V O L . X X X . M a S O N , M I C H I G a N , T H U R S D a L

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

V O L . X X X . M a S O N , M I C H I G a N , T H U R S D a L MASON, MICHIGAN, THURSDAl, JANUAKY 12, 1905. NO. 2. VOL. XXX. f T T r T t T T r T T r :^ l.^.ll^:^.llll±±lL.l^..U.J.lJ.l:.llllXXllXJ~LX^ To Farmers and Boan Growers. SWAN ARRESTED IN DETROIT, ^XJJJLXXXXJJ.XX1J.JL11XJLIXXXJ.1111XIX1JL11JLJLJL;..T ,T T ,T T T T T lllUT A nieoMiiu'df hlie I'jinners unci boiin While On His Way Home Prom a THLS SPACE BELONGS TO tjrmversDl' liicliiini colinhy will he lield Visit in New York State. DAYTON, lit t,lie (iiMirh iKMise In Uio cli.y of Mii- Isiiiic Swan, implicated by Mrs, Car­ son, on Wednesdiiy, Jan. ISili, iit ten rie Joslyn ill tlie killing of her hus­ ...DAR & D... o'clock a. 111. for Uie iiiiriKiso of per- band by poisoning, was arrested in FOR A FEW WEEKS YET. Jeweler fectlnt; n county orf,'nni/.iitloii. Every Detroit Saturday inornlng as lie step­ townsliip slioiilfl be represenl/Cd and ped from a Michigan Central train and make tills nieetinira complete sneeess, They arc closing out tlieir stock at almost your own price. This Optician, from the east. Able speakers will address the meel,- week they want to clean up and .Couches ing. Everybody come. About a week before Joslyn's death EYES MASON, MICHIQAN. Z Swan left and says lie was told liy tlie and Bed Room Suits. By OUDKUOF COMMITTEK, woman to go away and lay low until EXAMINED SATISFACTION Pancake supper at M. 10, cliurch Fri the case had blown over, that a broth- FINE PRESENTS GIVEN AWAY FREE. FREE GUARANTEED day (Evening. crvvas to let liim know when every­ thing was all right, fie was so notl- TlTTTTTTTTTTTTirTTT'l'TTn' T I" ITU 11 !' U 1 T 1 T M M rn"rTVTTTK TlTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTi;! I" r i i I iK Capt.Alonzo Cheney is commander of James B. Brainerd Post of the G. lied, started for home and was arrest­ A. R. at liaton Rapids for the coming ed, whicl) was a surprise to liim, also Near-Pickworth Wedding. Death of Mrs. Boniiett-Sweet, year. to learn that the woman was under Michigan rTENTRjj. At the homo nf Mr.and Mi'.s, Jay Tlie remains nf Mrs. Lydia Bennett- h§j I LOCAL NEWS | | A very strong cast will make "A arrest. TSIoar In Anrolins Thursday evening, Sweet, wlio died of cancer at the "IlioNiagara Falls Jloute." iMJOHnonniimitinnijooooeooiHlnnooijiMlonotMJnnaanfmnnnnonooi, Debt of Honor" the season's best olTer- Swan went to Tlolly, N. Y. Olllcers .Ian. 5lli, at 7:30 o'clock occurred the home of Iter youngest daughter in HOUTIUVAIU). ing. Rayner opera iionso. Wateli at that place notided SlierilT Steele Maaon.......... !):l8a,ia. tiiM p.m. lOiOBp. in niarriiige of their daughter Ella M. to Hartford, VanBuren county, were Jaokaon li);4ii lliOll for date. Friday niglit tliiit Swan had left that Men Wanted to Cut Wood. Mi-. Clyde Plekwnrth of Eaton Rapids, brouglit here lor interment in Maple Detroit 4!iB p. III. -I:IliJL ii^.7;lfia. in A ropresentative of the Chicago place that day for Michigan. The Inquire (if Driver Tiros., Miisnn, The corniuony was performed by tlie Grove Cemetery last Thursday fore­ OhlcaKO......... liTioji. 