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27334916_0_7 | 27334916 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Randy%20Waldman | Randy Waldman | Randy Waldman.
In 2017, Waldman appeared on Seal's Standards album which features Frank Sinatra's songs. He was also Barbra Streisand's pianist, music director, and conductor for her Barbra: The Music, The Mem'ries, The Magic tour. A filmed version of one of the shows was released on Netflix in November 2017. In September 2018, he released the studio album, Superheroes, with Vinnie Colaiuta on drums and Carlitos Del Puerto on bass. The album also featured guest appearances from artists like Chick Corea, Wynton Marsalis, George Benson, Take 6, Chris Potter, and several others. Waldman's arrangement of the album's "Spiderman Theme" would go on to win the Grammy Award for Best Arrangement, Instrumental and Vocals at the 61st Grammy Awards in 2019. His arrangement of the "Batman Theme" was also nominated for the Grammy Award for Best Arrangement, Instrumental or A Cappella. |
27334916_1_0 | 27334916 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Randy%20Waldman | Randy Waldman | Randy Waldman. American session musicians
Musicians from Chicago
Living people
1955 births
Helicopter pilots
American aviation record holders
Rotorcraft flight record holders
20th-century American pianists
American male pianists
Grammy Award winners
21st-century American pianists
20th-century American male musicians
21st-century American male musicians |
27334926_0_0 | 27334926 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/K244 | K244 | K244. K244, K-244, K 244, K.244 or other variants may refer to:
HMCS Charlottetown (K244) (Flower class corvette)
HMCS Charlottetown (K244) (River class frigate)
K-244 (Kansas highway)
K-244: Church Sonata in F, see Köchel catalogue
Station K244: Suwon Station on the Bundang Line
Ace Books K244, The Gothic Reader, see List of Ace titles in K series |
27334927_0_0 | 27334927 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timothy%20Doherty | Timothy Doherty | Timothy Doherty.
Timothy Lawrence Doherty (born September 29, 1950) is an American Roman Catholic bishop. He was a priest of the Diocese of Rockford until he was appointed Bishop of Lafayette in Indiana by Pope Benedict XVI on May 12, 2010. On July 15, 2010, Doherty was consecrated, becoming the sixth bishop of the diocese. |
27334927_1_0 | 27334927 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timothy%20Doherty | Timothy Doherty | Timothy Doherty. Early life and education
Doherty was born in Rockford, Illinois, the eldest of seven children of Lawrence and June Doherty. He attended St. Mary Minor Seminary in Crystal Lake from 1964 to 1968. He then attended St. Ambrose University in Davenport, Iowa, where he earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1972. He studied for the priesthood in Rome at the Pontifical North American College and the Pontifical Gregorian University, receiving a Bachelor of Sacred Theology degree in 1975. Doherty earned a doctorate in Christian ethics at Chicago's Loyola University in 1995. |
27334927_1_1 | 27334927 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timothy%20Doherty | Timothy Doherty | Timothy Doherty. Ordination and ministry
On June 26, 1976, Doherty was ordained a priest of the Diocese of Rockford by Bishop Arthur J. O'Neill. His first assignment was as an associate pastor at the Cathedral of St. Peter in Rockford, where he remained for five years. He then furthered his studies at the Pontifical Lateran University, where he earned a Licentiate of Sacred Theology in moral theology from the Alfonsian Academy in 1982. |
27334927_1_2 | 27334927 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timothy%20Doherty | Timothy Doherty | Timothy Doherty. Biography
Following his return to Illinois, Doherty taught religious studies at Boylan Central Catholic High School in Rockford from 1982 to 1986. He served as assistant principal and head of the religion department at Marian Central Catholic High School in Woodstock from 1986 to 1991. Then beginning his doctoral studies at Loyola University Chicago, he received a Doctor of Philosophy degree in Christian Ethics in 1995. That same year, he was appointed diocesan ethicist for health care issues, a position which he continues to hold. From 1996 to 1999, he was an associate pastor at OSF St. Anthony College of Nursing, Rockford, teaching courses in theology and health care ethics. |
27334927_1_3 | 27334927 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timothy%20Doherty | Timothy Doherty | Timothy Doherty. Biography
In 1999, Doherty served as parochial administrator of St. James Church in Lee. He served as pastor of St. Mary Church in Byron from 1999 to 2007. After 2007, he was pastor of both St. Catherine of Siena Church in Dundee and St. Mary Mission Church in Gilberts. |
27334927_1_4 | 27334927 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timothy%20Doherty | Timothy Doherty | Timothy Doherty. Bishop of Lafayette, Indiana
On May 12, 2010, Doherty was appointed the sixth Bishop of Lafayette in Indiana by Pope Benedict XVI. He succeeded Bishop William Leo Higi, who reached the mandatory retirement age of 75 in August 2008. He received his episcopal consecration from Archbishop Daniel M. Buechlein on July 15, 2010. He has served as chairman of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops’ Committee for the Protection of Children and Young People. |
27334927_2_0 | 27334927 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timothy%20Doherty | Timothy Doherty | Timothy Doherty. 1950 births
Living people
People from Rockford, Illinois
Roman Catholic Diocese of Rockford
St. Ambrose University alumni
Pontifical Gregorian University alumni
Pontifical Lateran University alumni
American Roman Catholic clergy of Irish descent
Roman Catholic bishops of Lafayette in Indiana
21st-century Roman Catholic bishops in the United States
Religious leaders from Illinois
People from Byron, Illinois
Catholics from Illinois |
27334935_0_0 | 27334935 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John%20Melville%20of%20Raith | John Melville of Raith | John Melville of Raith.
Sir John Melville of Raith (died 1548) was laird of Raith in Fife, Scotland. He was active in the Scottish court in the second quarter of the 16th century, but was executed for his support of the Protestant cause. |
27334935_0_1 | 27334935 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John%20Melville%20of%20Raith | John Melville of Raith | John Melville of Raith.
