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01A-Front Page
July 2005 Volume 36, Issue 3 Court Rules: Historic Designation of Coronado Belt Line Unlawfully Set Aside by City Council SUSAN BRANDT HAWLEY The San Diego Historical Resources Board has declared after careful review that the portion of the Coronado Belt Line railway located in San Diego is a historic site. At the request of the MTDB and Councilmember Ralph Inzunza, the City Council overturned the Board’s desig- nation in 2004 against the recommendations of City staff and the City Manager, with Councilmember Donna Frye as the sole dissenting vote. Save Our Heritage Organisa- tion (SOHO) sued the City because, as City staff pointed out, there was no legal basis to overturn the historic status. (San Diego Superior Court Case GIC837743.) On July 15th, San Diego Superior Court Judge Ronald S. Prager ruled in favor of SOHO, agreeing that the City acted unlawfully and granting a peremptory writ requir- ing the City to set aside its action. (See ruling at www.sandiego.courts.ca.gov.) Photo/Bruce Coons The Coronado Belt Line looped around the San Diego coastline and up the Silver Strand to Coronado as part of the Spreckels railroad empire, contributing to San Diego’s growth and vitality as it linked the City with the harbor and South Bay communities. From 1888 until the mid-20th century, the Belt Line regularly transported residents, visitors, World War I and II military shipments, agricultural products, building materials, and commer- cial and industrial wares through the region. SOHO Executive Director Bruce Coons said, “This is an important precedent proving that the City Council can not arbitrarily overturn historic designations just because they want to approve some ill-advised development scheme. -
La Mamelle and the Pic
1 Give Them the Picture: An Anthology 2 Give Them The PicTure An Anthology of La Mamelle and ART COM, 1975–1984 Liz Glass, Susannah Magers & Julian Myers, eds. Dedicated to Steven Leiber for instilling in us a passion for the archive. Contents 8 Give Them the Picture: 78 The Avant-Garde and the Open Work Images An Introduction of Art: Traditionalism and Performance Mark Levy 139 From the Pages of 11 The Mediated Performance La Mamelle and ART COM Susannah Magers 82 IMPROVIDEO: Interactive Broadcast Conceived as the New Direction of Subscription Television Interviews Anthology: 1975–1984 Gregory McKenna 188 From the White Space to the Airwaves: 17 La Mamelle: From the Pages: 87 Performing Post-Performancist An Interview with Nancy Frank Lifting Some Words: Some History Performance Part I Michele Fiedler David Highsmith Carl Loeffler 192 Organizational Memory: An Interview 19 Video Art and the Ultimate Cliché 92 Performing Post-Performancist with Darlene Tong Darryl Sapien Performance Part II The Curatorial Practice Class Carl Loeffler 21 Eleanor Antin: An interview by mail Mary Stofflet 96 Performing Post-Performancist 196 Contributor Biographies Performance Part III 25 Tom Marioni, Director of the Carl Loeffler 199 Index of Images Museum of Conceptual Art (MOCA), San Francisco, in Conversation 100 Performing Post-Performancist Carl Loeffler Performance or The Televisionist Performing Televisionism 33 Chronology Carl Loeffler Linda Montano 104 Talking Back to Television 35 An Identity Transfer with Joseph Beuys Anne Milne Clive Robertson -
Denying Genocide: “America's” Mythology of Nation, the Alamo
Denying Genocide: “America’s” Mythology of Nation, The Alamo, and the Historiography of Denial by Robert Anthony Soza A dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Ethnic Studies in the Graduate Division of the University of California, Berkeley Committee in charge: Professor Patricia Penn Hilden, Chair Professor Ula Taylor Professor José David Saldívar Professor Paul Thomas Fall 2010 Denying Genocide: “America’s” Mythology of Nation, The Alamo, and the Historiography of Denial © 2010 by Robert Anthony Soza Soza 1 Abstract Denying Genocide: “America’s” Mythology of Nation, The Alamo, and the Historiography of Denial by Robert Anthony