Sentences with phrase «house cultural programs»

Scandinavia House Cultural Programs are brought to you by the American - Scandinavian Foundation

Not exact matches

The university's contributions go well beyond funding, as evidenced by the affordable housing it provides for community residents; the program it sponsors to allow university staff to serve as volunteer firefighters in Princeton; the students who help staff the first aid and rescue squad; the auditing program it offers to community residents; the intellectual, cultural and athletic events it makes available to community residents; and it supports entities like McCarter Theatre and Garden Theatre.
The people of Riverside County, along with those in the communities of Temecula, Murrieta and Lake Elsinore, enjoy an exceptional quality of life, a mild climate, good air quality, reasonably priced land and building sites adjacent to the I - 15 and I - 215 corridors, affordable housing at all levels, a highly skilled labor force, quality educational facilities and programs and cultural, entertainment and recreational activities for every lifestyle.
The Chicago Food Policy Action Council and the Food Chain Workers Alliance have played a leadership role in the City's adoption of the Program by supporting the Chicago Good Food Taskforce organized by the Mayor's Office including multiple City of Chicago Sister Agencies (Chicago Public Schools, Chicago Park District, Chicago City Colleges, Chicago Housing Authority) and Departments (Department of Public Health, Department of Family and Support Services, Department of Cultural Affairs and Special Events, Aviation, and Procurement).
Gause is one of 25 «Grandma, Please» volunteers, who will be honored Monday in a 10 a.m. awards ceremony at the Chicago Cultural Center, 78 E. Washington St. Started 10 years ago as a service for senior citizens by the Uptown Center Hull House Association and supported by the Chicago Community Trust, the program handles at least 800 calls a month from youngsters who come home after school to an empty house and want to talk to a groHouse Association and supported by the Chicago Community Trust, the program handles at least 800 calls a month from youngsters who come home after school to an empty house and want to talk to a grohouse and want to talk to a grownup.
CHRISTINE STEWART - FITZGERALD: Au pairs are, I mean they're providing a service of childcare and helping around the house in that regard, but in addition to childcare I mean, having au pair is really truly a cultural experience, so where do most of the au pairs come from and you know, how do they benefit from the program?
The centerpiece of the plan is the «Market on South Street,» a new structure at the front portion of the current South Street parking lot that would house a year - round farmers market, retail shops, a commercial test kitchen, educational programs and cultural events.
Agencies receiving Year - Round funding in 2014 include: Access of WNY, Inc. ($ 10,000), African Cultural Center of Buffalo, Inc. ($ 8,500), Be-A-Friend Program, Inc. (Big Brothers Big Sisters)($ 7,500), Blossom Garden Friends School ($ 3,000), Boys & Girls Club of Buffalo, Inc. ($ 7,500), Boys & Girls Club of Eden, Inc. ($ 5,000), Boys & Girls Club of Northtowns of WNY, Inc. ($ 12,500), Boys & Girls Club of Orchard Park, Inc. ($ 5,000), Boys and Girls Club East Aurora, Inc. ($ 15,000), Buffalo Urban League, Inc. ($ 12,500), Canisius College ($ 5,000), Child & Adolescent Treatment Services, Inc. ($ 5,500), Child and Family Services of Erie County (Haven House)($ 10,000), Compeer West, Inc. ($ 10,000), Computers for Children, Inc. ($ 7,500), Cradle Beach Camp, Inc. ($ 12,500), Daemen College ($ 10,000), Elim Community Corporation ($ 5,000), Erie Regional Housing Dev.
Hurse, a Lead Teacher at the school, says program staff realised early on that it wasn't just about attendance and education — there were also health, housing and cultural issues that needed to be addressed.
The Cultural Heritage Program, housed on the school campus, is a place where students go to learn about the life - styles, beliefs, and history of their ancestors.
Lessons for adults, children, teens and professionals, university credits, group, private and intensive programs, home - stay, student housing, prep for DELE exams, after school tours, activities, cultural events.
DURING HIS TWO TERMS in the White House, President Obama supported arts programs and policies, and the Obamas regularly hosted cultural events.
J.B. Blunk: Curriculum Vitae Chronology 1926 Born August 28, Kansas City, MO 1946 Moved to California 1949 B.A. University of California, Los Angeles 1949 — 1950 Drafted, Korean War 1952 — 1954 Lived and worked in Japan as potter's apprentice 1954 — 1955 Artist in Residence at Palos Verdes College 1955 Moved to Northern California 1957 — 1962 Built house in Inverness, California 1962 Began working with wood 1969 — 1970 Travel to Mexico and Peru 1971 Apprenticeship Grant from Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation 1979 Cultural Exchange Travel Grant to Indonesia, U.S.I.C.A. 1983 Travel to Japan 1986 California State Art in Public Places Program competition award for sculpture 1999 Lectured at California College of the Arts, San Francisco, CA 1990 Art Consultant to Land Studio Landscape Architects and MW Steele Group 2002 Died June 15, Inverness, CA
Contributions support a variety of public programs and provide resources to sustain the house museum as a unique component of Houston's cultural life.
Building on the Hollywood Hills House history as the first private Los Angeles residency program, ltd los angeles continues to foster the opportunity for artists, writers and curators to interface with Los Angeles» diverse cultural landscape through the contemporary gallery system by collapsing the boundaries between local and global arts practices.
The exhibitions program are part of a strategic initiative introduced by the new director of the Glass House, Henry Urbach, who is leading efforts to rededicate the site as a lively, creative cultural center consistent with the spirit and values of its former occupants, renowned architect Philip Johnson and independent curator David Whitney.
