SPRINGFIELD LEADER • VAILSBURG LEADER City Federal Savings New Jersey's Largest

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

SPRINGFIELD LEADER • VAILSBURG LEADER City Federal Savings New Jersey's Largest j ; September 19 1?74 L Prospects— ; above the HL-dw^o$H!fe-in$uniiiee-oferec^f6^Vlet^«i-J0B|f$_- Red Delicious, the leading Some 2.7 million Vietnam- military service since April 2,. veterans discharged prior to Washington St., Newark. variety, for several years, is bright for era veterans are eligible for_a_ 1970. ^ • .. - Aug. 1, 1974, are available, Applicant must furnish expected- to decrease 17 STRICTLY PERSONAL new low-cost veterans group The Jiew, Veterans from VA offices or from the evidence of good health but percent to 23 million .pounds VA-fated service-connected By Pal and Marilyn Davis life insurance program which Administration-supervised Office of Servicemen's Group fruit crop and be tied with Stayman, Life Insurance, 212 disabilities will be waived. The Zip Code aiiimiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiumiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiii .mtiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimtiuiiiiiiR offers as-much as $20,000 program also offers coverage in case of emergency Copley NPWS Service Cranberry and peach which increased 31 percent. coverage for $3.40 per month call is only 10 months old and I do in amounts of $5,000. $10,000 Dear Pat and Marilyn: Dear Dad: production in New Jersey-in Weather for all three fruit : to young veterans but they and $15,000. Rates for the 376-0400 for Police Department for Springfield is hot want people touching her. 17*1 nrt! oracled to be higher crops was generally fnvqrnhlf ..roust apply before Aug. X aximum $20,000 coverage or First Aid Squad pp^ iMrafflnMHu^IClfSrsM'.- 7-than lastyearpvhihrprospects—this—year—Althougrr-July- -i9ls:—. z—: -• are-?$3T4O—per -month for— —376-7*70-for-fHre-Departrrient than deserved it and here is family doctor. He can set up a I've readit before but I have ^,for the apple crop ore un-...rainfall.-was below normal, ' The nonrenewable five-year veterans aged 34 and under. why. Three years ago I would" properly balanced—diet- for -no solution. I ^mnt put a "Do ?hanged~fMnn973rMcordln^"_Aigus^ $OU for those'35-and" over. Salesmen! enjoy two or three drinks your daughter so that she-can - Not-Toueh" sign on the baby.— to Secretary of Agriculture moisture supplies. for veterans discharged "from" Application..." forms V for before dinner. Then I gotmaintain her weight. He can My .husband thinks I'm' Phillip Alampi. : — _ :—; : : C— ' Pubil»h.d Ev»r Tiiundoy by Trumor Publltbina Cotp. 41 Monnloln ov..", Sp'rlnoflalJ; N.J. 07081 - 686-770Q _ married and the number of also explain the lasting health fooliBh. The New Jersey Crop- DALE drinks increased with my new hazards of a starvation diet; '_ Rachel Reporting Service estimates responsibilities. Subicrlptlon R«t» S.cond Clo.. Po,io0.. Good luck,. Dad. Dear Racel: that the cranberry crop will Moiling Aildrill: 25 Cents Por Copy The stepped-up volume of VOL. 45 N<?. 51 , SPRINGFIELD, N.J., THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1974 •10.00 Yearly Paid oi SpHngll.U, N.J. When someone reaches for amount' to 230,000 100-pound P.O. Bos 69, Sprlnufl.ld, N.J. 07081 _^liquor was not noticeable to CARNEGIE Dear Pat and Marilyn: the baby simply say, "Please barrels. This compares with - me. -I could hold more, or so I don't touch my daughter." 