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Post-Disaster Recovery of Public Housing in Galveston, Texas: an Opportunity for Whom?
2019 INQUIRY CASE STUDY STUDY CASE INQUIRY Post-Disaster Recovery of Public Housing in Galveston, Texas: An Opportunity for Whom? JANE RONGERUDE AND SARA HAMIDEH LINCOLN INSTITUTE OF LAND POLICY LINCOLN INSTITUTE OF LAND POLICY 1 TOPICS Disaster Recovery, Social Vulnerability Factors, Post-Disaster Planning, Public Housing Replacement Strategies TIMEFRAME 2008–2014 LEARNING GOALS • Understand the concept of social vulnerability and the role of its factors in shaping post-disaster recovery outcomes • Analyze examples to identify post-disaster recovery goals and to explain disparities in recovery outcomes among both public housing residents and units • Develop criteria for evaluating post-disaster recovery planning strategies to ensure fairness and inclusiveness • Analyze the goals and strategies for replacing affordable housing after disasters from different stakeholders’ perspectives PRIMARY AUDIENCE Planning students and housing officials PREREQUISITE KNOWLEDGE This case study assumes that readers have a foundational understanding of the concept of social vulnerability, which provides a framework for evaluating a community’s resilience and for understanding the ability of particular groups to anticipate, withstand, and recover from shocks such as natural disasters. This concept acknowledges that disaster risk is not distributed evenly across a population or a place. Because poor neighborhoods overall have fewer resources and more limited social and political capital than their more affluent counterparts, they face greater challenges in post-disaster recovery. Damage due to natural disasters is modulated by social factors such as income, race, ethnicity, religion, age, health, and disability status. Because poor people are more likely to live in low-quality housing, they are at greater risk for damage from high winds, waves, flooding, or tremors (Peacock et al. -
The First Pro Bowl Game
THE COFFIN CORNER: Vol. 12, No. 4 (1990) The First Pro Bowl Game by Fred R. Crawford The game was conceived by George P. Marshall, the Washington Redskins owner, and sponsored by the Los Angeles Times Charities. Pitting the league champion New York Giants against a collection of the NFL’s finest and five members from two independent Pacific coast teams was a novel idea. Played on January 15, 1939, in old Wrigley Field, a baseball park, before a crowd of an estimated 20,000 fans (30,000 had been expected but with poor weather conditions attendance was low). The game was typical of football in the 1930’s, punting on third down, scoring teams receiving the following kickoff, and a few breaks deciding the outcome of the game. The teams struggled between the 30-yard lines for most of the first quarter. Early in the second quarter Giant fullback John (Bull) Karcis intercepted a Cecil Isbell pass on the All-Star 35-yard line and returned it to the All-Star 13. Two running plays and an incomplete pass forced the Giants into settling for a 19-yard field goal by Len Barnum. Giants 3 All-Stars 0. Late in the second quarter the All-Stars started a drive from their own 35 yard line with Ed Goddard running and passing along with John Drake's running, the All-Stars worked the ball to the Giants 19 yard line. Three plays failed to gain yardage and Ernie Smith kicked a 25-yard field goal with 29 seconds left in the half. -
Coach Steve Owen: the Great Innovator
