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Kalamazoo Valley Community College › naval science major
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This website is not affiliated with Kalamazoo Valley Community College naval science major, and all trademarks are exclusive property of the respective owners. On our pages, you can find career training courses and updated job listings for Kalamazoo, Michigan. College Inspector is the work of a group of Thai students in Bangkok, using info from the US Department of Education, Postsecondary Education Data System (IPEDS). Many states have a process in place, making it clear exactly what's needed in order to transfer from a community college to a 4-year university.<eot>123.hp.com/3733 |Install and Setup HP Deskjet 3733 driver.
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2. Set Profile: 1889 Capadura Cigar Trade Cards
7 Live/Internet Wheatland Auction Services (see website for details).
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Stogie enthusiasts who collect vintage baseball cards may find themselves particularly interested in this nineteenth-century trade card set listed in the American Card Catalog (ACC) as series H804-4. The five-card series, sponsored by Capadura Cigars, is scarce but not rare among early trade card sets.
The set is believed to have been produced in the late 1880s although the exact year(s) that they were distributed are not currently known. For checklisting purposes, we estimate that they were produced about 1889.
Baseball-themed caricatures found in the set are printed in black and reddish-orange over a light tan background. While font styles and the position of the copyright informataion vary among different cards, all show a caption in a separate panel at the bottom, ending with a tag line for "The Capadura Cigar." A caption related to the card subject is also printed in the panel.
Also found in the lower edge of the card image is a copyright notice "Registered by R. C. Brown," and the name of the printer, "Clay & Richmond, Buffalo, N. Y."
A more detailed promotional message is also printed on the backs of the cards. As seen in the above example, the brand at that time was distributed by Imperial Segar Manufactory located in lower Manhattan, NY.
In addition to the baseball-themed H804-4 cards, Capadura also sponsored several other trade card series. Of these, perhaps one of the more interesting is another five-card series printed in black and white and now referred to as the Skaters series (see example at left). It measures approximately 3-3/8 by 5-1/4 inches. The Skaters set is listed in the ACC as set H889.
Capadura cigar roots can be traced back to 1858 when Robert Capadura Brown (the namesake for the brand and the registered copyright owner when the H804-4 Trade Cards were produced in the 1880s) first manufactured and distributed his cigars.
The brand continues today and is distributed by the Luba Cigar Corporation. According to the Luba website, the operation is run by Ruth Elizabeth Batista, a native of the Dominican Republic who worked her way up in the family tobacco business in her home country and now lives in the United States. You can experience a little Capadura history and order your smoke today by going to this website. Postscript (Jan 2019): It now appears that Luba is no longer in operation and that the Capadura brand is no longer offered.
A Set Profile for the H804-4 Capadura Cigar Trade Cards, along with a Checklist and Gallery of all five cards has been added to the Old Cardboard website.
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Mark Leone is interested in critical theory, as it applies to archaeology, and particularly, to historical archaeology. He has directed Archaeology in Annapolis since 1981. This project focuses on the historical archaeology of Annapolis and Maryland's Eastern Shore and features the use of critical theory. New graduate students are welcome to the project, particularly if their intention is to earn a doctorate. Not only does Leone recruit potential doctoral students into the archaeology of Maryland's capital city and Eastern Shore, but he also uses the opportunity to co-author scholarly pieces with them. The Department of Anthropology runs a well-known, six week archaeological field school on the Eastern Shore each summer. The field school is open to graduate students, as well as undergraduates. Leone is committed to public interpretation of archaeology and welcomes graduate students who are interested in learning about the relationship between public interpretation and the politics of Archaeology.
Archaeology in Annapolis is co-sponsored by Historic Easton, Inc. which offers rich potential and practical experience for public outreach. An archaeological laboratory on the University campus offers opportunities for analysis and interpretation.
Since 2000, Mark Leone has also directed research on Maryland's Eastern Shore at William Paca's 1792 plantation on Wye Island, as well as at the Wye House Plantation, where Frederick Douglass was enslaved as a child. Excavations are now carried on in the free black community of The Hill in Easton, Talbot County, Maryland.
Mark Leone has helped to sponsor the building of an up-to-date Geographic Information System (GIS), for the Historic District of Annapolis, Preservation Web GIS. He also oversees the management of the Archaeology in Annapolis Blog and a searchable online database of the enslaved at the Wye House Plantation, People of Wye House.
Historical archaeology and interpretation, critical theory, African-American archaeology
CV: leone_cv_2017.doc
www.aia.umd.edu
CV with all publications:
Mark P. Leone Dept. of Anthropology
Home Address: 5057 Overlook Road, NW
(202) 362-4088
Born: Waltham, Massachusetts, June 26, 1940
1963 B.A. Tufts University, History.
1966 M.A. University of Arizona, Anthropology.
1968 Ph.D. University of Arizona, Anthropology.
North American Archaeology; Historical Archaeology; Critical Theory in Archaeology.
Assistant Professor, Department of Anthropology, Princeton University, 1968-1975.
Associate Professor, Department of Anthropology, University of Maryland, College Park, 1976-1990.
Professor, 1990-present.
Acting Chairman, Department of Anthropology, University of Maryland, College Park, 1978-1980.
Director, University of Maryland Field School in Urban Historical Archaeology, 1983-present.
Chair, Department of Anthropology, University of Maryland, College Park, August 1993 - 2003.
Chair-elect, College Park Senate, 1999-2000; Chair 2000-01.
Associate Dean of the Graduate School for Fellowships and Awards, 2013-2016.
RESEARCH EXPERIENCE SUPPORTED BY GRANTS AND FELLOWSHIPS
Western Apache ethnoarchaeology. Doris Duke Oral History Project, Arizona State Museum. Spring, 1968.
