Community, Family Support Plays Big Part in Recovery for Ollila
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Copyright 2013 Shawn Patrick Gilmore
Copyright 2013 Shawn Patrick Gilmore THE INVENTION OF THE GRAPHIC NOVEL: UNDERGROUND COMIX AND CORPORATE AESTHETICS BY SHAWN PATRICK GILMORE DISSERTATION Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in English in the Graduate College of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2013 Urbana, Illinois Doctoral Committee: Professor Michael Rothberg, Chair Professor Cary Nelson Associate Professor James Hansen Associate Professor Stephanie Foote ii Abstract This dissertation explores what I term the invention of the graphic novel, or more specifically, the process by which stories told in comics (or graphic narratives) form became longer, more complex, concerned with deeper themes and symbolism, and formally more coherent, ultimately requiring a new publication format, which came to be known as the graphic novel. This format was invented in fits and starts throughout the twentieth century, and I argue throughout this dissertation that only by examining the nuances of the publishing history of twentieth-century comics can we fully understand the process by which the graphic novel emerged. In particular, I show that previous studies of the history of comics tend to focus on one of two broad genealogies: 1) corporate, commercially-oriented, typically superhero-focused comic books, produced by teams of artists; 2) individually-produced, counter-cultural, typically autobiographical underground comix and their subsequent progeny. In this dissertation, I bring these two genealogies together, demonstrating that we can only truly understand the evolution of comics toward the graphic novel format by considering the movement of artists between these two camps and the works that they produced along the way. -
Ssprfiins and STRAINS
10-C THE DETROIT TIMES Monday, May 21, 1945 HENRY By Carl Anderson DOUBLE TROUBLE 8y Maclean " getting —— lilili *Y"Vfrsty [henry'-you're fp==n . hijpiii-!- -MiffliriTvooz is ,!,!l^!lj p||l| pnn '^lj|l:[ Tcome back an' letme'l ' PLUMP/ WWY DON'T YOU _A teluinO' ' J ' JJ^ I —•—¦ - ‘(uTauaa.m ebkJ_) ? Gri ’'j yjfs*' SfSw [r— y~— —T 'gfb ItJi —^nyJuEßE!^ By Walt Disney AND OINIE By Bay! Eoqa'ly DONALD DUCK LEM 7 GOT a A [yVwAVEMT e Ers ') l^ ~ y O l LAFF-A-DAY TIMES DAILY CROSSWORD A I ti N 4' HOWS 1 1 —Rftlnn. flinhf* 74—t- iitß . b 12 Alikin tanat >. 2 l—Garni' tui> 3 7—Katt *t«i 1 ti -l.lkr *lf 30—Jr»t l. 23—High piifkl. If—N«f 2 3—Furl 1 »—ri.i on a* 2-t Bny'i nirtrarm*. 1 1 Sl a i«ni r k » ' H—i, • re* I< rifr. fWTTTWm~WJ] 12 i Cully- 17—<lty N'V Ha. IS—Blundt rs. .4 It—s h» fnjzzi:—-t 4A - -iVfTk • * 41—Pernifd r>(M\ N 1— Hatai i—Ex 'tf i l«ll « f »..rrn» 3 Mechlin lan. ; 4Care lufdlv 7 7 -y—Tom >Tt. L). t h Memorandum h<«ik» 7 - I—>tn*« timed at P—slarch«i, , Palm 14—Hull «»* 1 7—firrl f tin aitfmr. 20—1’UMtkr hil.. •.* * —nirpra'p ' 72 ~«pMk *• “ !* 23—Male s<-e*f. * iifniiiiii Hi ukchold By B°y Cran» 24 animal. BUZ SAWYER 2*>— f.fare ofT *1 a ivllable 3fi—Exist ___M| 2Z-= Va.ut-d. -
National Exchange Carrier Association, Inc. Tariff F.C.C
NATIONAL EXCHANGE CARRIER ASSOCIATION, INC. TARIFF F.C.C. NO. 4 DIRECTOR, TECHNICAL PLANNING & IMPLEMENTATION 13TH REVISED SECTION 1 60 COLUMBIA ROAD, Bldg. A, Fl. 2 CANCELS 12TH REVISED SECTION 1 MORRISTOWN, N.J. 07960 PAGE 1 ISSUED: AUGUST 17, 2000 EFFECTIVE: SEPTEMBER 01, 2000 WIRE CENTER AND INTERCONNECTION INFORMATION TITLE PAGE THIS TARIFF CONTAINS INFORMATION RELATED TO WIRE CENTERS/RATING POINT LOCATIONS PROVIDING ACCESS SERVICE IN LOCAL ACCESS AND TRANSPORT AREAS (LATAS) AND MARKET AREAS (MAS), SUBTENDING INFORMATION IDENTIFYING THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN WIRE CENTERS FOR THE ORDERING AND PROVISIONING OF ACCESS SERVICES AND INTERCONNECTION INFORMATION WHEN TWO OR MORE EXCHANGE CARRIERS ARE JOINTLY PROVIDING ACCESS SERVICE WITHIN OR BETWEEN LATAS OR MAS UNDER SEPARATE ACCESS SERVICE TARIFFS. THE WIRE CENTER, INTERCONNECTION AND SUBTENDING INFORMATION CONTAINED HEREIN IS FOR NECA MEMBER COMPANIES AND ANY NECA