111. !l;!i(ip. Ml. 7;;wa. Ill Chronicle was liere tlie latter past of slierllT imniediiitoly luitllTed tlic Do- •w2 Rev. Mr, Norcross of Aurelius In the noon. Brief services were conducted NOIlTinVAHIl, Cllizens' Phone Kill nr Ui. last week getting a write up in the trnit ollicers and niitllled Deputy Mason a. iii, 11:17 a. ni./i:00 p, in presence of about twenty guests. Af­ at the grave by Rev. W, TL Simmons^ LHii.sInt,' li;l2 ll!.'i7 ri:a Pancake supper at M. E. church Fri- Joslin case. Sherlfr Tobias of Wlliianiston, who ter congratulations light refreshments Tlie remains were accompanied by Owosso 7i.i;i i«;i:ip.iii.o:;iri rlay evenlnj,'. Installation of olllcersof K. O. M. knew Swan, to go to Detroit after were served. They have the best her daughters, Mrs, Nettie McMana- Bay City 0. W•^•••i". ItlKKIMCS 8:'"), M. atid refresliinents next Tuesday him. F, D. Stanton, Oen. Pass. & Ticket Af?l. "A Ilcbt of Honor" will be vvorLliy wislies of their many friends., mon of Bancroft and Mrs, Allie Olds- Ticket AKunl.Ma.soii fjhioatjo night. Jan. 17th. All Sir Knights are WTien arresl,ed at Detroit Swan cor­ of yonr patronage. of Hartford and their husbands. requested to l)e present. roborated Mrs. Joslyn's story to (Jic January Circuit Court Jurors. Sec notice in our business local Lydia A. Williams was born in BUSINESS DIRECTORY. Rev. W W. Hicks, pastor of the extent nf admitting that he purchased colnnln of road mare for sale. Last Saturday I'orenoon a list of ju­ Northville, Wayne county, Mich., on 23333^ oris T Baptist churcii at Eaton Rapids, iias the arsenic and gave il. to her, but rors for the January i.criu of tiie cir­ The clerks boat the Co. B boys April 13, 1839, On Tlianksglving day, U. C. K. lll';NnKIl,SON, neiitist. Over F. accepted a call to go to Jerseyville, says the poison was purchased at her cuit court was drawn, The term will Inflonr baseball lust Friday evening. Nov, 2,5, 18155, at tlie age nt 16, she ,/. Ui-oFi'ii'.s aimii .Siore. HI., and begins Feb. 1st. request. He said the woman exerted convene in Oils city on the 22d and it was married lo Henry S, Bennett, vvhoi Miss Alice Flannery is again era a strange InlUicncc over lilni and says will bo the first held in the new cnun- PI-I-2-SXOI.A.3^S Something doing soon. The roman­ ty building. The list is as follows: died in 1800, On Feb, 2, 1801, she was- ployed at the J. E. Welsh tailor shop they were to divide her husband's tic drama, "A Debt of Honor," will Alaiednn—Henry Stillman. married ii second time to E, A, Mor-i HAS. (i. .IKNKINS, M. V. I'racllee llmlle,d Read the dressmaking local In on property. Swan says Mrs. Joslyn first C^ to rtlsoasiis„ ot Kye.,, Kar, Noslose iimiiiidl Uhrniil. be produced by a strong cast at Ray­ Aurelius—Charles A. Haynes. gan, a soldier of the Mexican and civ­ Kl WasllliiKtoii Ave. S., l.anslliK, iMIoll, business local column of Mrs, D. W tried to give lier husband aconite. (iunkcrlilll—Cliarles Clinton, ner opera house. Date given later. il wars, who died in May, 1862, On RH. MANN .S: AUSTIN, llomeopallilc I'liysl- Freeland, .I3epiity Tobias left Detroit with Ingliain—Bllswnrtli ITanna, clans and HiirRooii.s. Snuelalatliiiilloii (,'lveii C. A. Norcross of Aurelius, '03 Al­ LiinsiiiL' Township—Jnlui Oatley, March 9, 1865, she was married to tDo till) ICyu, l':ar, Nose anil Throat; also ill.soasiis Lost, by R. C. Dart, Sr., gold-bowed Swan Saturday afternoon, missed his bion College, took tlie entrance exam­ Lansing City—IHrsl, ward. Gen, TI. Martin A. Sweet, a prominent and of women and (Milldren aiiil niotal illsi'iises. train at Jackson and had to drive, ar­ Onicfi-Near lilock. llonrs-S to it) a. in., 'i to n glasses, crooked ends behind the ea ination of the M. E. conference Cliristiiplier; secntid wnrd, Cliarles prosperous merchant'of Mason. Mr. unil 7 to 0 p. 111. riving at the jail late in the night. Button in Instead of sliding in, 2w ast week before Rev. W. IT. B. Urcti Brink; tliird ward, Cnlnnol Griihani; Sweet passed away Feb. 21, 1880. Be­ There has been