Sir John Melville, laird of Raith in Fife, was early impressed by the principles of the Reformation, and associated himself closely with the movement. He was one of the three hundred noblemen and gentlemen whom Cardinal Beaton pressed James V of Scotland to pursue as heretics. As a friend of those who assassinated Cardinal Beaton at St Andrews, he was subsequently executed by Beaton's successor, Archbishop John Hamilton. |
27334935_0_2 | 27334935 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John%20Melville%20of%20Raith | John Melville of Raith | John Melville of Raith.
During the minority of Mary, Queen of Scots, Melville was a steady favourer of the policy of the 'English Party' in Scotland, who sought to consolidate the interests of the two nations by uniting the crowns in the marriage of Edward VI and Mary, Queen of Scots. Melville was arrested, carried prisoner to Edinburgh, and, being convicted of treason, was executed there on 13 December 1548. His estates were forfeited. According to John Knox, Melville had a natural son in England, John Melville, with whom he regularly corresponded while the two countries were at war. Melville was arrested when one of these letters fell into the hands of the governor of Scotland, Regent Arran. |
27334935_0_3 | 27334935 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John%20Melville%20of%20Raith | John Melville of Raith | John Melville of Raith. Biography
He was the eldest son of John Melville the younger of Raith and Janet Bonar, his wife, probably a daughter of the laird of nearby Rossie. He succeeded his grandfather, William Melville, as laird of Raith in 1502, and was knighted by James IV in the following year, probably on the occasion of that king's marriage in August to Princess Margaret Tudor. |
27334935_0_4 | 27334935 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John%20Melville%20of%20Raith | John Melville of Raith | John Melville of Raith.
He is said to have accompanied James IV to Flodden (1513), but if so he returned in safety, and was more or less actively engaged in the many disputes of the regency during the minority of James V (1513–1528). He was appointed Master of the Artillery for life in October 1526, but a few months later he took part with John, Earl of Lennox, in his unsuccessful attempt to free the king from the control of the Earl of Angus, and had to sue to Angus for mercy. Yet within a brief space the Douglases were in exile, and for intercommuning with them Melville had to beg a remission from the crown. |
27334935_0_5 | 27334935 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John%20Melville%20of%20Raith | John Melville of Raith | John Melville of Raith.
With James V (ruled 1528–1542), whose banner he followed in several of his expeditions to the Borders and elsewhere, Melville stood in considerable favour, and the king took a personal interest in the staunching of a blood-feud between him and his neighbour, Moultray of Seafield. The feuding became so bad that King James V was forced to intervene personally in 1533, arranging at Cupar for umpires to reach an amicable settlement between the warring factions. The Moultrays were confirmed in their former compensation arrangement of 12 merks per annum for the original killing of John Moultray by an earlier Melville, and this continued for many years. This appears to have been a renewal of the sum granted four decades earlier to the son of the original victim to be spent upon a priest who would celebrate a mass "in a fitting place". |
27334935_0_6 | 27334935 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John%20Melville%20of%20Raith | John Melville of Raith | John Melville of Raith.
In 1529, Moultray, who remained staunchly Catholic, heard that Melville was on his way to Kirkcaldy to murder James Beaton, Archbishop of St Andrews. Moultray and his ally Vallence (Wallace) and a few followers stood with a band of armed followers in Kirkcaldy High Street. Melville approached on horseback. Neither side would give way. Vallence was slain and Melville was seriously wounded. The legal accounts show that Kirkcaldy of Grange, was later executed for treason. |
27334935_0_7 | 27334935 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John%20Melville%20of%20Raith | John Melville of Raith | John Melville of Raith.
He was a member of the juries who tried Janet Douglas, Lady Glamis, and Sir James Hamilton of Finnart, who were both executed for conspiring to bring about the death of the king, in 1537 and 1540 respectively. About 1540 Melville was made captain of the castle of Dunbar, and had the custody of several important state prisoners. |
27334935_0_8 | 27334935 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John%20Melville%20of%20Raith | John Melville of Raith | John Melville of Raith.
Melville was early impressed by the principles of the Reformation, and associated himself closely with the movement. He was one of the three hundred noblemen and gentlemen whom David Cardinal Beaton pressed James V to pursue as heretics. During the minority of Queen Mary (1542–1561), Melville was a steady favourer of the policy of the Protestant, pro-English party in Scotland, who sought to consolidate the interests of the two nations by uniting the crowns in the marriage of the infant Mary with Edward VI of England. |
27334935_0_9 | 27334935 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John%20Melville%20of%20Raith | John Melville of Raith | John Melville of Raith.
Sir John had a natural son who lived in England, John Melville, with whom he regularly corresponded while the two countries were at war. One of his letters fell into the hands of the Scottish governor, Arran, and he was arrested and carried prisoner to Edinburgh. As a friend of those who assassinated Cardinal Beaton in 1546, he was convicted of treason by Beaton's successor, Archbishop Hamilton. |
27334935_0_10 | 27334935 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John%20Melville%20of%20Raith | John Melville of Raith | John Melville of Raith.
He was executed at Edinburgh on 13 December 1548. His estates were forfeited, but this forfeiture was rescinded in favour of his widow and children in 1563. |
27334935_0_11 | 27334935 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John%20Melville%20of%20Raith | John Melville of Raith | John Melville of Raith. Family
The children of John Melville included:
Robert Melville, 1st Lord Melville (1547–1621)
James Melville of Halhill, diplomat and writer, father of the poet Elizabeth Melville
Andrew Melville of Garvock, Master of the Household to Mary, Queen of Scots and later to James VI.
Margaret who married James, son of John Scrimgeour |
27334948_0_0 | 27334948 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List%20of%20Oklahoma%20State%20Cowboys%20in%20the%20NFL%20Draft | List of Oklahoma State Cowboys in the NFL Draft | List of Oklahoma State Cowboys in the NFL Draft.
The Oklahoma State Cowboys football team has had 109 players drafted into the National Football League (NFL) since the league began holding drafts in 1936. |
27334948_0_1 | 27334948 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List%20of%20Oklahoma%20State%20Cowboys%20in%20the%20NFL%20Draft | List of Oklahoma State Cowboys in the NFL Draft | List of Oklahoma State Cowboys in the NFL Draft.
