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    Feb 19, 2013 |Story| Herald Mail
  1. Bonanza event set for Saturday at Fort Ritchie

    Fort Ritchie Community Center invites the community to its Last Chance Bonanza Saturday in the gymnasium at Fort Ritchie Community Center, 14421 Lake Royer Drive, Cascade. Only 139 tickets will be sold for the event, which includes dinner, dessert, games...

    Tags: Culture, Arts and Culture, Physical Fitness and Exercise, Recreational and Sporting Goods Industry

  2. Feb 17, 2013 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  3. Foreign government offices

    For tourist information about foreign destinations, contact the government offices below. Several no longer list phone numbers, so information is available only through their websites. For information about a country not listed, call the United Nations at...

    Tags: Venezuela, Latvia, Republic of Ireland, Madagascar, Uganda

  4. Feb 17, 2013 | Los Angeles Times
  5. World War II internment site considered for historical status

    L.A. NOW
    Former site of internment camp considered for historical status...
  6. Feb 1, 2013 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  7. In nationwide innovation battle, Baltimore area lags on patents

    Dr. Luis Diaz is an oncologist at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, a researcher with patented findings and the co-founder of a small, fast-expanding company.
    Dr. Luis Diaz is an oncologist at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, a researcher with patented findings and the co-founder of a small, fast-expanding company. "We've grown from no employees to one employee to four employees and now we have 12,"...

    Tags: Microsoft Corporation, Startups, Colleges and Universities, Oncology, Culture

  8. Feb 17, 2013 |Story| Glendale News Press
  9. L.A. tries to save Verdugo Hills Golf Course

    Los Angeles this week began a process that could end up protecting Verdugo Hills Golf Course from controversial plans to build hundreds of homes after the City Council voted unanimously to review the site of a former internment camp for possible status as a historical monument.
    Los Angeles this week began a process that could end up protecting Verdugo Hills Golf Course from controversial plans to build hundreds of homes after the City Council voted unanimously to review the site of a former internment camp for possible status as...

    Tags: Culture, Golf, Sports, Arts and Culture, Attack on Pearl Harbor (1941)

  10. Feb 18, 2013 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  11. Saying farewell to Steven Muller, one of Baltimore's best

    Steven Muller, the president of Johns Hopkins University from 1972-1990, died on Jan. 19.  He was one of the giants of his era.  I knew him well.  I write to share three remarkable stories which reveal the character of this great man.
    Steven Muller, the president of Johns Hopkins University from 1972-1990, died on Jan. 19.  He was one of the giants of his era.  I knew him well.  I write to share three remarkable stories which reveal the character of this great man. 1. Steve was...

    Tags: Literature, Passover, Colleges and Universities, Culture, Religion and Belief

  12. Feb 16, 2013 |Story| Herald Mail
  13. Washington County location major plus in economic development strategic plan

    <em><strong>Editor&rsquo;s note:</strong> This is one in an occasional series of stories about findings and recommendations in the Hagerstown and Washington County Economic Development Strategic Plan.</em>
    dona@herald-mail.com
    Editor’s note: This is one in an occasional series of stories about findings and recommendations in the Hagerstown and Washington County Economic Development Strategic Plan. “Location, location, location” is an old real estate adage...

    Tags: Social Services, Washington, DC, Employment, Aetna Inc., Hopewell (Hopewell, Virginia)

  14. Feb 15, 2013 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  15. A world of difference in reactions over foreign, U.S. film violence

    Genre filmmaking helps make sense of the world, creating codes by which the seemingly irrational ways of human behavior can be understood. With storytelling modes that travel from country to country &mdash; the crime picture, the horror film, the action movie &mdash; genres cross borders and barriers with audiences the world over. On-screen violence can be seen as an international language.
    Genre filmmaking helps make sense of the world, creating codes by which the seemingly irrational ways of human behavior can be understood. With storytelling modes that travel from country to country — the crime picture, the horror film, the action...