a rumor and it has n. KliKELANl), 1\I. IX Lawrence lilock. A niarriiige license lias been issued at Albion. fniirth ward, Alva N. Hamiltnn; lifth fore his decease he built what is . lIntirs-8 to !i a, ni„ 1 to !l, 7 to s p, in. been piibllslied in sumo papers Mint ward, Jnlin Broad; sixth ward, F. VV. in Ingham county to Clyde Pickwortl Do nut fall to attend the pancake known as tlie Pioneer block,now owned uTflcTtT 1!UiTirnToAAlI'ltKLL, I'liy.slclaii Swan was implicated in the deatli of Bertcli. and HiiDiiiOM, UlllcL-at re.sldetici', nortli I! of iCaton Riipids and Ella Near of popper served by the L. A. S. of the Loroy—Earl E. Mend. by O, VV, Halstead and occupied by 0. street, Honrs, 8 lo !l a. ni., '2 to •! and 7 lo S p. in. his wife, ills relatives deny tlie Aiireliils, M. E. church Friday evening from Leslie—Solden R. IVIIner. J. Wlilting. Two dfiiighters, men­ Connlry anil town calls proin|illy atlcnileil. cliarge and siiy there is no triitli in 5:00 to 7:00 o'clock, Cakes will Ije . Locke—Bvron Oladin. tioned above, were tlic outcome of r\ll,l'ltANK H. THOMAS, IMiyslclaii and Su The Cllarlotte Republican was such a statement. JJueon, Olllco ovor Welili Si Wlillnian's stori founded, 50 years ago and the lirst served on time. Price 10 cents, Mason City—•''irst vvard, Frank this marriage, both being graduates reslilunce at corner I! anil Oak sirocts. Mason. Swan was visited by Prosecutor Mc­ Cook ; second ward, Rowland Sanders. issue piibiisiicd on Jan, (i, J85o, by of our high school. About JO years, Capt, li", C, Ives and, Ji'irst. Lieut. Arthur at tlie jail shortly after lihs Meridian—Cliarles Grcttenberger, Foote Si Marsh. ago Mrs. Sweet was married for the A.TTORnSTB'SrS Geo. Dey of Co. B. of this city have aiTiviil, but refused to say anything Jr. • Oniindiitra—Prank Barrett.
Recommended publications
  • Issues of Image and Performance in the Beatles' Films
    “All I’ve got to do is Act Naturally”: Issues of Image and Performance in the Beatles’ Films Submitted by Stephanie Anne Piotrowski, AHEA, to the University of Exeter as a thesis for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in English (Film Studies), 01 October 2008. This thesis is available for Library use on the understanding that it is copyright material and that no quotation from the thesis may be published without proper acknowledgement. I certify that all material in this thesis which in not my own work has been identified and that no material has previously been submitted and approved for the award of a degree by this or any other University. (signed)…………Stephanie Piotrowski ……………… Piotrowski 2 Abstract In this thesis, I examine the Beatles’ five feature films in order to argue how undermining generic convention and manipulating performance codes allowed the band to control their relationship with their audience and to gain autonomy over their output. Drawing from P. David Marshall’s work on defining performance codes from the music, film, and television industries, I examine film form and style to illustrate how the Beatles’ filmmakers used these codes in different combinations from previous pop and classical musicals in order to illicit certain responses from the audience. In doing so, the role of the audience from passive viewer to active participant changed the way musicians used film to communicate with their fans. I also consider how the Beatles’ image changed throughout their career as reflected in their films as a way of charting the band’s journey from pop stars to musicians, while also considering the social and cultural factors represented in the band’s image.
