Lighting Luminaires Catalogue

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Lighting Luminaires Catalogue GE Lighting Luminaires Catalogue International Edition 2010/2011 GE Lighting Luminaires Catalogue International Edition 2010/2011 Pictograms Application Technical Information PARKING AREA RALXXX STANDARD COLOUR SEAWALKS IPXX CONTROL GEAR PROTECTION INDEX WALKWAYS IPXX OPTICAL ASSEMBLY PROTECTION INDEX RESIDENTIAL AREAS IK XX IMPACT RESISTENCE GARDENS XX-XX KG APROXIMATE WEIGHT STREETS CLASS I INDUSTRIAL AREAS CLASS II ROUNDABOUTS MARKING F SQUARES ROADWAYS HIGHWAYS JUNCTIONS TUNNELS UNDERPASSES SPORTS ARCHITECTURAL TRANSPORT STATIONS AIRPORT APRONS SHOPPING CENTERS HOTELS HOSPITALS SCHOOLS STAIRCASES GE Lighting is constantly developing and improving its OFFICES products. For this reason, all product descriptions in this catalogue are intended as a general guide, and we may change specifications from time to time in the interest of INDUSTRIAL ENVIRONMENTS product development, without prior notification or public announcement. All descriptions in this publication present only general particulars of the goods to which they refer WAREHOUSES and shall not form part of any contract. Data in this guide has been obtained in controlled experimental conditions. However, GE Lighting cannot accept any liability arising from the reliance on such data to the extent permitted by law. All lamp drawings are a guide, if further technical details are required please contact your nearest sales office. General conditions of sale GE Lighting products are supplied according to GE’s General Conditions of Sale. If you require a copy of these conditions please contact your nearest GE Lighting sales office. Prices A price list is available from all GE Lighting sales offices. www.gelighting.com/eu and General Electric are both registered trademarks of the General Electric Company Contents Introduction 4 Complete solutions 6 Product overview 14 New technology 16 LED Outdoor 18 LED Indoor 24 Outdoor decorative 38 Road Lighting 40 Street Decorative 48 Urban Decorative 56 Outdoor functional 64 Road Lighting 66 Tunnel Lighting 80 Circulation Lighting 86 Accent Lighting 88 Facade Lighting 90 Sport Lighting 102 Indoor functional 106 Industrial HID 108 Water Proof 122 Industrial Fluorescent 132 Office Lighting 154 Indoor decorative 174 Residential Lighting 176 Technical information 194 Index 206 Sales offices 216 GE Luminaires Catalogue 3 INTRODUCTION This is GE... It begins with the best ideas in class and leads to quality products with proven demand, for which GE can offer long term services. We build client relationships with our customers to spark off ideas for new innovations. imagination at work GE has always been a company that stands for progress. For more than 130 years we have been able to tell stories about GE innovations. GE’s new imagination at work approach is about GE people, their curiosity, relentless drive, hard work and willingness to take risks – combined with a foundation of limitless imagination – that makes anything possible. It’s a legacy of progress that began with our founder, Thomas Edison, and one that will continue through the 21st century. At GE, what we imagine, we can make happen. Our company began with the invention of the world’s first affordable incandescent lamp. A century later, GE is still bringing light to your world. We are developing new lighting technologies such as ceramic metal halide and light-emitting diodes that operate with more efficiency, less cost and less environmental impact than ever before. We provide solutions for commercial, industrial and residential use in more than 100 countries, bringing to market new technologies that help customers and consumers meet pressing environmental challenges, As a Worldwide Partner of the Olympic Games, GE is the whilst delivering a comfortable lighting environment for exclusive provider of a wide range of innovative products both work and domestic settings. and services that are integral to the successful Games. 4 GE Luminaires Catalogue INTRODUCTION Solutions for sustainable cities LED luminaires Our heritage, our future We believe that better technology is the answer to our customers’ environmental challenges. We are confident that we can find tomorrow’s solutions to those challenges just as LED Area Lighter LED Cove we have since the days of our founder, Thomas Edison. Throughout our 130-year history, we have invented solutions to meet our customers’ greatest needs. Over many years, we have developed one of the broadest ranges of environmentally advanced technologies. We will build on this legacy of success by searching and developing next generation clean technologies. Our goal is to be a leader in bringing clean energy, air and improved quality of life to LED Duna LED Display Case the world’s citizens. GE Lighting has combined its luminaire and LED expertise to bring unmatched product quality and reliability together in an integrated approach. With a full understanding of customers’ needs, we have developed an advanced and effective system. LED Iberia Tetra AL10 Outdoor applications Site, area and general lighting utilising advanced LED optical systems providing uniformity, improved vertical light distribution, reduced both off-site and on-site glare and effective security light levels. Indoor applications Flexible LED solutions offer unlimited design possibilities. GE LED systems provide function and improved aesthetics, easier installation, less frequent maintenance and consistent performance in lighting designs. Robust, long-life systems allow maximum performance in a variety of indoor applications. GE Luminaires Catalogue 5 COMPLETE SOLUTIONS Choosing the right fitting Highways, streets, industrial areas, commercial and residential environments areas – GE has carefully selected a range of lamps and luminaires