City of Leon Valley 2015 Business Listing

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

City of Leon Valley 2015 Business Listing City of Leon Valley 2015 Business Listing October 2015 10/13/2015 1 Arts & Entertainment No. Street Suite Business Name Business Category Business Description Business Center Store Number Website 6320 Bandera Road San Antonio Aquarium Arts & Entertainment Aquarium N/A 210-310-3210 www.sanantonioaquarium.net 6320 Bandera Road San Antonio Aquarium Arts & Entertainment Aquarium-Outdoor Entertainment N/A 512-805-2101 www.sanantonioaquarium.net Conference Room And Birthday Party 6320 Bandera Road San Antonio Aquarium Arts & Entertainment N/A 210-310-3144 www.sanantonioaquarium.net Rooms 6709 Bandera Road SMASH Arts & Entertainment Dance Studio Savings Square 210-954-6518 http://www.smashdance.net/ Marketing/PR/Film & Video Production 7500 Eckhert Road 280 Sol Media Group Arts & Entertainment Eckhert Center 210-722-1075 www.solmediagroupsa.com Firm Music Institute of San 6527 Bandera Road Arts & Entertainment Music Institute Seneca Plaza 210-338-2045 www.musicinstitutesa.com Antonio 5504 Bandera Road 611 Hustle Time Productions Arts & Entertainment Music Productions Studio Bandera Road Business Park 210-875-2562 www.hustletimeproductions.com 7205 Bandera Road 201 The Echo Newspaper Arts & Entertainment Newspaper N/A 210-695-3613 http://helotesecho.com/ Party Time Pictures Media 6533 Bandera Road Arts & Entertainment Photo Booths Seneca Plaza 210-775-1973 N/A Group HOME BUSINESS Jamie Larson Photography Arts & Entertainment Photography N/A 210-705-3388 www.jamielarsonphotography.com HOME BUSINESS Photography by Godsey Arts & Entertainment Photography N/A 210-524-9594 N/A 6812 Bandera Road 215 Gina Jolly Photography Arts & Entertainment Photography Crossway Center / Town Center 210-325-3590 http://www.ginajolly.com/ 5740 Wurzbach Road Blacknote Studio Arts & Entertainment Production Sunset Plaza 210-325-6232 www.blacknoterecords.org Slackmonster Recording 6506 Bandera Road Arts & Entertainment Recording Studio Lehman's Village 210-857-3527 N/A Studio 6700 Huebner Road A Bandera Bowling Center Arts & Entertainment Sports & Recreation Leon Creek Shopping Center 210-523-1716 www.banderabowlingcenter.com Car-Vel Skate Center 6807 Bandera Road Arts & Entertainment Sports & Recreation Grass Valley 210-684-8900 www.carvelskate.com (Skateland) Automotive Services No. Street Suite Business Name Business Category Business Description Business Center Store Number Website 5504 Bandera Road 101 Line-X Automotive Services Accessories Bandera Road Business Park 210-522-1122 www.line-x-sa.com 6886 Bandera Road Ward Auction Company Inc. Automotive Services Auction House Bandera Plaza 210-521-7653 www.wardauction.com 6324 Bandera Road Hail USA Automotive Services Auto Hail Repair For Ancira Chevrolet N/A 800-336-8656 www.hailusa.com 5308 Bandera Road 360 Automotive Automotive Services Auto Repair N/A 210-818-9243 N/A 5504 Bandera Road 708 ABC Auto Hail Repair Automotive Services Auto Repair Bandera Road Business Park 702-773-3230 gohardc.com 5901 Wurzbach Road Ancira Body Shop Automotive Services Auto Repair N/A 210-681-4730 www.ancirachev.com 4727 Timco West Autoworks Automotive Services Auto Repair N/A 210-680-4328 www.autoworksatx.com 5417 Bandera Road 606 Campeoni Automotive Automotive Services Auto Repair West Loop Business Center 956-451-5071 N/A 7302 Reindeer Trail Coopers Bimmers & Benz Automotive Services Auto Repair Leon Valley Business Park 210-680-0810 www.coopersbimmersandbenz.com Maximum Velocity 4810 NW Industrial Automotive Services Auto Repair N/A 210-682-1100 N/A Motorsports Team Adversary- HID 7308 Reindeer Trail Automotive Services Auto Repair Leon Valley