NON-MEMBER THAT FILES IT'S OWN INTERSTATE ACCESS TARIFF. NECA NON-MEMBERS ARE IDENTIFIED IN THIS TARIFF VIA SECTION 8. A COMPANY CATEGORY OTHER THAN ILEC OR RBOC MAY ALSO BE ASSIGNED TO NECA MEMBER COMPANIES FOR THE PURPOSE OF IDENTIFYING SERVICES PROVIDED BY NECA MEMBERS OUTSIDE OF TRADITIONAL SERVING TERRITORIES. CHARGES APPLICABLE TO NON-MEMBERS SHALL BE APPLIED TO THESE OPERATIONS. THIS TARIFF ALSO CONTAINS REGULATIONS FOR CALCULATING THE AIRLINE MILEAGE BETWEEN WIRE CENTERS, ON WHICH CERTAIN ACCESS SERVICE CHARGES ARE BASED, USING THE VERTICAL AND HORIZONTAL COORDINATES METHOD. UNDER AUTHORITY OF SPECIAL PERMISSION NO. 88-200 OF THE FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION, THIS TARIFF, NATIONAL EXCHANGE CARRIER ASSOCIATION, INC., TARIFF F.C.C. NO. 4, WIRE CENTER AND INTERCONNECTION INFORMATION, SUCCEEDS IN ITS ENTIRETY EXCHANGE CARRIER ASSOCIATION TARIFF NO. -
F(Error) = Amusement
Academic Forum 33 (2015–16) March, Eleanor. “An Approach to Poetry: “Hombre pequeñito” by Alfonsina Storni”. Connections 3 (2009): 51-55. Moon, Chung-Hee. Trans. by Seong-Kon Kim and Alec Gordon. Woman on the Terrace. Buffalo, New York: White Pine Press, 2007. Peraza-Rugeley, Margarita. “The Art of Seen and Being Seen: the poems of Moon Chung- Hee”. Academic Forum 32 (2014-15): 36-43. Serrano Barquín, Carolina, et al. “Eros, Thánatos y Psique: una complicidad triática”. Ciencia ergo sum 17-3 (2010-2011): 327-332. Teitler, Nathalie. “Rethinking the Female Body: Alfonsina Storni and the Modernista Tradition”. Bulletin of Spanish Studies: Hispanic Studies and Researches on Spain, Portugal and Latin America 79, (2002): 172—192. Biographical Sketch Dr. Margarita Peraza-Rugeley is an Assistant Professor of Spanish in the Department of English, Foreign Languages and Philosophy at Henderson State University. Her scholarly interests center on colonial Latin-American literature from New Spain, specifically the 17th century. Using the case of the Spanish colonies, she explores the birth of national identities in hybrid cultures. Another scholarly interest is the genre of Latin American colonialist narratives by modern-day female authors who situate their plots in the colonial period. In 2013, she published Llámenme «el mexicano»: Los almanaques y otras obras de Carlos de Sigüenza y Góngora (Peter Lang,). She also has published short stories. During the summer of 2013, she spent time in Seoul’s National University and, in summer 2014, in Kyungpook National University, both in South Korea. https://www.facebook.com/StringPoet/ The Best Players in New York Mets History Fred Worth, Ph.D. -
Innovative Lessons from the Miracle Mets of 1969: Part 3 of 3 March 17, 2020 | Written By: Len Ferman
Published in General Innovative Lessons from the Miracle Mets of 1969: Part 3 of 3 March 17, 2020 | Written by: Len Ferman This is the final post in a 3 part series. Read the first two parts: Part 1 | Part 2 How the Worst Team in Baseball History Innovated to Win the World Series 50 Years Ago The New York Mets of 1969 The New York Mets baseball club of 1969 has come to be known as simply the Miracle Mets. The story of that club is perhaps the closest that major league baseball, or for that matter all of professional sports, has ever come to producing a true to life fairy tale. From Worst to First The Mets first season in 1962 was a record setting campaign in futility. The Mets lost 120 of their 160 games. No major league baseball team before or since has come close to losing that many games. And the losing didn’t stop there. From 1962 – 1968 the Mets lost an average of 105 games per year as they finished in last or second to last place every year. Then, in a stunning reversal of fortune, in that miracle year of 1969, when men first landed on the moon, the Mets won 100 games and won the World Series. The Players Credit Their Manager The players on the 1969 Mets all gave the credit for the amazing turnaround to their manager Gil Hodges. “We were managed by an infallible genius[i]”, said Tom Seaver, the club’s young star pitcher. And leading batter on the team, Clean Jones said, “If we had been managed by anybody else, we wouldn’t have won. -
