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The San Francisco Arts Quarterly SA Free Publication Dedicated to the Artistic Communityfaq
i 2 The San Francisco Arts Quarterly SA Free Publication Dedicated to the Artistic CommunityFAQ SOMA ISSUE: July.August.September Bay Area Arts Calendar The SOMA: Blue Collar to Blue Chip Rudolf Frieling from SFMOMA Baer Ridgway Gallery 111 Minna Gallery East Bay Focus: Johansson Projects free Artspan In Memory of Jim Marshall CONTENTS July. August. September 2010 Issue 2 JULY LISTINGS 5-28 111 Minna Gallery 75-76 Jay Howell AUGUST LISTINGS 29-45 Baer Ridgway Gallery 77-80 SEPTEMBER LISTINGS 47-60 Eli Ridgeway History of SOMA 63-64 Artspan 81-82 Blue Collar to Blue-Chip Heather Villyard Ira Nowinsky My Love for You is 83-84 SFMOMA 65-68 a Stampede of Horses New Media Curator Meighan O’Toole Rudolf Frieling The Seeker 85 Stark Guide 69 SF Music Collector Column Museum of Craft 86 Crown Point Press 70 and Folk Art Zine Review 71 East Bay Focus: 87-88 Johansson Projects The Contemporary 73 Jewish Museum In Memory: 89-92 Jim Marshall Zeum: 74 Children Museum Residency Listings 93-94 Space Resource Listings 95-100 FOUNDERS / EDITORS IN CHIEF Gregory Ito and Andrew McClintock MARKETING / ADVERTISING CONTRIBUTORS LISTINGS Andrew McClintock Contributing Writers Listing Coordinator [email protected] Gabe Scott, Jesse Pollock, Gregory Ito Gregory Ito Leigh Cooper, John McDermott, Assistant Listings Coordinator [email protected] Tyson Vogel, Cameron Kelly, Susan Wu Stella Lochman, Kent Long Film Listings ART / DESIGN Michelle Broder Van Dyke, Stella Lochman, Zmira Zilkha Gregory Ito, Ray McClure, Marianna Stark, Zmira Zilkha Residency Listings Andrew McClintock, Leigh Cooper Cameron Kelly Contributing Photographers Editoral Interns Jesse Pollock, Terry Heffernan, Special Thanks Susie Sherpa Michael Creedon, Dayna Rochell Tina Conway, Bette Okeya, Royce STAFF Ito, Sarah Edwards, Chris Bratton, Writers ADVISORS All our friends and peers, sorry we Gregory Ito, Andrew McClintock Marianna Stark, Tyson Vo- can’t list you all.. -
Mayor Newsom Announces Better Streets Program
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: Thursday, August 11, 2005 Contact: Mayor’s Office of Communications 415-554-6131 *** PRESS RELEASE *** NEWSOM UNVEILS PHASE II OF THE CLEAN AND GREEN INITIATIVE: BETTER STREETS PROGRAM Announces Creation of Interdepartmental Working Group and Green Vision Council to further Mayor’s commitment to sustainable communities City Policy Planner Marshall Foster named San Francisco’s first Director of City Greening San Francisco CA – Delivering on his commitment to make real, immediate and sustainable improvements to enhance and preserve quality of life in San Francisco, Mayor Gavin Newsom today unveiled Phase II of the City’s Clean and Green Initiative: the Better Streets Program. Mayor Newsom also took this opportunity to announce the establishment of an Interdepartmental Working Group and Green Vision Council to carry out his goal of aligning the City’s development with a set of sustainable building practices. The City’s efforts will be led by Mr. Marshall Foster, a Planner in the San Francisco Planning Department. Mr. Foster will be San Francisco’s first Director of City Greening, who will work with the Interdepartmental Working Group and Green Vision Council to develop the City’s Green Master Plan. “The quality of streets is a concern everywhere in San Francisco,” said Mayor Gavin Newsom. “This second phase gives us a key opportunity to focus on the design of our streets,” Newsom continued, “I am confident that with the leadership of Marshall Foster, we will develop a framework of initiatives that will build the vision of greening our city over time.” Mr. Dean Macris, San Francisco’s Planning Director added, “Mayor Newsom has made an excellent choice in naming Marshall to lead his vision of greening our city. -