228,000 barrels, last year. thought. No horrible trnuma My little girl ia very pretty. People often atop and touch That flhonlfrbe sufficient. I'm The peach crop is forecast made me drink. I just enjoyed at 95 million pounds, up three SALES her. Even complete strangers with you— adults should" keep it. The rest of the tale has been hands, off_tlny_childtenj_A_ percent from 1973's 92 million told a hundred times so I won't who have colds will pat her on the head or take her hand. She verbal compliment Is nicer. pounds and almost quadruple FREEPreviewi Court hearing spurs possible rent law repeat it. When I fell in the . COURSE 7the 25 million pounds door last night, my wife was produced in the disastrous gone. She simply couln) not .year of 1972. \ I ~take the forgotten dinners, i Mayor tells _ late evenings, drunken cur- Apple production is CRANFORD Contract let sing and general unhappiness. estimated at lOJLJDJllion I'm sober thia.mornlng andl pounds, the"same as lastyear. hope.I stay that way. Maybe -Rome-Beautyiisrespected to j Pmrntcil by (Oirdtn si.Pkwy Exit mj • WfS WESIHOM « AISOC need my little scenario will turn displace Red Delicious as the" H on repairing 10 ;il>llns ltd. somebody-off-the-booier-lt-i: state'sTIeading apple variety Watching; N. J. 070*0 MOHDAY drug, too. Beauty ig expected to . - - - . Loser account for 26 million pounds Dear Lbser: of total apple production. schoohfoo You quit being a loser when you quit drinking. Look up Trip to New England Alcoholics Anonymous in your to aid handicapped . telephone book and give then a reinstituted by board By AHNKH (IOI.I) tryrYou-might also inform- The SprinEfie[d Board of Education Monday your wife your new outlook. The Township Committee Tuesday night - night -6WflKled-an-$85;o()0-<forilf aoCToMecfllP began discussions on how best to retain the Here is a note to teen-agers atruction of the roof a^ the Thelma Sandmeier ijujo^are . turning to', liquor. local rent control ^ordinance in the face of a School to end recurrent leaks. The contract preliminary but unfavorable district court Alcohol is a drug-and. can he—I went to Max Buyroff of Bayonne, lowest of ruling on the ordinance. Mayor Edward N. — harmful. It is not an-innocent: three bidders, before an audience of 10 persons Stiso Jr. reported that the ruling issued last alternative to pot, pills or hard at the Raymond ;Ghisholm-Sehool. >lf drugs. - Michael Mclntyre, president, reported that --O-O- landlords and termed the present 2'_. percent the board is working to recover damages from limit on annual rent increases an un- Dear Pat and Marilyn: the bonding company for the original roofing constitutional deprivation of profits. How long can a growing girl firm which did the work when the school was go without food? I think that built in 1960. "In the meantime," he added, He added that a full trial is scheduled lo start '""my'daugliter isfryTrig'fdr^the" 'the jobjins. to bejtone.." _„._. „ late in November "unless the township-can— record. Either that or she is In other business^ the board approved dates" I _deyjse__an_ ordinance; jvh_ich will protect the fasting for some unknown (or the seventh graders at the Florence tenants and be agreeable to the plaintiffs/" Ifie -•• cause. She feels that at Sfeot 5•••..> Gaudlneer School to go on what had been their owners of the Short Hills Village apartments. inches she should weigh lip unnua|-trip-fo-places: of •historicaMnterest-m— Approximately R!> citizens attended tho pounds—even if .this . means New England. The trip was not held last year. meeting. that she lives on salads, Tills year the youngsters.will go in four groups, In other business. Springfield became tho carrots and nn occasional Oct 14-10, Oct. 21-23, Oct. 20-30 and Nov. 4-6. first-municipality in the stale lo pass an or- glass of skim milk. It is fine to Mclntyre expressed the board's condolences dinance requiring all future commercial and be slim, but she carries this to the family, of Mrs.~3uani(a Robertson," industrial-buildings-to-be free-of-arohitet'tural— thing too far. It has. to be bad physical education teacher at the Sandmeier barriers to the physically handicapped. for her health. I cannot force School, who died on Sunday. He noted that the food down Kerthroat. Howtio school flags would be lowered to half-staff until The unanimous vote followed a public other parents handle this? . the funeral yesterday. hearing featuring a brief- motion picture • Dad SISTERLY REUNION-^Mrs. Shem CarmarCTlght, wife The board also approved hiring of two ad showing some of the ways in which a person in •of-Oiarleft-Garman.