Business Park 210-378-1037 N/A Lighting 7120 Bandera Road The Busted Knuckle Automotive Services Auto Repair N/A 210-680-0404 www.thebustedknuckle.com 10/13/2015 2 6312 Grissom Road 1 Total Injection Automotive Services Auto Repair N/A 210-682-3898 N/A Automotive Reconditioning Warehouse & 5504 Bandera Road 206 D & K Distributing Automotive Services Bandera Road Business Park 210-440-7270 Distribution 6780 Bandera Road $5 Car Wash Automotive Services Car Wash N/A 210-669-2424 www.5carwashamerica.com 7160 Bandera Road Bandera Car Wash Automotive Services Car Wash N/A 210-520-7770 N/A 7210 Bandera Road Diamond Shine Car Wash Automotive Services Car Wash N/A 210-281-8414 www.diamondshine-carwash.com 6780 Bandera Road One Stop Carwash Automotive Services Car Wash N/A 403-561-2425 N/A 6617 Evers Road Paradise Car Wash Automotive Services Car Wash N/A 210-291-0568 www.theparadisecarwash.com 6217 Grissom Road Miracle Auto Body & Paint Automotive Services Collision Center N/A 210-680-1987 www.miraclebodyandpaint.com Real Tech Collision & 6008 Grissom Road A Automotive Services Collision Center N/A 210-522-0100 www.realtechcollision.com Automotive 5608 Bandera Road Service King Collision Repair Automotive Services Collision Center Northwest Industrial Park 210-522-1044 www.serviceking.com 7338 Reindeer Trail Brass Knuckle Kustoms Automotive Services Custom Accessories Leon Valley Business Park 210-520-5813 N/A 6125 Bandera Road Ancira Volkswagen Automotive Services Dealership N/A 210-681-2300 www.anciravolkswagen.com 6111 Bandera Road Ancira Winton Chevrolet Automotive Services Dealership N/A 210-681-4900 www.ancirachev.com 6226 Bandera Road JD Byrider Auto Sales Automotive Services Dealership N/A 210-523-0900 www.jdbyrider.com 7312 Reindeer Trail 210 JDM Automotive Services Engine & Parts Specialist Leon Valley Business Park 210-328-5300 www.210jdm.com 7322 Reindeer Trail Nitro Exhaust Systems Automotive Services Exhaust Leon Valley Business Park 210-520-1428 N/A 7100 Bandera Road Official Inspection Station Automotive Services Inspections N/A 210-684-7555 www.officialinspectionstation.com 5405 Bandera Road 101 AmeraGuard Liners Automotive Services Liners West Loop Distribution Center 210-680-2000 www.ameraguardliners.com 7250 Bandera Road CD Tire & Muffler Automotive Services Muffler Shop N/A 210-509-4709 N/A Intertek Automotive 5404 Bandera Road 8 Automotive Services Quality & Safety Solutions Bandera Road Business Park 210-684-2310 www.intertek.com Research Intertek Automotive 5405 Bandera Road 115 Automotive Services Quality & Safety Solutions West Loop Distribution Center 210-706-1580 www.intertek.com Research 6535 Bandera Road Avis Rent A Car Automotive Services Rentals Seneca Plaza 210-680-1651 www.avis.com 5720 Bandera Road 20B Enterprise Rent A Car Automotive Services Rentals N/A 210-256-7934 www.enterprise.com 7525 Linkview St Joules & Hertz Automotive Services Rentals/Repair N/A 210-647-7484 N/A 6960 Bandera Road Brother Audio Sound Automotive Services Security and sound systems 210-509-3933 www.baudiosound.com 6610 Bandera Road Bring Your Own Parts Automotive Services Services N/A 210-682-2967 www.bringyourownparts.com 6612 Bandera Road Collision Central Automotive Services Services N/A 210-684-7333 www.collisioncentral.com 5504 Bandera Road 105 Erik's Automotive Automotive Services Services Bandera Road Business Park 210-681-8891 www.eriksautomotive.com 6500 Grissom Road G & R Automotive Services Automotive Services Services N/A 210-681-5281 N/A 7314 Reindeer Trail Global Automotive Automotive Services Services Leon Valley Business Park 210-690-3431 N/A 5504 Bandera Road 103 Goose Automotive Automotive Services Services Bandera Road Business Park 210-762-6268 www.Gooseautomotive.com