Soza Doctor of Philosophy in Ethnic Studies University of California, Berkeley Professor Patricia Penn Hilden, Chair History, the adage goes, is written by the victors. As a result, history represents the values, ideologies, and most importantly for this dissertation, the remembrances of the victorious. Their remembrances never remain ethereal or disembodied; they become the object lessons about the past for those living in the present. And these object lessons, the lessons of history, become the narratives and locations that transmit a nation’s idealized values and origin stories. It is in this confluence of remembrances, object lessons, values and origin stories that this dissertation examines in the Alamo. The Alamo represents a consummate site of memory for the United States. As a cultural narrative it persists from a mid-nineteenth century battlefield through the present day as a cinematic narrative. The Alamo is one of the historical watershed moments of the Westward expansion. However, the tales of the victors (ironically, in this case, the victors at the Alamo are the Euro- Americans who died in the battle) transmit values, lessons and stories steeped in narratives of denial. -
Download Our Qualifications Brochure
WASHINGTON SQUARE PARTNERS FIRM QUALIFICATIONS 675 THIRD AVENUE, 25TH FLOOR | NEW YORK, NY 10017 | 212-906-9090 | WASHSQUARE.COM WASHINGTON SQUARE PARTNERS Real Estate Developers and Advisors ABOUT US Washington Square Partners was founded in 1994 by a group of real estate professionals who believed that a critical gap existed between consultants who offered analytical research and reports and developers who created projects. Washington Square Partners provides previously unavailable development advisory services to private developers, property owners, retailers, governmental agencies, and not-for-profit institutions. The firm has tremendous experience in creating strategies for our clients to maximize the value of their assets through seeking, if appropriate, discretionary public agency approvals for development projects. The firm has tremendous experience in seeking discretionary RIVER PLAZA, BRONX, NY public agency approvals to maximize the value of our client’s assets. Our clients, who include some of the largest developers and public agencies in the New York City metropolitan area, hire Washington Square Partners because of the firm’s record of innovation in implementing development projects that require creative, strategic thinking and securing negotiations with difficult third parties. Our successful strategies for advancing projects through multiple discretionary public approval processes places us on forefront of developments in emerging markets. Our firm’s principals have guided some of the most complex, groundbreaking projects in the New York Metropolitan Area including City Point, 42nd Street/Times Square revitalization, MetroTech Center in Downtown Brooklyn, Cooper Union, 400 5th Avenue and River Plaza, the first new shopping center in the Bronx in decades. Additionally, the firm has and continues to serve clients in Long Island and Westchester County. -
Salt River Valley, Arizona
A stratigraphic survey of pre-Spanish trash mounds of the Salt River valley, Arizona Item Type Thesis-Reproduction (electronic); text Authors Schroeder, Albert H. Publisher The University of Arizona. Rights Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. Download date 04/10/2021 08:10:02 Link to Item http://hdl.handle.net/10150/191395 I / 3 .1-S I- , ,_ 4 4 0 + 'S S. a "5, 3 _4___ a 'a. 4 (S 0 4 S. ''S a. 7 LI. 01 OI. 'a I ''S THE SALT RIVER VALLEY IIaaV,ON ARIZONA U UI. .45 Is' -I' I. I U SI / > I. 0 I. SALT Rv(S INDIAN 5(3(RVAIION az .4. ,.., -- --- I. C. I C' 0 'S. II .4 IN )AN QE.(4VAT ION V YtI.aIda,eazti Ci. I - tI..._.. Li.AiA4AIJjgJ,. .4. SEND THE 'SI SALTRIVER VALLEY St $1 5V4051 4=J= ARIZ ONA u.( I A STRATIGRAPHIC SURVEY OF PRE-SPANISH TRASH MOUNDS OP THE SALT RIVER VALLEY ARIZONA by Albert Henry Sobroeder A Thesis submitted to the faculty of the Department of Anthropology in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in the Graduate College University of Arizona 1940 Approved: Date ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS The writer is indebted to the faculty of the Department of Anthropology of the University of Axizona for a critical reading of the text and for valuable suggestions. -