    Tags: Sweden, Film Festivals, Italy, Sergio Leone, South Korea

  16. Feb 14, 2013 |Story| AM News
  17. Frank X Walker named Kentucky Poet Laureate

    <strong>FRANKFORT &mdash;&nbsp;</strong>Gov. Steve Beshear has appointed Lexington poet, author and teacher Frank X Walker as Kentucky poet laureate for 2013-14, the Kentucky Arts Council announced today. Walker, a native of Danville, will be formally inducted during a ceremony on Kentucky Writers' Day, April 24, at the Capitol Rotunda in Frankfort.
    FRANKFORT — Gov. Steve Beshear has appointed Lexington poet, author and teacher Frank X Walker as Kentucky poet laureate for 2013-14, the Kentucky Arts Council announced today. Walker, a native of Danville, will be formally inducted during a...

    Tags: Culture, Education, Arts, Regional Authority, Arts and Culture

  18. Feb 14, 2013 |Story| Daily Pilot
  19. Lee Chapin Sammis

    Lee Chapin Sammis passed away February 12, 2013, in his home in Newport Beach, CA, where he lived and built his business for the past 50 years.&nbsp; He was born on February 15, 1931 in Los Angeles to MIT graduates Ford Woodruff and Constance Sharp Sammis.&nbsp; His family lived all over the country during the depression until settling in Pasadena, CA where he graduated in 1949 from South Pasadena High School.&nbsp; The experience of frequently being the new kid in class shaped his scrappy nature and he became an inveterate reader, mechanical tinkerer and collector extraordinaire of many things.&nbsp; Ambition and tenacity being innate, he was a teamster in San Pedro at age 14 for 65&cent; an hour, had his driver&rsquo;s license at the same age, trained with legendary boxer Canto Robletto to win a Golden Gloves title as a teen, played football with distinction at South Pasadena High and won intramural track meets in the 100 yard dash, all while faithfully keeping a full social calendar.&nbsp; He often hitchhiked down to the beach at Balboa in those years to sail the family Thistle, swing at the Rendezvous Ballroom and attend Bal Week festivities.&nbsp; He attended UCLA and UC Berkeley where he was an active member of Phi Gamma Delta Fraternity and Skull &amp; Keys, amongst others.&nbsp; Lee also worked as a hasher in the Kappa House at Cal to supplement his diet and &ldquo;foster fraternal relations.&rdquo;&nbsp; After college he enlisted in the Army, being discharged in 1957 a 1st Lieutenant stationed at Fort Ord.&nbsp; He married his beloved wife, Joan Howard of Pasadena, in 1955 and they settled in their hometown in 1957.&nbsp; He worked in Los Angeles for RA Rowan and in 1962, the family moved to Newport Beach, where he was a founding member of the Orange County office of Coldwell Banker on PCH in Corona del Mar.
    Lee Chapin Sammis passed away February 12, 2013, in his home in Newport Beach, CA, where he lived and built his business for the past 50 years.  He was born on February 15, 1931 in Los Angeles to MIT graduates Ford Woodruff and Constance Sharp Sammis. ...

    Tags: Music Industry, Auto Trends, Arts and Culture, Orange County (Virginia), Housing Industry

  20. Nov 28, 2012 |Story| Hartford Courant
  21. Governor's Budget Cuts To Address Deficit Affects Arts Groups

    Hartford Courant
    Gov. Dannel P. Malloy's $150 million in immediate cuts to deal with a looming deficit has an effect on many arts, cultural, heritage and tourism organizations. The governor cut a total of  $1,038,742 from the Department of Economic and Communuity...

    Tags: Waterbury, Connecticut Economic Development, Tourism and Leisure, Arts and Culture, Mystic Aquarium and Institute for Exploration

  22. Jan 14, 2013 |Story| Orlando Sentinel
  23. 'Sewn Together' opens at Hannibal Square Heritage Center

    In honor of the 125th anniversary of the incorporation of Eatonville, the Hannibal Square Heritage Center Quilting Guild is working with seven families to create a series of historical photographic quilts.
    In honor of the 125th anniversary of the incorporation of Eatonville, the Hannibal Square Heritage Center Quilting Guild is working with seven families to create a series of historical photographic quilts. "Sewn Together: Photographic Quilts...

    Tags: Culture, Arts, Eatonville, Maitland, Arts and Culture

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Cultural Development Photos
Celebrate African-American culture and heritage at MT B...
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July 7-8: African-American Festival
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