that offer specific benefits, depending upon what lighting effects you require. Outdoor lighting Designing a lighting scheme for a stretch of road is by no means as simple as it may first appear. There are guidelines that advise on the required brightness levels, and widely available information on the energy efficiency of different lighting types. Given the huge public investment involved, one of the main requirements for traffic lighting is the highest illuminance for the least cost, so high efficacy, long-life sources are the standard. For safety and security reasons, outdoor lighting must also create highly uniform lighting on the road surface, with minimum glare. In addition, cities and towns are becoming 24 hour venues with ongoing activity, day or night. In order to facilitate this 24/7 operation we need light; but the lighting solution needs to provide more than just functional illumination. It also needs to be aesthetically pleasing both during daylight hours and whilst in operation. With all these requirements in mind GE Lighting manufactures a comprehensive range of outdoor lighting fittings. The range provides lighting solutions for secondary residential roads, through to highways and motorways and decorative amenity lighting fittings to help create a more pleasing environment. Indoor lighting For industrial and commercial environments, the use of appropriate illumination systems is essential for profitable growth, greater safety in the workplace, improved productivity and reduced error and reject rates. The design of the “most appropriate illumination system” is not limited to easily quantifiable aspects (energy savings, efficacy, etc.), but must also pay heed to qualitative aspects, such as visual comfort and the appearance of the installation. 6 GE Luminaires Catalogue COMPLETE SOLUTIONS Quality and technology Top quality techniques and advanced technology for best results GE Lighting constantly works on new technology and new top quality products. Registered licensed international institutions support GE in the testing process. Every year the Company invests significant capital for in-house research and development to meet customers’ needs and expectations. From the planning to the final product, GE Lighting tests safety, performance and quality in its laboratories. Tests are in accordance with domestic and international laws and laboratory equipment is chosen to provide complete reliability of results. Certifications Products and systems in accordance with high quality standards UNI EN ISO 9001 From 1997 GE Lighting’s quality system is certified to UNI EN ISO 9001. ISO 14001 In June 2000 GE Lighting was awarded ISO 14001 Certificate: another acknowledgment of our quality standards. All GE Lighting products carry CE mark: an EU declaration of conformity that allows free circulation in the European market. Applicable Directives to lighting fittings are: Low Voltage Directive 2006/95/EC (amended by Directive 93/68/EEC) and Electromagnetic Compliance (EMC) Directive 2004/108/EC (amended by Directive 93/68/EEC, Directive 92/31/EEC and Directive 91/263/EEC). Most of our lighting fittings and their components have been granted free circulation by ENEC Mark Licence (European Norms Electrical Certification). ENEC is the European certification mark of conformity to the standards EN for the luminaires and their components instituted within Cenelec by 20 European organizations of electric certification for the mutual acknowledgement of a single mark. On the side of the ENEC Mark is specified the country that issued the certification. The ENEC mark is based on the application of the following principles: • The manufacturer must have a firm quality system certified UNI EN ISO 9001. • The product is inspected during production. • The product is submitted
Recommended publications
  • Perceptions of Success from Members of the Founding Class of MC Squared STEM High School Jeffrey D
    National Louis University Digital Commons@NLU Dissertations 6-2013 The esM sage 2.0: Perceptions of Success from Members of the Founding Class of MC Squared STEM High School Jeffrey D. McClellan National Louis University Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.nl.edu/diss Part of the Curriculum and Instruction Commons, Curriculum and Social Inquiry Commons, Disability and Equity in Education Commons, Educational Leadership Commons, Educational Methods Commons, Elementary and Middle and Secondary Education Administration Commons, Science and Mathematics Education Commons, and the Urban Education Commons Recommended Citation McClellan, Jeffrey D., "The eM ssage 2.0: Perceptions of Success from Members of the Founding Class of MC Squared STEM High School" (2013). Dissertations. 193. https://digitalcommons.nl.edu/diss/193 This Dissertation - Public Access is brought to you for free and open access by Digital Commons@NLU. It has been accepted for inclusion in Dissertations by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons@NLU. For more information, please contact [email protected]. THE MESSAGE 2.0: PERCEPTIONS OF SUCCESS FROM MEMBERS OF THE FOUNDING CLASS OF MC SQUARED STEM HIGH SCHOOL Jeffrey D. McClellan Dissertation Educational Leadership Doctoral Program Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements of Doctor of Education in the Foster G. McGaw Graduate School National College of Education National-Louis University February, 2013 Copyright by Jeffrey David McClellan, 2013 All rights reserved ABSTRACT This dissertation examines the methods of learning from the student’s perspective in order to understand what made the first graduating class of MC Squared successful. The conceptual model of student success composed of non-academic factors of motivation, social connectedness, and self-management was used for the lens from which to understand the six students in depth.