Kips Bay Greenwich Village Union Square East Village Gramercy Noho
Neighborhood Map ¯ 5 M1 99 101 131 133 199 201 299 Kips Bay Court Bellevue E 27 Street Hospital E 27 Street Bellevue E 27 Street Center Downtown 28 St South Bellevue only M101 LTD M101 M15 Park Hospital LTD SBS M15 Garden SBS 470 M101 97 Bellevue Sobriety 381 New York 372 M102 M101 M9 Garden Drive FDR Life Insurance M103 M15 M9 Waterside M102 Place Carmel Mount M34A Company Building M103 M15 SBS Plaza 101 133 135 199 201 301 323 399 499 E 26 Street E 26 Street SBS M34A E 26 Street 2 0 1 M 3 0 NYU College 1 Baruch M of Nursing 69th Regiment Hunter College 75 442 459 355 354 345 360 College Armory Brookdale Campus M34ASBS E 25 Street Bridge 3 Avenue 3 1 Avenue 25th Street Avenue 2 99 101 131 Plaza 199 201 299 399 M2 LTD M3 M1 LTDSouth Avenue Park E 25 Street Avenue Lexington E 25 Street E 25 Street M1 M15SBS M1 3 0 LTD 1 M2 M Baruch LTD Asser Levy 54 337 College 322 Manhattan NYU College Playground Waterfront M1 Kips Bay of Dentistry M2 2 Greenway M3 0 201 299 301 1 Veterans Administration M E 24 Street E 24 Street E 24 Street Medical Center Asser Levy East Midtown Plaza Recreation 31 318 399 38 411 315 310 Center 400 Downtown Uptown only only School of Visual Arts 101 133 135 M23 199 201 299 M23 399 401 SBS SBS M23SBS M23 SBS M23SBS M23SBS E 23 Street East River E 23 St M23 SBS E 23 Street M9 M23SBS M23SBS M23SBS M23SBS M34A SBS M34ASBS M23 M34ASBS M23 M9 M34ASBS M23 M9 SBS Epiphany SBS SBS Library M34A M34A SBS SBS 17 18 M15SBS 383 390 297 293 296 304 Solar One M23SBS 390 1 Avenue 1 3 Avenue 2 Avenue 2 99 101 129 131 199 201 299 301 399 FDR Drive E 22 Street Avenue Lexington E 22 Street Avenue C 23 St Church of the 1 2 Peter Cooper Village 374 369 275 272 270 Epiphany Calvary Episcopal 99 Church 50 48 199 201 295 297 399 Gramercy Park North E 21 Street Stuyvesant E 21 Street Cove Park 360 Peter’s Field 4 Gramercy Park 36 351 353 252 253 257 260 private access M23SBS Gramercy Park East Park Gramercy 401 699 99 107 West Park Gramercy 141 199 201 299 399 M23 SBS M23SBS M23SBS M9 M23 SBS E 20 Street Gramercy Park South E 20 Street Citi Bike E 20 Street Augustus St. -
2014-2015 Journal
SKOWHEGAN SCHOOL OF PAINTING & SCULPTURE 136 WEST 22ND STREET, NEW YORK, NY 10011 / T 212 529 0505 / F 212 473 1342 WWW.SKOWHEGANART.ORG JOURNAL Non-Profit Org. U.S. Postage 2014–2015 PAID New York, NY Permit No. 6960 Founded in 1946 by artists for artists, Skowhegan School of Painting & Sculpture is one of the country's foremost programs for emerging visual artists. The intensive nine-week summer 03 Summer 2014 16 Space Launch session, held on our nearly 350-acre campus in Maine, provides a collaborative and rigorous Why Are These Games So Bad? New York Space Fund environment for artistic creation, risk-taking, and mentorship, by creating a flexible Sharon Madanes (A '14) skowheganBOX no.2 pedagogical framework that is informed by the School's history and responsive to the Susan Metrican (A '14) individual needs of each artist. Skowhegan summers have had a lasting impact on the Sreshta Rit Premnath (A '09) Paper Negatives practices of thousands of artists, and the institution plays an integral role in ensuring the Inaugural Season Tei Blow (A '14) vitality of contemporary artmaking. 136 W. 22nd Street Selected Documentation Daniel Carroll (A '14) Bernard Langlais and Skowhegan 26 Alumni Programs & News Hannah W. Blunt 2015 Session June 6 – August 8 42 Support I see you, you see me. (2014) Resident Faculty Visiting Faculty Special Lecture LaToya Ruby Frazier (A '07) David Diao (F '70) Theaster Gates by Felipe Steinberg (A '14) Neil Goldberg Jonathan Berger Odili Donald Odita Lizzie Fitch & Ryan Trecartin Michelle Grabner Regina José Galindo Sarah Oppenheimer Julie Ault Bridging the Gulf Katie Sonnenborn & Sarah Workneh Co-Directors The summer of 2014 was tumultuous and dangerous in much of the world. -