J & J Transmission + Auto 5504 Bandera Road 205 Automotive Services Services Bandera Road Business Park 210-705-1485 N/A Repair 10/13/2015 3 6012 Grissom Road Jacob Motors Automotive Services Services N/A 210-523-8308 N/A 5612 Bandera Road Jiffy Lube Automotive Services Services Northwest Industrial Park 210-682-1304 www.jiffylube.com 7083 Bandera Road Jiffy Lube Automotive Services Services N/A 210-680-6581 www.jiffylube.com 7081 Bandera Road Meineke Automotive Services Services N/A 210-680-9090 www.meineke.com 6805 Bandera Road Midas Muffler Shop Automotive Services Services Grass Valley 210-681-7251 www.midas.com 6312 Grissom Road Miller's Automotive Machine Automotive Services Services N/A 210-684-7722 N/A 5930 Bandera Road Sierra Motors Acceptance Automotive Services Services N/A 210-314-8988 www.sierra-motors.com 4811 NW Industrial St. John's Auto Repair Automotive Services Services N/A 210-647-3118 N/A 6608 Bandera Road USA Auto Care Center Automotive Services Services N/A 210-682-4400 www.usacarcarecenter.com 5504 Bandera Road 202 A-1 Alarm & Tint Automotive Services Tint & Alarm Bandera Road Business Park 210-647-0900 www.a1alarmandtint.com 6710 Bandera Road A Mother's Tint & Alarm Automotive Services Tint & Alarm N/A 210-521-9444 www.motherswindowtint.com 6221 Bandera Road Discount Tire Automotive Services Tires N/A 210-523-1361 www.discounttire.com www.firestonecompleteautocare.co 6901 Bandera Road Firestone Tire & Service Automotive Services Tires Leon Creek Center 210-348-3992 m NTB-National Tire & Battery 5745 NW Loop 410 Automotive Services Tire Shop N/A 210-684-6000 http://www.ntb.com/ Auto Centers 6213 Grissom Road 606 Banis Towing Service Automotive Services Towing Service N/A 210-647-3994 www.banistowing.com 5305 Bandera Road Pena Brothers Upholstery Automotive Services Upholstery N/A 210-647-4200 www.penabrosautotops.com 6300 Bandera Road Tricolor Auto Automotive Services Used Car Lot / Auto Sales Fiesta Auto Center 210-245-3677 www.tricolorauto.com 6780 Bandera Road A & B One Stop Dealer Services Automotive Services Wash & Detail Cars N/A 403-561-2425 N/A Construction & Contractors No. Street Suite Business Name Business Category Business Description Business Center Store
Recommended publications
  • Jim Crow Racism and the Mexican Americans of San Antonio, Texas
    ORAL HISTORY AS A MEANS OF MORAL REPAIR: JIM CROW RACISM AND THE MEXICAN AMERICANS OF SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS by Rebecca Dominguez-Karimi A Dissertation Submitted to the Faculty of The Dorothy F. Schmidt College of Arts and Letters In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy Florida Atlantic University Boca Raton, FL May 2018 Copyright by Rebecca Dominguez-Karimi, 2017 ii ORAL HISTORY AS A MEANS OF MORAL REPAIR: JIM CROW RACISM AND THE MEXICAN AMERICANS OF SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS by Rebecca Dominguez-Karimi This dissertation was prepared under the direction of the candidate's dissertation advisor, Dr. Sandra Norman, Comparative Studies Program, and has been approved by the members of her supervisory committee. It was submitted to the faculty of the Dorothy F. Schmidt College of Arts and Letters and was accepted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. SUPERVISORY COMMnTEE: ~~o..... .:i N1~"" Sandra Norman, Ph.D. ~~Susan Love Brown, Ph. 'S:"..,;ae~.~~o~ JosephinBeoku-Betts, Ph.D. Directo , mparative St ilies Pro? MiC11aeliOfSWclD.~-# Dean, Dorothy F. Schmidt College of Arts andn:ers . 5"", "Zo/g "~~2.~~ ' iii ACKNOWLEDGMENTS The author offers her sincerest thanks and gratitude to members of her committee (past and present-Dr. Robin Fiore, Dr. Marta Cruz-Janzen, Dr. Sandra Norman, Dr. Susan Love Brown, and Dr. Josephine Beoku-Betts) for their guidance, input, and support in bringing this manuscript to fruition. She wishes to especially thank her dissertation advisor, Dr. Sandra Norman, for her patience, advice, and inspiration during the composition of this manuscript.