    [Show full text]
  • Shakeup at GE Lighting
    20160208-NEWS--1-NAT-CCI-CL_-- 2/5/2016 3:45 PM Page 1 VOL. 37, NO. 6 FEBRUARY 8 - 14, 2016 MANUFACTURING: Outlook Business of Life It’s a mixed bag for industry in 2016 P. 6 Ice wine How frozen grapes SPORTS: Arena football become a sweet drink Cleveland is rare AFL success story P. 20-21 P. 8 The List FOCUS: Middle Market CLEVELAND BUSINESS Heinen’s downtown move paying off NEO’s largest software developers P. 15 P. 27 A to Z podcast making a mark BY KEVIN KLEPS frequent inquiries led to a partner- ship that really helped the podcast [email protected] take off. @KevinKleps Zac Jackson casually tells a re- Here to stay porter that he didn’t get an iPhone “I bugged them for a long time,” “until like a year ago.” said Grzegorek, the editor-in-chief of Andre Knott, his best friend and a pair of alternative weeklies, Cleve- podcast partner, immediately land Scene and the Detroit Metro chimes in, “And he still doesn’t know Times. how to use it.” Grzegorek said he would call Jack- The scene was a Panera’s in North son “at least once a month” and ask Olmsted, but it might as well have him if “it was time for us to have a se- been one of the undisclosed loca- rious conversation.” A display of tions (Jackson and Knott prefer to Late last summer, Scene made an LED technology keep their audience wondering) at offer — it would pay Jackson and at GE Lighting’s which the two record their increas- Knott a fee for the podcast, which ingly popular A to Z podcast.
    [Show full text]
  • 130497 Catalog.Pdf
    Around the world, one brønd, stand,s al,one- breøking the . d,arhness with suþeri,or þraduct innoztation and custornsr seruice, Illuminati,ng thefar corners of the þlanet with the most recognized ti,ghting brand, in the i,nd,ustry. Pushi,ng the This 22nd, edition of the GE Lighting 9200 Lamþ catalog contains a comþrehensiae sel,ec- tion of lighting þroducts desi.gned to dekaer the maximum return on your lighting inaestment. We're committed to þroaiding the most comþlete ra,nge of þroducß aaailabl¿- to meet the unique, euer changing needs of our customers around the world. We'ue designed thi,s catalog with our 104 yeør tradition of quality in mind. In that time we'ae built our business @ heþingyou i,lluminate y617ys-in the most fficti,ve, cost need,. Because being the wwld,'s lighting lead,er i,s more th,an our liistory, it is our mission. Welcome to the nn-expanding world of GE Lighting products. o a o ÊE Lighting Section Introduction lncandescent I Halogen 2 H igh lntensity Discharge 3 Fluorescent 4 Electronic Ballasts 5 'o Compact Fluorescent 6 Stage and Studio 7 Appendix I This 22nd edition of the GE Lighting 9200 Lamp catalog has been totally redesigned to help you more easily select the GE Lighting products that best meet EPA does not endorse any product your needs. or service. iÐ All ratings and data are subject to change without notice. Technical drawings are not to scale. @ Copyright General Electric Company 1995 1 In addition, GE Lighting markets products such as wiring devices, refractory metals, rare gasses, o chemicals, q:uartz and phosphors for the elec- tronic, semiconductor, aerospace, computer and laser industries.