Better Neighborhood Plan
BETTER NEIGHBORHOOD PLAN DRAFT FOR PUBLIC REVIEW MAY 2009 SAN FRANCISCO PLANNING DEPARTMENT Acknowledgements MAYOR PLANNING DEPARTMENT JAPANTOWN JAPANTOWN PRESERVATION JAPANTOWN TEAM STEERING COMMITTEE WORKING GROUP Gavin Newsom Rosemary Dudley Darryl Abantao Sumi Honnami Ken Rich Ko Asakura Karen Kai Matt Weintraub Stephen Engblom Ken Kaji BOARD OF SUPERVISORS Seiko Fujimoto Ben Kobashigawa Michela Alioto-Pier Hiroshi Fukuda Karl Matsushita John Avalos PLANNING DEPARTMENT Pierre Gasztowtt Steve Nakajo David Campos CONTRIBUTING STAFF Bob Hamaguchi Paul Osaki David Chiu, President John Rahaim, Director of Planning Richard Hashimoto Ben Pease Carmen Chu Dean Macris, Former Director of Planning Seiji Horibuchi Rosalyn Tonai Chris Daly Amnon Ben-Pazi Cathy Inamasu Francis Wong Bevan Dufty Gary Chen Gregory Johnson Sean Elsbernd Elaine Forbes Ryan Kimura Eric Mar Adena Friedman Bette Landis Sophie Maxwell Michael Jacinto Tak Matsuba Ross Mirkarimi Lily Langlois Sandy Mori Mark Luellen Eddie Moriguchi With the Participation of the Following Public Agencies Kate McGee Steve Nakajo Mayor’s Office of Community Investment PLANNING COMMISSION Nicholas Perry Yosh Nakashima Mayor’s Office of Housing Gwyneth Borden AnMarie Rodgers Rumi Okabe Office of Economic and Workforce Development Christina Olague Elizabeth Skrondal Diane Onizuka Recreation and Park Department Michael J. Antonini Josh Switzky Teresa Ono San Francisco County Transportation Authority William L. Lee Adam Varat Jon Osaki San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency Ron Miguel, President Michael Webster Paul Osaki San Francisco Redevelopment Agency Kathrin Moore Kathy Reyes Robert Sakai Hisashi Sugaya With the Following Consultants to the Planning Department Rosalyn Tonai BMS Design Group Donna Graves Fehr & Peers Japantown Task Force Page & Turnbull, Inc. -
The Future of Downtown San Francisco Expanding Downtown’S Capacity for Transit-Oriented Jobs
THE FUTURE OF DOWNTOWN SAN FRANCISCO EXPANDING DOWNTOWN’S CAPACITY FOR TRANSIT-ORIENTED JOBS SPUR REPORT Adopted by the SPUR Board of Directors on January 21, 2009 Released March 2009 The primary author of this report were Egon Terplan, Ellen Lou, Anthony Bruzzone, James Rogers, Brian Stokle, Jeff Tumlin and George Williams with assistance from Frank Fudem, Val Menotti, Michael Powell, Libby Seifel, Chi-Hsin Shao, John Sugrue and Jessica Zenk SPUR 654 Mission St., San Francisco, California 94105 www.spur.org SPUR | March 2009 INDEX Introduction ________________________________________________________________________ 3 I. The Problem: Regional job sprawl and the decline of transit-served central business districts _ 6 II. The Solution: The best environmental and economic response for the region is to expand our dynamic, transit-served central business districts _______________________________________ 16 III. The Constraints: We are running out of capacity in downtown San Francisco to accommodate much new employment growth _______________________________________________________ 20 The Zoning Constraint: Downtown San Francisco is running out of zoned space for jobs. 20 The Transportation Constraint: Our regional transportation system — roads and trains — is nearing capacity at key points in our downtown. 29 IV. Recommendations: How to create the downtown of the future __________________________ 39 Land use and zoning recommendations 39 Transportation policy recommendations: Transit, bicycling and roadways 49 Conclusion _______________________________________________________________________ 66 The Future of Downtown San Francisco 2 INTRODUCTION Since 1990, Bay Area residents have been driving nearly 50 million more miles each day. Regionally, transit ridership to work fell from a high of 11.4 percent in 1980 to around 9.4 percent in 2000. -
