Mcteague a Story of San Francisco by Frank Norris CHAPTER 1 It Was
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
The Orkustra
THE ORKUSTRA This day-by-day diary of The Orkustra's live, studio, broadcasting and private activities is the result of two decades of research and interview work by Bruno Ceriotti, but without the significant contributions by other kindred spirits this diary would not have been possible. So, I would like to thank all the people who, in one form or another, contributed to this timeline: Jaime Leopold (RIP), Bobby Beausoleil, David LaFlamme, Henry Rasof, Nathan Zakheim, Stephen Hannah, Jesse Barish, Steve LaRosa, Rod Harper (RIP), Colin Hill, Ross Hannan, Corry Arnold, William Hjortsberg, Aldo Pedron, Klemen Breznikar, Reg E. Williams, Charles Perry, Penny DeVries, Claire Hamilton, Lessley Anderson, Ralph J. Gleason (RIP), Craig Fenton, Alec Palao, Johnny Echols, 'Cousin Robert' Resner, Roman Garcia Albertos, James Marshall, Chester Kessler, Gene Anthony, Christopher Newton, Loren Means, The San Francisco Examiner, San Francisco Chronicle, San Francisco Oracle, and Berkeley Barb. September 1966 Undoubtedly the most experimental and ecletically diverse band of the so-called 'San Francisco Sound', The Orkustra were put together by the infamous Bobby Beausoleil. A larger than life character with a mixed reputation ("He was like Bugs Bunny," says Orkustra's bandmate Nathan Zakheim. "Very in your face, enthuastic."), Robert Kenneth Beausoleil, aka 'Cupid', aka 'Bummer Bob', aka 'Bobby Snofox', was born on Thursday, November 6, 1947, in Santa Barbara, California. After dropping out of high school and let his hair grow out, Bobby moved to Los Angeles in search of fame and fortune in 1965. There, over the summer, he played a six-string rhythm guitar with The Grass Roots, a folk- rock band later known as LOVE, for only three weeks, and also made a cameo appearance (as 'Cupid') in the famous underground documentary movie Mondo Hollywood. -
Full Page Photo
SMALL BUSINESS COMMISSION CITYAND COUNTYOF SAN FRANCISCO M ARK DWIGHT, PRESIDENT EDWIN M. LEE, M AYOR REGINA D ICK-E NDRIZZI, D IRECTOR Legacy Business Registry Staff Report HEARING DATE OCTOBER 24, 2016 ESCAPE FROM NEW YORK PIZZA Application No.: LBR-2015-16-055 Business Name: Escape From New York Pizza Business Address: 1737 Haight Street District: District 5 Applicant: Timothy Parker, Owner Nomination Date: March 9, 2016 Nominated By: Supervisor London Breed Staff Contact: Richard Kurylo [email protected] BUSINESS DESCRIPTION Escape from New York Pizza is a local pizza shop in the Haight-Ashbury founded in 1986 that prides itself in its New York style pizza, its unique business model and its practice of giving to local charities. The original location of the business is at 1737 Haight Street, and it has expanded to four other locations. Escape from New York Pizza has a unique slow-growth philosophy and business model that opts to share its success with employees. They also contribute to local charities and organizations that benefit the community and the greater San Francisco area. The business has regularly donated to Homeless Youth Outreach, United Playaz and McKinley Elementary School’s afterschool programs. CRITERION 1: Has the applicant has operated in SF for 30 or more years, with no break in SF operations exceeding two years? Yes, the applicant has operated in San Francisco for 30 or more years, with no break in San Francisco operations exceeding two years: 1737 Haight Street from 1986-Present (30 years) Other locations: 333 Bush Street #104 715 Harrison Street 3242 22nd Street 2109 Polk Street CRITERION 2: Has the applicant contributed to the neighborhood's history and/or the identity of a particular neighborhood or community? Yes, the applicant has contributed to the Haight-Ashbury neighborhood’s history and identity. -
Frank Norris Collection of Papers and Related Materials, [Ca