    [Show full text]
  • Industry TODAY. FINANCE ANALYST San Jose, California I .1 .Y
    I..c At Work in Industry TODAY. FINANCE ANALYST San Jose, California i_ .1 .Y ............ ENGINEERING ASSISTANT CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE WORK GROUP LEADER Salem, Virginia _~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~New .York, New York q..... St.:'w~Petersburg, Florida TELETYPE OPERATOR MACHINIST APPRENTI Iflz-% ONNEL SPECIALIST Louisville, Kentucky Cleveland, Ohio |INSTITUTE OFI ARDUSTYAL Cincinnati, Ohio . VW ENGINEERING MANAGER AIRCRAFT ELECTRICAL SPECIALIST QUALITY CONTROL SUPERVISOR Pittsfield, Massachusetts Schenectady, New York Philadelphia, Pennsylvania At Work in Industry Today THIS IS A BOOKLET about some of the men and many Negro young people.. "It isn't enough for us to women who work for the General Electric Com- tell them about good job opportunities," we've been pany. told. "You have to show them." Maybe this booklet They have jobs in sales, as secretaries, as engineers, will help. as factory workers, as managers. Some of the men and women in this booklet did Some work with familiar products like electric irons drop out of school. Each has regretted it. One (who and refrigerators and radios. Others work in strange now holds a well-paying, high-skill job) told us: "I've new fields like nuclear electronics, outer space proj- spent 15 years just trying to catch up. I put in seven ects, and supersonic jet engines. years in night school, and that's not easy when you've Some have worked for General Electric for many got a full-time job and a family to raise. And even years. Some are just starting their careers in industry. now I ask myself 'How far would I have gone if I'd Some work in the older General Electric plants in stuck to the books 15 years ago?"' The progress road the northeast where General Electric began in the has been rocky for the man or woman who dropped 19th century - in Massachusetts, Connecticut, Penn- out of school too soon - and because jobs are getting sylvania, New York.
    [Show full text]
  • GE's Nela Park Facility More Than 100 Years of Lighting Innovation
    GE's Nela Park Facility More Than 100 Years of Lighting Innovation https://www.cleveland.com/business/2017/09/ges_nela_park_an_uncertain_fut.html ---------------------------------- By Marcia Pledger, The Plain Dealer EAST CLEVELAND, Ohio - Nela Park in East Cleveland remains the headquarters for General Electric's lighting division. Nela was the first industrial park in the world, and it was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1975. But the future of the campus is uncertain. In June, 2019, General Electric announced plans to put its iconic lighting business up for sale. In 1912, two decades after General Thomson-Houston merged with the Edison General Electric Company to form GE, the foundation for the company's lighting division was being laid at Nela Park industrial park. GE absorbed the National Electric Lamp Association (NELA) into its lighting business. GE has been moving away from consumer electronics and toward machinery such as aircraft engines, Industrial Internet services, and wind turbines. Last year, GE's lighting business made up less than 2 percent of its total revenue, and the company only employs about 300 people in the lighting division in Northeast Ohio. Just four years ago, the company employed about 700 people in the area. Five years ago, a new generation of GE employees, dug up a time capsule buried a century earlier, and buried another. Inside the one buried 100 years ago, was lighting technology from the horse and buggy era. Artifacts inside the lead box, included photos of Nela's founders, journals, a book of technical specifications, and a Plain Dealer dated March 21, 1912.
    [Show full text]
  • GE Lighting Catalog
    SHOWBIZ™ FOR STAGE, STUDIO, DISCO AND PHOTOGRAPHIC LIGHTING www.GELighting.com e GE Consumer Products Lighting and General Electric are both registered trade marks of the General Electric Company, USA © General Electric Company (USA) 2003 ENT.CAT. - 02/2003 e SHOWBIZ™ FOR STUDIO, DISCO AND PHOTOGRAPHIC LIGHTING STAGE, Introduction Welcome to this new updated catalogue. Under the SHOWBIZ™ brand GE Lighting will continue to be a leading supplier to the various sectors which make up the entertain- ment lighting industry. GE Lighting have an ongoing strategy of product innovation and improvement to meet the demands and applications of O.E.M.s and end users. This updated catalogue shows those lamps, from the extensive range of entertainment lighting products, which are currently in popular use. Please note the many new products including a more comprehensive range of discharge range. Certain other USA manufactured lamp types may be available to special order. Please contact your local GE Lighting Sales Office for details. Notes Contents A Hemispherical shield in front of filament masking all direct light Symbols 2 - 3 B Operate at or near horizontal C Protect from moisture. Safety screening techniques recommended PAR Lamps 4 - 17 D Replace broken lamp immediately. Inner bulb pressurised and could shatter unexpectedly Single Ended Halogen Lamps 18 - 35 E Use safety screen external to lamp F Operate BDTH Linear Halogen Lamps 36 - 43 G Operate BD ±30° Specialist Projector Lamps 44 - 61 H 100V rating available to order J 120V rating available to order Discharge Lamps 62 - 81 K Specially designed for searchlight applications Technical Information 82 - 117 L Twin filament lamp.