Each NFL franchise seeks to add new players through the annual NFL draft. The draft rules were last updated in 2009. The team with the worst record the previous year picks first, the next-worst team second, and so on. Teams that did not make the playoffs are ordered by their regular-season record with any remaining ties broken by strength of schedule. Playoff participants are sequenced after non-playoff teams, based on their round of elimination (wild card, division, conference, and Super Bowl). |
27334948_0_2 | 27334948 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List%20of%20Oklahoma%20State%20Cowboys%20in%20the%20NFL%20Draft | List of Oklahoma State Cowboys in the NFL Draft | List of Oklahoma State Cowboys in the NFL Draft.
Before the merger agreements in 1966, the American Football League (AFL) operated in direct competition with the NFL and held a separate draft. This led to a massive bidding war over top prospects between the two leagues. As part of the merger agreement on June 8, 1966, the two leagues would hold a multiple round "common draft". Once the AFL officially merged with the NFL in 1970, the "common draft" simply became the NFL draft. |
27334953_0_0 | 27334953 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alloblennius%20parvus | Alloblennius parvus | Alloblennius parvus.
Alloblennius parvus, the dwarf blenny, is a combtooth blenny, from the subfamily Salarinae, of the family Blenniidae. It is a tropical blenny which is known from the western Indian Ocean, and has been recorded swimming at a depth range of 6–10 metres. Dwarf blennies have pale bodies with a dark spot between their first and second dorsal spines. Males have a dark colouring beneath their heads and around their pectoral fins, and can reach a maximum standard length of 2.6 centimetres (1.02 inches). The blennies are oviparous. |
27334953_0_1 | 27334953 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alloblennius%20parvus | Alloblennius parvus | Alloblennius parvus. Etymology
The species epithet "parvus" (Latin: "little") refers to the size of the species, from which the common name is also derived. |
27334954_0_0 | 27334954 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles%20Andler | Charles Andler | Charles Andler.
Charles Philippe Théodore Andler (11 March 1866, Strasbourg – 1 April 1933, Malesherbes, Loiret) was a French Germanist and philosopher. |
27334954_0_1 | 27334954 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles%20Andler | Charles Andler | Charles Andler. Life
Andler was born to a Protestant family in Strasbourg. In 1887 and 1888, Andler failed to achieve his agrégation in philosophy, judged by Jules Lachelier, inspector-general in charge of philosophy, as showing "excessive bias" towards German philosophy. He therefore changed to take the German literature agrégation in 1889, passing out top of his class. Andler became professor of German at the Sorbonne in 1901 and at the Collège de France in 1926. Amongst his works were writings on Nietzsche, a commentary on The Communist Manifesto, and a life of his friend Lucien Herr. |
27334954_0_2 | 27334954 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles%20Andler | Charles Andler | Charles Andler. Works
Les origines du socialisme d'état en Allemagne, 1897 – The origins of state socialism in Germany.
Collection de Documents sur le Pangermanisme, 4 vols, 1915–1917 – Collection of documents on Pan-Germanism.
Nietzsche, sa vie et sa pensée, 6 vols, 1920 – Nietzsche, his life and thinking.
Vie de Lucien Herr (1864-1926), 1932 – The life of Lucien Herr. |
27335004_0_0 | 27335004 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anna%20von%20Hausswolff | Anna von Hausswolff | Anna von Hausswolff.
Anna Michaela Ebba Electra von Hausswolff (born 6 September 1986) is a Swedish musician, composer, pipe organist and songwriter. |
27335004_1_0 | 27335004 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anna%20von%20Hausswolff | Anna von Hausswolff | Anna von Hausswolff. Early life
Born in Gothenburg, Sweden, von Hausswolff is the daughter of avant garde sound artist Carl Michael von Hausswolff. She was a student of architecture at Chalmers University of Technology. |
27335004_2_0 | 27335004 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anna%20von%20Hausswolff | Anna von Hausswolff | Anna von Hausswolff. Career
Von Hausswolff released her debut single, "Track of Time", on 5 February 2010, followed by the debut album Singing from the Grave. The album was warmly received by the Swedish press. She played the Way Out West Festival in 2009. In March 2010 she opened for Tindersticks on three occasions and toured Brazil with Taken by Trees and Taxi Taxi! Then in 2011 she opened for Lykke Li thrice, and also for M.Ward at the Royal Dramatic Theatre in Stockholm. She has played at several big festivals in Sweden such as Peace and Love, Storsjöyran, Way Out West, Arvika, and Made Festival.