    [Show full text]
  • ASKANCE Whole Number 46
    1 July 2019 Volume XII Number 2 ASKANCE Whole Number 46 The Steampunk Issue Edited & published by John Purcell, 3744 Marielene Circle, College Station, TX 77845-3926 USA Proof reading on this issue courtesy of our cats Inga, Eyegore, and Froderick. If there are typos anywhere in this issue, these are the responsible parties. Good help is so hard to find these days. Contents © 2019 by John A. Purcell. Contact information: [email protected] Even so, all rights revert to original artists and authors upon publication. Disclaimers are a dirty business, but are always included. You understand. I know you do. What you have here in your hands (or on screen) is another Mythical Publication. Copies of this fine, back on a quarterly schedule fanzine can be had for The Usual, which means expressed interest, submission and eventual inclusion of articles and artwork, letters of comment, and cold hard cash in the amount of $3.00 USD if you want a printed copy mailed to you. Bribes are also accepted. Of course, if you send in locs, articles, and artwork, you just earned a life-time free subscription. Consider yourself lucky, indeed. Table of Contents Bemused Natterings………………………………………………………..…..3 All Steamed Up: an introduction to “Writing Steampunk”……5 Writing Steampunk: author perspectives from Gail Carriger, Paul di Filippo, Jonathan Fesmire, and Rie Sheridan Rose……………………………………………………….6 Becoming a Steampunk Vendor, by Lloyd Penney……………..11 The Grime is Afoot, fiction by Taral Wayne…………………………14 Sun Thunder, fiction by John Purcell………………………….……….16
    [Show full text]
  • Askance #42 the Post-Worldcon Issue
    Askance #42 The post-WorldCon Issue October 2017 VOLUME X, number 3 Whole Number 42 Edited and published by John Purcell, 3744 Marielene Circle, College Station, TX 77845-3926 USA This time, proofreading services rendered by Duckie, the wonder Labrador. Contents © 2017 by John A. Purcell. Contact information: [email protected] Even so, all rights revert to original artists and authors upon publication. Disclaimers are a dirty business, but are always included. You understand. I know you do. What you have here in your hands (or on screen) is another Mythical Publication. Copies of this fine, back on a quarterly schedule fanzine can be had for The Usual, which means expressed interest, submission and eventual inclusion of articles and artwork, letters of comment, expressed interest, and cold hard cash in the amount of $3.00 USD. Bribes are also accepted. Of course, if you send in locs, articles, and artwork, you just earned a life- time free subscription. Consider yourself lucky, indeed. Contents Bemused Natterings…………………………………………………….3 An Easter Story, by John Purcell……………………………………6 Loc on Askance 40, 22 May 2017, by Taral Wayne…….…9 A Nape, Beheaded, by Robin Bright, PhD……………………12 First Fandom, by Taral Wayne……………………………………19 From the Hinterlands, letters……………………………………..20 Regional Convention Calendar……………………………………23 What’s Next……………………………………………………………….29 Art Credits: Denny Marshall – front cover Sheryl Birkhead – 2; photo by Sanna Pudas – 3; photos by John Purcell – 6, 8, 11, 20, 23; Alan White – 8; clip art – 9, 21, 24; image Googled “Planet of the Apes” – 12; Denny Marshall – 22, 29; back cover photos taken in Geithoorn, Netherlands, by John Purcell **Scattered through this issue are bottom-page feeders plucked at random from a book off the sf and f shelves in my office at school.