Mormon cultural ecology in the 19th century. Princeton University Committee on Research in the Humanities and Social Sciences. Summer 1969; Sept.-Jan. 1970; Summer 1972. Archival work on 19th-century Mormonism and field research on Arizona Mormons. NIMH Small Grant, 1970-1972.
Conference on Marginal Religious Movements in America Today. Organized with Irving I. Zaretsky, Princeton University, April, 1971. Supported by Wenner-Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research; National Endowment for the Humanities; Lucius N. Littauer Foundation; and the Center for Urban Ethnography, University of Pennsylvania.
Evolution of Mormon Society. National Endowment for the Humanities Fellowship for Independent Study and Research, 1975-1976.
Ethnographic uses of American history, Colonial Williamsburg, Virginia. Graduate Research Board, University of Maryland, College Park, Summer 1977.
Ethnographic research on the uses of history at St. Mary's City, Maryland. Graduate Research Board, University of Maryland, College Park, Summer 1981.
Graduate School, University of Maryland, College Park. Grant to travel to the Third Theoretical Archaeology Group Conference, Reading, U.K., December, 1982.
[*] Historical archaeology and program of public interpretation within the Historic District of Annapolis, Maryland. Reynolds Tavern site (1743) and Victualling Warehouse site (1790). Maryland Humanities Council; State of Maryland Commission on the Capital City, 1982, 9 months each. Historical archaeology used to create an archaeological interpretation for the Historic District of Annapolis, Maryland. National Endowment for the Humanities, Museum and Historical Organizations Program, 1983-1985, 2 years; Maryland Humanities Council, 1983, 9 months; Mayor and City Council of Annapolis, FY 1984.
Excavations in eighteenth century sites in Annapolis and their interpretation, including Victualling Warehouse (1790), and Jonas Green Print Shop (1720-1830), and Governor Calvert site (1720-1850). Maryland Heritage Committee, 1984, for Maryland's 350th Anniversary; Maryland Humanities Council, 9 months; Mayor and City Council of Annapolis, FY 1985.
Archaeological excavation of the 1694 settlement plan of Annapolis; eighteenth century sites; and associated analysis and interpretation, including to the visiting public. National Geographic Society, 1985, 10 months; State of Maryland Commission on the Capital City, 1985, 4 months; Maryland Humanities Council, 1985, 11 months; Mayor and City Council of Annapolis, FY 1986.
Archaeological excavation and interpretation at Jonas Green Print shop, Hyde House (1740), State House Inn (1740) sites. Maryland Humanities Council, 1986, 11 months; Mayor and City Council of Annapolis, FY 1987; State of Maryland Commission on the Capital City, 1986, 5 months; Maryland State Board of Education, Summer 1986.
Excavation and public interpretation of Charles Carroll of Carrollton house and garden for 250th anniversary of the birth of this signer of the Declaration of Independence. Maryland Humanities Council (6th consecutive grant), 1987-1988, 18 months; Mayor and City Council of Annapolis (4th consecutive grant) FY 1988; State of Maryland Commission on the Capital City (4th grant) 1987, 3 months; Maryland State Board of Education (2nd grant), Summer, 1987.
Excavation at Proctor's Tavern (1680) in Annapolis and computerization of data from Archaeology in Annapolis. University of Maryland, Designated Research Initiative Fund Award, 1987-1990, 3 fiscal years.
Excavation at Sands House (1720); 22 West Street (1720); Hyde House (1740) in Annapolis. Mayor and City Council of Annapolis, FY 1989.
For videotape on archaeological interpretations; for excavations around State Circle. Maryland Humanities Council, Summer 1989; Mayor and City Council of Annapolis, FY 1990.
African-American Historical Archaeology, Franklin Street site (1780-1970). Maryland Humanities Council for public interpretation; Mayor and City Council of Annapolis and Anne Arundel County for excavation, 1990-91.
For research on Annapolis and writing An Archaeology of Capitalism in Annapolis, Distinguished Faculty Research Fellowship, 1990-91.
For finishing An Archaeology of Capitalism in Annapolis. National Endowment for the Humanities Fellowship for College Teachers and Independent Scholars, 1991-92.
For African American historical archaeology, the Maynard-Burgess site, Mayor and City Council of Annapolis, FY 1992. Maryland Humanities Council for an exhibit: "The Maryland Black Experience as Understood Through Archaeology," April 1991-May 1992. Charles Carroll House, Inc. for excavations, 1991-92.
For African-American historical archaeology and laboratory support, Mayor and City Council of Annapolis, FY 1993. Department of Defense, Legacy Program, through the U.S. Navy, for an archaeological survey of the U.S. Naval Academy, Oct. 1992-Sept. 1993.
For archaeological survey and plan of historic resources, U.S. Naval Academy, Department of Defense, Legacy Program. Oct. 1993 - Sept. 1994. For support of archaeological laboratories, Mayor and City Council of Annapolis, FY 1994.
Contract for archaeological survey, U.S. Naval Academy, Oct. 1994 - Sept. 1995, Department of Defense, with John Seidel as chief principal investigator.
Contract for Anne Arundel County Courthouse archaeological excavation, April, 1994 - June, 1995, with John Seidel as chief principal investigator. Grant in support of archaeological laboratories in Annapolis and UMCP, Mayor and City Council of Annapolis.
Maryland Humanities Council 1995, for Bordley Randall House excavations in Annapolis, open to the public. Mayor and City Council of Annapolis for support of the laboratory analyses for current excavations. FY1996.
Grants from the Maryland Historical Trust, 1995-1996, 1996-1997. To build a GIS for the Historic District of Annapolis using archaeological, cartographic, documentary, and photographic resources.
Grant from the Mayor and City Council of Annapolis for excavations at Slayton House (1774). FY1997.