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result(s) for
"Pulsipher, Lydia"
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Residents worry about lot-split request
by
Marcum, Ed
in
Pulsipher, Lydia
2003
Bruce McClelland, surveyor for [David Butler], told MPC the subdivision is needed because there is a house on the property and his client wants to add a guest house. However, Lydia Pulsipher, representing the Town Hall East neighborhood organization, asked MPC to postpone the request. Also when it met on Nov. 13, MPC approved development requests from Temple Baptist Church to use the former Levi Strauss plant in Powell for the new home of its Crown College. MPC approved rezoning 36 acres northwest of Beaver Creek Drive, including the plant, and 19 acres northeast of Bayless Lane to office zoning.
Newspaper Article
Family's heritage woven into Slovenian vacation
2005
The Knoxvillian coordinated a visit that included her husband, Dr. Conrad \"Mac\" Goodwin, and her two sons and their wives and their two sons, plus her brother, John Mihelic, and his girlfriend, Gerry McGrane. The clan spent a significant part of the 26-day trip with family members in Ribnica. (Color) The twin towers of the Ribnica parish church stand behind Ribnica castle and cultural center along the Bistrica River. JOHN MIHELIC
Newspaper Article
WINTER IN THE SUN; Lazy Days in Montserrat
by
Kurlansky, Mark
,
MARK KURLANSKY is the author of "A Continent of Islands," a book about contemporary Caribbean issues to be published next year by Addison-Wesley
in
KURLANSKY, MARK
,
NYTRAVEL
,
Osborne, John
1990
IT was in Montserrat that I finally did it. I had read about it, talked about it (cricket talk is a necessary prelude to serious discussion with most West Indian political leaders), but I never actually went to a cricket match until I went to Montserrat. The truth is that there was nothing else to do there, and that sense of leisure, I have come to realize, is the essence of cricket, and one of the reasons why the Caribbean has produced the world's greatest cricket players. Montserrat is a British colony, officially called a dependent territory. Some, such as Chief Minister [John Osborne], do not conceal their ambitions for independence, but so far they haven't been able to muster enough support for this idea. And the arguments don't get too heated. After all, the head of the government and the head of the opposition are cousins, both named Osborne, which forces politics into first names. Not that this strikes anyone in Montserrat as particularly noteworthy. In 1970 the head of government, William Bramble, was voted out of office in a landslide victory by Austin Bramble, his son, who ran on a platform that called his father too autocratic. William unsuccessfully denounced his son as \"a chip off the old block.\" Old Road Beach has the island's distinctive black powder sand. A [Monserrat] resident makes a toy from palm fronds for a young visitor at Vue Point Hotel. (Photographs by Len Kaufman for The New York Times)(pg. 8); A lobster claw heliconia, one of many exotic plants on lush Montserrat. (Gerry Ellis)(pg. 8); War memorial clock tower at Plymouth. (Len Kaufman for The New York Times)(pg. 32)
Newspaper Article
WINTER IN THE SUN; Lazy Days in Montserrat
by
Kurlansky, Mark
,
MARK KURLANSKY is the author of "A Continent of Islands," a book about contemporary Caribbean issues to be published next year by Addison-Wesley
in
KURLANSKY, MARK
,
NYTRAVEL
,
Osborne, John
1990
IT was in Montserrat that I finally did it. I had read about it, talked about it (cricket talk is a necessary prelude to serious discussion with most West Indian political leaders), but I never actually went to a cricket match until I went to Montserrat. The truth is that there was nothing else to do there, and that sense of leisure, I have come to realize, is the essence of cricket, and one of the reasons why the Caribbean has produced the world's greatest cricket players. Montserrat is a British colony, officially called a dependent territory. Some, such as Chief Minister [John Osborne], do not conceal their ambitions for independence, but so far they haven't been able to muster enough support for this idea. And the arguments don't get too heated. After all, the head of the government and the head of the opposition are cousins, both named Osborne, which forces politics into first names. Not that this strikes anyone in Montserrat as particularly noteworthy. In 1970 the head of government, William Bramble, was voted out of office in a landslide victory by Austin Bramble, his son, who ran on a platform that called his father too autocratic. William unsuccessfully denounced his son as \"a chip off the old block.\" Old Road Beach has the island's distinctive black powder sand. A [Monserrat] resident makes a toy from palm fronds for a young visitor at Vue Point Hotel. (Photographs by Len Kaufman for The New York Times)(pg. 8); A lobster claw heliconia, one of many exotic plants on lush Montserrat. (Gerry Ellis)(pg. 8); War memorial clock tower at Plymouth. (Len Kaufman for The New York Times)(pg. 32) Map of the Caribbean Sea showing locations and maps of Monsterrat and Dominica.
Newspaper Article
Montserrat's Secret Gardens
1992
One exhibit at the \"Seeds of Change\" exhibition at the National Museum of Natural History in Washington DC comemmorating Columbus's journey to the New World is the result of years of excavation and research by Lydia Mihelic Pulsipher, a cultural geographer. She has studied the life of African slaves--especially their gardening practices--on the Caribbean island of Montserrat.
Magazine Article