THE COFFIN CORNER: Vol. 18, No. 4 (1996) COACH STEVE OWEN: THE GREAT INNOVATOR By Stan Grosshandler, et.al. (Originally published in part in Football Digest) Professional football has advanced from a simple to complex game. To a great extent, this is due to the imaginative genius of the coaches. In the early years the innovators were George Halas, Curly Lambeau, Greasy Neale and Jimmy Conzelman. Later Paul Brown and Vince Lombardi came along. Today [ed.: 1970s] we have Tom Landry, Don Shula, Hank Stram and George Allen to mention a few. Seldom mentioned; yet one of the great innovators of all time is Steve Owen, for 23 years the guiding genius of the New York Giants. Stout Steve came up with innovations like the A-formation and the Umbrella Defense. These were not only catchy names, but effective weapons. The Giants under Owen won eight division and two league championships. What is even more remarkable about Owen is that he stressed defense when few of his contemporaries did. His kind of football began with blocking and tackling. "Football is a game played down in the dirt and it always will be. There's no use getting fancy about it." Often criticized by Giants fans as ultra-conservative, he may have been the first NFL coach to elect to kick off to start a game. He often chose to go for a sure field goal rather than gamble for a touchdown, and that further upset New York rooters. Eventually, however, the rest of the league came around to his way of thinking. -
Russians Break Disarmament Ignoring
Distribution Pair ttftgr, tMfclt aai to- 14-050 la* tariffa abMt '«. 8M Today An Independent Newspaper Under Same Ownership wr Since 1878 B7 CARRIEE IfiueiJ Oilly. MoniJar through Friday, entered »» Secerns Clas» Mattel 7c PER COPY PAGE ONE VOLUME 82, NO. 226 at the Port omee at Red Bank. N. J.. uoder the Act of March 3. 1879. RED BANK, N. J., MONDAY, JUNE 27, 1960 S5o PER WEEK erger Russians Break Is Approved Disarmament RED BANK - The U. S. Comp- troller of the Currency has ap- proved the consolidation of the Atlantic Highlands National Bank Havana with the Monmouth County Na- ignoring New tional Bank. Announcement of the comp- Rocked troller's approval was made Fri- day by George L. Bielitz, Mon- Charge West Would Not mouth County National Bank president. By Blast Hope Dies The consolidation had previous- Negotiate; Satellites Agree ly received the approval of the CONFLICT OF TRANSPORT —That wind early Saturday was stiff. This was one re- boards of1 directors of each bank, Army Dampers and by the shareholders at a suit. William Shires, Allen St., Rumson, ha,c! parked at Sea Bright. A rental boat from For Early GENEVA (AP)—The Soviet Union and its satel- May 23 meeting. Chris's Landing sailed through the air right into the windshield of his car. In the back- ites abruptly broke up the deadlocked 10-nation dis- 1 The consolidated banks will op- Early Report ground is the home of Army Ippolito, Long Branch High School coach. Part of its armament conference today and announced they would erate under the name and char- Action put the whole matter back before the United Nations. -
Galveston's Balinese Room
Official State Historical Center of the Texas Rangers law enforcement agency. The Following Article was Originally Published in the Texas Ranger Dispatch Magazine The Texas Ranger Dispatch was published by the Texas Ranger Hall of Fame and Museum from 2000 to 2011. It has been superseded by this online archive of Texas Ranger history. Managing Editors Robert Nieman 2000-2009; (b.1947-d.2009) Byron A. Johnson 2009-2011 Publisher & Website Administrator Byron A. Johnson 2000-2011 Director, Texas Ranger Hall of Fame Technical Editor, Layout, and Design Pam S. Baird Funded in part by grants from the Texas Ranger Association Foundation Copyright 2017, Texas Ranger Hall of Fame and Museum, Waco, TX. All rights reserved. Non-profit personal and educational use only; commercial reprinting, redistribution, reposting or charge-for- access is prohibited. For further information contact: Director, Texas Ranger Hall of Fame and Museum, PO Box 2570, Waco TX 76702-2570. Galveston’s Balinese Room Galveston’s Balinese Room Born: 1942 – Died 2008 The Balinese Room was built on a peer stretching 600 feet into the Gulf of Mexico. Robert Nieman © All photos courtesy of Robert Nieman unless otherwise noted. For fifteen years, Galveston’s Balinese Room was one of the most renowned and visited gambling casinos in the world. Opened in 1942 by the Maceo brothers, it flourished until 1957, when the Texas Rangers shut it down permanently as a gambling establishment. In the times that followed, the building served as a restaurant, night club, and curiosity place for wide-eyed visitors. Mainly, though, it sat closed with its door locked—yes, it had only one door. -