    [Show full text]
  • Historic Context
    3.0 HISTORIC CONTEXT 3.1 Overview of Ohio, 1940–1950 During World War II, Ohio experienced significant industrial development and population growth. The state’s diversified industrial base and geographical proximity to transportation routes and other population centers made it well suited for wartime production needs. The industrial development and consequential economic prosperity generated during World War II shaped Ohio’s economic, cultural, and social history for decades thereafter. The United States resisted involvement in World War II from 1939 through much of 1941. Even as the Axis powers swept through Europe and eastern Asia, American isolationists insisted that the U.S. had no key interests at stake. At President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s urging, Congress enacted a “cash and carry” policy in 1939, allowing the U.S. to supply goods to any nation that could pay cash and carry the goods away (Knepper 2003:367). While providing great assistance to Great Britain and its allies, the program also offered economic benefits to the U.S., which remained enmeshed in the Great Depression. More importantly, it began the process of shifting American industries to a wartime footing. In September 1940, Congress established the first peacetime military draft in the nation’s history. The Ohio National Guard was activated and designated the 37th Division. Guard units traveled to Camp Shelby, Mississippi, for training. In Columbus, Fort Hayes served as a reception center for military draftees and recruits and was staffed by 2,000 troops in its own right (Fort Hayes Metropolitan Education Center 2010). Roosevelt, a Democrat, handily won Ohio in the November 1940 presidential election, but Republicans dominated the state government and the Congressional delegation.
    [Show full text]
  • 100 Women Leaders in STEM and Our Very Own Linda Mills, Corporate Vice President, President Northrop Grumman Information Systems Sector
    THE VALUE OF STEM LEADERSHIP. Northrop Grumman is proud to salute the top 100 Women Leaders in STEM and our very own Linda Mills, Corporate Vice President, President Northrop Grumman Information Systems Sector. We are honored to come together with other change leaders and visionaries who are helping to ensure our next generation of scientists, technicians, engineers and mathematicians. THE VALUE OF PERFORMANCE. ©2012 Northrop Grumman Corporation www.northropgrumman.com/stem THE VALUE OF STEM LEADERSHIP. Northrop Grumman is proud to salute the top 100 Women Leaders in STEM and our very own Linda Mills, Corporate Vice President, President Northrop Grumman Information Systems Sector. We are honored to come together with other change leaders and visionaries who are helping to ensure our next generation of scientists, technicians, engineers and mathematicians. THE VALUE OF PERFORMANCE. ©2012 STEMconnector™ All Rights Reserved ©2012 Northrop Grumman Corporation www.northropgrumman.com/stem Production Team Edie Fraser Chief Executive Officer, STEMconnector™ Senior Consultant, Diversified Search, LLC [email protected] Lorena Soto Fimbres Director of Marketing and Communications, STEMconnector™ Project Manager, Diversified Search, LLC [email protected] Fiorella Gil Graphic Design [email protected] Printed By: Boyd Brothers, Inc. 425 E. 15th Street Panama City, FL 32402 www.Boyd-Printing.com Vern Von Werder (727) 698-0925 [email protected] Sherrie Kreth (850) 215-3209 [email protected] Acknowledgements Diversified Search, LLC Deloitte American Geophysical Union Karen L. Harper Susan Lavrakas Information and Copies [email protected] 1990 M Street NW Suite 570 Washington, DC 20036 Table of Contents About the Publishers . xiii About STEMconnectorTM .