-asslstont-to-tho president of- - -a wheelchair is barred from normal activities. the~Colonlal Savings'BnK of 'RosellePark, and her named'to serve fdur-fifths of-full-time as 'rnrfHrrrwab pi ewnted-lflrjRyelyii-Ai'onow—a— sistor, Mrs. Shirley Bishop of Rosanna, Australia, Spanish teacher at the Gaudlneer School. She local' resident and a leader in the statewide FiRNITURE great each other ot a reunion at Kennedy will continue as the school's "dancer-in- drive for barrier-free buildings. Following the vote. Miss Aronow presented Jflcantly. Mis _CorjrAgg.jwhb residence," a post to which she was named this J Mayor Stiso with a certificate of recognition is originally from Melbourne, Australia, and her —summer—. • Mrs. Frledler holds . degrees from Smith , froin-tlitN.J-Eastex.Scal SQciclyJJShe_was.ahl(>_ sisier-_had_oal_seen_oach.x>ther.Jor_3Q_years.-The to attirtid the meeting only after being carried Carmans are residents of Irvington. ~X;olIegeTw1thhonf3riflrrEngllshrand-fronrKean College, where she is studying for a master's 'up"thc'Town"Halrstcps-in-her-whcelchair: degree. She has also studied at colleges in r-o--o- Below Retail 2 Civil Defense courses . -•_..,.. ,T ~7~"'~(ConiFnai3fon"page1iSy RENT CONTROL might be rescued. Stiso with clear.hardship provisions/If landlords free by correspondence could open to their books to the Rent Leveling on Name Brand Board, he said, each development's case conld Two Civil Defense-Disaster "Radiological Monitoring." bedecidedonan individual basis". He rinted_the_ Control free home study "CD USA" is a general course court had suggested a link tn.the.Consumer , Furniture correspondence courses are to show the student the effects Price Index, which, the town ended last year available to New Jersey of natural and man-made are sought for because it felt-that-figurc-was rising loo Call 964-1834 residents,- says- acting- state.
Recommended publications
  • Nikon D3200 for Dummies
    Index reducing, 216 • Symbols and setting, 222, 227–230. See also Numerics • A (aperture-priority autoexposure) mode; M (manual exposure) mode; ? (question mark) P (programmed autoexposure) mode blinking, 37, 59, 247 shooting wide open, 222 camera icon, 36 stopping down, 216 3D Tracking mode, 264 aperture (f-stop), settings 8-bit TIFF fi les, 194 depth of fi eld, adjusting, 274–275 16-bit TIFF fi les, 194 effect on focus, 85 recording movies, 124 • A • aperture priority. See A (aperture-priority autoexposure) mode; P (programmed A (aperture-priority autoexposure) mode autoexposure) mode depth of fi eld, adjusting, 279 aperture ring, 9 description, 49 Apple Aperture, 175 determining exposure, 223, 229 Apple iPhoto, 173 exposure metering, 226 artifacting, 69 Active D-Lighting, 241–244, 347 aspect ratio Adobe Photoshop, 174–176 cropping pictures, 330 Advanced Shooting options, 82 printing pictures, 197–199 AE (autoexposure) lock, 240–241 attaching AE-L/AF-L button, customizing, 43, 347–348 fl ash, 56 AE-L/AF-L/Protect button, 20–21 lenses, 8–10 AF (autofocusing) assist lamp, 24 audio recording, 120–125 AF-A (auto-servo autofocus) mode, Auto Area mode, 264 78–80, 268 Auto Distortion Control, 82 AF-Area mode, 80, 108–109, 111–113, Auto Flash Off mode, 48, 82–86 263–267. See also autofocus system Auto image rotation option, 40 AF-C (continuous-servo autofocus) Auto information display option, 38–39 mode, 268 COPYRIGHTEDAuto ISOMATERIAL Sensitivity Control, 232 AF-F mode, 111–113 Auto mode, 48, 57–58, 60, 82–86 AF-S lenses, 8, 10–12 Auto off timers option, 40–41 AF-S mode, 111–113, 268 autoexposure A/M (Auto/Manual) focus switch, 11, 23 in Flash mode, 60–61 annotations, adding to pictures, 40, locking, 20–21, 124, 348–349 341–343 recording movies, 124 anti-shake.