Short Range Transit Plan
SHORT RANGE TRANSIT PLAN SFMTA.COM Fiscal Year 2017 - Fiscal Year 2030 2 Federal transportation statutes require that the Metropolitan Transportation Commission (MTC), in partnership with state and local agencies, develop and periodically update a long-range Regional Transportation Plan (RTP), and a Transportation Improvement Program (TIP) which implements the RTP by programming federal funds to transportation projects contained in the RTP. In order to effectively execute these planning and programming responsibilities, MTC requires that each transit operator in its region which receives federal funding through the TIP, prepare, adopt and submit to MTC a Short Range Transit Plan (SRTP). The preparation of this report has been funded in part by a grant from the U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT) through section 5303 of the Federal Transit Act. The contents of this SRTP reflect the views of the San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency, and not necessarily those of the Federal Transit Administration (FTA) or MTC. San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency is solely responsible for the accuracy of the information presented in this SRTP. SFMTA FY 2017 - FY 2030 SRTP Anticipated approval by the SFMTA Board of Directors: Middle of 2017 TABLE OF CONTENTS 1. OVERVIEW OF THE SFMTA TRANSIT SYSTEM 7 Brief History 7 Governance 8 Transit Services 12 TABLE OF CONTENTS OF TABLE Overview of the Revenue Fleet 17 Existing Facilities 18 2. SFMTA GOALS, OBJECTIVES & STANDARDS 27 The SFMTA Strategic Plan 27 FY 2013 - FY 2018 Strategic Plan Elements 29 SFMTA Performance Measures 30 3. SERVICE & SYSTEM EVALUATION 35 Current Systemwide Performance 35 Muni Transit Service Structure 40 Muni Service Equity Policy 41 Equipment & Facilities 42 MTC Community-Based Transportation Planning Program 42 Paratransit Services 43 Title VI Analysis & Report 44 3 FTA Triennial Review 44 4. -
MX-19.2 Users Manual
MX-19.2 Users Manual v. 20200801 manual AT mxlinux DOT org Ctrl-F = Search this Manual Ctrl+Home = Return to top Table of Contents 1 Introduction...................................................................................................................................4 1.1 About MX Linux................................................................................................................4 1.2 About this Manual..............................................................................................................4 1.3 System requirements..........................................................................................................5 1.4 Support and EOL................................................................................................................6 1.5 Bugs, issues and requests...................................................................................................6 1.6 Migration............................................................................................................................7 1.7 Our positions......................................................................................................................8 1.8 Notes for Translators.............................................................................................................8 2 Installation...................................................................................................................................10 2.1 Introduction......................................................................................................................10 -