    [Show full text]
  • G E ASSET MANAGEMENT INC (Form: SC 13D/A, Filing Date: 10/04
    SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION FORM SC 13D/A Schedule filed to report acquisition of beneficial ownership of 5% or more of a class of equity securities [amend] Filing Date: 2002-10-04 SEC Accession No. 0000950130-02-006909 (HTML Version on secdatabase.com) FILED BY G E ASSET MANAGEMENT INC Business Address 3003 SUMMER STREET CIK:936839| IRS No.: 061238874 | State of Incorp.:DE | Fiscal Year End: 1231 P O BOX 7900 Type: SC 13D/A STAMFORD CT 06904-7900 2033262300 SUBJECT COMPANY ARCH CAPITAL GROUP LTD Mailing Address Business Address 20 HORSENECK LANE 20 HORSENECK LANE CIK:947484| IRS No.: 061424716 | State of Incorp.:DE | Fiscal Year End: 1231 GREENWICH CT 06830 GREENWICH CT 06830 Type: SC 13D/A | Act: 34 | File No.: 005-48508 | Film No.: 02782306 2038624300 SIC: 6331 Fire, marine & casualty insurance Copyright © 2012 www.secdatabase.com. All Rights Reserved. Please Consider the Environment Before Printing This Document UNITED STATES SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION Washington, D.C. 20549 SCHEDULE 13D UNDER THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934 (Amendment No. 1) Arch Capital Group Ltd. (Name of Issuer) Common Stock (Title of Class of Securities) G0450A105 (CUSIP Number) Nancy E. Barton, Esq., General Electric Capital Corporation, 260 Long Ridge Road, Stamford, Connecticut 06927 Michael M. Pastore, GE Asset Management Incorporated, 3003 Summer Street, Stamford, Connecticut 06905 (Name, Address and Telephone Number of Person Authorized to Receive Notices and Communications) September 19, 2002 (Date of Event which Requires Filing of this Statement) If the filing person has previously filed a statement on Schedule 13G to report the acquisition which is the subject of this Schedule 13D, and is filing this schedule because of Rule 13d-1(b)(3) or (4), check the following box ¨.
    [Show full text]
  • Clinic Can Learn from Cable, Too Health Care Giant’S Innovation Team Is Building Diverse Array of Corporate Partnerships DAN SHINGLER by CHUCK SODER [email protected]
    20150223-NEWS--1-NAT-CCI-CL_-- 2/20/2015 2:57 PM Page 1 $2.00/FEBRUARY 23 - MARCH 1, 2015 STACK is bigger and better than ever, thanks to acquisitions and rapidly increasing audience — P. 5 SPECIAL REPORT: Nela Park is showing the way for lighting industry and community — Pages 13-18 A 6.5% tax on oil and gas extracted in Ohio would amount to about $3 on each barrel and about 15 cents on each mcf of gas. Clinic can learn from cable, too Health care giant’s innovation team is building diverse array of corporate partnerships DAN SHINGLER By CHUCK SODER [email protected] Maybe the next big medical breakthrough will come from a cable company? Big companies from all sorts of industries are helping the Cleveland Clinic come up with big ideas — and turn Taxing time for oil them into products. And none of them are health care companies. In fact, one is a cable company: Last week, Cox Com- munications became the fourth major corporation to Kasich’s plan to raise burden comes at a difficult period for industry form an alliance with Cleveland Clinic Innovations, the Clinic’s business development team. By DAN SHINGLER Kasich contends that drillers in Ohio Ohio Tax Commissioner Joe Testa, a Why would the Clinic want to work with a cable com- [email protected] have received what amounts to a “free staunch proponent of increasing the pany? ride,” because Ohio’s severance taxes severance tax, conceded that the low- Cox could help the Clinic figure out how to deliver Ohio Gov.
