Curating Philadelphia: City Notebook for Philadelphia, USA


Book Description

This quirky city notebook is designed to inspire listmakers to create and curate their own city guide and city biography in list form. It's a do it (all) yourself notebook for independent travelers and thinkers! "YOU ARE AS COOL AS YOUR CITY. Naturally. So, why not curate your city and capture the essence of that coolness? This is a city guide re-imagined for travelers, urban explorers and city locals alike!" — Cormac Younghusband Curating Philadelphia: City Notebook For Philadelphia, USA is a do-it-yourself city guide that helps you keep all your important city information organized and ready for when you need it and where you need it. Use the pages of this city notebook to document your adventures, experiences, thoughts, and memories. Have fun making lists of all the highlights and lowlights the city has to offer. Inside you will find D.I.Y. sections like: Getting Started, City Confidential, City Calendar, City Folks, City Adventure, Places to Stay, See & Explore, Eat Drink & Be Merry, Shopping, Sport, Health & Fitness, Entertaining Outings, City Escapes & Excursions, One Day Must Not Miss, Blacklist Must Miss, Curator Special Lists, Local Language & Dialect, Rating & Embetterment, and Notes, Sketches, Maps. This is the perfect place to capture and curate everything you find fascinating about Philadelphia-which is why it's your city guide in lists. Make your time more fun, more organized, more productive and more creative with a D.I.Y. City Guide from Younghusband City Notebooks. "Aldous Huxley said 'For every traveler who has any taste of his own, the only useful guidebook will be the one which he himself has written.'" To help with that, I created a line of D.I.Y City Guides In Lists to help you curate your city and to curate your world. Enjoy!" — Cormac Younghusband CITIES IN THE YOUNGHUSBAND CITY NOTEBOOK COLLECTION: Adelaide, Amsterdam, Antwerp, Asuncion, Athens, Atlanta, Auckland, Bangalore, Bangkok, Barcelona, Basel, Beijing, Beirut, Belo Horizonte, Berlin, Bilbao, Bogotá, Boston, Brasilia, Brisbane, Brussels, Budapest, Buenos Aires, Busan, Cairo, Calgary, Canberra, Cape Town, Caracas, Casablanca, Chang Mai, Chennai, Chicago, Christchurch, Cologne, Colombo, Copenhagen, Dallas, Delhi, Denver, Dhaka, Dubai, Dublin, Düsseldorf, Edinburgh, Florence, Frankfurt, Geneva, Genoa, Glasgow, Goa, Guangzhou, Hamburg, Hanoi, Havana, Helsinki, Ho Chi Minh City, Hong Kong, Honolulu, Houston, Hyderabad, Istanbul, Jakarta, Johannesburg, Kathmandu, Kinshasa, Kobe, Kolkata, Kuala Lumpur, Kyoto, Lagos, Las Vegas, Lhasa, Lima, Lisbon, Liverpool, London, Los Angeles, Luxembourg, Lyon, Maastricht, Macau, Madrid, Manchester, Manila, Marrakesh, Marseille, Melbourne, Merida, Mexico City, Miami, Milan, Monaco, Montevideo, Montreal, Moscow, Mumbai, Munich, Nagoya, Nairobi, Naples, New Orleans, New York, Nice, Nuremberg, Osaka, Ottawa, Palermo, Palma, Paris, Perth, Philadelphia, Porto, Prague, Pune, Reykjavik, Riga, Rio de Janeiro, Rome, Rotterdam, Ruhr Valley, Salzburg, San Francisco, Santiago, São Paulo, Sapporo, Seattle, Seoul, Seville, Shanghai, Shenzhen, Singapore, Sochi, St Petersburg, Stockholm, Strasbourg, Stuttgart, Sydney, Taipei, Tel Aviv, Tianjin, Tokyo, Toronto, Turin, Valencia, Vancouver, Venice, Victoria, Vienna, Vientiane, Vladivostok, Warsaw, Washington D.C., Wellington, Yangon, Yokohama, Zurich "Find a place in the world you haven't been, and go there. Keep on trucking, my friends" - Cormac Younghusband, The World's Most Legendary Nomad







Who's who in America


Book Description










The Rotarian


Book Description

Established in 1911, The Rotarian is the official magazine of Rotary International and is circulated worldwide. Each issue contains feature articles, columns, and departments about, or of interest to, Rotarians. Seventeen Nobel Prize winners and 19 Pulitzer Prize winners – from Mahatma Ghandi to Kurt Vonnegut Jr. – have written for the magazine.