    [Show full text]
  • Specifications for Aerial Photography Database Files (PDF)
    Ministry of Agriculture and Lands Integrated Land Management Bureau Crown Registry and Geographic Base Branch Specifications for Aerial Photography Database Files Edition April, 2008 Victoria BC Canadian Cataloguing in Publication Data Crown Registry and Geographic Base Branch. Specifications for aerial photography database files [computer file] Previously published in print: British Columbia. Surveys and Resource Mapping Branch, 1994. Available on the Internet. Issued also in printed format on demand. ISBN 0-7726-4321-0 1. Aerial photographs - Databases - Handbooks, manuals, etc. 2. British Columbia - Aerial photographs - Databases - Handbooks, manuals, etc. I. Title. TR810.G464 2000 778.35 C00-960263-1 Printed copy of this document is uncontrolled. For latest version see Specifications for Aerial Photography Database Files posted at http://ilmbwww.gov.bc.ca/bmgs/airphoto/specs/ ________________________________________________________________________________________________ Owner: APLS/CRGB/MAL Title: Specifications for Aerial Photography Database Files Version No.: 1.4 Issue Date: April, 2008 Reviewed Date: April, 2008 Doc. No.: ARCS/ORCS: 10030-06-004 1 Record of Amendments Revision Page Revision made by Revision Description Approved by Signature Date No. # 1 Alan Spring, APLS 15 Section 3.2.3 Updated to Ron Johnson, PDF signed by Ron March 10, include additional film Manager, APLS Johnson 2005 emulsion codes 2 Alan Spring, APLS Ministry name change Ron Johnson, PDF signed by Ron July 8th, Manager, APLS Johnson 2005 3 Jim Hogg, APLS Document updated for Digital 2006 Camera photography 4 Alan Spring, APLS 16 Section 3.2.3 Updated to March 28, include digital codes 2007 5 Alan Spring Branch name change Andy Calarco, PDF signed by Andy April, 2008 Manager APDI Calarco Printed copy of this document is uncontrolled.
    [Show full text]
  • Meeting Minutes, Social Media Report Working Fires- Members Pictures
    March 2019 Issue 3 Volume 6 An International Fire Buff Associates Region 1 Club 03/03/19 Southington Multiple alarm fire in a commercial building Mike Quinn Inside this issue: Meeting Minutes, social media report 2-5 Working Fires- Members Pictures 6-56 The Apparatus Bay 57 Smartphone, Photography and Technology Section The Organization, Members at Work 58-60 Member Spotlight 61-62 Members Websites 64-65 1 March Green means UP/Improvement, Red means DOWN/Loss, Yellow New Stat --Website Stats-- - Total March Website Views: 231,207 Views. Up 107,300 from last month! - Busiest March Day: 2/23/19 with 23,579 views. - Highest Viewed Website Album in March: 4 Alarm Fire in Yonkers by Dave Kempter with 37,126 views. - Second Highest Website Viewed Album in March: Barnhart Ave Sleepy Hollow Fire by Dave Kempter with 13,706 views. - Third Highest Viewed Website Album in March: Lent Ave Montrose Fire by Dave Kempter with 12,919 views. Note: Congrats to new member Dave Kempter who dominated the website in March having all of the top three galleries including getting over 63,000 views over the three galleries! Note: Website was up big time this month, however many members are still not using the site. PLEASE if you go to a fire or a station or an apparatus shoot even just upload one or two shots and provide a link to your website. Our members make our website succeed or fail. It takes about three minutes to post a gallery. --Instagram-- -Total March Instagram Followers: 9,368 followers.
    [Show full text]
  • ADVANCE and Artistic Practice
    Point and Shoot: Originality, Authorship, and the Identification of the Copyright Work in Modern Photography Jani McCutcheon Abstract This article explores how profound technological developments in photography have problematised concepts of the photograph, authorship, and originality in Australian copyright law. These developments have resulted in highly automated photography and ubiquitous photographs, inviting questions about what constitutes a ‘photograph’ as defined in the Australian Copyright Act 1968 (Cth) (‘Copyright Act’), when a photograph is sufficiently original, and how the definition of the ‘author’ of a photograph as the person who ‘took’ it should be interpreted. The article is the first to analyse these issues, ameliorating the relative dearth of serious scholarly investigation of the contemporary photograph under Australian copyright law and a paucity of judicial attention. It considers the meaning of ‘photograph’ and ‘photography’ under the Copyright Act and explains how software and new practices in a ‘post-photography’ world challenge those concepts. It then explores photographic originality and investigates how increasingly automated modes of photography diminish, if not eviscerate, originality in contemporary photography. The article then focuses on photographic authorship, interrogating the statutory definition of the author of a photograph as ‘the person who took it’. The article also proposes further research into ways of better aligning copyright law with contemporary photographic technological developmentsADVANCE and artistic practice. Please cite this article as: Jani McCutcheon, ‘Point and Shoot: Originality, Authorship, and the Identification of the Copyright Work in Modern Photography’ (2021) 43(2) Sydney Law Review 163 (advance). This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution- NoDerivatives 4.0 International Licence (CC BY-ND 4.0).
