View allAll Photos Tagged ellen kennedy
661 243, Bajmok
A Budapest–Belgrád-gyorsvasút építése miatt Magyarország és Szerbia között jelenleg csak a Röszke–Horgos-határátmenetben lehetséges a vonatozás. A helyzetet tovább nehezíti, hogy a szerb oldalon is teljes kizárás mellett megvalósuló beruházás miatt az erre közlekedő számos tehervonatnak Újvidék és Szabadka között kerülnie kell, méghozzá gombosi (Bogojevo) irányváltással, a végletekig lepusztult és elhanyagolt, villamosítatlan zombori vasútvonalon. Szerbia kulcsfontosságú tranzitország az észak-déli irányú vasúti teherforgalom szempontjából, mert sokszor még annak ellenére is olcsóbb és gyorsabb errefelé közlekedtetni a tehervonatokat például a szintén a leromlott állapotú infrastruktúrájáról ismert Romániához képest, hogy Szerbia nem tagja az Európai Uniónak, vagyis a tranzitoló tehervonatoknak be- és kilépéskor is szigorú vámeljárásokon kell keresztülmenniük.
A számos tehervonat alaposan próbára teszi a zombori vonalon szolgálatot teljesítőket, akiknek a sokszor használhatatlan, de mindenképpen elöregedett biztosítóberendezések mellett a személyzethiány is megnehezíti a dolgát. A nagy forgalomban a vajdasági Kennedyknek is bőven jut feladat. A leharcolt külsejű 243-as gép hosszú orrával előre kúszik be a bajmoki állomásra egy RCH-s kocsikból álló üres tehervonattal a fényképen.
November 1991 - This was one of the largest Tri-Ess gatherings to date. I've tried to identify as many as I can, but if I ever had a list of the names, it's long since been lost. It's also depressing to realize how many of these extraordinary people have been lost to us. Most of the people in the front row were serving on the national Board of Directors at the time. A great time was had by one and all.
01 Naomi Owen
02 Kimberleigh Richards
03 Jennifer Higgins
04 Cynthia Phillips
05 Donna E Mobley
06 Dr. Virginia Prince
07 Carol Beecroft
08 Jane Ellen Fairfax
09 Frances Fairfax
10 Lynda Frank
11 Kathy Parker
12 Samantha Wells
13 Joanne Roberts
14 Julie Alexander
15 Jim Bridges
16 Linda Phillips
17 Eve Burchert
18 Patricia Kennedy
19 Drs. Melanie and Peggy Rudd
20 Jenee Davis
21 Dr. Sheila Kirk
1) Cole Mohr, Henry Holland & Marc Hunter at Alexander Wang, 2) MARK RONSON! at Charlotte Ronson, 3) Juliette Lewis and Kate Mara at Zac Posen, 4) Lou Dillon at Zac Posen, 5) Brandy and Tracy Reese, 6) Chace Crawford at Rock & Repulic, 7) Olympic gold medalist RYAN LOCHTE at Anna Sui, 8) Claire Danes at Zac Posen, 9) Alexander Wang, 10) Charlotte Ronson & Corey Kennedy, 11) Ellen Von Unwerth at Anna Sui, 12) Marc Jacobs with Ricky & Dee, 13) Nirvana at Y-3, 14) Daisy Lowe at Alexander Wang, 15) Lynn Yeager of The Village Voice with Mickey Boardman of Paper Mag at Erin Fetherston, 16) Winona Ryder at Marc Jacobs, 17) Elijah Wood at Rodarte, 18) Jennifer Lopez at Marc Jacobs, 19) Joanna Newsom and Andy Samberg, 20) Christina Ricci at DKNY, 21) Cole Mohr, Cory Kennedy & Sean Lennon at Charlotte Ronson, 22) Bill Cunningham, 23) Michelle Trachtenberg at Herve Leger, 24) Kim Gordon & Miranda July at Rodarte, 25) Blake Lively at Miss Sixty, 26) Samantha Ronson and the side of Lindsay Lohan, 27) Erin Wasson at Alexander Wang, 28) Michael Pitt at Marc Jacobs, 29) Kelly Osbourne at Betsey Johnson, 30) Zac Posen, 31) Erin Fetherston, 32) Leighton Meester at DVF, 33) Adrian Grenier at Be Eco Chic, 34) every fashionista’s girl crush Kate Lanphear at Miss Sixty, 35) Emma Roberts at Tracy Reese, 36) Kanye and Jay-Z at Marc Jacobs
Ellen Kennedy, founder of the Howard County Poetry and Literature Society, for the Columbia Archives.