Hausswolff is noted for her expressive voice and her live performances, and is sometimes compared to Diamanda Galás. |
27335004_2_1 | 27335004 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anna%20von%20Hausswolff | Anna von Hausswolff | Anna von Hausswolff. Career
On July 9, 2013, Ceremony was released in North America by Other Music Recording Co., and Anna von Hausswolff played her debut US show on July 10 at Glasslands Gallery in Brooklyn. The album received strong support from National Public Radio's Bob Boilen, who said "Von Hausswolff's voice possesses the power to soar with those mighty pipes and still hold tight to delicate, personal emotions. I hope to find one album like Ceremony every year — a rare, thoughtful, inspiring record for a night on the couch or a candlelit evening — and now I've got one for 2013." She was also featured on NPR's Weekend Edition, PRI's The World, WNYC Soundcheck, the New York Times, Pitchfork and more. |
27335004_2_2 | 27335004 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anna%20von%20Hausswolff | Anna von Hausswolff | Anna von Hausswolff. Career
Von Hausswolff released her fourth album Dead Magic, produced with Sunn O))) producer Randall Dunn, on City Slang records on 2 March 2018. The album features songs recorded on the 20th-century pipe organ at Copenhagen's rococo-style Marble Church. Von Hausswolff hopes that the album causes listeners to accept mystery and ambiguity in an "extremely materialistic society where everything needs to be explained." |
27335004_2_3 | 27335004 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anna%20von%20Hausswolff | Anna von Hausswolff | Anna von Hausswolff. Career
All Thoughts Fly is the fifth album, recorded the pipe organ of Örgryte New Church in Gothenburg. The organ is a Swedish replica of the Arp Schnitger organ in Germany. It is the largest organ tuned in quarter-comma meantone temperament in the world. |
27335004_2_4 | 27335004 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anna%20von%20Hausswolff | Anna von Hausswolff | Anna von Hausswolff. Career
Anna von Hausswolff appears on the Sunn O))) record Metta, Benevolence. BBC 6Music : Live on the Invitation of Mary Anne Hobbs (2021) |
27335004_2_5 | 27335004 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anna%20von%20Hausswolff | Anna von Hausswolff | Anna von Hausswolff. Career
Anna has collaborated with Wolves in the Throne Room, Swans, Sunn O))), and Yann Tiersen. |
27335004_2_6 | 27335004 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anna%20von%20Hausswolff | Anna von Hausswolff | Anna von Hausswolff. Style
Von Hausswolff's gothic-style music is described as "art pop, drone, and post-metal", with "a juxtaposition of dark and bright". The Guardian has described it as "funeral pop". Her 2015 release, The Miraculous, is noted for its "gothic splendour". Dead Magic shows a "brighter, poppier beat". Her vocals are similar to Nico, Diamanda Galás, Peruvian soprano Yma Sumac, and are compared to Kate Bush and A Kiss In The Dreamhouse-era Siouxsie Sioux. Her music is associated with the Krautrock genre with odes to Einstürzende Neubauten and Swans. |
27335004_2_7 | 27335004 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anna%20von%20Hausswolff | Anna von Hausswolff | Anna von Hausswolff. Career
The pipe organ features heavily in her work. In an interview with The National about the album, she spoke to the physically-demanding nature of the instrument, "You are working with your hands and feet, and you have all these stops that you are pulling in and out to make flute sounds, or maybe trumpet sounds. If you are playing fast it’s like dancing – you have to move the entire body to make it work.” |
27335004_2_8 | 27335004 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anna%20von%20Hausswolff | Anna von Hausswolff | Anna von Hausswolff. Controversy
On 7 December 2021, von Hausswolff cancelled her planned concert at the Notre-Dame de Bon-Port in Nantes, France, following boycott demands from fundamentalist Catholic groups. Deeming her music "Satanic", the protestors blocked the church's entrance. Complaints against von Hausswolff include her 2009 song "Pills", which features the lyrics "I made love with the devil". However, the scheduled concerts were instrumental on organ without lyrics. The concert, organized by Le Lieu unique, had been scheduled with approval from the Roman Catholic Diocese of Nantes. On 9 December 2021, a concert planned at Saint-Eustache church in Paris was also threatened and rescheduled to the Protestant Unie de l'Etoile church, a location kept secret until the last moment except for ticket holders. In a press release, the priest of Saint-Eustache explained that show was cancelled due to security reasons, and not due to the content of von Hausswolff's work. Organisers for von Hausswolff and the Syndicat des musiques actuelles (SMA) lamented the lack of political support for the holding of the concert. The organiser and the spectators of the canceled concert in Nantes have announced intentions to file a complaint against the fundamentalists for obstructing freedom of expression. Von Hausswolff has denied the accusations of Satanism. |
27335004_2_9 | 27335004 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anna%20von%20Hausswolff | Anna von Hausswolff | Anna von Hausswolff. Career
On 13 December 2021, a show at the Dominican Order Saint-Dominique de Bruxelles church in Brussels also received threats. The concerts, which were sold out, nonetheless took place but under police protection. Approximately 100 people turned out to protest, but were more peaceful than the protestors in France. |
27335004_3_0 | 27335004 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anna%20von%20Hausswolff | Anna von Hausswolff | Anna von Hausswolff. Albums
Singing from the Grave (2010)
Ceremony (2012)
The Miraculous (2015)
Dead Magic (2018)
All Thoughts Fly (2020)
Live at Montreux Jazz Festival (2022) |
27335004_3_1 | 27335004 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anna%20von%20Hausswolff | Anna von Hausswolff | Anna von Hausswolff. EPs
Track of Time (2010)
Källan (Prototype) (2014)
Källan (Betatype) (2016) |
27335006_0_0 | 27335006 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alloblennius%20pictus | Alloblennius pictus | Alloblennius pictus.
Alloblennius pictus is a species of combtooth blenny (family Blenniidae). Lotan originally placed this species in the genus Rhabdoblennius. It is found in the northwestern Indian Ocean. Blennies in this species are oviparous. They can reach a maximum standard length of 2.6 centimetres (1.02 inches). |
27335025_0_0 | 27335025 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erica%20Funkhouser | Erica Funkhouser | Erica Funkhouser. Erica Funkhouser is an American poet.
She graduated from Vassar College with a BA and from Stanford University with a MA. She teaches at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. |
27335025_0_1 | 27335025 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erica%20Funkhouser | Erica Funkhouser | Erica Funkhouser. Erica Funkhouser is an American poet.
Her work appeared in The Atlantic Monthly, The New Yorker, The Paris Review, Ploughshares, and Poetry. She lives in Essex, Massachusetts. |
27335025_1_0 | 27335025 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erica%20Funkhouser | Erica Funkhouser | Erica Funkhouser. Works
Post & Rail, University of Washington Press, 2018
"Imaginary Friends", AGNI 66, 2006
"Day Work", Beatrice, 15 March 2008
"Love Poem with Harbor View", Poetry Foundation
Earthly, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2008,
Pursuit, Houghton Mifflin, 2002,
The actual world, Houghton Mifflin, 1997,
Sure Shot and Other Poems, Houghton Mifflin, 1992
Natural Affinities, A. James Books, 1983, |
27335025_1_1 | 27335025 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erica%20Funkhouser | Erica Funkhouser | Erica Funkhouser. Anthologies
"My Father's Lunch", Good Poems for Hard Times, Editor Garrison Keillor, Penguin Group, 2006,
"The Women Who Clean Fish", Working classics: poems on industrial life, Editors Peter Oresick, Nicholas Coles, University of Illinois Press, 1990,
"Lilies", Poetry from Sojourner: a feminist anthology, Editors Ruth Lepson, Lynne Yamaguchi Fletcher University of Illinois Press, 2004, |
27335025_1_2 | 27335025 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erica%20Funkhouser | Erica Funkhouser | Erica Funkhouser. Non-fiction
Lewis & Clark: the journey of the Corps of Discovery, an illustrated history, Authors Dayton Duncan, Ken Burns, William Least Heat Moon, Stephen E. Ambrose, Erica Funkhouser, Knopf, 1997, |
27335066_0_0 | 27335066 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minister%20of%20State%20for%20Security%20and%20Borders | Minister of State for Security and Borders | Minister of State for Security and Borders.