    [Show full text]
  • Qurrat Ann Kadwani: Still Calling Her Q!
    1 More Next Blog» Create Blog Sign In InfiniteBody art and creative consciousness by Eva Yaa Asantewaa Tuesday, May 6, 2014 Your Host Qurrat Ann Kadwani: Still calling her Q! Eva Yaa Asantewaa Follow View my complete profile My Pages Home About Eva Yaa Asantewaa Getting to know Eva (interview) Qurrat Ann Kadwani Eva's Tarot site (photo Bolti Studios) Interview on Tarot Talk Contact Eva Name Email * Message * Send Contribute to InfiniteBody Subscribe to IB's feed Click to subscribe to InfiniteBody RSS Get InfiniteBody by Email Talented and personable Qurrat Ann Kadwani (whose solo show, They Call Me Q!, I wrote about Email address... Submit here) is back and, I hope, every bit as "wicked smart and genuinely funny" as I observed back in September. Now she's bringing the show to the Off Broadway St. Luke's Theatre , May 19-June 4, Mondays at 7pm and Wednesdays at 8pm. THEY CALL ME Q is the story of an Indian girl growing up in the Boogie Down Bronx who gracefully seeks balance between the cultural pressures brought forth by her traditional InfiniteBody Archive parents and wanting acceptance into her new culture. Along the journey, Qurrat Ann Kadwani transforms into 13 characters that have shaped her life including her parents, ► 2015 (222) Caucasian teachers, Puerto Rican classmates, and African-American friends. Laden with ▼ 2014 (648) heart and abundant humor, THEY CALL ME Q speaks to the universal search for identity ► December (55) experienced by immigrants of all nationalities. ► November (55) Program, schedule and ticket information ► October (56) ► September (42) St.
    [Show full text]
  • Catskill Mountainkeeper Report to Stakeholders
    CATSKILL2013 MOUNTAINKEEPER REPORT TO STAKEHOLDERS Preventing hydraulic fracturing (fracking) in New York State continues to be Catskill Mountainkeeper’s number one goal and priority. Thanks to your support, we have successfully kept fracking out of New York for over six years. To achieve our ultimate goal of a ban on fracking and to counter other “false solutions,” we continue to advance an alternative vision for our beautiful, ecologically sensitive, and economically vulnerable home region. We are working to create sustainable economic growth in the regions’ two largest sectors – tourism and agriculture – and are helping communities transition from climate changing fossil fuels to clean, renewable energies. This year, we expanded our Catskill Edible Garden Program, launched a Farmers Market to increase food access, grew our Trailkeeper Network initiative and broadened our efforts to promote and protect the Catskill Park. We are also working with groups across the nation to fight all forms of Extreme Energy extraction, and launched two initiatives to help our communities go green – Renewable NY and Save Energy, Save NY. In this report we will bring you up to date on all that we’ve accomplished in 2013 and our plans for the coming year. FRACKING OuR figHT AgAinst FracKing 150 250,000 COMMEN LOCAL GrowTH Of nEw YORK It has been six years since Catskill a strategic communications AnTi-fRAcKING MOVEMEnT proposed campaign to educate and HGHF Regs 204,000 Mountainkeeper started fighting BANS 120 2010 - PRESEnT 200,000 influence the public, media and to keep fracking out of New TS Chart courtesy of William Huston policymakers.