    [Show full text]
  • San-Antonio-300-Years-Of-History.Pdf
    Copyright © 2020 by Texas State Historical Association All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical reviews and certain other noncommercial uses permitted by copyright law. For permission requests, write to the publisher, addressed “Attention: Permissions,” at the address below. Texas State Historical Association 3001 Lake Austin Blvd. Suite 3.116 Austin, TX 78703 www.tshaonline.org IMAGE USE DISCLAIMER All copyrighted materials included within the Handbook of Texas Online are in accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107 related to Copyright and “Fair Use” for Non-Profit educational institutions, which permits the Texas State Historical Association (TSHA), to utilize copyrighted materials to further scholarship, education, and inform the public. The TSHA makes every effort to conform to the principles of fair use and to comply with copyright law. For more information go to: http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that go beyond fair use, you must obtain permission from the copyright owner. Dear Texas History Community, Texas has a special place in history and in the minds of people throughout the world. Texas symbols such as the Alamo, oil wells, and even the shape of the state, as well as the men and women who worked on farms and ranches and who built cities convey a sense of independence, self-reliance, hard work, and courage.
    [Show full text]
  • Pocket Program
    LoneStarCon 3 POCKET PROGRAM The 71st Worldcon August 29–September 2, 2013 San Antonio, Texas The Dedication Nin Soong Fong Who gave me heart and soul Elizabeth “Liz” Metcalfe Whose heart never really left Texas Wayne Fong Together we steered Starships: Qapla’ Some of these conversations are for you I miss y’all - Terry Fong “World Science Fiction Society,” “WSFS,” “World Science Fiction Convention,” “Worldcon,” “NASFiC,” “Hugo Award” and the distinctive design of the Hugo Award Rocket are service marks of the World Science Fiction Society, an unincorporated literary society. “LoneStarCon 3” is a service mark of ALAMO, Inc., a 501(c)(3) nonprofit, tax-exempt corporation, registered in Texas. Getting Started Welcome To loneSTarcon 3! There and back again....or deja’ vu all over again. For years, Bill and Randy’s modus operandi at a Worldcon With apologies to J. R. R. Tolkien and Yogi Berra. This journey, was to be up early for breakfast to be sure they made the like many great adventures, began in a bar (or behind one first panel of the day (and yes, starting at 9 or 10 in the anyway). Back in the early 1990s when the bid was underway morning there is always a cool program item...so go take for LoneStarCon 2, we both volunteered to help with the bid. your pick!). A day of constant activity moving back and forth GETTING STARTED In those early days that entailed table sitting (one of fandom’s between art show, dealers’ room, exhibits, and multiple thankless jobs), door greeter at the parties, and quite often panels, then shifting to evening events and finally parties.