Project B and the Charging Bull
Happy Bullish 2011!!!: Olek’s Project B Ingrid Asplund Project B and the Charging Bull Arturo Di Modica’s Charging Bull is imposing in scale. It is a model of muscular machismo and a popular tourist spot. It stands taller than most people in the middle of a very busy part of Manhattan, usually gleaming in the sun like a trophy of capitalist masculinity. Its scale is met with detail, as the Charging Bull features expressive eyes and eyebrows, a stance that exudes motion and energy, and a detailed musculature, from ribs to thighs. Very early Christmas morning (about three o’clock) in 2010, the artist Olek escaped from any potential sugar-plum fantasies and stole down to Wall Street to leave a Christmas gift for New York City.1 Olek had crocheted, by hand and without assistance, a covering for the Charging Bull, perhaps a sweater or a sort of “bull cozy” and installed it in the dead of night so as to avoid the authorities. She would later entitle this piece Project B (Wall Street Bull).2 The finished product was, like the object that it covered, imposing, even intimidating, but Project B contrasted Charging Bull with the comforting, warm, and cozy associations of yarn. The piece’s execution is impressive in several ways: the yarn suit fits the Charging Bull precisely from horn to tail with no room for slacking or sagging, and the viewer can see every curve, bulging belly and thighs included. It is not formed in one seamless piece, but rather by means of several blocks of crocheted yarn stitched together with thick seams. -
Lower Manhattan Retail Guide
LOWER MANHATTAN RETAIL GUIDE 1 As more and more businesses and residents move to Lower Manhattan, a globally recognized business district is being infused with unrivaled energy. Home to hundreds of thousands of workers, one of New York’s fastest-growing residential communities and a thriving international tourist destination, this kinetic square mile at New York’s southern tip has something for everybody. At the center of a regional, multi-modal transportation network, the district has experienced a dramatic transformation. Lower Manhattan’s retail revolution kicked into full swing with the opening of the reimagined Seaport District, joining its neighbors Westfield World Trade Center and Brookfield Place while locally owned shops and restaurants enliven the neighborhood’s historic streets. Transit options continue to evolve with the five borough NYC Ferry service joining the Fulton Center and the World Trade Center Transportation Hub. New hotels are expanding the neighborhood’s LOWER offerings to serve a range of guests looking for everything from luxury to limited-service. Office towers around Lower Manhattan continue to diversify, bringing technology, media and fashion firms to the historic inancial district. MANHATTAN And more great things are just over the horizon. Lower Manhattan continues to be a premier residential neighborhood, especially for young professionals. During the next few years, an additional 3,000 housing units and 1,800 hotel IT’S A NEW YORK YOU KNOW, rooms will become available. Tourism is expected to reach over 15 million BUT HAVEN’T MET YET. annual visitors. More and more New Yorkers are discovering the exciting new 2 shopping and dining options in the city’s oldest neighborhood. -
Your Reading: a Booklist for Junior High and Middle School Students
