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John Taylor
“Still the same.” - Bob Seger
The details in a landscape mean nothing if they do not express some mood of nature felt by the artist/photographer.
I strive to capture internal feelings and the external harmony of the natural world - the passing seasons of life.
The La Cloche mountain range of Northeastern Ontario is one of the oldest mountain ranges in the world. Less than two billion years ago and before glacial erosion, these beautiful quartzite and granite mountains were as high as the Rockies. It is a beautiful and spiritual area on the north shore of Georgian Bay with Killarney Park in the east and the town of Spanish in the west.
Generations of people have been intrigued by the quartzite mountains, crystal clear lakes, windswept pines and abundance of wildlife. The continually changing light and shadows have entranced artists and lovers of the outdoors for centuries.
Jon Butler, a retired newspaperman who changed his clothes to enjoy the passing seasons of life, has been capturing and enjoying the light of La Cloche for more than 25 years. He concentrates on solitary and contemplative landscapes and atmospheric effects.
The colour, details and shadows seen in his photographs are achieved through the use of camera settings (in some cases a polarizing filter) and Jon’s unique sense of light. He uses no additional or altered colour and no digital enhancement. He photographs with 35mm Olympus, 2 1/4 Mamiya and 4 X 5 Linhof cameras.
His photographs reflect years of meditation on the subject matter and they draw viewers into the light of La Cloche.
All limited edition photographs are original, manipulative free and in a limited series of 10 or less. The negative is then destroyed.
Jon’s ‘Photo Haiku’ is a form of mixed media combining limited edition photographs and an original haiku written on natural surfaces. A haiku is the expression of temporary enlightenment, in which we see into the life of things and in this case it is La Cloche. Each of the haiku series is limited to five or less.
Private and corporate collections in Canada and the United States have purchased photographs by Jon Butler.
Recent awards include first place photography at the 2004 Heritage Alive Art Show at the Centennial Museum of Sheguiandah, first place photography at the 2004 Massey Area Museum Art Show and first place in photography at the 2005 La Cloche Art Show. In May 2004 a one man show was held in Sudbury at the Cedar Street Gallery and in 2005 there were shows in Sudbury at Black Cat Too in February, Cedar Street Gallery and the Manitoulin Art Tour in June, Turner’s Gallery of Little Current in July and The Deer Trail Studio Tour in September. In February 2006 photographs will be at the Sudbury Theatre Centre. La Cloche and Killarney tourist publications use Jon’s photographs.
‘The stark beauty of Jon Butler’s Cranberry Narrows was judged the Best Photography.’ - The Manitoulin Expositor, September 15, 2004
Jon, his wife Kerry and son Sam live in Willisville located in the heart of the La Cloche mountains. Daughters Loren and Vanessa are in the heart of Toronto.
Photographs and photo art cards are available upstairs at Turners Gallery of Little Current, The Whitefish Falls General Store and The Art Gallery of Sudbury gift shop.
Participate in your landscape.
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Sources
www.lacloche.ca
216.104.126.198 00:30, 2 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Declined. The proposed article is not suitable for Wikipedia. Disambiguation page exists at John Taylor, no reliable sources provided, no clear claims to notability, and without checking appears to have been copied from subject's own website. Confusing Manifestation 00:09, 1 June 2007 (UTC)[reply]
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"is chairman of the Board of Trustees of Rice University and is a life trustee of The University of Texas Law School Foundation. Barnett is a director of St. Luke's Episcopal Health System and a director emeritus of the Greater Houston Partnership. He also serves on the board of Reliant Energy, Inc. and as a director and a past chairman of Houston Zoo, Inc.
"Barnett received his bachelor's degree from Rice University and his law degree from The University of Texas. While in law school, Barnett was a member of the Chancellors and the Order of the Coif and served as an editor of the Texas Law Review."
[www.houston.org/bios.asp]
"E. William Barnett is a retired managing partner of Baker Botts L.L.P. He is a former chairman of the Antitrust Section of the American Bar Association and a fellow of the American College of Trial Lawyers." [www.centerforhoustonsfuture.org]
"Reliant Energy spin-off Reliant Resources appointed Barnett to its board in 2002. Barnett also sits on the boards of Chase Bank of Texas and Louis Dreyfus Natural Gas." [www.whitehouseforsale.org]
He is a member of the James Baker III Institute Board of Advisors at Rice University. [ref below]
James Baker Institute
[removed copy of text from James Baker Institute article --Geniac 02:36, 19 August 2006 (UTC)][reply]
In support of WhiteHouseForSale assertion about Dreyfus, note entry below:
LOUIS DREYFUS NATURAL GAS CORP.