The Minister of State for Security and Borders is a ministerial position in the Home Office. The post was created by Prime Minister Gordon Brown on 3 June 2009 by splitting the now-defunct post of the minister for security, counter-terrorism, crime and policing between this post (then called Minister for Security and Counter-Terrorism) and the new post of Minister for Crime and Policing. |
27335066_0_1 | 27335066 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minister%20of%20State%20for%20Security%20and%20Borders | Minister of State for Security and Borders | Minister of State for Security and Borders.
The most recent postholder was James Brokenshire MP appointed by Boris Johnson in 2020; he previously served in the role under David Cameron. In May 2011, Lady Neville-Jones resigned as Security Minister to be replaced as Minister of State at the Home Office by Lady Browning, while her brief at the Home Office for Security was taken on by James Brokenshire but only as a Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State. Following the resignation on 8 February 2014 of the Minister of State for Immigration, Mark Harper, the position was temporarily merged with that of Minister for Security. James Brokenshire assumed the enlarged role of Minister for Security and Immigration. The two posts were divided again on 8 May 2015. Brokenshire returned to the role in 2020 but resigned on 7 July 2021, on health grounds. He was replaced by Damian Hinds in August 2021. In a cabinet reshuffle on 15 September 2021, the ministerial title changed to Minister of State for Security and Borders. |
27335066_0_2 | 27335066 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minister%20of%20State%20for%20Security%20and%20Borders | Minister of State for Security and Borders | Minister of State for Security and Borders.
The post is generally seen as one of the most senior Minister of State positions, and as such its holder has been invited to attend meetings of the cabinet in the past. |
27335113_0_0 | 27335113 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norra%20Vram | Norra Vram | Norra Vram.
Norra Vram is a village in Bjuv Municipality in southern Sweden. The 1933 Swedish Summer Grand Prix was held there. |
27335120_0_0 | 27335120 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spencer%20Heights%2C%20Illinois | Spencer Heights, Illinois | Spencer Heights, Illinois.
Spencer Heights is an unincorporated community in Pulaski County, Illinois, United States. Spencer Heights is north of Mounds. It has a zip code of 62964 and a population of 1,386 (2015 data). |
27335123_0_0 | 27335123 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martin%20Fl%C3%A4mig | Martin Flämig | Martin Flämig.
Martin Flämig (19 August 1913, in Aue – 13 January 1998, in Dresden) was a German church musician, and the cantor of the Dresdner Kreuzchor from 1971 to 1991. |
27335123_0_1 | 27335123 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martin%20Fl%C3%A4mig | Martin Flämig | Martin Flämig. Biography
Martin Flämig studied since 1934 in Dresden with Alfred Stier and in Leipzig at the Kirchenmusikalisches Institut des Leipziger Konservatoriums with Karl Straube, Günther Ramin, and Johann Nepomuk David. He was since 1948 cantor at the Versöhnungskirche in Dresden and premiered there Willy Burkhard's oratorio Das Gesicht des Jesaja (The Vision of Isaiah), Ernst Krenek's Lamentationes Jeremiae Prophetae and Johannes Drießler's Dein Reich komme. |
27335123_0_2 | 27335123 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martin%20Fl%C3%A4mig | Martin Flämig | Martin Flämig.
In 1953 he was appointed professor of the Hochschule für Musik Dresden. He was a teacher at the Bern Conservatory since 1959. In 1971 he was appointed Dresdner Kreuzkantor as the successor of Rudolf Mauersberger and held the post until 1991. |
27335131_0_0 | 27335131 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caribbean%20Initiative | Caribbean Initiative | Caribbean Initiative.
The Caribbean Initiative is the most recent initiative of the IUCN (International Union for the Conservation of Nature). |
27335131_0_1 | 27335131 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caribbean%20Initiative | Caribbean Initiative | Caribbean Initiative.
The Caribbean Initiative focuses on the Insular Caribbean - an ecologically coherent unit with unique biodiversity where conservation and natural resource management issues are at the heart of the challenge of sustainable development. The Insular Caribbean is three distinct groups of islands: The Bahamas; the Greater Antilles, consisting of the larger islands of Cuba, Dominican Republic, Haiti, Jamaica, and Puerto Rico; and the Lesser Antilles. |
27335131_1_0 | 27335131 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caribbean%20Initiative | Caribbean Initiative | Caribbean Initiative. How was the Caribbean Initiative started?
Members, councillors, commissions and staff of the IUCN assemble every four years at the World Conservation Congress where the 4-year global program for conservation and sustainable development is established and approved. This determines the global program priorities and actions of the Union. During the 2004 Congress, the members of the Union requested the Secretariat to reinforce IUCN's presence in the Caribbean region. In response, the IUCN formulated a proposition for the Caribbean Initiative. The Initiative benefited from extensive consultations and an evaluation of fundamental themes, needs and opportunities in the wider Caribbean, and between members and key partners. The development of the Initiative was completed with the support of the French Ministry of Ecology, Energy and Sustainable Development and the Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs. |
27335131_1_1 | 27335131 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caribbean%20Initiative | Caribbean Initiative | Caribbean Initiative. How was the Caribbean Initiative started?