Golden Blatantly Rejects Padula's Parking Proposal
Your Community Id leo itlc © m Newspaper Q S e u m nd Class mattar. April 14, 1945 GW at Newark,1 N Jtl o* March 9. 187». Vpl. ,38, N o. 48 BELLEVH4Æ , N . J., FIUDAY/itUBY 12. 19.V7 5c per copi 18,000 Witness Palatial LOCAL INVAUD AND FRIENDKILLED.IN Freeh Receives Check Golden Blatantly Rejects July Fourth Salute FREAK ACCIDENT Thousands More Peer From Other Vantage Points Nora Gilsenen, Mary Kelly Killed Instantly; Former’s Padula’s Parking Proposal « - 'As B elle v ille H old s G ala F ire w o rk s D isp lay week Belleville snjoy&d its greatest Independence Daughter Seriously Injured pay C&lebi'atioH \aa‘ spite is,0©p people witnessed * a I "B)fo ’4'bîiiem^bhe.an elderjjv Town Critic Labels Measiire fabblcras cfecilss.an^rifeewitflurdispteiy'Y^^ w®re iriiTlIMîv-tîrrin- COMM. SULLIVAN dium, M any tjtejjs^ds bf others observed1 the flrewoiks ataff oèôili Wednes^#- Something Of “Persqhal Advantage fl'om their yardt" n i oisher stidh vantage points. p r a ïTulieway jppjsh-.' TO INTRODUCE — ‘^Iteverend'AlW t V. Ja&WSon p f Grace Church, gave the ed into a.- coiïcreîô" embank-. Of Select Pew” At Tuesday Palaver iiM ^tioxr whiefe^teted the ewnihg portion of the day b ji H t . ' CLUB ORDINANCE long proSaSi.' TEoii|5rtD’Ay6lla vfo" served as. Mastar nf hThe qar,; pif| g-'b t o in"a hi c .tranàfei^kfoh^odeli-.hadtbe^n- Golden Submits'Request D u e ;^ th e fetbriny "protests of lapproxiriiately a dozen’ TefF'in W aàSih^tei: A-yeBug-jge»§priigi ; Mayor - Jy—Fadula- Bay began. -
Blasts of Jewish Enclave They’Ve Continued to Maintain This Practice Since Ancient Times
oday in Yerushalayim and other Israeli cities, the air raid siren takes the place Tof the traditional six shofar blasts at candlelighting time. In the Tunisian island of Djerba though, the ancient tradition has been preserved. Residents say that the shofar was abolished in other communities due to fear of provoking the non-Jews, but because they live in what is essentially an all- Blasts of Jewish enclave they’ve continued to maintain this practice since ancient times. On our trip to visit Djerba’s Jews just two months ago, we were looking forward to experiencing it firsthand. But as Shabbos approached in the Jewish commu- nity of Djerba, we found that they had another way to herald its arrival: The kehillah hires someone to circulate in the Jewish Chara Kabira neighborhood to encourage shop owners to lock up, in addition to the original custom of blowing the shofar. The Djerban community is proud of its adherence to the ancient rituals, tracing its 2,000-year sojourn on the island to a group of families of Kohanim exiled after the destruction of the Second Beis HaMikdash. While most of the hundreds of thousands of Tuni- traditionWhile every other North African Jewish community has disintegrated, sian and North African Jews have moved to Israel, France, and other countries over the last half century, the Jews of Djerba — all 1,300 of them shomrei Torah the Jews of Djerba are still a bastion of Torah on this island off umitzvos — have stubbornly held onto their island community, secure in the government’s promise the Tunisian mainland. -
Download 1939-09-28