Sep 1969, Vector Vol. 05 No. 09
SEPTEMBER ¡969 s /N Tins ISSUE: DORR JONRS INTRRVIRW SEXUAL MANEUVERS ‘GEESE’ BY MAGDA GLIDE GAY SHOW li’-E.yT ^ > .if» • - e The Tavern Guild of San Francisco Take extends its heartiest thanks the plunge, try to those who attended BRADLEY’S CORNER, 900 C ole Street and supported C'.l.OUD 7, 2360 Polk S treet COVERED WAGON, 10th & Folsom Streets DENO’S RESTAURANT, Divisadero Street FICKLE FOX, 842 Valencia Street Empress Reba’s Galaxie Ball GANGWAY, 841 Larkin S treet GAS STATION, 298 Sixth Street GILDED CAGE, 126 Ellis Street CiOLD ROOM, 939 Geary Street GORDON’S, 840 Sansome Street HIGHLANDER, 395 Vermont Street HONEY BUCKET, 4146- 18th Street JUG’S LIQUORS, 2099 Market Street LEONARDA’S, 16 Leland Avenue LIBRA, 1884 Market Street LONELY BULL, 471 Turk Street LUCKY CLUB, 1801 Haight Street MAPLE LEAF, 1548 Polk Street MAUD’S STUDY, 937 Cole Street MEET MARKET, 1551 Mission Street MISSOURI MULE, 2348 Market Street MY ROOM, 209 S tevenson S treet ON THE LEVEE, 987 Embarcadero OPERA CLUB, 621 Gough Street PARADOX, 3041 Geary Boulevard RAMROD, 1225 Folsom Street RED LION, 4611 Geary Boulevard RENDEZVOUS, 567 Sutter Street SPEAKEASY, 17th & Florida TACKY WENCH, 301 Turk Street TOOL BOX, 399 Fourth Street TOWER LOUNGE, 1488 Pine Street TRAPP, 72 Eddy Street MARIN ALDO’S, 17500 Orchard Avenue, Ciuerneville HOUNDSTOOTH INN, 10 Woodland, San Rafael SUPPORT YOUR VI’S CLUB DRAKE, 1625 Sir Francis Drake, Fairfax Photograph by Walter Binder, San Francisco. TAVERN GUILD BAR MEMBERS. EAST BAY San Diego Reno Seattle BERRY’S, 352- I4th Street, Oakland Dave’s Coast Security Club Dave’s Westside Motel Dave’s Steam Bath GRANDMA’S HOUSE, 135-I2th, Oakland (Private”) 4969 Santa Monica 3001 W. -
Kevin Ahern's Wildly Popular Metabolic Melodies As of April 15, 2017 the Link Page for Individual Melodies Is
Kevin Ahern’s Wildly Popular Metabolic Melodies This is the complete collection of Kevin Ahern's Wildly Popular Metabolic Melodies as of April 15, 2017 The link page for individual melodies is http://www.davincipress.com Many More Metabolic and Miscellanic Melodies is available at http://www.lulu.com/shop/kevin-ahern/many-more-metabolic-and-miscellanic- melodies/paperback/product-22286156.html Merry Metabolic and Miscellanic Melodies is a book of the melodies available at Amazon – http://www.amazon.com/Merry-Metabolic-Miscellanic-Melodies- Kevin/dp/1312388609/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1408893716&sr=8- 1&keywords=Miscellanic Barnes & Noble – http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/merry-metabolic-and-miscellanic- melodies-kevin-ahern/1120154433?ean=9781312388604 Kindle - http://www.amazon.com/Merry-Metabolic-Miscellanic-Melodies-Kevin- ebook/dp/B00M6DYCF8/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1407214808&sr=8- 1&keywords=miscellanic Lulu - http://www.lulu.com/shop/kevin-ahern/kevin-aherns-1001-punniest- limericks/paperback/product-21732984.html The Metabolic Melodies 2016 Calendar is available at http://www.lulu.com/shop/kevin-ahern/my-calendar/calendar/product-22421056.html “A Limerick a Day For a Year” is available at http://www.lulu.com/shop/kevin- ahern/a-limerick-a-day-for-a-year/paperback/product-20580652.html “A Limerick a Day For Another Year” is available at http://www.lulu.com/shop/kevin-ahern/a-limerick-a-day-for-another- year/paperback/product-21361729.html “A Limerick a Day For a Third Year” is available at https://www.lulu.com/shop/kevin- ahern/a-limerick-a-day-for-a-third-year/paperback/product-21959393.html -