The Chrysler Museum Glass Studio, Norfolk • The Baron and Ellin Gordon Galleries at Old Dominion University, Norfolk • The Moses Myers House, Norfolk • The Selden Arcade, Norfolk • The Virginia Arts Festival, Norfolk • The Willoughby - Baylor House, Norfolk • The Visual Arts Center Galleries at Tidewater Community College, Portsmouth • The Suffolk Center for Cultural Arts, Suffolk • The Virginia Museum of Contemporary Art, Virginia Beach • Galleries, Schools, Community Groups Throughout the Seven Cities • Community Festivals and Mobile Glass Studio Appearances For exhibitions, programming and special events, visit chrysler.org or call 757-664-6200.
Alongside Open Studios, ISCP's 2012 institution - in - residence Clark House Initiative, Bombay brings a program to New York that illuminates the philosophical and cultural strategies that have served to withstand or conjure tectonic social and political shifts of upheaval or change.
The talk will be presented by Pratt Institute's Writing Program, and its Departments of Humanities and Media Studies and Social Science and Cultural Studies, which are housed in the School of Liberal Arts and Sciences, and its Department of History of Art and Design, which is housed within the School of Art and Design.
These range from tours of the exhibition by visual artists, organized in collaboration with the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council and Socrates Sculpture Park; to a hands - on family program, developed with The Children's Museum of the Arts; to an afternoon of poetry, a collaboration between Storm King and Poets House.
Created by the Japanese government in São Paulo, Los Angeles, and London, the JAPAN HOUSE acts as a dissemination point for all elements of contemporary Japanese culture to the international community by means of cultural programming and experiences open to the public.
Located at the intersection of St. Nicholas and 155th Street in the Sugar Hill neighborhood of Harlem, the Sugar Hill Children's Museum is housed on the ground floor of a mixed - use building that brings together affordable permanent housing, early education, and cultural programming.
Business Development: Brokering various business dealings that further the diversification of Indian economies Developing and accessing commercial financial programs and services for tribal governments, including tax - exempt offerings and federally - guaranteed housing loans Serving as issuer or underwriter's counsel in tribal bond issuances Ensuring tribal compliance with Bank Secrecy Act and other federal financial regulatory requirements Handling federal and state income, excise, B&O, property and other tax matters for tribes and tribal businesses Chartering tribal business enterprises under tribal, state and federal law Registering and protecting tribal trademarks and copyrights Negotiating franchise agreements for restaurants and retail stores on Indian reservations Custom - tailoring construction contracts for tribes and general contractors Helping secure federal SBA 8 (a) and other contracting preferences for Indian - owned businesses Facilitating contractual relations between tribes and tribal casinos, and gaming vendors Building tribal workers» compensation and self - insurance programs Government Relations: Handling state and federal regulatory matters in the areas of tribal gaming, environmental and cultural resources, workers» compensation, taxation, health care and education Negotiating tribal - state gaming compacts and fuel and cigarette compacts, and inter-local land use and law enforcement agreements Advocacy before the Washington State Gambling Commission, Washington Indian Gaming Association and National Indian Gaming Commission Preparing tribal codes and regulations, including tribal court, commercial, gaming, taxation, energy development, environmental and cultural resources protection, labor & employment, and workers» compensation laws Developing employee handbooks, manuals and personnel policies Advocacy in areas of treaty rights, gaming, jurisdiction, taxation, environmental and cultural resource protection Brokering fee - to - trust and related real estate and jurisdictional transactions Litigation & Appellate Services: Handling complex Indian law litigation, including commercial, labor & employment, tax, land use, treaty rights, natural and cultural resource matters Litigating tribal trust mismanagement claims against the United States, and evaluating tribal and individual property claims under the Indian Claims Limitation Act Defending tribes and tribal insureds from tort claims brought against them in tribal, state and federal courts, including defense tenders pursuant to the Federal Tort Claims Act Assisting tribal insureds in insurance coverage negotiations, and litigation Representing individual tribal members in tribal and state civil and criminal proceedings, including BIA prosecutions and Indian probate proceedings Assisting tribal governments with tribal, state and federal court appeals, including the preparation of amicus curiae briefs Our Indian law & gaming attorneys collaborate to publish the quarterly «Indian Legal Advisor ``, designed to provide Indian Country valuable information about legal and political developments affecting tribal rights.
Programs include: Prison and Community Outreach Program (PCOP), the Adult Court Legal Information Program, the Youth Court Work Program, the Community Awareness Program for Immigrants (CAPI), the Aboriginal Cultural Support Program, Berkana and Sabrina House, and the Volunteer Program.
The Lutcher Theater, along with Stark Museum of Art, Shangri La Botanical Gardens and Nature Center, and The W.H. Stark House comprise the STARK Cultural Venue Programs and offer world - class venues and the best in art, nature, history and culture.
As well as being responsible for formulating, administering and monitoring the effectiveness of programs to individuals, councils and community organisations in key development areas (such as economic, employment and training, housing and environmental, social and cultural, policy co-ordination), the TSRA is the regional representative body for native title and land and sea management.
I was a member of a government bureaucratic entity (The Ontario New Home Warranty Program / TARION) for a number of years, but I escaped (of my own accord) before I lost my ability to still free - think my way through sticky legal problems in lieu of succumbing to in - house cultural group - think policy directives from on - high academic navel - gazers in perpetual search of bad guys.
NAR's Equal Opportunity and Cultural Diversity program offers REALTORS ® education, grants, programs and events related to fair housing and diversity.
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