The 2009-2012 Caribbean Initiative Strategy was developed, supported and recognized by the members and experts at the October 2008 World Conservation Congress held in Barcelona, Spain. This was also the date of the official launch of the Initiative. Through the Caribbean Initiative, the IUCN aims at strengthening its work in the region and establishing a win-win situation for members and countries. The Initiative offers social and political actors the possibility of sharing a coherent program from the local to global levels that encourages joint and participatory actions. |
27335131_2_0 | 27335131 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caribbean%20Initiative | Caribbean Initiative | Caribbean Initiative. Headquarters
For an initial period of two years, while the Initiative becomes fully established, IUCN Caribbean has been placed under the responsibility of the Regional Office for Mesoamerica, based in Costa Rica, to allow for administrative and management support as well as the development of links within the wider Caribbean region. |
27335131_2_1 | 27335131 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caribbean%20Initiative | Caribbean Initiative | Caribbean Initiative. Headquarters
The current Coordinator of the Caribbean Initiative is Ms. Deirdre P. Shurland who is native of Trinidad and Tobago. |
27335131_3_0 | 27335131 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caribbean%20Initiative | Caribbean Initiative | Caribbean Initiative. Cuba
Ministerio de Ciencia, Tecnología y Medio Ambiente (CITMA)
Fundación Antonio Núñez Jiménez de la Naturaleza y el Hombre
Sociedad Cubana para la Protección del Medio Ambiente |
27335131_3_1 | 27335131 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caribbean%20Initiative | Caribbean Initiative | Caribbean Initiative. Dominican Republic
Secretaría de Estado de Medio Ambiente y Recursos Naturales
Centro para la Conservación y Ecodesarrollo de la Bahía de Samana y su Entorno (CEBSE)
Consorcio Ambiental Dominicano (CAD)
Fundación para el Mejoramiento Humano-PROGRESSIO
Grupo Jaragua |
27335131_3_2 | 27335131 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caribbean%20Initiative | Caribbean Initiative | Caribbean Initiative. Haïti
Fondation pour la Protection de la Biodiversité Marine (FoProBiM) |
27335131_3_3 | 27335131 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caribbean%20Initiative | Caribbean Initiative | Caribbean Initiative. Jamaica
National Environment and Planning Agency (NEPA)
Environmental Foundation of Jamaica (EFJ)
Jamaica Conservation and Development Trust (JCDT)
Negril Area Environmental Protection Trust (NEPT)
Negril Chamber of Commerce (NCC) |
27335131_3_4 | 27335131 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caribbean%20Initiative | Caribbean Initiative | Caribbean Initiative. Netherlands Antilles
National Parks Foundation of the Netherlands Antilles (STINAPA) |
27335131_3_5 | 27335131 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caribbean%20Initiative | Caribbean Initiative | Caribbean Initiative. St. Kitts and Nevis
Nevis Department of Physical Planning, Natural Resources and Environment |
27335131_4_0 | 27335131 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caribbean%20Initiative | Caribbean Initiative | Caribbean Initiative. Trinidad and Tobago
Caribbean Natural Resources Institute (CANARI)
The Trust for Sustainable Livelihoods (SUSTRUST) |
27335131_5_0 | 27335131 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caribbean%20Initiative | Caribbean Initiative | Caribbean Initiative. Biodiversity
Environmental organizations based in Costa Rica
Organisations based in the Caribbean
Ecology organizations |
27335148_0_0 | 27335148 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NoMad%2C%20Manhattan | NoMad, Manhattan | NoMad, Manhattan.
NoMad ("North of Madison Square Park"), also known as Madison Square North, is a neighborhood centered on the Madison Square North Historic District in the borough of Manhattan in New York City. |
27335148_0_1 | 27335148 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NoMad%2C%20Manhattan | NoMad, Manhattan | NoMad, Manhattan.
The name NoMad, which has been in use since 1999, is derived from the area’s location north of Madison Square Park. The neighborhood is bordered by East 25th Street to the south, East 29th or East 30th Street to the north, Sixth Avenue (Avenue of the Americas) to the west and Madison or Lexington Avenue to the east. The surrounding neighborhoods are Chelsea to the west, Midtown South to the northwest, Murray Hill to the northeast, Rose Hill to the east, and the Flatiron District to the south. NoMad is part of Manhattan Community District 5. |
27335148_1_0 | 27335148 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NoMad%2C%20Manhattan | NoMad, Manhattan | NoMad, Manhattan. History
NoMad's early history is closely aligned with that of Madison Square Park, which has been a public space since 1686. The park extends from Fifth Avenue to Madison Avenue between 23rd and 26th Streets. Formerly a military parade ground that to this day serves as the starting point for the city's annual Veterans Day Parade, Madison Square Park and the surrounding area have undergone a number of changes since pre-Revolutionary War days, serving at various times as a potter’s field, an army arsenal and a facility for juvenile delinquents. |
27335148_1_1 | 27335148 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NoMad%2C%20Manhattan | NoMad, Manhattan | NoMad, Manhattan. History
New Yorkers began establishing residences around the park in the mid-nineteenth century. Private brownstone dwellings and mansions springing up around the perimeter of the park soon boasted such respected, well-to-do families as the Haights, Stokeses, Scheifflins, Wolfes, and Barlows. Leonard and Clara Jerome, the grandparents of Winston Churchill, lived at 41 East 26th Street. The Jerome Mansion later became the clubhouse of the Union League Club of New York (its second location), the University Club and, finally, the Manhattan Club, birthplace of the Manhattan cocktail and congregating place of such famous Democrats as Franklin D. Roosevelt, Grover Cleveland and Al Smith. The mansion was demolished in 1967 and was replaced in 1974 by the New York Merchandise Mart, which also extends onto the site of the adjacent Madison Square Hotel, where actors Henry Fonda and James Stewart roomed in the 1930s. |
27335148_1_2 | 27335148 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NoMad%2C%20Manhattan | NoMad, Manhattan | NoMad, Manhattan. History
The famous families in the area nurtured the spiritual life of the neighborhood, founding such landmark houses of worship as the Church of the Transfiguration (the "Little Church Around the Corner"), Trinity Chapel (site of the wedding between writer Edith Newbold Jones and Edward Wharton and now the home of the Serbian Orthodox Cathedral of Saint Sava) and Marble Collegiate Church. |