LOT# TITLE BIDS 1 Lou Gehrig Single-Signed Baseball
HUGGINS AND SCOTT'S May 4, 2017 AUCTION PRICES REALIZED LOT# TITLE BIDS 1 Lou Gehrig Single-Signed Baseball - Sweet Spot Signature--Full JSA & PSA/DNA 13 $ 16,800.00 2 Ultra-Rare Jesse Burkett Signed Black and White HOF Plaque Postcard (PSA/DNA MINT 9) - 1 of 3 Known [reserve16 met]$ 40,800.00 3 Rare Thomas H. Connolly Double-Signed Black and White HOF Plaque Postcard - SGC/JSA Authentic [reserve not met]4 $ - 4 Scarce Connie Mack Signed Black and White HOF Plaque Postcard - PSA/DNA Authentic [reserve met] 4 $ 6,000.00 5 Scarce A.C. Dazzy Vance Signed Black and White HOF Plaque Postcard - PSA/DNA MINT 9 [reserve met] 5 $ 2,880.00 6 Honus Wagner Reverse-Signed Black and White HOF Plaque Postcard - PSA/DNA Authentic [reserve met] 15 $ 4,200.00 7 Jackie Robinson Signed Black and White HOF Plaque Postcard - PSA/DNA MINT 9 [reserve met] 16 $ 2,640.00 8 Ty Cobb Twice-Signed Black and White HOF Plaque Postcard - PSA/DNA Authentic [reserve met] 10 $ 1,800.00 9 Cy Young Signed Black and White HOF Plaque Postcard - PSA/DNA MINT 9 [reserve met] 13 $ 3,720.00 10 Jimmie Foxx Signed Black and White HOF Plaque Postcard - PSA/DNA Authentic 23 $ 2,400.00 11 Rogers Hornsby Double-Signed Black and White HOF Plaque Postcard - PSA/DNA NM-MT 8 21 $ 2,520.00 12 Fred C. Clarke Double-Signed Black and White HOF Plaque Postcard - PSA/DNA MINT 9 18 $ 2,280.00 13 Pie Traynor Signed Black and White HOF Plaque Postcard - PSA/DNA MINT 9 11 $ 1,440.00 14 Tris Speaker Double-Signed Black and White HOF Plaque Postcard - PSA/DNA NM-MT 8 15 $ 2,400.00 15 Charles "Kid" Nichols Signed Black and White HOF Plaque Postcard - SGC/JSA Authentic 21 $ 2,160.00 16 HOFers Signed Black and White Plaque Postcards Lot (10) - PSA/DNA Graded/Authentic 9 $ 1,560.00 17 George Sisler Signed Black and White HOF Plaque Postcard - PSA/DNA MINT 9 1 $ 300.00 18 Ed A. -
Communist Attacks Reach Low Ebb in Vietnam
G*nentawmun FRIDAY'S TIDES 0zzttWATER CONDITION t HIGH LOW Charlie V 1:17 a.m. 7:40 a.m. U.S. NAVAL BASE, GUANTANAMO BAY, CUBA STORAGE ASHORE 1:29 p.m. 7:16 p.m. 15.3 Million Gallons Phone 9-5247 Date THURSDAY, JULY 3, 1969 Radio (1340) TV (Ch. 8) Communist Attacks Reach Low Ebb in Vietnam SAIGON (AFRTS)--Enemy attacks in South Vietnam "are almost Rogers Rejects down to nothing" an merican source reported yesterday. Mil- itary officials said attacks have dropped to one of the low- Challenge Motive est levels of the year, but added that infiltration from the North is keeping enemy forces up to strength. * In Nixon Trip "For reasons unknown," one source said, "the enemy has de- WVHINGTON (AP/AFPS)-- Sec- creased his actions. They are almost down to nothing. They retary of State William P. &re not launching any sizeable attacks." Rogers yesterday rejected the The source noted that "attack s have gone down in the past. idea that President Nixon's Whether wd're in a valley betwe en a couple of peaks, we don't visit to Communist Romania know yet. We'll have to wait might be considered a chal- and see. There is a sprink- lenge in Moscow. Wales Cheers New Prince ling of reports indicating "I do not think there is an- possibly another surge of kn- ything inconsistent with our FISHGU'ARD, Wales (AP/AFPS)-- emy attacks rather soon, but friendly relations with the Prince Charles charmed his way this is not firm." Soviet Union," Rogers told a through wildest wales yester- Ranking officers _,said the news conference. -
Force Protection SEE JOBLESS on PAGE 10