This spectacular photo is of the May 27, 1999 liftoff of the Orbiter Discovery on STS-96. The STS-96 mission, of almost 10 days, was the second International Space Station (ISS) assembly and resupply flight and the first flight to dock with the station. The crew installed foot restraints and the Russian built crane, STRELA. The Shuttle's SPACEHAB double module carried internal and resupply cargo for station outfitting and the Russian cargo crane was carried aboard the shuttle in the integrated Cargo Carrier (ICC).
Credit: NASA
Image Number: SPD-MARSH-9903915
Date: May 27, 1999
First Lady Michelle Obama pets Bo, the Obama family dog, during a taping for "The Ellen DeGeneres Show" with 6-year-old Rainer Muuss, left, and his brother Atticus, 4, in the Diplomatic Reception Room of the White House, Feb. 7, 2013. (Official White House Photo by Chuck Kennedy)
This official White House photograph is being made available only for publication by news organizations and/or for personal use printing by the subject(s) of the photograph. The photograph may not be manipulated in any way and may not be used in commercial or political materials, advertisements, emails, products, promotions that in any way suggests approval or endorsement of the President, the First Family, or the White House.
First Lady Michelle Obama and Ellen DeGeneres dance during a taping of “The Ellen DeGeneres Show” marking the second anniversary of the "Let’s Move!" initiative, in Burbank, Calif., Feb. 1, 2012. (Official White House Photo by Chuck Kennedy)
This official White House photograph is being made available only for publication by news organizations and/or for personal use printing by the subject(s) of the photograph. The photograph may not be manipulated in any way and may not be used in commercial or political materials, advertisements, emails, products, promotions that in any way suggests approval or endorsement of the President, the First Family, or the White House.
Well, I've been wanting to visit our local Equestrian Center (in Saint Helena, SC, about 10 min from my house) - so I went yesterday and met Anne and Mark Kennedy who are the owners - WOW - this place is impressive!! I am going back this morning as they were kind enough to allow me to practice my hosre shooting skills at this incredible place. I met Ellen who boards two of her horses here - this pic is of one of them. Can you beleive he is 24 years old?? He was so sweet and didn't mind his pic being taken at all! The lighting was bad as it was noon when I got there but I hope to get some better pics this morning! If you are ever in the area on vacation and want to ride, you can visit them and here is their website for more info: www.camelotfarmshorses.com/index.html
Edith Wilson: The first lady who fooled D.C. and ran the White House
Rebecca Boggs Roberts’s ‘Untold Power’ is a riveting look at a president’s powerful spouse and her efforts to conceal his illness
Edith Bolling Galt in her electric automobile. She was the first woman to earn a D.C. driver’s license. (Library of Congress)
By Barbara A. Perry
March 29, 2023 at 8:23 a.m. MST
Unless readers are aficionados of Woodrow Wilson’s presidency, they may possess only vague knowledge that a debilitating stroke incapacitated him in his administration’s final year and that his wife Edith became the unofficial “acting president.” This intriguing tale of how a first lady, with minimal formal education and no government experience, effectively took the reins from the partially paralyzed chief executive and guided his White House, from October 1919 to March 1921, is as riveting as it is improbable.
By virtue of her DNA, author Rebecca Boggs Roberts is well acquainted with Washington’s power dynamics. The daughter of the late political commentator Cokie Roberts and granddaughter of the late House Democratic Majority Leader Hale Boggs, Rebecca also counts on her family tree grandmother Lindy, who served nine terms in Congress after Hale disappeared, and was declared dead, following a 1972 plane crash. Equally genetic, given her father Steven Roberts’s journalistic career, is Rebecca’s flair for writing crisp and engaging narratives. Her book “Untold Power: The Fascinating Rise and Complex Legacy of First Lady Edith Wilson” is quite simply a compelling yarn.