http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/tf6g500585 No online items Guide to the Frank Norris Collection of Papers and Related Materials, [ca. 1889-1930] Processed by The Bancroft Library staff The Bancroft Library. University of California, Berkeley Berkeley, California, 94720-6000 Phone: (510) 642-6481 Fax: (510) 642-7589 Email: [email protected] URL: http://bancroft.berkeley.edu © 1997 The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved. Note This finding aid has been filmed for the National Inventory of Documentary Sources in the United States (Chadwyck-Healey Inc.) Note Arts and Humanities --Literature --American Literature Guide to the Frank Norris BANC MSS C-H 80 1 Collection of Papers and Related Materials, [ca. 1889-1930] Guide to the Frank Norris Collection of Papers and Related Materials, [ca. 1889-1930] Collection number: BANC MSS C-H 80 The Bancroft Library University of California, Berkeley Berkeley, California Contact Information: The Bancroft Library. University of California, Berkeley Berkeley, California, 94720-6000 Phone: (510) 642-6481 Fax: (510) 642-7589 Email: [email protected] URL: http://bancroft.berkeley.edu Processed by: The Bancroft Library staff Date Completed: ca. 1969 Encoded by: Charlotte Gerstein © 1997 The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved. Collection Summary Collection Title: Frank Norris Collection of Papers and Related Materials, Date (inclusive): [ca. 1889-1930] Collection Number: BANC MSS C-H 80 Creator: Norris, Frank, 1870-1902 Extent: Number of containers: 6 boxes, 2 portfolios, 1 volume and 1 oversize folder Repository: The Bancroft Library Berkeley, California 94720-6000 Physical Location: For current information on the location of these materials, please consult the Library's online catalog. -
The Best Places to Eat, Sleep and Play in San Francisco This Fall and Winter
SAN FRANCISCO FALL & WINTER GUIDE 2008/2009 The best places to eat, sleep and play in San Francisco this fall and winter With more than 20 million reviews and opinions, TripAdvisor makes travel planning a snap for the 25 million travelers visiting our site each month. INTRODUCTION TripAdvisor, the most trusted source for where to eat, sleep and play in thousands of destinations around the world, has collected the best insider tips from its 25 million monthly visitors to produce a unique series of travel guides. In addition to the best hotels, restaurants and attractions for every type of traveler, you’ll get great advice about what to pack, how to get around and where to find the best views. Be sure to check out the guides at www.tripadvisor.com. You’ll find reviews for more than 230,000 hotels, 76,000 attractions and 435,000 Inside restaurants on TripAdvisor.com. Learn from other travelers what to expect before you make your plans. SAN FRANCISCO Diversity is the name of the game in San Francisco. Diverse citizens: one of the most liberal centers in the U.S. today, the PACKING TIPS city is the second most densely populated in the country and is home 1. A backpack—“Backpacks abound among to significant Chinese, Japanese, Vietnamese, Filipino, Italian, Irish and locals. They are handy for carrying the Russian populations. Diverse architecture: almost destroyed in an layers of clothing that you will need, due to earthquake in 1906, the city was rapidly rebuilt and remains one of the the changing temperatures of the day.” —TripAdvisor Member, San Francisco most architecturally interesting cities in the United States with building styles that range from British Victorians to modern skyscrapers. -
1645 Pacific Avenue Project
DRAFT ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT REPORT 1645 Pacific Avenue Project PLANNING DEPARTMENT CASE NO. 2007.0519E STATE CLEARINGHOUSE NO. 2008102012 Draft EIR Publication Date: NOVEMBER 18, 2009 Draft EIR Public Hearing Date: DECEMBER 10, 2009 Draft EIR Public Comment Period: November 18, 2009 – JANUARY 2, 2010 Written comments should be sent to: Environmental Review Officer | 1650 Mission Street, Suite 400 | San Francisco, CA 94103 DATE: November 18, 2009 TO: Distribution List for the 1645 Pacific Avenue Project FROM: Bill Wycko, Environmental Review Officer SUBJECT: Request for the Final Environmental Impact Report for the 1645 Pacific Avenue Project (Planning Department Case No. 2007.0519E) This is the Draft of the Environmental Impact Report (EIR) for the 1645 Pacific Avenue project. A public hearing will be held on the adequacy and accuracy of this document. After the public hearing, our office will prepare and publish a document titled “Comments and Responses” that will contain a summary of all relevant comments on this Draft EIR and our responses to those comments. It may also specify changes to this Draft EIR. Those who testify at the hearing on the Draft EIR will automatically receive a copy of the Comments and Responses document, along with notice of the date reserved for certification; others may receive a copy of the Comments and Responses and notice by request or by visiting our office. This Draft EIR together with the Comments and Responses document will be considered by the Planning Commission in an advertised public meeting and will be certified as a Final EIR if deemed adequate. After certification, we will modify the Draft EIR as specified by the Comments and Responses document and print both documents in a single publication called the Final EIR. -
