Office Building & Street-Level Retail other at plaza level. 5 6 Ovation Aerial – Concert Venue, Office & Hotel Panoramic View of Cincinnati Skyline from Ovation Site Ovation Office & Hotel 7 PROJECT OVERVIEW • 942 Residential Units • 3 Hotels consisting of up to 524 rooms • 1,000,000 square feet of office space • 380,000 square feet of entertainment/retail • 2,700 structured parking spaces 8 CINCINNATI OHIO RIVER NEWPORT LICKING RIVER COVINGTON 9 The overall Ovation development consists of 25 acres of land in Newport, Kentucky, at the southeast intersection of the Ohio and Licking Rivers. This site is one of the most phenomenal development opportunities in the Midwest.
    [Show full text]
  • Las Vegas Convention Center 3150 Paradise Road (702) 892-0711
    Las Vegas Convention Center 3150 Paradise Road (702) 892-0711 Whether you’re visiting Vegas for your first time or your 6th, the LVCVA has all your tourist answers. The Las Vegas and Visitors Information Center is conveniently located next to our hotel. Lied Discovery Children’s Museum 833 Las Vegas Boulevard North (702) 382-3445 www.ldcm.org This hand’s on Museum is sure to please everyone. Lied Discovery Children’s Museum encourages interaction between child and adult. With exhibits based on exploring science, art, culture and early childhood development, you’ll want to come back a second time! Las Vegas Natural History Museum 900 Las Vegas Boulevard North (702) 384-3466 www.lvnhm.org Created for children, adults, and families of all ages, the Las Vegas Natural History Museum educates all through their interactive past and present exhibits. Spend an entire day taking in the world’s wildlife, ecosystems and cultures. Las Vegas National Golf Club 1911 East Desert Inn Road (702) 734-1796 www.lasvegasnational.com Located less than 2 miles from the Las Vegas Strip and only 5 minutes from our hotel is the beautiful Las Vegas National Golf Club. This 18-hole course will not only amaze you but you never know which celebrity you could run in to! Zion National Park Springdale, UT (435) 772-3256 Located 160 miles northeast of our hotel lays Zion National Park. This beautiful park includes Zion Canyon and unique sandstone cliffs. If you’re looking for a day of hiking, climbing or biking, Zion National Park is for you.
    [Show full text]
  • THE MILLS CORPORATION (Exact Name of Registrant As Specified in Its Charter)
    SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549 FORM 10-K ፤ ANNUAL REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934 For the fiscal year ended December 31, 2002 or អ TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934 For the transition period from to Commission File Number 1-12994 THE MILLS CORPORATION (Exact Name of Registrant as Specified in Its Charter) DELAWARE 52-1802283 (State or other jurisdiction of (I.R.S. Employer Identification No.) incorporate or organization) 1300 WILSON BOULEVARD, SUITE 400 ARLINGTON, VA 22209 (Address of principal executive office) (Zip Code) Registrant's telephone number, including area code: (703) 526-5000 Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act: Title of each Class Name of each exchange on which registered COMMON STOCK, $0.01 PAR VALUE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE 9% SERIES B CUMULATIVE REDEEMABLE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE PREFERRED STOCK, $0.01 PAR VALUE 9% SERIES C CUMULATIVE REDEEMABLE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE PREFERRED STOCK, $0.01 PAR VALUE Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(g) of the Act: None Indicate by check mark whether the registrant (1) has filed all reports required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter periods that the registrant was required to file such report(s)) and (2) has been subject to such filing requirements for the past 90 days. Yes ፤ No អ Indicate by check mark if disclosure of delinquent filers pursuant to Item 405 of Regulation S-K (Section 229.405 of this chapter) is not contained herein, and will not be contained, to the best of registrant's knowledge, in definitive proxy or information statements incorporated by reference in Part III of this Form 10-K or any amendment to this Form 10-K.
    [Show full text]
  • Or, a Prehistory of Interactive Television1
    The society of the Spectacle is dead: Long live the society of the Carnival; or, a Prehistory of Interactive Television1 by Alison McMahan, Ph.D. ABSTRACT Daniel Dayan’s and Elihu Katz’s theory of spectacle, ceremony and festival levels of engagement is here applied to the various types of interactive television, from choice and time-shift types, to hyperserials (as defined by Janet Murray in Hamlet on the Holodeck) to the kind of interactive television where viewer/players can alter the content. The closest we have right now to this festival-approach to interactive television are graphic online MUDs such as Ultima Online and massive multiplayer games. Console boxes, the first of which was the Sega Dreamcast, offer a festival model of interactive televisual engagement along with a low-cost convergence of television, internet and computer. If we accept that multiplayer console games are a model for the interactive television of the future, we can then start defining an aesthetics of interactive television based on computer games. KEY WORDS Interactive television, computer games, videogames, console boxes, hyperserial, spectacle, ceremony, festival. The idea I wish to explore in this paper is that Game Consoles, among which the Sega Dreamcast was the first to include Internet access and on-line games, are the first true form of interactive television. If we accept this hypothesis then we can look at a variety of other phenomena, from web casting to reality TV to computer games, as precursors to interactive television that have been remediated in the form of interactive television we have now.