    [Show full text]
  • Fire-And-Ice-1984
    Peter Wollen than as a scientific or instructional instrument. going talk about 'aspect' rather than 'tense'. (Here I must Fire and lce//1984 First, I am to acknowledge my dependence on and debt to Bernard Comrie's book on Aspect', the standard work on the subject). Aspect, on one level, is concerned with duration but this, in itsell is inadequate to explain its functioning. We need The aesthetic discussion of photography is dominated by the concept of time. semantic categories which distinguish different types of situation, in relation to Photographs appear as devices for stopping time and preserving fragments of change (or potential for change) and perspective as well as duration. Comrie the past, like flies in amber. Nowhere, of course, is this trend more evident than distinguishes between states, processes and events. Events themselves can be when still photography is compared with film. The natural, familiar metaphor is broken down between durative and punctual events. Alongside these categories that photography is like a point, film like a line. Zeno's paradox: the illusion of aspect also involves the concepts of the iterative, the habitual and the movement. characteristic. It is the interlocking of these underlying semantic categories The lover of photography is fascinated both by the instant and by the past. which determines the various aspectual forms taken by verbs in different The moment captured in the image is of near-zero duration and located in an languages (grosso modo). ever-receding 'then'. At the same time, the spectator's 'now', the moment of It is useful to approach photography in the light of these categories.
    [Show full text]
  • Fire Investigation Photography Course Syllabus (16 Hours)
    Fire Investigation Photography Course Syllabus (16 Hours) Course Target Audience Firefighters, fire/arson investigators, death investigators, crime scene investigators, police officers and detectives with beginner to intermediate skills in photography. Course Objectives Increase understanding of optics, light and camera functions. Increase understanding of how to manipulate a camera to take proper investigative photos. Increase experience composing forensic photographs. Properly compose and capture crime scene, subject, evidence, collision & search warrant photos. Required Equipment Any camera equipment normally carried for investigations. Tripod Flashlight 1 Course Schedule Day one. (8 hours) Module 1 – Optics & Camera Basics • Sources of light • How cameras capture light. • Camera capabilities & limitations • Parts of the camera • Settings, buttons & adjustments • Camera terms • Camera modes • Proper focus • Desired exposure Practical Exercise 1 - Making camera adjustments Module 2 - Introduction to the Exposure Triangle • Shutter speed, aperture & ISO • Effects of shutter speed, aperture & ISO • Adjusting shutter speed, aperture & ISO • Evaluating exposure. Practical Exercise 2 – Adjusting shutter speed, aperture & ISO for desired photos. Module 3 – Principles of Forensic Photography • Proper documentation • Use of scale • Proper perspectives • Use in criminal investigations • Court considerations Practical Exercise 3 – Scales and perspective Practical Exercise 4 – Over all, mid-range and close up photos Day one written quiz* 2 Day
    [Show full text]
  • ED226226.Pdf
    DOCUMENT RESUME ED 226 226 CE 035 155 TITLE Investigative Photography, 16-1. Military Curriculum Materials for Vocational and Technical Education. INSTITUTION Army Military Police School, Fort McClellan, AL.; Ohio State Univ., Columbus. National Center for, Research in Vocational Education. / , $1,ONS AGENCY Office of Education (DREW), Washington, D.C. I PUB DATE Mar 75 NOTE' 243p. PpB TYPE Guides - Classroom Use Materials (For Learner) (051) EDRS PRICE MF01/PC10 Plus Postage. DESCRIPTORS Color; *Equipment Utilization; Investigations; *Light; Military Personnel; Military Training; Optics; *Photochemical Reactions; *Photographic, Equipment; *Photography; Postsecondary Education; Secondary Education; *Technical Education IDENTIFIERS *Crime Detection; *Investigative Photography; Military Curriculum Project ABSTRACT This military-developed text consists of nine lessons dealing with investigative photography. Covered in the individual lessons are the following topi,ps: light (light as the basis of photography, the behavior of light, the composition of white light, light transmission, reflection and absorption, illumination, and pinholes and light); camera lenses and optics (types of lenses, lens defects, lens focal length, aperture setting and light control, lens angles, image size, the circle of confusion, and lens focusing characteristics); cameras; films (black and white films, color film, diffusion transfer reversal system materials, an, film,selection); principles of exposure (basic outdoor exposure, interchanging the stop and shutter speed, light meters, exposure withartificial light, filter effects, filter types, and film factors); photographic chemistry and processing (film development, negative developing solutions, the effects of developer aid negative density, developer life, processing the negative, negative processing problems, printing paper and printing, and processing theprint); copy and small object photography (photographing.small objects and fingerprints); and crime scene photography (photographing crime scenesand articles of levidence).