Orientalist Decoration in Realist Aesthetics from William Dean Howells to Sui Sin Far
Studies in American Fiction is a journal of articles and reviews on the prose fiction of the United States. Founded by James Nagel and later edited by Mary Loeffelholz, SAF was published by the Department of English, Northeastern University, from 1973 through 2008. Studies in American Fiction is indexed in the MLA Bibliography and the American Humanities Index. Studies in American Fiction Volume 36 Spring 2008 Number 1 June Hee Chung, Asian Object Lessons: Orientalist Decoration in Realist Aesthetics from William Dean Howells to Sui Sin Far Copyright © 2008 Northeastern University ISSN 0091-8083 ASIAN OBJECT LESSONS: ORIENTALIST DECORATION IN REALIST AESTHETICS FROM WILLIAM DEAN HOWELLS TO SUI SIN FAR June Hee Chung DePaul University It has been well established that despite differences in American realists’ and naturalists’ political philosophies, these writers nonethe- less shared aesthetic principles that were informed by their interest in representing the nation’s democratic masses. In particular, both move- ments aspired to a simplicity in style and a transparent treatment of their subject matter. Thus William Dean Howells, champion of the United States’ middle class, was also one of the few writers of his day to defend striking immigrant laborers in Chicago’s 1886 Haymarket tragedy. In his December 1887 “Editor’s Study” col- umn for Harper’s New Monthly Magazine, Howells joined his sym- pathies for America’s working and middle classes to his aesthetic values when he asserts that “hitherto the mass of common men have been afraid to apply their own simplicity, naturalness, and honesty to the appreciation of the beautiful.”1 Elitist Frank Norris also advocated a straightforward style, but he did so to apply Social Darwinism’s scientific principles of objectivity to the working and lower-middle classes. -
Dental and Vision Resource Guide
Dental Resource Healthy San Francisco does not provide dental care. There are, however, dental resources located throughout the San Francisco Bay Area that provide free or reduced-cost dental services. Range of services and costs vary depending on an individual’s income and assets, and the clinic or agency’s own policies related to free and reduced-cost care. If you are in need of dental care, contact one of the resources below for more information. The information provided in this guide is intended as a resource only. Services are not guaranteed. Healthy San Francisco will not pay for, or reimburse the cost of dental care services. Chinatown Public Marin City Health & Silver Avenue Family UCSF Health Center Wellness Center - Bayview Health Center School of Dentistry - 1490 Mason Street Hunters Point Clinic 1525 Silver Avenue Adult Clinic San Francisco, CA 94133 6301 3rd Street San Francisco, CA 94134 707 Parnassus Avenue, sfdph.org/dph San Francisco, CA 94124 sfdph.org/dph/ 1st Floor for Registration 1(415) 364-7636 marincityclinic.org/bayview- 1(415) 657-1700 San Francisco, CA 94143 (Pregnant women in network hunters-point/ (Pregnant women in network dentistry.ucsf.edu/patient- and Clients age 0-20) 1(415) 339-8813 and Clients age 0-20) services 1(415) 476-1891 ext. 3 Mission Neighborhood Davie Wei, DDS South of Market Resource Center UCSF 2041 Polk Street, Suite F Health Center 165 Capp Street School of Dentistry - San Francisco, CA 94109 229 7th Street San Francisco, CA 94110 Buchannan Dental Center 1(415) 776-9567 1st Floor for Registration mnhc.org/community_ 100 Buchanan Street San Francisco, CA 94103 programs/mission- San Francisco, CA 94102 Edward Zhao, DDS neighborhood- smhcsf.org/ dentistry.ucsf.edu/patient- resource-center/ 450 Sutter Street, Suite 1640 1(415) 503-6000 services 1(415) 869-7977 ext. -
Planning Commission Project Summary and Draft Motion