By: /s/ Jeffrey A. Bonney
Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, this Registration Statement has been signed by the following persons in the capacities and on the dates indicated....
E. William Barnett * Director May 19, 2000
[www.secinfo.com/dRQS7.5a.htm]
For further follow-up:
Dominion To Acquire Louis Dreyfus Natural Gas For $2.3 Billion
Dominion will assume about $505 million in Louis Dreyfus Natural Gas debt. Louis Dreyfus Natural Gas’s board will recommend its shareholders vote to approve ...
www.dom.com/news/dom2001/ [via Google]
Sources
Note: references are attached to paragraphs above.
165.247.204.155 01:41, 2 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Submitter's note: most of this info is copied from various web pages, IN QUOTES and with attribution. I doubt this violates copyright law. I am chronically ill and do not have the time/energy to do this properly.
I came across this information while research another topic. Since I had it, thought someone else might benefit from it.
I would cheefully leave my e-mail address if I thought it would not be published. However, if you want to reach me, I am listed in the San Jose, CA directory (area code 408).
End submission, 1 feb 2006, frank kirk, san jose, ca 95129.
-end-
Declined. The proposed article is not suitable for Wikipedia. I sympathise with your personal situation, but unfortunately this submission is not written as an encyclopedia article. We cannot publish a collection of facts from other locations, even if they are quotes. Perhaps Requested Articles would be more appropriate.--Xnuala (talk)(Review) 16:14, 2 June 2007 (UTC)[reply]
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Ship Captain Thomas Cooper of Boston was a leading Boston figure
and largest Boston taxpayer at his death at sea in 1705.
He founded the Brattle Street Church (with others) where later
his son Rev William Cooper was the pastor.
He rented the home to Josiah Franklin where Benjamin Franklin
lived before moving to Philadelphia.
His wife Mehitable Minot was the daughter of James Minot , larger
wharf owners in the Boston Harbor (owned the larger dock called
Minot's T for being T shaped) and was also the neice of Dep Gov
Staunton. After Capt Cooper's death she remarried 3 times to
other prominent Bostonians including Sargeant Family.
Son Rev William Cooper and his son Rev Samuel Cooper
both turned down being president of Harvard University -unique
in history.
Posthumous son Thomas Cooper Jr (born 1706) moved to Charleston, SC
where he was a prominent planter and leader, later retiring
to his wife's Maryland Beauchamp plantations.
Chief Justice Samuel Sewell mentions in his diary running about Boston lauding
his Cooper family connection (as his daughter married Rev William Cooper)
esp for his ancestor Thomas Cooper's Dictionary (preceding the other dictionaries of Johnson / webster by ? 100 years and published in 1550 or so)
for which Queen ELizaeth I granted Thomas Cooper two bishoprics of
Lincoln and ? .
This article is a stub. please add
Sources -
"Capt thomas Cooper of Boston and his Descendants"
New Eng Hist & Gen Reg VOl XLIV page 53-61
Genealogical Gleanings in England
page 303 Thoas Palmer will leaves L10 each to Re Benj Coleman & Rev Thomas Cooper of Brattle Street Church (Boston)
Vol 2 pg 1041-3 Will of Mary Cooper mother of Capt Thomas Cooper of Boston
History and Antiquities of Boston (1630-1770) by Samuel Drake (1857)
pg 518-519 Capt Thomas Cooper and group donate land for Brattle Street Church
Sasmuel Sewell's Diary (by Samuel Sewell Chief Justice of Mass Supreme Court
whose daughter married Capt Thomas COoper's son Rev William Cooper)
Sources
refer to theoritical
Declined. This suggestion doesn't sufficiently explain the importance or significance of the subject. See the speedy deletion criteria A7 and/or guidelines on biographies. Please provide more information on why the person or group is worthy of inclusion in an encyclopedia. Thank you. To me, this sounds like he was connected tenuously to some possibly notable people. Please provide stronger sources asserting his notability.--Xnuala (talk)(Review) 16:23, 2 June 2007 (UTC)[reply]
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Some underground settlement
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CUBC is one of the oldest university rowing clubs in the UK. It is drawn solely from student members of Cambridge University and exists primarily for the purpose of trying to beat arch-rival Oxford University Boat Club in the annual Boat Race on the River Thames at about Easter time. This race has been raced since 1829 with interruptions for wars and other events meaning that the 2004 race was both the 175th anniversary of the first race and the 150th actual race.
Although winning the Boat Race remains CUBC's primary concern, the Club also competes at Henley Royal Regatta and is usually at least a finalist and often a winner of an event there. In the run up to this international event, the Club participates in some of the most prestigous regattas on the UK circuit such as the Metropolitan Regatta and Marlow Regatta. In recent years the Club has also gone to race the Head of the Charles which it won in 2004.