    [Show full text]
  • San Antonio, 1846-1861, Have Been Lost Or Destroyed
    C£ Rl RICE UNIVERSITY San Antonio, Texas, 1846-1861 by Carland Elaine Crook A THESIS SUBMITTED IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF ARTS Thesis Director's signature: Houston, Texas May 1964 3 1272 00010 0048 ABSTRACT The first fifteen years of Texas statehood were pivotal in the development of San Antonio. Contemporary chroniclers vividly show how the city grew between 1846 and 1861 from an ancient, crumbling Mexican village to a large, bustling commercial and military supply center. The United States Army caused many of the changes that occurred in the period. During the Mexican War, 1846-1848, San Antonio became the military headquarters for Texas and a main supply depot for the fighting forces in Mexico. After the war, members of the Corps of Topo¬ graphical Engineers opened roads from the supply depot at San Antonio to forts along the Texas frontier. Military expenditures became the lifeblood of San Antonio's economy; the forts provided the area with unprecedented protection. The new roads brought increasing numbers of traders and travelers to San Antonio and facilitated the city's first adequate postal system. More and more newcomers settled in San Antonio to capitalize upon the expanding opportunities. Between 1846 and l86l the city's population increased more than eight time from approximately a thousand in 1846 to over eight thousand in 1861. A heterogeneous group, composed mostly of Anglo- Americans and European immigrants, the new residents soon outnumbered the older Mexican inhabitants and became the new directors of San Antonio's development. They guided the city through a period of cultural, social, and economic growth.
    [Show full text]
  • ASKANCE Whole Number 44
    1 June, 2018 Volume XLIV Number 4 ASKANCE Whole Number 44 Edited & published by John Purcell, 3744 Marielene Circle, College Station, TX 77845-3926 USA Proofreading services this time were rendered by Duckie, the wonder Labrador, ably assisted by our cats Inga, Eyegore, and Froderick. If there are typos anywhere in this issue, now you know who to blame. Contents © 2018 by John A. Purcell. Contact information: [email protected] Even so, all rights revert to original artists and authors upon publication. Disclaimers are a dirty business, but are always included. You understand. I know you do. What you have here in your hands (or on screen) is another Mythical Publication. Copies of this fine, back on a quarterly schedule fanzine can be had for The Usual, which means expressed interest, submission and eventual inclusion of articles and artwork, letters of comment, and cold hard cash in the amount of $3.00 USD if you want a printed copy mailed to you. Bribes are also accepted. Of course, if you send in locs, articles, and artwork, you just earned a life-time free subscription. Consider yourself lucky, indeed. Table of Contents Bemused Natterings…………………………………………………………..3 I See France, by John Purcell……………………………………………….6 The Last Ex, by Taral Wayne………………………………………….….16 Chat, the 4th Fhannish Ghod, by Teddy Harvia…………………..21 Some Words about Fanzines, the editor……………………………22 Figby, by Bill Fischer………………………………………………………….23 Tales from the Convention, by Lloyd Penney……………….……24 From the Hinterlands, the lettercolumn…………….……………..27 Regional Convention Calendar……………………………….…………30 What’s Next…………………………………………………………….………..39 Art Credits Kurt Erichsen – front cover Sheryl Birkhead – 2; clip art – 6, 29, 31; photos by me – 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 26, 28, 30, 40 Nicked from Internet – 16, 8, 27, 37; Brad Foster – 20, 25; Lloyd Penney – 24 Photo of Harlan Ellison® by and copyright © Andrew Porter - 39 Member FWA (since 2007!) 2 What’s all this then? A good question.
    [Show full text]
  • San Antonio Multifamily Report 2Q 2018
    Multifamily Research Market Report Second Quarter 2018 San Antonio Metro Area Downtown Employment Growth Encourages Apartment Development Multifamily 2018 Outlook Shift in new supply on the horizon. Downtown San Antonio is 6,200 units Construction: ripe with new development as city leaders focus on bringing jobs will be completed Deliveries fall to a four-year back to the area. Several companies have announced expansion low during 2018, following the plans in the core, and a number of mixed-use projects are planned delivery of more than 7,300 units or underway to revitalize the nearby area. Apartment developers last year, a 15-year high. have focused on northern submarkets for the past few years, adding nearly 17,000 units to stock in the outer northern and western submarkets since 2012, compared with approximately Vacancy: 40 basis point 4,300 in downtown and the area just north of downtown during decrease in vacancy The absorption of more than the span. Limited new supply and healthy demand for housing 6,500 apartments this year have resulted in these submarkets recording the lowest vacancy outweighs deliveries during the rates in the metro at close to 6 percent. While new units coming span, pushing down vacancy to online this year remain heavily concentrated in the far northwest 7.0 percent. and far west submarkets, deliveries are shifting as Central San Antonio is slated to receive an additional 2,400 units over the Rents: 3.4% increase next two years. Demand for these units will remain strong as in effective rents Rent growth strengthens from employers continue to create jobs downtown.