PROFESSIONAL VIDEO 327 800-947-1175 | 212-444-6675 Blackmagic • Canon
327-369 Pro Video_Layout 1 9/17/14 5:55 PM Page 327 PROFESSIONAL VIDEO 327 800-947-1175 | 212-444-6675 Blackmagic • Canon Accessories for Cinema Cameras Amphibico UW Housing for Pocket Cinema (AM34000)....1699.00 Blackmagic Power Supply for Pocket (BLPSPLY1210W) ........50.00 Pocket Cinema Camera Camrade Rain Cover/wetSuit for Cinema and 4K (CAWSBM) ..185.07 Pocket Cinema Camera is a true Super 16 digital film camera that’s small enough to keep with you D\Focus D|Cage for Pocket Cinema (DFDCBMPCC) ............169.95 at all times. Remarkably compact (5 x 2.6 x 1.5”) and lightweight (12.5 oz) with a magnesium alloy Equinox UW Housing for Cinema Camera (EQBMCC)........2449.00 chassis, it features 13 stops of dynamic range, Super 16 sensor size, and and records 1080HD lossless Genustech Combat Cage f/Cinema Camera (GEGBMDCAGE) ..275.00 CinemaDNG RAW and Apple ProRes 422 (HQ) files to fast SDXC cards, so you can immediately edit or Hoodman HBM1 Hood For Cinema Camera (HOHBM1) .......105.99 color correct your media on your laptop. Active Micro 4/3 lens mount can accommodate a growing ikan Tilta ES-T13 Pocket Cinema Camera Rig (IKEST13) .....359.00 range of MFT format lenses as well as a legacy lenses via optional adapters. IndiPRO Tools Dual Canon LP-E6 (INPGRIDPKLP6) or Sony-L Ideal for documentaries, independent films, photo journalism, ENG and even war zones, it brings cinematic film look shooting to the most (INGRIDPKSONY) Battery Plate for Pocket Cinema Camera......95.00 difficult and remote locations. (BLPKCINECAM).................................................................................................................................995.00 -
Resolution Log – 2005
RESOLUTION LOG – 2005 05-01 1/4/05 Requesting the Controller to allot funds and to draw warrants against such funds available or will be available in payment of the following claims against the MTA: A. Latara Reed, Superior Ct. #420857 filed on 5/28/03 for $2,000 B. Peggy Elaine Cosmas, Superior Ct. #CGC03418121 filed on 3/7/03 for $4,500 C. Sheila Golden, Unlitigated Claim #0500675 filed on 8/24/04 for $7,037.22 D. Elizabeth Ing, Superior Ct. #429869 filed on 3/24/04 for $11,000 E. Jose Armando Ramirez, Superior Ct. #01401901 filed on 11/30/01 for $17,500 F. Jose Jimenez, Superior Ct. #CGC04044291 filed on 9/1/04 for $32,000 G. Michael Kellner, Superior Ct. #411335 filed on 8/9/02 for $60,000 05-002 1/4/05 Approving the following traffic modifications: A. ESTABLISH - TOW-AWAY, NO STOPPING - Evans Avenue, west side, from Napoleon Street to 100 feet northerly and Evans Avenue, east side, from Napoleon Street to 120 feet northerly. B. RESCIND - TWO-HOUR PARKING TIME LIMIT, APRIL THROUGH OCTOBER, 7 AM TO 10 PM, MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY, 9 AM TO 6 PM, SATURDAY AND SUNDAY AND TWO-HOUR PARKING TIME LIMIT, NOVEMBER THROUGH MARCH, 7 AM TO 6 PM, MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY - Townsend Street, south side, from 2nd Street to 27 feet westerly. C. RESCIND - PARKING METERS - Columbus Avenue, north side, west of Greenwich Street, rescinding #802 to increase the length of an existing Bus Zone. D. ESTABLISH - NO LEFT TURN - 505 Parnassus Avenue, driveway exit. -