Membership of the Club is theoretically open to any male undergraduate or postgraduate oarsman in the University, and coxwains of either sex. In practice, however, membership of the Club is largely restricted to an elite few, the precise number varying throughout the year. In general, at the start of the academic year trials are held and all oarsmen who appear potentially good enough to compete in the Boat Race are retained for at least a few weeks. Following erg trials and the annual Head fo the River Fours race in November, some oarsmen may be dropped from the squad - known as 'binning'. At the end of Michaelmas Term (in early/mid December) the Trial Eights races are held over the Boat Race course on the Thames. This pits two evenly matched VIIIs against each other over the course to enable the coaches to see how the oarsmen react under pressure and how the coxes cope with the unusual and stressful conditions prevalent on that river. After Trial VIIIs the squad is reduced to 20 (or more recently 18) oarsmen plus three coxes.
During Lent Term, the oarsmen undergoe further tests including seat racing over defined distances. From the squad, eight oarsmen are chosen to race in the 'Blue Boat' for the Boat Race and eight more are chosen to form 'Goldie' which has raced its Oxford counterpart 'Isis' in the Reserves Boat Race 30mins before the main event since the 1960s. The last oarsmen and cox are the official spares, in case of injury or illness. Usually the Blue Boat is announced first, about a month or so before the Boat Race and the Goldie crew is announced some time later.
The Blue Boat is so-called because participation in the Boat Race earns the participant a 'Blue' - a form of university colours awarded at Cambridge and Oxford Universities. Cambridge Blue is dervied from an earlier Eton blue, both being a kind of turqouise or duck egg colour, hence CUBC being referred to as the 'Light Blues'. Oxford Blue is a standard dark blue in colour.
Members of the Goldie crew are awarded unique 'Goldie' colours, donoted by blazers consisting of alternatinv Cambridge Blue, dark green and bright gold stripes.
In recent years the Club has also ran a development squad - 'Dev Squad' for the purposes of raising the standards of talented college oarsmen, mostly those who have learned to row at their college. This squad races under the name 'Goldie' in the annual Head of the River Race on the Thames a week before the Boat Race. This crew should not be confused with the true Goldie crew which is of a significantly higher standard.
Originally, members of the CUBC tended to be undergraduates of the university who also rowed for their college boat clubs and had mostly learned to row at public school. More recently, there has been a trend for many international oarsmen from across the world to take up postgraduate courses at the university in order to compete in the Boat Race. This has undoubtedly raised the standard of the event to near world-class but has led to some criticisms that the club is no longer so representative as a club for members of the university.
However, raising the standard has helped the club to remain one fo the best rowing clubs in the UK and to nurture talented but inexperienced oarsmen which is one of the reasons for the recent Dev Squad innovation, mentione dabove. Recent successful examples include two oarsmen from Jesus College, Ed Sherwood and James Orme, both of whom learned to row at their college in their first undergraduate year and yet made it into the Goldie crew of the following year and then onto the under-23 World Championships. They were both in the Goldie crew again in 2005.
Sources
86.144.32.128 13:27, 2 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]
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Wells-next-the-Sea is a small town on the North Norfolk coast. Historically its main significance came through its harbour - one of the largest along the Norfolk coast between Great Yarmouth and King's Lynn. Although historically a notable port, in recent years Wells has become principally a tourist and recreational centre. However the harbour remains important and significant sized vessels can gain entry at high tide.
As a tourist centre Wells has several assets. Firstly there is the harbour itself which provides excellent facilities for yachting and many other watersports. Then there is the town which houses quaint narrow streets, often lined by small flint-walled cottages or larger brick built merchants' houses. Near the centre of the town is a grassed area called The Buttlands (indicative of former use for archery practice) surrounded by a mix of buildings but notably a number of imposing Georgian houses. Further south (i.e. inland) is the parish church of St Nicholas, where a survivor of The Bounty is buried.
North of The Quay is the beach, a third major attraction for tourists, with a large sandy beach backed by sand dunes and pine woods and lined by distinctive beach huts that stretches west to the nearby village of Holkham's beach. The beach is also the location of the Lifeboat Station, a point of interest in itself. The area adjacent to the beach is an area for camping, caravaning, and recreation.
Close to Wells are many other tourist attractions such as historic houses (Holkham Hall, Blickling Hall) and world-class bird watching opportunities with much of the North Norfolk coast now designated as some form of nature reserve or site of special scientific interest (e.g. Scolt Head, Blakeney Point). Wells houses both a Youth Hostel and a Field Studies Centre.