DOCUMENT RESUME ED 299570 CS 211 536 AUTHOR Davis, James E., Ed.; Davis, Hazel K., Ed. TITLE Your Reading: A Booklist for Junior High and Middle School Students. Seventh Edition. INSTITUTION National Council of Teachers of English, Urbana, Ill. REPORT NO ISBN-0-8141-5939-7 PUB DATE 88 NOTE 505p.; Prepared by the Committee on the Junior High and Middle School Booklist. AVAILABLE FROMNational Council of Teachers of English, 1111 Kenyon Rd., Urbana, IL 61801 (Stock No. 59397, $10.95 member, $14.50 nonmember). PUB TYPE Books (010) -- Reference Materials - Bibliographies (131) EDRS PRICE MF02/PC21 Plus Postage. DESCRIPTORS *Adolescent Literature; Annotated Bibliographies; Elementary Secondary Education; Junior High Schools; *Literature Appreciation; Middle Schools; Reading Interests; *Reading Materials; Student Interests ABSTRACT This annotated bibliography, for junior high and middle school students, describes nearly 2,000 books to read for Pleasure, for school assignments, or merely to satisfy curiosity. Books included have been published mostly in the last five years and are divided into six major sections: fiction, drama, picture books for older readers, poetry, short story collections, and nonfiction. The fiction and nonfiction sections have been further subdivided into various categories; e.g. (1) abuse; (2) adventure; (3) animals and pets; (4) the arts; (5) Black experiences; (6) classics; (7) coming of age; (8) computers; (9) dating and love; (10) death and dying; (11) ecology; (12) ethnic experiences; (13) family situations; (14) -
14 St Port Authority Inland
Neighborhood Map ¯ Madison 1201 1186 Belvedere 95 90 314 135 138 261 831 363 420 378 264 832 333 330 317 Plaza 401 399 305 299 201 199 101 99 19 17 1 1 21 23 129 131 5 Avenue 5 9 Avenue 9 Chelsea Park W 28 Street W 28 Street E 28 Street E 28 Street Church of the 28 St 28 St 28 St Chelsea Doughboy Holy Apostles Statue 1181 1170 76 63 311 115 118 812 Fashion 401 396 Chelsea Institute of Health Technology Avenue 6 8 Avenue 8 199 91 Midtown 25 99 101 131 133 Center 23 21 1 1 23 Lexington Avenue Lexington Penn South Cooperative Avenue Madison 296 W 27 Street 343 W 27 Street E 27 Street E 27 Street M1 LTD M101 M2 M1 LTD LTD LTD 1155 M2 New York LTD 281 97 60 381 M101 787 225 299 336 Museum Phillips Beth Life Insurance Downtown M1 only M102 at FIT Israel School M2 Company Building M103 M3 Museum M1 of Nursing M55 M2 401 399 299 199 101 11 9 1 1 of Math 29 M3 101 133 135 W 26 St W 26 Street W 26 Street E 26 Street E 26 Street Penn South Playground Broadway e e u u 41 n Elliott- 1133 n M7 1134 New York State Baruch e 69th Regiment e M20 75 345 360 771 M7 212 248 Chelsea M20 275 v v Supreme Court Houses M55 Armory College A A Appellate Division 7 23 St 5 9 Avenue 9 Courthouse 25th Street 401 399 301 299 201 199 D 99 101 131 101 99 5 1 3 Plaza T 0 Park Avenue South Avenue Park L M1 1 M3 M1 LTD M2 LTD 2 M W 25 St W 25 Street W 25 Street M E 25 Street 2 0 Avenue of the Americas the of Avenue Worth 1 M Square Madison Square Park M11 1101 736 54 Baruch 245 337 753 252 294 281 230 College Penn South Cooperative 401 299 199 101 99 101 399 Madison Avenue -
“Remember the Man at the Front”
MILITARY SERVICE, COMBAT, AND AMERICAN IDENTITY IN THE PROGRESSIVE ERA by Sebastian Hubert Lukasik Department of History Duke University Date:_______________________ Approved: ___________________________ Alex Roland, Supervisor ___________________________ Claudia Koonz ___________________________ Peter Wood ___________________________ Richard H. Kohn Dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Department of History in the Graduate School of Duke University 2008 ABSTRACT MILITARY SERVICE, COMBAT, AND AMERICAN IDENTITY IN THE PROGRESSIVE ERA by Sebastian Hubert Lukasik Department of History Duke University Date:_______________________ Approved: ___________________________ Alex Roland, Supervisor ___________________________ Claudia Koonz ___________________________ Peter Wood ___________________________ Richard H. Kohn An abstract of a dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Department of History in the Graduate School of Duke University 2008 Copyright by Sebastian Hubert Lukasik 2008 Abstract During the First World War, approximately two million troops served with the American Expeditionary Forces (AEF), the army that functioned as the material and symbolic focal point of America’s commitment to the defeat of the Central Powers. This dissertation examines the impact of training, active service and combat on the social identity of the draftees and volunteers who comprised the AEF. Reigning historiography