    [Show full text]
  • Genitive: Phōtós) Light, and Gráphein, to Write
    History of photography The word photography derives from the Greek words phōs (genitive: phōtós) light, and gráphein, to write. The word was coined by Sir John Herschel in 1839. A camera obscura box used for drawing images Photography is the result of combining several different technical discoveries. Long before the first photographs were made, Chinese philosopher Mo Ti and Greek mathematicians Aristotle and Euclid described a pinhole camera in the 5th and 4th centuries BC.[1][2] In the 6th century CE, Byzantine mathematician Anthemius of Tralles used a type of camera obscura in his experiments[3] Ibn al-Haytham (Alhazen) (965±1040) studied the camera obscura and pinhole camera,[2][4] Albertus Magnus (1193/1206-1280) discovered silver nitrate, and Georges Fabricius (1516±1571) discovered silver chloride. Daniel Barbaro described a diaphragm in 1568. Wilhelm Homberg described how light darkened some chemicals (photochemical effect) in 1694. The novel Giphantie (by the French Tiphaigne de la Roche, 1729±1774) described what can be interpreted as photography. Early History: Development of chemical photography [edit] Monochrome process Nicéphore Niépce's earliest surviving photograph of a scene from nature, circa 1826, "View from the Window at Le Gras," Saint-Loup-de-Varennes (France). "Boulevard du Temple", taken by Louis Daguerre in late 1838 or early 1839, was the first-ever photograph of a person. It is an image of a busy street, but because exposure time was over ten minutes, the city traffic was moving too much to appear. The exception is a man in the bottom left corner, who stood still getting his boots polished long enough to show up in the picture.
    [Show full text]
  • Laszloandrew-2000-Everyframearembrandt.Pdf
    EVERY FRAME A REMBRANDT ART AND PRACTICE OF CINEMATOGRAPHY Andrew Laszlo, A.S.C. with additional material by Andrew Quicke Focal Press An Imprint of Elsevier Boston Oxford Auckland Johannesburg Melbourne New Delhi Focal Press is an imprint of Elsevier Copyright © 2000 Butterworth-Heinemann (Si A member of the Reed Elsevier group All rights reserved. All trademarks found herein are property of their respective owners. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photo­ copying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the publisher. Permissions may be sought directly from Elsevier's Science and Technology Rights Department in Oxford, UK. Phone: (44) 1865 843830, Fax: (44) 1865 853333, e-mail: [email protected]. You may also complete your request on-line via the Elsevier homepage: http://www.elsevier.com by selecting "Customer Support" and then "Obtaining Permissions". 0 Recognizing the importance of preserving what has been written, Elsevier prints its books on acid-free paper whenever possible. GLOBAL E*sev*er suPPorts me efforts of American Forests and the Global ReLeaf REPEAT program in its campaign for the betterment of trees, forests, and our environment. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Laszlo, Andrew, 1926- Every frame a Rembrandt: art and practice of cinematography / Andrew Laszlo, with Andrew Quicke. p. cm. ISBN-13: 978-0-240-80399-9 ISBN-10: 0-240-80399-X (pbk. : alk. paper) 1. Cinematography. I. Quicke, Andrew. II. Title. TR850.L38 2000 778.5—dc21 ISBN-13: 978-0-240-80399-9 99-058083 ISBN-10: 0-240-80399-X British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
    [Show full text]
  • Applied Police and Fire Photography
    APPLIED POLICE AND FIRE PHOTOGRAPHY APPLIED POLICE AND FIRE PHOTOGRAPHY Second Edition BY RAYMOND P. SILJANDER Former Police Officer Loss Control Specialist and DARIN D. FREDRICKSON Police Officer Phoenix Police Department Phoenix, Arizona With Forewords by John D. Douthit Me1 Hardy and Dennis A. Garrett CHARLES C THOMAS PUBLISHER, LTD. Springfield Illinois U.S.A. Published and Distributed Thmughout the World by CHARLES C THOMAS PUBLISHER, 1,TD. 2600 South First Street Springfield, Illinois 62794-9265 This book is protected by copyright. No part of it may be reproduced in any manner without written permission from the publisher. 0 1997 by CHARLES C THOMAS PUBLISHER, LTD. ISBN 0-398-06687-6 Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 96-36244 First Edition, 1976 Second Edition. 1997 With THOMAS BOOKS carefilattention isgiven to alldetails of manufacturing anddesip. It is the Publisher? desire topresent books that are satisfactory as to their physical qualities and artistic possibilities and appropnkte for their particular use. THOMAS BOOKS will be true to those laws of quality that assure a good name andgood will. Printed in the United States of America SC-R-3 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Siljander, Raymond P. Applied police and fire photography / by Raymond P. Siljander and Darin D. Fredrickson ; with forewords by John D. Douthit, Mel Hardy, and Dennis A. Garrett. - 2nd ed. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 0-398-06687-6 (cloth : alk. paper) 1. Legal photography. 2. Criminal investigation. 3. Fire investigation. I. Fredrickson, Darin D. 11. Title. TR822.S53 1997 363.2'5 -dc20 96-36244 CIP This book is dedicated to the many police officers and firemen who have so diligently sewed their fellowman.