MILITARY FACES Russian fighter Iranian craft Athletes, celebrities endangered US harass US ships going ‘All In’ to feed plane, Navy says in Persian Gulf families in need Page 3 Page 3 Page 16 Clemson’s Simmons built to thrive in modern NFL » Back page Volume 78, No. 260 ©SS 2020 CONTINGENCY EDITION FRIDAY, APRIL 17, 2020 stripes.com Free to Deployed Areas VIRUS OUTBREAK Claims for jobless aid in US reach 22 million BY CHRISTOPHER RUGABER Associated Press WASHINGTON — The wave of lay- offs that has engulfed the U.S. economy since the coronavirus struck forced 5.2 million more people to seek unemploy- ment benefits last week, the government reported Thursday. Roughly 22 million have sought job- less benefits in the past month — the worst stretch of U.S. job losses on record. It means that roughly one in seven work- ers have lost their jobs in that time. The grim figures point to an econo- my that is tumbling into what appears to be a calamitous recession, the worst in decades. The nation’s output could shrink by roughly 10.5% before it starts to rebound, according to Ryan Sweet, an economist at Moody’s Analytics. Force protection SEE JOBLESS ON PAGE 10 Army parachute riggers, civilians in Kaiserslautern improvise face masks BY JENNIFER H. SVAN livery Company soldiers have produced about Spc. Robert Walker, a Stars and Stripes 150 a day since Monday, as part of an effort to parachute rigger with the 5th contain the spread of the coronavirus. Quartermaster-Theater Aerial KAISERSLAUTERN, Germany — Sewing The first batches of masks have been distrib- Delivery Company at Rhine RICK BOWMER/AP machines continue to hum inside the work- uted to cooks, gate guards, postal workers and Ordnance Barracks, Germany, A sign reflecting the bleak state of shop at Rhine Ordnance Barracks, where U.S. -
2013 Syndicate Directory
2013 Syndicate Directory NEW FEATURES CUSTOM SERVICES EDITORIAL COMICS POLITICAL CARTOONS What’s New in 2013 by Norman Feuti Meet Gil. He’s a bit of an underdog. He’s a little on the chubby side. He doesn’t have the newest toys or live in a fancy house. His parents are split up – his single mother supports them with her factory job income and his father isn’t around as often as a father ought to be. Gil is a realistic and funny look at life through the eyes of a young boy growing up under circumstances that are familiar to millions of American families. And cartoonist Norm Feuti expertly crafts Gil’s world in a way that gives us all a good chuckle. D&S From the masterminds behind Mobilewalla, the search, discovery and analytics engine for mobile apps, comes a syndicated weekly column offering readers both ratings and descriptions of highly ranked, similarly themed apps. Each week, news subscribers receive a column titled “Fastest Moving Apps of the Week,” which is the weekly hot list of the apps experiencing the most dramatic increases in popularity. Two additional “Weekly Category” features, pegged to relevant news, events, holidays and calendars, are also available. 3TW Drs. Oz and Roizen give readers quick access to practical advice on how to prevent and combat conditions that affect overall wellness and quality of life. Their robust editorial pack- age, which includes Daily Tips, a Weekly Feature and a Q & A column, covers a wide variety of topics, such as diet, exercise, weight loss, sleep and much more. -
October 7, 1969 YOUNGSTOWN STATE UNIVERSITY VOLUME
Tuesday, October 7, 1969 YOUNGSTOWN STATE UNIVERSITY VOLUME Plans for the upcoming Homecoming Queen election will be able to continue as a result of the passage by Student Council yesterday of a revised election procedure. This action, which came during Council':; first meeting ol the year, was necessitated by a CouncU resolu tion last year which prohibited any furthei ejections until a new code wa* adopted. The new rules, introduced by representative-at-large. Chuck Hettler, change old procedure in three ways. The Council hopes to foil all attemps of illegal voting by requiring proof of identification 'in addition tc the YSU ID. Beginning with the Queen In other action, Council Isgro explained that elections, voters will be required debated two money bills; one, Committee presently rents stage:* to show either their driver's calling for a $1,500 purchase of for all of the week-ends at a cost license, social security, or draft a portable stage for Major of $1,500 per event. card. Events, - the- second,- a -52,000 The tbtaHcost of' the-stage; With the same objective in appropriation to the Special estimated at $5,600, will be 1969-1970 Student Council Officers (from left to mind, the new rules call for a Lecture Series Committee for shared by the Council and the right); Frank Hacket, Vice •Chairman; Greg Bednarcik, ledger IBM card where the campus organization's speakers. Major Events Committee. Chairman; and Diane Dell Arco, Secretary student's ID is imprinted and Council passed the Si,500 In Qther action, Council signed. Major Events allocation but held chairman Greg Bednarcik made Additionally, Hettler's bill up for further study the request appointments to Council will lower the grade of the Special Lecture Series Standing Committees, and requirements for candidates in Committee. -