Marcel Duchamp


Book Description

In his early thirties, Marcel Duchamp (1887-1968) convinced everyone that he had abandoned making art in favor of playing chess. But from 1946 to 1966, he was secretly at work in his studio on West 14th Street in New York City. There he produced his final masterpiece: Étant donnés: 1o la chute d'eau, 2o le gaz d'éclairage, composed of a battered wood door through which one views a prone, nude female, holding aloft an antique gas lamp against a landscape of trees, waterfall, and sky. Unveiled as a permanent installation at the Philadelphia Museum of Art in July 1969, the year after Duchamp's death, it startled the art world with its explicit eroticism and voyeurism, as well as its trompe l'oeil realism. Since its public debut, Étant donnés has been recognized as one of the most important and enigmatic works of the 20th century. Published to commemorate the fortieth anniversary of the original installation of Étant donnés and to accompany the first major exhibition on the artwork and its studies, this richly illustrated book presents a wealth of new research and documents that draw upon previously unpublished works of art and materials. The catalogue also examines the critical and artistic reception of Étant donnés, as evidenced by the subsequent work of Les Levine, Hannah Wilke, Robert Gober, Marcel Dzama, Ray Johnson, and other artists who have engaged with Duchamp's provocative and challenging tableau-construction.




Louis Kahn


Book Description

The American architect Louis Kahn (1901 - 1974) is regarded as one of the great master builders of the twentieth century. With complex spatial compositions, an elemental formal vocabulary and a choreographic mastery of light, Kahn created buildings of archaic beauty. As the first comprehensive publication on this architect in 20 years, the book �Louis Kahn - The Power of Architecture� presents all of his important projects. It includes essays by prominent Kahn experts and an expansive illustrated biography with many new facts and insights about Kahn's life and work. In a number of interviews, leading architects such as Frank Gehry, Renzo Piano, Peter Zumthor and Sou Fujimoto underline Kahn's significance in today's architectural discourse. An extensive catalogue of works features original drawings and architectural models from the Kahn archive. The compendium is further augmented by a portfolio of Kahn's travel drawings as well as photographs by Thomas Florschuetz, which offer completely new views of the Salk Institute and the Indian Institute of Management.




Busted


Book Description

In the vein of Erin Brockovich, The Departed, and T. J. English's Savage City comes Busted, the shocking true story of the biggest police corruption scandal in Philadelphia history, a tale of drugs, power, and abuse involving a rogue narcotics squad, a confidential informant, and two veteran journalists whose reporting drove a full-scale FBI probe, rocked the City of Brotherly Love, and earned a Pulitzer Prize . In 2003, Benny Martinez became a Confidential Informant for a member of the Philadelphia Police Department's narcotics squad, helping arrest nearly 200 drug and gun dealers over seven years. But that success masked a dark and dangerous reality: the cops were as corrupt as the criminals they targeted. In addition to fabricating busts, the squad systematically looted mom-and-pop stores, terrorizing hardworking immigrant owners. One squad member also sexually assaulted three women during raids. Frightened for his life, Martinez turned to Philadelphia Daily News reporters Wendy Ruderman and Barbara Laker. Busted chronicles how these two journalists—both middle-class working mothers—formed an unlikely bond with a convicted street dealer to uncover the secrets of ruthless kingpins and dirty cops. Professionals in an industry shrinking from severe financial cutbacks, Ruderman and Laker had few resources—besides their own grit and tenacity—to break a dangerous, complex story that would expose the rotten underbelly of a modern American city and earn them a Pulitzer Prize. A page-turning thriller based on superb reportage, illustrated with eight pages of photos, Busted is modern true crime at its finest.




William Still


Book Description

The first full-length biography of William Still, one of the most important leaders of the Underground Railroad. William Still: The Underground Railroad and the Angel at Philadelphia is the first major biography of the free Black abolitionist William Still, who coordinated the Eastern Line of the Underground Railroad and was a pillar of the Railroad as a whole. Based in Philadelphia, Still built a reputation as a courageous leader, writer, philanthropist, and guide for fugitive enslaved people. This monumental work details Still’s life story beginning with his parents’ escape from bondage in the early nineteenth century and continuing through his youth and adulthood as one of the nation’s most important Underground Railroad agents and, later, as an early civil rights pioneer. Still worked personally with Harriet Tubman, assisted the family of John Brown, helped Brown’s associates escape from Harper’s Ferry after their famous raid, and was a rival to Frederick Douglass among nationally prominent African American abolitionists. Still’s life story is told in the broader context of the anti-slavery movement, Philadelphia Quaker and free black history, and the generational conflict that occurred between Still and a younger group of free black activists led by Octavius Catto. Unique to this book is an accessible and detailed database of the 995 fugitives Still helped escape from the South to the North and Canada between 1853 and 1861. The database contains twenty different fields—including name, age, gender, skin color, date of escape, place of origin, mode of transportation, and literacy—and serves as a valuable aid for scholars by offering the opportunity to find new information, and therefore a new perspective, on runaway enslaved people who escaped on the Eastern Line of the Underground Railroad. Based on Still’s own writings and a multivariate statistical analysis of the database of the runaways he assisted on their escape to freedom, the book challenges previously accepted interpretations of the Underground Railroad. The audience for William Still is a diverse one, including scholars and general readers interested in the history of the anti-slavery movement and the operation of the Underground Railroad, as well as genealogists tracing African American ancestors.