    [Show full text]
  • Primary & Secondary Sources
    Primary & Secondary Sources Brands & Products Agencies & Clients Media & Content Influencers & Licensees Organizations & Associations Government & Education Research & Data Multicultural Media Forecast 2019: Primary & Secondary Sources COPYRIGHT U.S. Multicultural Media Forecast 2019 Exclusive market research & strategic intelligence from PQ Media – Intelligent data for smarter business decisions In partnership with the Alliance for Inclusive and Multicultural Marketing at the Association of National Advertisers Co-authored at PQM by: Patrick Quinn – President & CEO Leo Kivijarv, PhD – EVP & Research Director Editorial Support at AIMM by: Bill Duggan – Group Executive Vice President, ANA Claudine Waite – Director, Content Marketing, Committees & Conferences, ANA Carlos Santiago – President & Chief Strategist, Santiago Solutions Group Except by express prior written permission from PQ Media LLC or the Association of National Advertisers, no part of this work may be copied or publicly distributed, displayed or disseminated by any means of publication or communication now known or developed hereafter, including in or by any: (i) directory or compilation or other printed publication; (ii) information storage or retrieval system; (iii) electronic device, including any analog or digital visual or audiovisual device or product. PQ Media and the Alliance for Inclusive and Multicultural Marketing at the Association of National Advertisers will protect and defend their copyright and all their other rights in this publication, including under the laws of copyright, misappropriation, trade secrets and unfair competition. All information and data contained in this report is obtained by PQ Media from sources that PQ Media believes to be accurate and reliable. However, errors and omissions in this report may result from human error and malfunctions in electronic conversion and transmission of textual and numeric data.
    [Show full text]
  • 814-03 Legacy Club Express 49Th Edition2
    Legacy Express Lone Star Legacy Club™ e-Newsletter Are You Social? We Are! September 2014 I 49th Edition Find Us On A Warm Welcome Back to Our Legacy Friends! Tony and I would like to send a big Hello and Welcome back Witty & Wise ya’ll! A foolish man perceives meekness as weakness. We hope everyone had a great Author: Terry Miller summer. Get ready for another fun, informative, and empow- ering season. We are really looking forward to seeing Antonio Lopez Cindy Reynolds LSNB Investment everyone. You all have been Legacy Club Legacy Club missed! San Antonio Market Rio Grande Valley Market Services We’re sure you will enjoy the Topics for the season. • Stocks and Bonds • Fixed Income Products Experience a Unique Style of Texas Banking • Mutual Funds If you have any questions, concerns, or suggestions, regarding the Legacy Club, • IRA Rollovers and Transfers please do not hesitate to contact Antonio (Tony) Lopez (210) 979-4652 or Cindy • Tax-Free Investments Reynolds (956) 365-5910. • Annuities • Trust Services • And More ATTENTION LEGACY CLUB MEMBERS: DON’T FORGET THE $15 HEB Gift Card Referral Fee, just by Ask for more information or to schedule a free sending in a Brand New Customer who opens a Legacy Club Account! consultation. For more information call (956) 664-9490. Holidays Lone Star National Bank will be closed Monday, September 1, 2014 in observance of Labor Day Bringing the Bank to You in the Securities and Financial Planning offered through LPL Financial, a Registered Investment Advisor. Member FINRA/SIPC. Insurance products offered through Rio Grande Valley and LPL Financial or its licensed affiliates.