    [Show full text]
  • From Squatting to Tactical Media Art in the Netherlands, 1979–1993
    City University of New York (CUNY) CUNY Academic Works All Dissertations, Theses, and Capstone Projects Dissertations, Theses, and Capstone Projects 5-2019 Between the Cracks: From Squatting to Tactical Media Art in the Netherlands, 1979–1993 Amanda S. Wasielewski The Graduate Center, City University of New York How does access to this work benefit ou?y Let us know! More information about this work at: https://academicworks.cuny.edu/gc_etds/3125 Discover additional works at: https://academicworks.cuny.edu This work is made publicly available by the City University of New York (CUNY). Contact: [email protected] BETWEEN THE CRACKS: FROM SQUATTING TO TACTICAL MEDIA ART IN THE NETHERLANDS, 1979–1993 by AMANDA WASIELEWSKI A dissertation submitted to the Graduate Faculty in Art History in partiaL fulfiLLment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of PhiLosophy, The City University of New York 2019 © 2019 AMANDA WASIELEWSKI ALL Rights Reserved ii Between the Cracks: From Squatting to TacticaL Media Art in the Netherlands, 1979–1993 by Amanda WasieLewski This manuscript has been read and accepted for the Graduate Faculty in Art History in satisfaction of the dissertation requirement for the degree of Doctor of PhiLosophy. Date David JoseLit Chair of Examining Committee Date RacheL Kousser Executive Officer Supervisory Committee: Marta Gutman Lev Manovich Marga van MecheLen THE CITY UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK iii ABSTRACT Between the Cracks: From Squatting to TacticaL Media Art in the Netherlands, 1979–1993 by Amanda WasieLewski Advisor: David JoseLit In the early 1980s, Amsterdam was a battLeground. During this time, conflicts between squatters, property owners, and the police frequentLy escaLated into fulL-scaLe riots.
    [Show full text]
  • “Signs of Sustainability” 2013
    “Signs of Sustainability” 2013 Sustainable Tompkins, the premiere organization devoted to catalyzing sustainable development in our region, continually seeks the newest “Signs of Sustainability” in our community. We invite our community to keep watch through the year to spot individuals and organizations emerging on the local scene, all doing their part to help advance community sustainability. Sustainable Tompkins highlights these efforts to help these new activists “plug in” and connect with other similar endeavors. With all of us working together in different ways to resolve our shared sustainability challenges, we spur faster progress of this vital social movement. Join us in acknowledging the great work of this year’s “Signs of Sustainability” in our community! Sustainable Tompkins, 109 South Albany Street, Ithaca NY 14850 www.sustainabletompkins.org 2013 “Signs of Sustainability” Table of Contents Pages New Sustainable Enterprises 1-2 Energy Efficiency 1 Food Systems 1 Sustainable Community Development 1 Sustainable Enterprise 1-2 New Sustainability-Related Organizations 2-3 Food Systems 2 Renewable Energy 2 Social Activism 2 Sustainable Community Development 2-3 Sustainability Education 3 Sustainable Operations 3 New Sustainability Program by an Existing Business, Organization or Individual 4-31 Energy Efficiency 4 Food Systems 4-6 Green Building 6 Land Use 6-8 Planning and Policy 8-9 Recycling and Composting 10-11 Renewable Energy 11-12 Social Activism 12-14 Sustainable Community Development 14-18 Sustainability Education 18-27
    [Show full text]
  • Setting the Record Straight: Hydraulic Fracturing and America's Energy
    United States Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works Minority Staff Report Setting the Record Straight: Hydraulic Fracturing and America’s Energy Revolution October 23, 2014 Contact: U.S. Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works (Minority) Luke Bolar — [email protected] (202) 224-6176 Cheyenne Steel — [email protected] (202) 224-6176 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY In his October 2, 2014, remarks to Northwestern University, President Obama boasted, “Today, the number-one oil and [natural] gas producer in the world is no longer Russia or Saudi Arabia. It’s America.”1 In his speech, the President also touted “our 100-year supply of natural gas [as] a big factor in drawing jobs back to our shores. Many are in manufacturing, which produce the quintessential middle-class job.”2 The President’s attempt to claim success from the very industry he has worked so hard to undermine is sadly ironic. Then again, it would have made little sense for the President to take credit for the numerous failed “green” stimulus projects, including Solyndra, or otherwise for him to have been honest about the fact that without the private sector’s investment in oil and natural gas development the economy would still be in a deep recession. Instead, he chose to celebrate—along with all the undeniable benefits it has for our nation—the success of an industry he and his far-left environmental activist base despise. This report by the United States Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works illustrates the clear disparity between the President’s rhetoric and the multitude of nonsensical claims from the far-left environmental activist organizations—such as the Natural Resources Defense Council, Sierra Club, and Center for American Progress—versus the reality of American ingenuity, including hydraulic fracturing, to develop our vast fossil resources.