    [Show full text]
  • Aspet, the Little Studio, the Stables, Saint
    I I I I I I I I I FURNISHING PLAN I SAINT- GAUDENS N·ATIONAL I HISTORIC SITE I I.._.._ I I "--~~--~~--~•. il'-----J.~.... ---»-~'----U......;.u.. __~ I ASPET THE LITTLE . THE STABLES I I I -I I I U. S. Department of the Interior I National Park Service Harpers Ferry Center I I Historic Furnishing Plan I Aspet, The Little Studio, The Stables Saint-Gaudens National Historic Site I New Hampshire I I I I I I I g. )_f. f-z., I Date Recommended: Fj,.1/gL . I -:---,-~=-=,...,.----,~--,..,---..,...,.....-,,....,.-;--~~=--:--~~~~~~~~-Regional Director, North Atlantic Region Date I I I I I I HISTORIC FURNISHING PLAN I ASPET, THE LITTLE STUDIO, THE STABLES SAINT-GAUDENS NATIONAL HISTORIC SITE I NEW HAMPSHIRE I I I I by Sarah M. Olson I I I I June 1982 Harpers Ferry Center National Park Service I U. S. Department of the Interior I ... .. •. ~ ·~.. 'f ~~~S. ::t:i:?.n;\lC1iL 0 1 1...\~ ' • ~l:;tioal Parl1 Se: J;.;~ I lll.l.rfi.~JS f zrrJ Ccui::ir I ~fl.IJ'li I I I CONTENTS I DEFINITION OF INTERPRETIVE OBJECTIVES I 1 OPERATING PLAN I 3 I ANALYSIS OF HISTORIC OCCUPANCY I 6 EVIDENCE OF ORIGINAL FURNISHINGS I 10 IMPRESSIONS OF ASPET I 10 I FURNISHINGS ACCUMULATED IN PARIS, 1877-1880 I 16 NEW YORK, 1880-1900 I 34 ASPET I 38 I Interior Photographs./ 38 Purchases, 1892-1899 I 40 The Estate of Mrs. Thomas J. Homer, 1899 I 42 I Evidence of Furnishings, 1902-1907 / 46 Kitchen and Laundry Furnishings I 51 Flatware and Hollowware I 53 Evidence of Books I 55 I Porch Furnishings and Lawn Ornaments I 59 Saint-Gaudens Heirs and Property Settlements I 62 Portraits
    [Show full text]
  • The General Electric Storv Volume 4 a Photo History
    1947-1978 The General Electric Storv Volume 4 ~all of History Plfbllcatlon A Photo History .--, .---, r--i .......,...-, THB TUB .:( TBB ~·-- > ) ON THI:illl.:; ') PATHWAYS~'· .f ') 8TBINMBTI , ,. SHOl LDERS . \ , Of ~ \ BD180N 8TBINMBTZ ', , BRA 01· GIANTS PROGRESS BRA BRA ~ .-,-, .---, r--, ON TllEilll;'. ~; "\ PATHWAYS~... , ·, ) THB SHOULDERS ~ 1 OF · BOl80N OF GIANTS I P6OGRESS ' BRA .---, r--7 r:--:, .-,,-, THB •.- :(· ,- TBB TBB ~ -.:) ) ON THF~:;-, PATHWAYS~:'.r ' THB BDl80N STBINMBTZ : \ SHOL'LDERS ., \ 1 OF : \ ) BDISOS 8TRINMBTZ • • BRA BRA m GIA~TS PROGRESS BRA BRA ~ THE ELFUN SOCIETY An organization of present and retired employees of the General Electric Company, dedicated to the encouragement of cooperation, fraternity, and good fellowship and to the betterment of the community in which they function. THE HALL OF HISTORY A multi-faceted project designed to serve as a focal center for the gathering, preservation and display of valuable historical documents and memorabalia about the people, products and places of the electrical industry, and to share this heritage with America. This publication is a joint project of the Elfun Society and the Hall of History, with all proceeds for the benefit of the Hall of History Foundation. FIRST PRINTING - FIRST EDITION COPYRIGHT 1980 NOVEMBER 1980 THE HALL OF HISTORY FOUNDATION ,~ r--, r--, .---, r-.:, . 0/IITHE{Yl·:·/· ') PATHWAYSjl.:'. ) THB TUB jl.·/) Ol\ THr.01.: > ') PATHWAYS ;. :,,.~ SHOlJI.Di RSi \. 1 OF \, BDl80N STBINMBTZ \ SHOULDERS \. OF · \. or GIP . 'TS r' PROGRESS .., BRA BRA ,., OF GIANTS ' ' PROGRESS~ .-:-:--i ~ r-:, TUB THI! [Ql•/) ON mt:~.:( '') PATHWAYS[Ql•::;, ) STBINMBTZ I \ SHOULDERS \ OF I \ BDI80N BRA ,.i OF GIANTS • PROGRESS r' BRA .....---i r--, ~ c---, ...--, ON THE. ;. /R!HWAYS ', '.(~ ) TBB • :(~ ' TBB ,.=:(·l:.:) oi-.:THF.
    [Show full text]