Two Charged in Iron County Counterfeiting Case by RICHARD JENKINS Candice A
Sunny High: 20 | Low: -4 | Details, page 2 DAILY GLOBE yourdailyglobe.com Saturday, January 14, 2017 75 cents Two charged in Iron County counterfeiting case By RICHARD JENKINS Candice A. McCampbell, 35, is criminal complaint also includes Franklin LeRoy Raymond identi- by a police officer from Clin- Dec. 12. [email protected] charged with one count of con- a habitual criminality designa- fied Tobias Jameson as his sup- tonville, Wis., in early December According to the complaint, HURLEY — Two Mercer resi- spiracy to possess meth with tion, alleging he has been con- plier of meth. Raymond, 40, of regarding Hangartner. Hangartner and McCampbell dents were charged with forgery intent to deliver, two counts of victed of at least three misde- Ironwood Township, is facing “(The officer) informed Lt. arrived at the store, where the and drug crimes in Iron County being a party to the crime of meanors in the past five years, three counts of delivery/manufac- Samardich that they were work- couple is alleged to have paid Friday. forgery and two counts of being a increasing the potential maxi- turing meth and one count of ing on a counterfeiting case in with the counterfeit money. They are accused of creating party to the crime of conspiracy mum punishments by up to two maintaining a drug house in their jurisdiction and had execut- Based on the evidence gath- as much as $25,000 in counter- to commit forgery. years. Gogebic County. ed a search warrant on a resi- ered, Samardich obtained a feit currency, at least some of Each meth charge carries a Citing circuit court records, Jameson had been determined dence and had interviewed sever- search warrant for a mobile which authorities say has been potential maximum sentence of the complaint lists convictions to be an alias of Hangartner, al suspects. -
Senior Professional Baseball Association: a League of Our Own Stuart M
University of Miami Law School Institutional Repository University of Miami Entertainment & Sports Law Review 5-1-1993 Senior Professional Baseball Association: A League of Our Own Stuart M. Pepper Follow this and additional works at: http://repository.law.miami.edu/umeslr Part of the Entertainment and Sports Law Commons Recommended Citation Stuart M. Pepper, Senior Professional Baseball Association: A League of Our Own, 10 U. Miami Ent. & Sports L. Rev. 307 (1993) Available at: http://repository.law.miami.edu/umeslr/vol10/iss1/13 This Practitioner's Note is brought to you for free and open access by Institutional Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in University of Miami Entertainment & Sports Law Review by an authorized administrator of Institutional Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Pepper: Senior Professional Baseball Association: A League of Our Own PRACTITIONER'S NOTE SENIOR PROFESSIONAL BASEBALL ASSOCIATION: A LEAGUE OF OUR OWN STUART M. PEPPER* A brief biography of the author is necessary to frame the back- ground for the events that follow. I became a lawyer in 1978, and was originally licensed in Iowa, where I practiced in personal injury and criminal law. I have been a baseball player (as in real hard ball) since age nine. I played for the City College of New York as a pitcher and infielder in the Metropolitan Baseball Conference. In the early seventies I played semi-pro amateur baseball in men's leagues in New York, in Kansas City while in law school, and in Iowa for twelve years. I always pitched well, possessing good con- trol, a sneaky curve ball, and a moderately fast fast ball.