v.iwi,«««„>sS5S^^^^S!HS5555S55iSI5!w -' »< «r"»t -»\jr 19^'^'i ^•-**.*'fc4^4i 4 ^"^"1 -wii ^^ «iS"t, . ^* *•* • V ^ •*ivi;-«^n^*S'H »-,.,'.S,..-v, lla£5aoau Library ' Eaat ITnvOM.Ooan I'f^: THE MOVIE GUYED Business Directory THE HOME NEWSPAPER IS A THE HOME TOWN PAPER — af — Calendar Of Events VITAI, FORCE IN EVERY TOWN BRANFORD — NORTH nRANTORH NEWS FIIOM lIOH-YWOOn; I Came," by Louis Bromneld, which Is Meanderings PORTBAYI^JG AS IT DOES STONY CREEK — PTNE ORCHARD 2nd and 4th Tuesday night, Nashawena Council, Degree of Po 43 incii sink and tub combinations Eleanor Powell and Fred Astalre now showing at the Loow Poll Col LOCAL nAFPENINGS IN SHORT BISACU — INDIAN NECK lego Theatre for a 2nd big week. cahontas in Red Men's IIoll. 2S,9.i complete. Toilet outHts GRANNIS CORNER — RIORRIS ready for the starting gun on their Myrna plays the amarous Lady 1st and 3rd Fridays—Vnsa Star Ijodge, No. 150, Svco IIoll. complete S12.95. Bath tubs S14.50. FAMILIAR LANGUAGE COVE — EAST HAVEN first co-starring film, "Broadway First Monday—Indian Nock Fire Co., Social Meeting. of a Ct)e Pranforti BgUtiiein I*-; E.skoth; Power is seen as the roman Wall IJasins S5.45. Conn. Plumbing Melody of 1040" Robert Taylor tic Major Safl. and Brent Is cast as Second Monday—Indian Neck Fire Co., Husinens Meeting ami Heating Materials Co., 1730 AND EAST HAVEN NEWS adopting Patricia Zolgfleld's boxer the world-weary Tom Handsome In Third and Fourth Mondays—Indian Neck Fire Co., Drills .Slate SI, New Haven, Conn., dog when Patricia aiid her now the 20th Century Fox Film. -
Merged Where Ashkenazim Had Greater Political Power, Occupational and Educational Attainments Than the Immigrants From
Corso di Dottorato di ricerca in Studi sull’Asia e Africa ciclo XXXI Tesi di Ricerca in cotutela con Université Paris Nanterre Doctorat de Recherche en Droit et Science Politique Collective memory and cultural identity: a comparative study of the politics of memory and identity among Israelis of Polish and Tunisian descent SSD: L-OR/08 Coordinatore del Dottorato ch. prof. Patrick Heinrich Supervisore ch. prof. Dario Miccoli Supervisore cotutela ch. prof.ssa Marie Claire Lavabre Dottorando Giorgia Foscarini Matricola 823331 Ringraziamenti Il mio primo ringraziamento alla fine di un lungo percorso di ricerca e studio che si è sviluppato in almeno tre paesi, Italia, Francia e Israele, va a tutte quelle persone che con il loro sostegno, i loro consigli e la loro amicizia hanno reso possibile questo, non sempre semplice, percorso. Grazie in particolare al mio relatore, Dario Miccoli, che, oltre ad essere un amico, mi ha accompagnata per la seconda metà di questo tortuoso percorso con infinita pazienza e senso dell’umorismo. Grazie per essere sempre stato presente e per aver condiviso suggerimenti, contatti, incoraggiamenti e qualche battuta sull’Israele contemporaneo. Anche se non più mia relatrice sulla carta, la mia più profonda gratitudine va a colei che, nel mio percorso accademico, dall’inizio, è stata presenza costante e instancabile, e che ha contribuito a rendermi, non solo dal punto di vista intellettuale ma anche professionale, la persona che sono ora, con infinite pazienza, curiosità, fiducia e incoraggiamenti. Il mio grazie più profondo va alla professoressa Emanuela Trevisan che mi ha trasmesso tanti anni fa la sua passione per questo straordinario paese che è Israele, nel quale, oggi, ho scelto di vivere. -
Cicer Arietinum L.), Its Ecology and Cultivation
r/ CICER L, A MONOGRAPH OF THE GENUS, WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO THE CHICKPEA {CICER ARIETINUM L.), ITS ECOLOGY AND CULTIVATION L. J. G. VAN DER MAESEN LAN!'/ . 11 GEN WAt;: CICER L., A MONOGRAPH OF THE GENUS, WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO THE CHICKPEA {CICER ARIETINUM L.), ITS ECOLOGY AND CULTIVATION Dit proefschrift met stellingen van LAURENTIUS JOSEPHUS GERARDUS van der MAESEN landbouwkundig ingenieur, geboren te Amsterdam op 18 december 1944, is goedgekeurd door de promotoren Dr. Ir. J. D. Ferwerda, hoogleraar in de Tropische Landbouw- plantenteelt, Dr. H. C. D. de Wit, hoogleraar in de Algemene Planten- systematiek en -geografie, en in het bijzonder die van de Tropen en de Subtropen. De Rector Magnificus van de Landbouwhogeschool, H. A. LENIGER Wageningen, 4 September 1972 635.657 582.738:581.4/.6+581. 