Paolo Shoes Is Staying on Fillmore by Chris Barnett
■ INSIDE ■ NEWS ■ FILM Letters 2 Paolo Shoes A Filmmaker’s Street Talk 3 Crime Watch 4 Gets a Reprieve Coff ee Passion New Neighbors 5 Lease on a key corner Premiering this month, Film 7 extended for two years a story born on Fillmore Home Sales 14 PAGE 3 PAGE 7 THE NEW FILLMORE SAN FRANCISCO ■ APRILJUNE 20142010 The Story OF THE Fillmore Th ree Cataclysmic Events Transformed the Neighborhood By Gary Kamiya geologist would call the block of Fillmore Street between Post and Sutter a A“triple junction.” It’s one of those three- way collisions where a swanky part of town crashes into a seedy one, while a completely diff erent quarter sideswipes both of them. In 1974, my cousin Jonathan and I were house-sitting four blocks away at Pine and Buchanan, in a majestic, decaying Victorian with a big psychedelic mandala painted in an alcove. We didn’t know it at the time, but our building was a weird precursor to the Summer of Love. In 1965, that stretch of Pine Street had been a pre- Haight hippie scene, with half a dozen houses fi lled with longhairs and deal- ers. Th e downstairs unit had been home to the legendary hippie newspaper the Oracle. Across the street, at 2111 Pine, a rooming house once stood; some of the itinerant musicians there played in a vanished after-hours jazz club three blocks away called Bop City. Th e room- ing house was managed by a guy named Bill Ham, who invented psychedelic light shows. Our block was mostly black and pretty run-down. -
SHOOT Digital PDF Version, August/Sept 2016, Volume 57
www.SHOOTonline.com August/September 2016 Chat Room: John Leverence 6 VR & AR 18 DGA of Wise/courtesy Howard by Photo (From top left clockwise) DP James Hawkinson (l) and actress Alexa Davalos in The Man In The High Castle (photo courtesy of Amazon); Actor Jonathan Pryce (l) and director Jack Bender on location for Game of Thrones (photo courtesy of HBO); Claire Danes in Homeland (photo by Stephan Rabold/courtesy of Showtime). Top Ten Tracks 22 The Road To Emmy Part 14 Insights Into Game of Thrones, Homeland, The Night Manager, The Man In The High Castle, Black Sails 4 4 2016 Mid-Year Industry Report Card 8 (L-r) Andy Clarke of Publicis NY; Stacy McClain of Camp + King; Dave Damman of Grupo Gallegos; and Libby Brockhoff of Odysseus Arms Visual Effects & Animation Top Ten Chart 24 The world’s fastest video editing and color correction software! Now with over 1,000 enhancements and 250 new features, DaVinci New Effects Resolve 12.5 gives editors and colorists a faster, more refined editing DaVinci Resolve 12.5 introduces ResolveFX, an amazing collection of and grading experience than ever! You get professional editing with high performance plug-ins such as blurs, light rays, mosaics, and more! advanced color correction, plus incredible new effects so you can edit, You also get more transitions, enhanced titles, keyframe animation and color correct, add effects and deliver projects from start to finish, all in speed ramp effects, along with Fusion Connect, which lets you send one single software tool! shots to Fusion for visual effects! Faster Editing DaVinci Resolve 12.5 Studio DaVinci Resolve 12.5 features dozens of new editing and trimming tools, When you need to work at resolutions higher than Ultra HD, like DCI 4K along with faster timeline performance! You get new ripple overwrite, or even on stereoscopic 3D projects, then upgrade to DaVinci Resolve paste insert, revolutionary new audio waveform overlays that help you 12.5 Studio.