The commercial heart of Wells has contracted since the 1950s when shops and commercial businesses lined most of the walk along Staithe and High Streets from The Quay to St Nicholas Church. Now shops are mostly found only on Staithe Street, where tourist traffic from The Quay provides added trade for several outlets. Historically Wells possessed a remarkable number of public houses for a town of its size, probably reflecting maritime links, but now many of these have closed.
Wells was linked to the national rail network in 1857, and for many years was a terminus on two separate lines. However the East Coast floods on January 1953, which also affected Wells significantly, precipitated the closure of the coastal line to Heacham (and then on to King's Lynn) to the west, while the 'Beeching axe' saw the closure of the line through Fakenham and Dereham to Wymondham and Norwich in the mid 1960s. However Wells has seen two separate light railway narrow gauge systems in operation - one from the end of The Quay to the beach and the other from south of the town to the religious centre of Walsingham a few miles inland. Neither of these, however, reach the former railway station.
Sources
Paul Whysall 86.0.212.72 21:04, 2 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]
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Retail Ethics has come to the fore in recent years in the wake of similar movements in wider business ethics and marketing ethics.
However it would be wrong to see retail ethics as wholly new - philosophers such as Aristotle and Cicero, for example, mused on the fairness of retail transactions.
Modern retail ethics has concerned itself with a wide range of issues such as the selling of 'sweatshop' products, green issues, fair trade, consumer endebtedness, retail employment conditions, issues of privacy and data protection, the movement of stores out-of-town and the decline of the High Street, selling 'socially undesirable' products (such as tobacco products, firearms, alcohol, pornography etc., although clearly definitions of 'undesirability' are highly subjective here), alleged abuses of 'retailer power', controversial advertising, and so forth.
A number of models of what might be 'ethical retailing' can be envisaged. Firstly there is the model of the retailer who only sells 'ethical' products (although what constitutes an ethical product may be disputed). For a while Body Shop would have been an obvious example for many here, but the work of such as Jon Entine has challenged that notion. Then there are businesses that are seen as ethical by virtue of their organisational structure and use of proceeds - such as co-operative retailers. However a wider definition would be one that seeks to treat all stakeholders ethically (although that in itself is a highly challenging concept to operationalise).
The central paradox of ethical retailing is perhaps the extent to which the market will reward virtuous businesses. Will consumers pay more, say, for ethical goods or is this a limited niche market? Or is striving for an image of virtue and fairness a risky strategy when so many are apparently waiting to expose the slightest shortcomings of anyone seeking to claim a higher moral ground in the world of highly competitive global retailing?
Sources
Chapter 5 ('Ethical Standards in Business' by P. Whysall) in J.P. Freathy (Editor), The Retailing Book, 2003.
86.0.212.72 21:29, 2 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Declined. The proposed article is not suitable for Wikipedia. Please rewrite the material in an encyclopedic style. Also, please ensure that the submission is in your own words.--Xnuala (talk)(Review) 19:40, 3 June 2007 (UTC)[reply]
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Peter George Patmore was a periodical writer active betwee nthe years of 1820-25, known mainly for a series of articles in the 'New Monthly Magazine' entitled 'Picture Galleries of England', acting as a critical guide to the main aristocratic collections of Old Master paintings at the time. These articles were a response to, and in some ways a dialogue with, a similar series begun by the great critic William Hazlitt, at around the same time, and published in the London Magazine. Patmore's works were serialised and published in a single volume in 1824, of which a copy si available in the Bodleian Library in Oxford. He was forced into publication due to the announcement of several other works of the same name attempting to capitalise on his (or possibly Hazlitt's) succes.
He was also the father of the minor Victorian poet Coventry Patmore
Sources
Grayling, A.C. 'The Quarrel of the Age: a biography of William Hazlitt'
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Sources
PLEASE CREATE A BIOGRAPHICAL SITE FOR Anthony Jansen van Salee
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--Xnuala (talk)(Review) 19:07, 2 June 2007 (UTC)[reply]
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Leonard Kane Haney, C.M., A.O.E
Location: Picture Butte, Alberta
Member of the Order of Canada
Appointed: October 21, 1992
Investiture: April 21, 1993
A successful seed grower and marketer, he is a prominent figure in the farming community and a respected industry spokesperson. He has played leadership roles in provincial and national agricultural organizations, and has advocated educational programs for farmers, as well as cooperative research and business endeavours involving industry, government and universities.
Sources
http://www.gg.ca/honours/search-recherche/honours-desc.asp?lang=e&TypeID=orc&id=3081
136.159.16.100 23:41, 2 February 2006 (UTC)David Haney[reply]
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