    [Show full text]
  • Feminism: When the Label 'White' Gets Attached in Pop Music Industry
    Feminism: When the Label ‘White’ Gets Attached in Pop Music Industry Audrey Lee and Brian Oh Published 5 Oct 2020 Abstract This paper describes a qualitative study that investigates the pop music genre starting from the 2000s, relating it to feminism. The investigation focuses on understanding when female artists are considered feminist, and when the label ‘white feminist’ is applied to specific female artists. Based on media press and public perspective, the research hopes to find key characteristics that separates the moment when the label feminism and white feminism are applied, especially in relation to other attributes such as gender orientation, sexual orientation, and race. The purpose of the research is to provide more insight into understanding feminism in the context of today, and to how navigate complex spaces such as media image and personal identity, labels that come with the public status of their profession. 1 Introduction MTV, The GRAMMYs, Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube, KIIS FM - Popular music aka ‘Pop Music’ is an industry that is in a constant flurry of activity and publicity, through television, radio, news, and videos. When referencing popular music, the paper is defining Pop Music as any popular music produced after the 2000s. With such a public identity, artists in the pop music industry are expected to navigate the complexities of the business that exist, including image, policies, and activism. In the current generation where technology and communication can occur in an instant, female artists are expected to adjust to a multi-faceted industry that, at many times, can seem paradoxical in nature. Many female artists are forced to find the right balance between outgoing and timid when portraying their public personas.
    [Show full text]
  • An Energy in Depth Whitepaper April 2015
    A LOOK INSIDE NEW YORK’S ANTI-FRACKING ECHO CHAMBER AN ENERGY IN DEPTH WHITEPAPER APRIL 2015 CONTACT: Katie Brown [email protected] ABOUT ENERGY IN DEPTH E nergy In Depth is a program of the Independent Petroleum Association of America. The IPAA represents thousands of independent oil and natural gas producers and service companies across the United States. Its members develop 95 percent of the nation’s oil and gas wells. EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 1.0 BACKGROUND 2.0 GOV. CUOMO’S “BONA FIDE” RESEARCH 2.1 ACTIVIST AUTHORS 2.2 SANDRA STEINGRABER: AN ACTIVIST PEER REVIEWER 2.3 SUBVERTING THE PEER-REVIEW PROCESS 3.0 NEW YORK’S ANTI-FRACKING ECHO CHAMBER 3.1 THE PARK FOUNDATION 3.2 THE HEALTH AND ENVIRONMENTAL FUNDERS NETWORK 3.3 THE SUSTAINABLE MARKETS FOUNDATION 3.4 HEFN AND SMF REVENUES IN CONTEXT 4.0 THE ECHO CHAMBER IN ACTION: RESEARCH, MEDIA AND CAMPAIGN SPENDING 4.1 THE GCM PAPER 4.2 INGRAFFEA & HOWARTH PAPER 4.3 PHYSICIANS SCIENTISTS AND ENGINEERS FOR HEALTHY ENERGY PAPER 4.4 EARTHWORKS PAPER 4.5 THE NICHOLAS SCHOOL PAPERS 5.0 AVENUES FOR FURTHER INQUIRY 6.0 CONCLUSION 7.0 APPENDIX 8.0 WORKS CITED EXECUTIVE SUMMARY On Dec. 17, 2014, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) announced a ban on so-called high-volume hydraulic fracturing activities in the state of New York. The unprecedented decision overturned two earlier findings from New York state environmental regulators that hydraulic fracturing technology could be applied safely and should be allowed to proceed under stringent regulation. The decision was at odds with broad agreement among scientists, engineers and regulators from state and federal environmental agencies that hydraulic fracturing has been conducted safely for decades – including, incidentally, in the state of New York.
    [Show full text]
  • Associazione Musicisti Di Ferrara Scuola Di Musica Moderna !