    [Show full text]
  • Cardinal Gets Kicks Playing for Romania a University of the Incarnate Word Soccer Player’S Spring Semester Got an Unusual, Freshman Year and 10-Day Break Overseas
    VOL. 116. NO. 6 www.uiwlogos.org February 2016 UIW opt-out on guns brings relief By Joshua Gonzales LOGOS STAFF WRITER The University of the Incarnate Word’s plans to opt recommendation to opt out. That recommendation came communication out of the state’s “Campus Carry” bill that would have after surveying students, faculty and staff last October arts, said he allowed people with licenses to carry concealed guns is and November, Agnese said. agreed with apparently causing relief. “The survey response overwhelmingly expressed that UIW’s opt-out. Unlike state schools that must UIW should opt out and continue to “I am in allow campus carry beginning Aug. ban concealed handguns from campus agreement that 1 except in declared gun-free zones, as permitted by the statute,” Agnese concealed carry in or private schools that don’t opt out, said. classrooms should the UIW community won’t have that That decision apparently was NOT be allowed,” Warner problem – at least on campus – since welcomed. No protests have taken said. “I personally have completed the CHL (certified the state’s open-carry law went into place at UIW as have some at the handgun license) training and even after serving 20plus effect Jan. 1. University of Texas-Austin and others years in active duty Air Force -- being around weapons Paul Warner Dr. Hector Perez Dr. Louis J. Agnese Jr., UIW’s who oppose the state’s “Campus Carry” all that time -- and growing up shooting weapons and longtime president, announced in December that UIW’s bill. hunting small game, I would not want weapons in the Board of Trustees had accepted the Executive Council’s Paul Warner, an Air Force veteran majoring in classroom.” -Cont.
    [Show full text]
  • IMT School for Advanced Studies, Lucca Lucca, Italy
    IMT School for Advanced Studies, Lucca Lucca, Italy Events and temporary uses in the historic urban landscape: Lucca Comics & Games between localized interactions and a worlding project ecology. PhD Program in Analysis and Management of Cultural Heritage XXXth Cycle By Dania Marzo 2018 The dissertation of Dania Marzo is approved. Program Coordinator: Prof. Emanuele Pellegrini, IMT School for Advanced Studies, Lucca Advisor: Dr. Linda Bertelli, IMT School for Advanced Studies, Lucca Co-Advisor: Prof. Oliver Ibert, IRS, Leibniz-Institut für Raumbezogene Sozialforschung, Erkner (Berlin) The dissertation of Dania Marzo has been reviewed by: Prof. Martin Müller, Université de Lausanne Prof. Leonardo Chiesi, Scuola di Architettura, Università di Firenze IMT School for Advanced Studies, Lucca 2018 Table of contents Vita vii Relevant publications, presentations and projects x Abstract xi Introduction 1 Presentation and aims 1 Research questions and main contributions 4 Chapters’ disposition 5 1. Events, ‘in-between’ use and temporary use 8 Events as boundary crossing research objects 8 Working definitions 11 Temporary organizations and Field Configuring Events 18 Project ecologies and temporary proximities 21 Urban spaces and temporary use: from informal practices to institutionalized policies 22 2. Urban landscapes between Heritagisation and Festivalisation 26 Short term, long term and cyclical interactions 26 Festivalisation 31 Heritagisation and sustainable preservation: a founding paradox 34 Urban heritage as a processual landscape 39 3. Research design and methodology 42 Case study selection: why study a Comic & Games convention? 42 Used methods and combination 45 Data collection and analysis 50 4. The project ecology of comic events: notes on a geography of the comics 54 A “spatial medium par excellence” 54 From the ‘bullpen model’ to a dispersed system: emergence of the comic book convention in North America 60 The first European “Comic Salons”: institutionalizing the comic medium.
    [Show full text]