    [Show full text]
  • Entertainment Law Institute
    26th Annual Entertainment Law Institute JOE ELY 2016 TEXAS STATE MUSICIAN Photo by Todd Purifoy LIVE Austin • November 3-4, 2016 • Sheraton Austin at the Capitol MCLE CREDIT DOWNLOADABLE TexasBarCLE.com Education by the Bar, 13.5 Hours (2 Ethics) Course Materials 800.204.2222 x1574 for the Bar TexasBarCLE presents the 26th Annual Entertainment Law Institute Cosponsored by the Entertainment and Sports Law Section of the State Bar of Texas LIVE Austin Stan Soocher, Denver, CO covered by ESPN, Yahoo, The CW, Turner Editor-in-Chief, Entertainment Law & and WME/IMG with new companies like November 3-4, 2016 Finance Oomba Gameworks moving in. Sheraton at the Capitol Associate Professor, Music & Moderator Entertainment Industry Studies Michele Martell, Esq., Austin Register by October 20 and University of Colorado Denver save $50! Martell Media House 9:45 Roundup of Recent Entertainment David Ho, Los Angeles, CA Entertainment and Sports Law Industry Cases 1 hr General Counsel, Fullscreen Media Section members can save $75! Rooster Teeth Professor Stan Soocher presents a Attorneys licensed 5 years or less roundup of entertainment industry Michael Williams, Los Angeles, CA cases and is joined by Entertainment attend for half off! Oomba.com Law Update Podcast co-hosts Tamera Bennett and Gordon Firemark. 2:15 Broadway Musicals: the Contracts, #TBCLE Royalties and Economics of the “Great Stan Soocher, Denver, CO White Way” 1 hr Editor-in-Chief, Entertainment Law & This panel will discuss the many different Finance types of music licensing deals, contracts
    [Show full text]
  • MESA ARIZONA 101 Things to Do
    MESA ARIZONA 101 Things To Do Photo by Mike Reyno Minutes from Phoenix & Scottsdale . Miles from Ordinary Apache Greyhound Park Arizona Hall of Fame Museum Arizona Theatre Company 2551 W.Apache Trail 1101 W.Washington St. 502 W.Roosevelt St. Apache Junction,AZ 85220 Phoenix,AZ 85007 Phoenix,AZ 85003 Phone:480-982-2371 Phone: 602-255-2110 Phone: 602-256-6995 Experience the thrills and excitement of Housed in the 1908 Carnegie Library. The state’s leading professional theater greyhound racing. www.casinocity.com/ Exhibits: “The Works of Lon Megaree: company presents six productions each us/az/apachegr.html Preservation of a State Treasure,” season at the Herberger Theater Center. “My Name is Arizona.” www.dlapr. www.herbergertheater.org Apache Trail and lib.az.us/museum/hof.htm Superstition Mountains Barleen’s Arizona Opry Hwy. 88, 65 miles round trip Arizona Mills Dinner Show The Apache Trail is one of the most 5000 Arizona Mills Circle 2275 E. Hwy. 60 Broadway Palm Dinner Theatre – West popular day trips from the Phoenix- Baseline and I-10 Freeway Apache Junction,AZ 85219 Mesa metro area.Visitors can follow Tempe, AZ 85282 Phone:480-982-7991 the footsteps that Indians and hopeful Phone:480-491-9700 Generous portions of tender, slow- Broadway Palm Dinner prospectors took over 100 years ago. A dynamic mix of 175 value retailers, cooked roast beef, mashed potatoes Theatre – West restaurants and entertainment venues. 5246 E. Brown Rd. SM and country gravy, corn, cole slaw Arizona Mills brings Shoppertainment and rolls are served to your table. Mesa,AZ 85205 to the Southwest.
    [Show full text]
  • 2010 Music for All National Festival Program Book
    presented by March 4-6, 2010 Indianapolis, Indiana Programs of Music for All Greetings from the President & CEO March 4, 2010 Greetings, Welcome to Indianapolis and the 2010 Music for All National Festival, presented by Yamaha. It is my pleasure to welcome you to this premier event, recognized as the epitome of music festivals, and to congratulate you for being recognized as one of the finest school music programs in America. 2010 marks the 35th anniversary of Music for All’s Bands of America and my 26th L. Scott McCormick year as the executive director of the organization. For the past 34 years, we have been able to provide positively life-changing experiences to over 1.25 million young people and educators. Today, more than ever, I am encouraged by what lies on the horizon and at the same time looking at current challenges that we have not previously experienced. Today, we have greater evidence than we have ever had about the impact that music and the arts have on preparing our young people for the new creative society. And yet we face more and more schools looking at budget cuts that, unfortunately, too often look at the wrong places to cut. It is time to grow the largest community of advocates in our history. With the army of alumni that this organization has, we all need to reach out to engage each of our respective school’s alumni and come together with a single message. If you read this, like so many parents and teachers have in the past, and say, these budget cuts and issues will not affect our program, I know of several nationally recognized music programs’ parents and teachers who were of the same opinion a year ago.
    [Show full text]