    [Show full text]
  • Fire Tour Promo
    THE PRICHARD ART GALLERY presents the first thorough exhibition of Kari Greer’s photographs. Greer’s images usually serve as supplements to words and reports; this project provides the space for their full appreciation. Due to increased wildfire activity our summer skies progress from azure blue through hazy tones, achieving a true sense of brown. In 2015, 10.1 million acres burned in the U.S. The increasing length and severity of fire seasons makes this project timely and important. Scientists comprehend what it means to live in a fire environment, including when to suppress, contain or let fires burn. The goal of this project is to help propel greater public conversation and understanding of this volatile dynamic. KARI GREER is a photographer with the National Interagency Fire Center based in Boise, Idaho. Kari specializes in wildland fire photography and editorial photojournalism. Her interest in wildland fire photography was sparked during her college years, working on a Forest Service fire crew on the Gifford-Pinchot National Forest in Washington. Her work has appeared in numerous publications including Outside Magazine, National Geographic Adventure, Wildland Firefighter and The New York Times. She has an online video interview in Yahoo Studios for The Weekly Flickr as well as on CNN. Kari studied photography at California State University, Sacramento and spent time in a workshop with Mary Ellen Mark, collaborating with Icelandic photographer Erla Stefánsdóttir and National Geographic photographer Brooks Walker. Essayist STEPHEN PYNE is a Regents professor at Arizona State University and the author of 30 books, 21 of them dealing with fire.
    [Show full text]
  • Toward Integrated Research, Land a 13.151/5:RMRS-P-10 .Z-=A Department Of
    This file was created by scanning the printed publication. Errors identified by the software have been corrected; however, some errors may remain. USDA U nited States Toward Integrated Research, Land A 13.151/5:RMRS-P-10 .z-=a Department of USDA United States Agriculture Agriculture Forest Service Management, and Ecosystem Forest Service Rocky Mountain Rocky Mountain Research Station Research Station Proceedings Protection in the Malpai Borderlands: RMRS-P-10 Proceedings |une1999 RMRS-P-10 Toward Integrated Research, Land june 1999 Conference Summary Management, and Ecosystem Protection in the Malpai Borderlands: Conference Summary to*/"*) January 6-8, 1999 KM U. -1- i) -• , . - ' Douglas, Arizona .„- , t ""'-'•--'.«-t* ' '' ' •, * --•'*. ,.' --*,. * t.- : w. - Illu^- January 6-8, 1999 Douglas, Arizona -:>>4«^ -k :^;; -.^>^ '.m Gottfried, Gerald J.; Eskew, Lane G.; Curtin, Charles G.; and Edminster, Carleton B., compilers. 1999. Toward integrated research, land management, and ecosystem protection in the Malpai Borderlands: Conference summary; 6-8 January 1999; Douglas, AZ. Proceedings RMRS-P-10. Fort Collins, CO: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station. 136 p. Abstract Land management based on sound science is key to increased productivity and bio­ logical diversity along the U.S./Mexico border in southeastern Arizona and south­ western New Mexico. The USDA Forest Service's Rocky Mountain Research Station and the non-government Malpai Borderlands Group have sponsored studies andre­ source inventories in the region. A meeting in Douglas, Arizona, was held to inform the scientific, land management, and local communities of progress. These proceed­ ings contain abstracts from the presentations.
    [Show full text]