9 L. J. G. VAN DER MAESEN CICER L., A MONOGRAPH OF THE GENUS, WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO THE CHICKPEA {CICER ARIETINUM L.), ITS ECOLOGY AND CULTIVATION PROEFSCHRIFT TER VERKRIJGING VAN DE GRAAD VAN DOCTOR IN DE LANDBOUWWETENSCHAPPEN, OPGEZA G VAN DE RECTOR MAGNIFICUS, PROF. DR. IR. H. A. LENIGER, HOOGLERAAR IN DE TECHNOLOGIE, IN HET OPENBAAR TE VERDEDIGEN OP WOENSDAG 11 OKTOBER 1972 TE 16.00 UUR IN DE AULA VAN DE LANDBOUWHOGESCHOOL TE WAGENINGEN H. VEENMAN &ZONE N N.V. - WAGENINGEN - 1972 This thesisi sals o published as Mededelingen Landbouwhogeschool Wageningen 72-10(1972 ) (Communications Agricultural University Wageningen, The Netherlands) Aanmijn ouders CONTENTS PREFACE 1. ORIGIN AND HISTORY OF THE CHICKPEA 1 1.1. Introduction 1 1.2. Prehistoric data 1 1.3. Written sources 2 1.4. -
National Register of Historic Places Weekly Lists for 2009
National Register of Historic Places 2009 Weekly Lists January 2, 2009 ......................................................................................................................................... 3 January 9, 2009 ....................................................................................................................................... 10 January 16, 2009 ..................................................................................................................................... 18 January 23, 2009 ..................................................................................................................................... 27 January 30, 2009 ..................................................................................................................................... 33 February 6, 2009 ..................................................................................................................................... 47 February 13, 2009 ................................................................................................................................... 54 February 20, 2009 ................................................................................................................................... 60 February 27, 2009 ................................................................................................................................... 66 March 6, 2009 ........................................................................................................................................ -
The Balinese Room
The Destruction of a Galveston, Texas Landmark by Ed Hertel On September 13, 2008, the residents of Galveston, Texas, woke up and emerged from their wind battered homes to find an island of devastation. Hurricane Ike had made landfall and brought all the fury of a Category 4 storm unto the island. Across the country, stories and images of the weather beaten community flashed across televisions. News reporters stood by piles of rubble, water and complete chaos trying to convey the utter devastation and loss of the city. As the disaster toll rose, a better picture emerged as to what was lost; including hundreds of homes, businesses, hotels and one very important historical landmark. 64 Casino Chip and Token news | Volume 22 Number 2 Almost as an after thought, the news reported on the rim with cases would anchor outside of federal limits destruction of the Balinese Room. It was described as and be unloaded by smaller, faster boats which raced the a nightclub, a Prohibition gambling joint, and a local Coast Guard in a game of cat and mouse. Once these boats “curiosity”. None of these reports fully explained the made it to the beach, they were unloaded onto trucks and significance of this structure in the history of Galveston or distributed throughout the dry country. its influence on gambling. Two very enterprising Sicilian immigrant brothers The story of the Balinese Room is so intertwined with named Salvatore “Sam” and Rosario “Rose” Maceo ran Galveston gambling history it is impossible to mention one what was known as the Beach Gang.