27335148_1_3 | 27335148 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NoMad%2C%20Manhattan | NoMad, Manhattan | NoMad, Manhattan. History
The area became a meeting place for the Gilded Age elite, and a late-nineteenth century mecca for shoppers, tourists and after-theater restaurant patrons. A list of celebrities who ate at Delmonico's is a who’s who of the day, including Diamond Jim Brady, Mark Twain, Jenny Lind, Lillian Russell, Charles Dickens, Oscar Wilde, J.P. Morgan, James Gordon Bennett, Jr., Walter Scott, Edward VII of the United Kingdom (then the Prince of Wales), and Napoleon III of France. |
27335148_1_4 | 27335148 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NoMad%2C%20Manhattan | NoMad, Manhattan | NoMad, Manhattan. History
A commercial boom followed with the growth of hotels, restaurants, entertainment venues and office buildings, many of which are still standing. By the late nineteenth century, business activity began to eclipse the residential scene around the park, and the area along Broadway above the park began to be subsumed into the Tenderloin, an entertainment-and-vice red-light district full of nightclubs, saloons, bordellos, gambling casinos, dance halls and "clip joints". At about this time, on August 14, 1894, the world's first kinetoscope parlor opened in a former shoe store at 1155 Broadway, on the corner of 27th Street. For 25 cents, patrons could stand and watch a short film through a shaded "peephole" on William Dickson's device. The store had 10 of these machines, and netted $120 for its opening day. |
27335148_1_5 | 27335148 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NoMad%2C%20Manhattan | NoMad, Manhattan | NoMad, Manhattan. History
In the late nineteenth and early twentieth century the area around 28th Street between Fifth Avenue and the Avenue of the Americas (Sixth Avenue) was dubbed Tin Pan Alley thanks to the collection of music publishers and songwriters there who dominated the American commercial music world of the time. Around the same time, the 1913 Armory Show, which took place at the 69th Regiment Armory on Lexington Avenue between 25th and 26th Streets, was a seminal event in the history of Modern Art. |
27335148_1_6 | 27335148 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NoMad%2C%20Manhattan | NoMad, Manhattan | NoMad, Manhattan. History
The neighborhood deteriorated somewhat during the mid- and late-twentieth century. Tee-shirt, luggage, perfume and jewelry wholesalers began lining the storefronts along Broadway from Madison Square to Herald Square, and wholesalers continue to dominate that stretch. By the second half of the twentieth century, Madison Square Park was suffering from neglect and petty crime. The massive 2001 park restoration project, spearheaded by the Madison Square Park Conservancy spurred a transformation of the neighborhoods around the park—the Flatiron District, Rose Hill and NoMad—from primarily commercial to places attractive for residences, upscale businesses and trendy restaurants and nightspots, especially in the early 2010s. |
27335148_3_0 | 27335148 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NoMad%2C%20Manhattan | NoMad, Manhattan | NoMad, Manhattan. Buildings
Among the notable buildings in the area are New York Life Building, the headquarters of the New York Life Insurance Company; the Gift Building, which has been converted to a luxury condominium; and the Toy Center, which has been converted to an office complex. |
27335148_3_1 | 27335148 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NoMad%2C%20Manhattan | NoMad, Manhattan | NoMad, Manhattan. Buildings
Designed in 1904 by Stanford White as the prestigious Colony Club for socialites, the building at 120 Madison Avenue has been occupied since 1963 by the American Academy of Dramatic Arts. Long before the Academy began training its young hopefuls in the NoMad area, the Madison Square Theater opened in 1880. Boasting the first electric footlights and a backstage double-decker elevator, the theater also provided an early air-conditioning system. |
27335148_3_2 | 27335148 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NoMad%2C%20Manhattan | NoMad, Manhattan | NoMad, Manhattan. Buildings
Along Broadway, the Townsend (1896) and St. James (1896) were the tallest buildings in New York for a short while, and remain historic landmarks. Slightly up the street, the Baudouine Building at 28th Street was heavily decorated with escutcheons of anthemions with lion heads over many windows. At the same corner, the Johnston Building (now the Hotel NoMad) was built in 1900 and faced in all limestone with beautiful exterior decoration. One block up, Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis’s grandfather built a classically designed loft building, next to the Breslin. |
27335148_3_3 | 27335148 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NoMad%2C%20Manhattan | NoMad, Manhattan | NoMad, Manhattan. Buildings
Although a number of old buildings in the neighborhood have been renovated, there have been few new construction starts in the area. One of the first is 241 Fifth Avenue between 27th and 28th Streets. Construction began on the 46-unit condominium building in November 2011, and it was open to sales in April 2013; by April of the next year it was sold out. Elsewhere in the neighborhood, old building are undergoing conversion to residences. |
27335148_3_4 | 27335148 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NoMad%2C%20Manhattan | NoMad, Manhattan | NoMad, Manhattan. Buildings
In 2014, the Kaufman Organization announced it was developing four underutilized NoMad commercial buildings previously owned by F. M. Ring Associates: 119 West 24th Street near Sixth Avenue, 19 West 24th Street near Fifth Avenue, 45 West 27th Street, and 13 West 27th Street. The buildings will be renovated to make them more attractive to technology firms, and the street level spaces made suitable for use by retail outlets and restaurants. |
27335148_4_0 | 27335148 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NoMad%2C%20Manhattan | NoMad, Manhattan | NoMad, Manhattan. Hotels past and present
NoMad was once home to some of New York’s most luxurious hotels. Completed in 1859 by Amos R. Eno, the Fifth Avenue Hotel, whose gleaming white-marble housed 100 apartment suites, was the first American hotel with an elevator and private bathrooms, as well as a fourth meal, or "late supper", and was a popular meeting place for politicians, brokers and speculators. Because of its opulence, as well as its location at the far uptown edge of the city, it was dubbed "Eno's Folly". The site previously had been an inn where travelers leaving the city or returning to it could get a meal or lodging before continuing their trip. The hotel stood between East 23rd and East 24th Streets facing Madison Square, where the Toy Center South would later stand. |
27335148_4_1 | 27335148 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NoMad%2C%20Manhattan | NoMad, Manhattan | NoMad, Manhattan. Hotels past and present