Planning Commission Project Summary and Draft Motion COMMUNITY BUSINESS PRIORITY PROCESSING PROGRAM HEARING DATE: MAY 21, 2020 CONSENT Record No.: 2020-001384CUA Project Address: 1650 Polk Street Zoning: Polk Street NCD (Neighborhood Commercial District) Zoning District 65-A Height and Bulk District Block/Lot: 0621/022 Project Sponsor: Wayne Joe Eng 1255 Washington Street San Francisco, CA 94108 Property Owner: Joe & Annie Eng Family Trust San Francisco, CA 94108 Staff Contact: Mathew Chandler – (415) 575-9048 [email protected] PROJECT DESCRIPTION The project would establish an approximately 11,877 square foot General Entertainment use with 1,888 square foot accessory Limited Restaurant use at the existing vacant tenant space, most recently used as a General Grocery (d.b.a Big Apple). The General Entertainment use will function as a family entertainment center with an indoor playground primarily for children and will occupy the ground floor and basement. The accessory Limited Restaurant will occupy the ground floor and will serve patrons of the primary establishment and the general public. The project has qualified for review under the Planning Commission’s Community Business Priority Processing Program (“CB3P”). REQUIRED COMMISSION ACTION Planning Code Section 202.3, 303, and 723 requires Conditional Use Authorization to permit a change of use of a General Grocery which exceeds 5,000 gross square feet and to permit a General Entertainment use. The subject space is approximately 13,785 square feet and was most recently occupied by a General Grocery use. DECISION Based upon information set forth in application materials submitted by the project sponsor and available in the case file (which is incorporated herein by reference as though fully set forth) and based upon the CB3P Checklist and findings below, the Commission hereby APPROVES Conditional Use Application www.sfplanning.org Project Summary and Draft Motion RECORD NO. -
Sep 1969, Vector Vol. 05 No. 09
SEPTEMBER ¡969 s /N Tins ISSUE: DORR JONRS INTRRVIRW SEXUAL MANEUVERS ‘GEESE’ BY MAGDA GLIDE GAY SHOW li’-E.yT ^ > .if» • - e The Tavern Guild of San Francisco Take extends its heartiest thanks the plunge, try to those who attended BRADLEY’S CORNER, 900 C ole Street and supported C'.l.OUD 7, 2360 Polk S treet COVERED WAGON, 10th & Folsom Streets DENO’S RESTAURANT, Divisadero Street FICKLE FOX, 842 Valencia Street Empress Reba’s Galaxie Ball GANGWAY, 841 Larkin S treet GAS STATION, 298 Sixth Street GILDED CAGE, 126 Ellis Street CiOLD ROOM, 939 Geary Street GORDON’S, 840 Sansome Street HIGHLANDER, 395 Vermont Street HONEY BUCKET, 4146- 18th Street JUG’S LIQUORS, 2099 Market Street LEONARDA’S, 16 Leland Avenue LIBRA, 1884 Market Street LONELY BULL, 471 Turk Street LUCKY CLUB, 1801 Haight Street MAPLE LEAF, 1548 Polk Street MAUD’S STUDY, 937 Cole Street MEET MARKET, 1551 Mission Street MISSOURI MULE, 2348 Market Street MY ROOM, 209 S tevenson S treet ON THE LEVEE, 987 Embarcadero OPERA CLUB, 621 Gough Street PARADOX, 3041 Geary Boulevard RAMROD, 1225 Folsom Street RED LION, 4611 Geary Boulevard RENDEZVOUS, 567 Sutter Street SPEAKEASY, 17th & Florida TACKY WENCH, 301 Turk Street TOOL BOX, 399 Fourth Street TOWER LOUNGE, 1488 Pine Street TRAPP, 72 Eddy Street MARIN ALDO’S, 17500 Orchard Avenue, Ciuerneville HOUNDSTOOTH INN, 10 Woodland, San Rafael SUPPORT YOUR VI’S CLUB DRAKE, 1625 Sir Francis Drake, Fairfax Photograph by Walter Binder, San Francisco. TAVERN GUILD BAR MEMBERS. EAST BAY San Diego Reno Seattle BERRY’S, 352- I4th Street, Oakland Dave’s Coast Security Club Dave’s Westside Motel Dave’s Steam Bath GRANDMA’S HOUSE, 135-I2th, Oakland (Private”) 4969 Santa Monica 3001 W. -
Mcteague| a Study in Determinism, Romanticism, and Fascism
University of Montana ScholarWorks at University of Montana Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers Graduate School 1959 McTeague| A study in determinism, romanticism, and fascism Leonard Anthony Lardy The University of Montana Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.umt.edu/etd Let us know how access to this document benefits ou.y Recommended Citation Lardy, Leonard Anthony, "McTeague| A study in determinism, romanticism, and fascism" (1959). Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers. 2944. https://scholarworks.umt.edu/etd/2944 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate School at ScholarWorks at University of Montana. It has been accepted for inclusion in Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks at University of Montana. For more information, please contact [email protected]. COPYRIGHT ACT OF 1976 THIS IS AN UNPUBLISHED MANUSCRIPT IN WHICH COPYRIGHT SUB SISTS, ANY FURTHER REPRINTING OF ITS CONTENTS MUST BE APPROVED BY THE AUTHOR, IV1ANSFIELD LIBRARY UNIVERSITY OF MONTANA DATE: (0 McTeague: A Study in Determinism, Romanticism, and Fascism ty Leonard A. lardy B.S. North Dakota State Teachers College, 19$$ Presented in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts MONTANA STATE UNIVERSITY 1959 Approved ty Dean, Graduate School MB 17 1S59 Date UMI Number: EP34054 All rights reserved INFORMATION TO ALL USERS The quality of this reproduction is dependent on the quality of the copy submitted. In the unlikely event that the author did not send a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. -