    Associazione Musicisti di Ferrara Scuola di Musica Moderna ! ! ! ! ! ! Caporedattore: Fulvio Gandini Grafica e impaginazione: Silvia Zaniboni Revisione articoli: Licia Barbieri Pubblicazione su OcchiAperti.net: Filippo Dallamagnana Redattori: Fulvio Gandini Licia Barbieri Vittorio Formignani Enrico Testi Mark Davis Francesco Pancaldi Paolo Bettiato (Billy Blue) Carlotta Franzini Roberto Morandi Nicolò Farina Mattia Schiavi Francesca Vasquez ! ! “Un Fiume di Musica”: foglio di informazione per i soci autogestito e stampato in proprio N°14, Aprile 2013 Sede Amministrativa e Operativa, Via Darsena 57 – Ferrara (Fe) - Italy Tel. 0532 – 46 46 61 Fax. 0532 – 186 167 1 Sito: www.comune.fe.it/amf E-Mail: [email protected] Facebook: www.facebook.com/unfiumedimusica ! E RIALE Il mese di Aprile inizia nel lutto per la prematura ed inaspettata scomparsa del musicista e insegnante di basso, nonché socio fondatore dell’AMF, Bruno Corticelli; la redazione si unisce agli insegnanti ed a tutto il resto della scuola nelle più sentite condoglianze alla famiglia. Dopo questa breve pausa pasquale, responsabile del ritardo di qualche giorno nell’uscita della nostra rivista, siamo pronti a ripartire a suon di articoli e di concerti. Colgo quindi l’occasione per ricordarvi che sabato 27 Aprile, presso il Patchanka, andrà in scena la terza serata della nostra programmazione, in cui saranno protagonisti i Duck Juice ed il Luca Bretta’s Acoustic Trio, entrambe formazioni che avrete modo di conoscere meglio sfogliando le nostre pagine. A Presto! Fulvio Gandini ! ! Bruno Corticelli Con grande dolore l'Associazione Musicisti di Ferrara annuncia la prematura scomparsa dell'amico musicista insegnante e socio fondatore Bruno Corticelli; per una grave malattia ci ha lasciati Domenica 24 Marzo 2013.
    [Show full text]
  • Book and Poster Project an Act of Resistance
    BOOK AND POSTER PROJECT IGOR LANGSHTEYN “Secret Formulas” SEYOUNG PARK “Hard Hat” CAROLINA CAICEDO “Shell” AN ACT OF RESISTANCE FRANCESCA TODISCO “Up in Flames” CURTIS BROWN “Not in my Fracking City” WOW JUN CHOI POSTERS “Cracking” SAM VAN DEN TILLAAR JENNIFER CHEN “Fracktured Lives” “Dripping” ANDREW CASTRUCCI LINA FORSETH “Diagram: Rude Algae of Time” “Water Faucet” ALEXANDRA ROJAS NICHOLAS PRINCIPE WRITERS AND ILLUSTRATORS “Protect Your Mother” “Money” SARAH FERGUSON HYE OK ROW ANDREW CASTRUCCI ANN-SARGENT WOOSTER “Water Life Blood” “F-Bomb” KATHARINE DAWSON ANDREW CASTRUCCI MICHAEL HAFFELY MIKE BERNHARD “Empire State” “Liberty” YOKO ONO CAMILO TENSI JUN YOUNG LEE SEAN LENNON “Pipes” “No Fracking Way” AKIRA OHISO IGOR LANGSHTEYN MORGAN SOBEL “7 Deadly Sins” CRAIG STEVENS “Scull and Bones” EDITOR & ART DIRECTOR MARIANNE SOISALO KAREN CANALES MALDONADO JAYPON CHUNG “Bottled Water” Andrew Castrucci TONY PINOTTI “Life Fracktured” CARLO MCCORMICK MARIO NEGRINI GABRIELLE LARRORY DESIGN “This Land is Ours” “Drops” CAROL FRENCH Igor Langshteyn, TERESA WINCHESTER ANDREW LEE CHRISTOPHER FOXX Andrew Castrucci, Daniel Velle, “Drill Bit” “The Thinker” Daniel Giovanniello GERRI KANE TOM MCGLYNN TOM MCGLYNN KHI JOHNSON CONTRIBUTING EDITORS “Red Earth” “Government Warning” JEREMY WEIR ALDERSON Daniel Velle, Tom McGlynn, SANDRA STEINGRABER TOM MCGLYNN DANIEL GIOVANNIELLO Walter Sipser, Dennis Crawford, “Mob” “Make Sure to Put One On” ANTON VAN DALEN Jim Wu, Ann-Sargent Wooster, SOFIA NEGRINI ALEXANDRA ROJAS DAVID SANDLIN Robert Flemming “No” “Frackicide”
    [Show full text]
  • Task Force E 2014.Pdf (10.27Mb)