By the 1870s, numerous hotels catering to much the same clientele had opened in the area, including the Hoffman House (East 24th Street), the Victoria (East 27th Street), the Gilsey House (East 29th Street) and the Grand (East 31st Street)—both still standing as of the 21st century, converted to residential use—and the Brunswick. |
27335148_4_2 | 27335148 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NoMad%2C%20Manhattan | NoMad, Manhattan | NoMad, Manhattan. Hotels past and present
The Brunswick, at East 26th Street and Fifth Avenue, was the hotel favored by the horsey set. The male-only New York Coaching Club, established in 1875 by Col. Delancey Astor Kane and William Jay, was headquartered there, and elevated "four-in-hand" carriage riding to an art form. Holding the reins of all four horses in one fist, the drivers ("whips") guided their horses from the Brunswick to the carriage drives in Central Park and staged parades twice a year. |
27335148_4_3 | 27335148 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NoMad%2C%20Manhattan | NoMad, Manhattan | NoMad, Manhattan. Hotels past and present
The St. James Hotel at Broadway and East 26th Street, where the St. James Building would later stand, was built in 1874. With its 30 parlors, bar, cigar stand, barber shop, dining room and full-service amenities, the hotel served the needs of mid- to late-nineteenth-century business and upscale clientele. The hotel was the site of a Confederate arson attack during the American Civil War. It was the first of 20 buildings to go up in flames in a coordinated effort by Confederate forces on November 25, 1864. |
27335148_4_4 | 27335148 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NoMad%2C%20Manhattan | NoMad, Manhattan | NoMad, Manhattan. Hotels past and present
Known since 1987 as the Carlton, the Hotel Seville, named for the original investor Maitland E. Graves’ infatuation with the Spanish city, was designed by Harry Allen Jacobs, and opened its doors on East 29th Street and Madison Avenue in 1904, months before the unveiling of the city’s first subway. Renovated and transformed at a cost of $60 million more than a century later by David Rockwell, the hotel’s "Tiffany-style glass skylight" on the mezzanine was discovered under layers of paint “used to deter air raids during World War II.” |
27335148_4_5 | 27335148 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NoMad%2C%20Manhattan | NoMad, Manhattan | NoMad, Manhattan. Hotels past and present
The Breslin Hotel, built in 1904, was transformed in 2009 into the Ace Hotel, but not before passing through a period as a single room occupancy (SRO) apartment building, during the low point of the neighborhood. The Ace, which was redesigned by Roman & Williams is a 300-room hotel whose restaurant has attracted a trendy crowd. The NoMad Hotel at 28th Street and Broadway occupies the Johnston Building, a landmark 1900 French Renaissance limestone space which features a Beaux-Arts cupola. The Gershwin Hotel, on East 27th Street, and named after George Gershwin, has a unique facade, a combination of red paint and whimsical decorative touches. |
27335148_4_6 | 27335148 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NoMad%2C%20Manhattan | NoMad, Manhattan | NoMad, Manhattan. Hotels past and present
Gansevoort Park, the second location of Hotel Gansevoort in New York, opened in 2010 at Park Avenue and 29th Street, complete with a "glass column containing light-emitting diodes" that changes color. Rounding out the host of boutique hotels in and around NoMad is the King and Grove Hotel, occupying the former space of the historic Martha Washington Hotel, located at 30 East 30 Street. |
27335148_5_0 | 27335148 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NoMad%2C%20Manhattan | NoMad, Manhattan | NoMad, Manhattan. Restaurants
The neighborhood was once the home of Delmonico's, New York elite society's favorite restaurant and the birthplace of Lobster Newburg. Today it has a numerous restaurants serving a wide range of cuisines, including San Rocco, Hill Country Barbecue, Bamiyan Afghan Restaurant, Antique Cafe, SD26, A Voce, Country, Ben & Jack’s Steakhouse and Illi. Eataly, a Italian food market comprising Italian restaurants, cafes and wine and food shops opened in Summer 2010. |
27335148_6_0 | 27335148 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NoMad%2C%20Manhattan | NoMad, Manhattan | NoMad, Manhattan. Cultural attractions, art and nightlife
NoMad is home to the Museum of Sex, the New York Comedy Club and Tada! Youth Theater, and is also a center for antique galleries and one of the city’s largest collections of weekend flea markets. Nightspots and clubs include the Breslin Lobby Bar, Jay-Z’s 40/40, the rooftop bar at 230 Fifth Avenue, Gstaad, Hillstone’s, and the Park Avenue Country Club. The noted Rizzoli Bookstore announced in September 2014 it will be reopening its New York City flagship in NoMad. |
27335148_6_1 | 27335148 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NoMad%2C%20Manhattan | NoMad, Manhattan | NoMad, Manhattan. Transportation
NoMad is served by four New York City Subway stations. The 23rd Street and 28th Street stations on the BMT Broadway Line offer service on the at Broadway. The 23rd Street and 28th Street stations of the IRT Lexington Avenue Line are both located on Park Avenue South, offering service on the . |
27335148_6_2 | 27335148 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NoMad%2C%20Manhattan | NoMad, Manhattan | NoMad, Manhattan. Cultural attractions, art and nightlife
The area is served by New York City Bus routes on Park and Madison Avenues (northbound) and Fifth Avenues (southbound). service also runs southbound on Fifth Avenue, while northbound service runs on nearby Sixth Avenue. The routes run on Third and Lexington Avenues, northbound and southbound, respectively. There is also crosstown bus service on 23rd Street. |
27335148_6_3 | 27335148 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NoMad%2C%20Manhattan | NoMad, Manhattan | NoMad, Manhattan. Education
Public schools in the area include Baruch College Campus High School, a collaboration between the New York City Department of Education and the City University of New York's Baruch College. |
27335148_6_4 | 27335148 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NoMad%2C%20Manhattan | NoMad, Manhattan | NoMad, Manhattan. Cultural attractions, art and nightlife
Private schools in the area include the Aaron School High School and the Rebecca School, both special education schools; the Fusion Academy, and the Drake Bennett School. |
27335148_6_5 | 27335148 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NoMad%2C%20Manhattan | NoMad, Manhattan | NoMad, Manhattan. Cultural attractions, art and nightlife
The preschool of École Internationale de New York is located in NoMad at 206 Fifth Avenue between West 25th and 26th Streets, where the school has with a 33-year lease. |
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