Speed Limit Reduction to 20 MPH SFMTA Engineering Public Hearing Neighborhood Wide Between: Grove Street (South), Friday, Februa
Speed Limit Reduction to 20 MPH SFMTA Engineering Public Hearing Neighborhood wide between: Grove Street (south), Friday, February 19, 2021 at 10:00 AM Sutter Street (north), Mason Street (east), Online and Van Ness (west) Please visit: SFMTA.com/committees/engineering- New Speed Limit Signs public-hearings for weblink No Turn on Red Regulations Neighborhood wide inclusive of: Grove Street (south), Sutter Street (north), Mason Street (east), and Polk Street (west) No Turn on Red Signs The San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency (SFMTA) Tenderloin Traffic Safety project proposes two traffic safety improvements in the Tenderloin: (1) reducing vehicle speed limits to 20 miles per hour and (2) prohibiting vehicle turns on red. This project will address high crash locations while creating a more comfortable space for travel through the following changes: • Installing “No Turn on Red” signs at approximately 50 intersections • Lowering speed limits on 17 corridors from 25 MPH to 20 MPH Pending project approvals, implementation could begin as early as March 2020. Why lower speed limits to 20 MPH in the Tenderloin? • Vehicle speed is the largest predictor of injury severity • A pedestrian struck at 20 MPH is 2x more likely to survive than someone struck at 25 MPH • Speed Surveys indicate current travel speeds warrant lowering the speed limit to 20 MPH Why prohibit turns on red in the Tenderloin? • Turn-related crashes occur more often in the Tenderloin than other neighborhoods • Turn on red prohibitions can reduce vehicle-pedestrian and vehicle-bicycle conflicts and increase safety for all • Fewer vehicles entering the crosswalk on a red light can increase comfort for pedestrians For general project information and updates, we invite you to visit the project website at https://www.sfmta.com/projects/tenderloin- traffic-safety-improvements or email the project team at [email protected]. -
Adaptation by Erich Von Stroheim Greed (1924)
FILM McTeague (1899) Frank Norris (1870-1902) adaptation by Erich von Stroheim Greed (1924) ANALYSIS “What von Stroheim produced in Greed was a very lengthy, visual translation, in effect a cinema-novel whose working script attempted a page-for-page transcription of McTeague. In his wish to respect and preserve the authenticity of the novel, von Stroheim organized a series of production methods that stressed his idea of a faithful adaptation. He filmed Greed on location, without using a single studio set. In San Francisco, he reconstructed the pre-earthquake scenes of the novel and required his principal actors to sleep in the building where most of the early portions of the story were filmed, so that they could ‘really feel inside the characters they were to portray.’ The Death Valley episodes were shot at the peak of summer, when the wildly intense heat drove the actors to their limits, and made them authentically hate each other. Von Stroheim managed to reopen the Big Dipper Mine and made everyone—camera and light crews included—go down three thousand feet to shoot the Sierra mining sequences. Von Stroheim’s identification with Norris is evident in these complicated maneuvers, as in his presumption to speak for the author in the design of the film. Later he wrote, ‘I was given plein de pouvoir to make the picture as the author might have wanted it’; and he complained that these terms of artistic freedom soon changed. As it turned out, Louis Mayer and Irving Thalberg of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer ‘did not care a hoop about what the author or I…had wanted.’…Von Stroheim eventually found that a commercially viable film would not allow the telling of the whole ‘truth’ as perceived by Norris and himself….