    Beyond the Boom: Developing Policy to Advance US Leadership in Shale Oil and Hydraulic Fracturing TASK FORCE 2014 UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON HENRY M. JACKSON SCHOOL OF INTERNATIONAL STUDIES Cover Photographs Left: J. H. Fair. Environmental Health Perspectives. "A lined impoundment receives waste at a fracking site in Dimock, Pennsylvania." Digital Image, 2014. Available from: http://ehp.niehs.nih.gov/122-a50/ Top Right: United States Geological Survey. Untitled media. Digital image, 2004. http://pubs.usgs.gov/fs/2002/fs049-02/. Bottom Right: United States Department of Labor. "Well pad with hydraulic fracturing equipment." Digital Image. Available from: https://www.osha.gov/SLTC/etools/oilandgas/well_completion/well_completion.html. All trademarks mentioned in this report remain the property of their owners. Their inclusion in this report should no way be taken as an endorsement of this report or its conclusions by the trademarks owners. Printed at the University of Washington in Seattle, Washington i THE HENRY M. JACKSON SCHOOL OF INTERNATIONAL STUDIES UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON, SEATTLE Task Force Report 2014 Beyond the Boom: Developing Policy to Advance US Leadership in Shale Oil and Hydraulic Fracturing Faculty Advisor: Scott L. Montgomery Affiliate Faculty, Jackson School of International Studies University of Washington, Seattle Evaluator: Julia Nesheiwat Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Implementation Bureau of Energy Resources US Department of State Task Force: Sarah Coney (Coordinator) Nikolina Stoykova (Editor) Kailyn Swarthout (Editor) Allison Ashmore Zoe Barker-Aderem Kelly Gould Davita Gurian Syailendra Kamdani Khiem Nguyen Mengqin Ouyang Monica Reeder Rebecca Snyder Stephanie Tam Emily Vyhnanek Chieh-Hsi Wang Ola Wietecha ii Table of Contents Acknowledgements………….…………………………………………………………………....iv Acronyms………………………………………………………………………………………….v Introduction………………………………………………………………………………………..1 Part I: Why Shale Oil and Why Now?: How Unconventional Drilling has Transformed the Oil Industry 1.
    [Show full text]
  • Voices Not Heard Natural Gas Development, Public Discourse, And
    Voices Not Heard Natural Gas Development, Public Discourse, and Power in Wayne County, Pennsylvania BY Grace Wildermuth Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Arts in the Department of Sociology-Anthropology Middlebury College January 31st, 2014 Approved_____________________________ Chair, Department of Sociology-Anthropology Voices Not Heard Natural Gas Development, Public Discourse, and Power in Wayne County, Pennsylvania Grace Wildermuth ABSTRACT As members of the urban and suburban population continue to migrate to rural areas in search of a beautiful landscape and quiet way of life, conflict over the meaning of and ownership over the landscape emerges. New and already established populations tend to have dramatically different conceptions of landscape and environment, leading to struggles in local environmental policy. This research focuses on Wayne County, Pennsylvania and uses a current and polarizing issue, hydraulic fracturing for natural gas, to illuminate these tensions. The prevailing rhetoric put forth predominantly by those who have moved to the area from urban centers and those who come to the area for recreation has dominated the debate due to abundant resources and access to national and local media. This research was conducted in an effort to elevate an alternative rhetoric absent from the political discourse surrounding this issue. I conducted in-depth interviews with predominantly longtime residents who live and work on the landscape in order to understand the meaning they ascribe to hydraulic fracturing for natural gas on the landscape and the conflicts with new or part-time residents the issue has revealed. The interviews were supplemented with various media sources.
    [Show full text]