Edith Bolling Galt Wilson. (Library of Congress)
How did Edith Bolling, born and raised in Wytheville, Va., a sleepy town nestled in post-bellum Appalachia, ultimately become one of the most powerful first ladies in American history? As a teenager, she followed her married sister to Washington and embraced the cultural and social life of the booming Gay Nineties city. In 1896, she married the successful, if unexciting, owner of a thriving jewelry store who was almost a decade older than the new Mrs. Edith Bolling Galt. He died a dozen years later, leaving Edith a widow of some means at age 35, unable to bear children after her only pregnancy resulted in a difficult birth and the death of the Galts’ infant son.
Viking
Unlike most women of her era, Edith lived independently, traveling abroad when the spirit moved her, tooling around the nation’s capital in an electric automobile (as the first woman to earn a D.C. driver’s license) and eschewing large soirees for intimate dinners with extended family. She had little interest in politics, opposed women’s suffrage and declined a friend’s invitation to attend Woodrow Wilson’s 1913 inaugural parade and a presidential tea. A friend, the White House physician Cary Grayson, introduced her to the grieving president shortly after Wilson’s first wife, Ellen, died of kidney disease in the second year of his first term.
Although a strait-laced Presbyterian and stodgy academic, Wilson immediately bonded with Edith, 16 years his junior, finding her beautiful, stylish, charming and vivacious. The merry widow added gaiety to his life, and he was as smitten as a teenage schoolboy. Realizing that his lovesickness would appear unseemly so soon after his first wife’s passing, the president initially confined his ardent courtship to secret assignations with the more restrained Edith.
Roberts’s description of Wilson’s wooing springs to life through her careful research of the love notes the couple exchanged almost daily. In addition, the author skillfully deconstructs the second Mrs. Wilson’s 1939 memoir, the first book of its kind penned by a former first lady. This biography is the only one to reflect the recently transcribed memoir chapters written in Edith’s scribbled penmanship and preserved at her birthplace.
First lady Edith Wilson and President Woodrow Wilson, left, arrive in New York on Oct. 11, 1918, to take part in the Liberty Day Parade. (AP)
The Wilsons’ 1915 marriage cemented a fruitful partnership, as the president’s new spouse sustained him through World War I, accompanied him to the Paris peace talks and supported his dogged efforts to secure Senate approval of the Treaty of Versailles. Establishing what modern political scientists now label “the rhetorical presidency,” Woodrow Wilson firmly believed that he could lead Congress and the people by speaking to them directly and in person. It was his overly ambitious cross-country whistle-stop tour that exhausted the president and induced a catastrophic cerebral hemorrhage, paralyzing his left side, affecting his speech and weakening his cognitive ability.
Roberts’s storytelling soars as she leads the reader through Edith’s machinations to hide her husband’s disabilities while maintaining his White House’s functions. She manipulated the Cabinet, Vice President Thomas Marshall and members of Congress to disguise the worst of the president’s symptoms, while making it appear that he maintained control over his faculties and public policy. She literally became his left hand, holding down documents as he signed them with his dominant and unaffected right hand.
From his 1919 stroke until his death in 1924, Edith Wilson maintained the fiction that her husband was functioning normally. She spent the remainder of her long life promoting his legacy as an advocate for freedom at home and abroad. One of her last public appearances, before her death in December 1961 at age 89, was to meet with President John F. Kennedy in the Oval Office when he signed the bill creating the Woodrow Wilson Memorial Commission.
First lady Eleanor Roosevelt, left, and former first lady Edith Wilson attend a Girl Scouts exhibit in Washington in 1934, holding jars of marmalade made by the Scouts. (AP)
In that sense, Edith was no different from all the modern first ladies (including Eleanor Roosevelt, Mamie Eisenhower, Jacqueline Kennedy, Pat Nixon, Nancy Reagan and Hillary Clinton) who supported their debilitated husbands, laid low by illness or scandal, and tried to solidify their legacies if they outlived them. Yet even the influential Roosevelt and Clinton never became “acting presidents.” As Roberts relates, it was JFK’s assassination that prompted the 25th Amendment’s ratification in 1967, providing for the vice president to assume the presidency upon the chief executive’s documented incapacitation. We can be grateful that Edith Wilson’s unprecedented and unofficial substitution for her husband demonstrated the need for such a constitutional remedy for presidential illness.
Barbara A. Perry, the Gerald L. Baliles professor and presidential studies director at the University of Virginia’s Miller Center, is the author of “Jacqueline Kennedy: First Lady of the New Frontier” and “Rose Kennedy: The Life and Times of a Political Matriarch.”
Untold Power
The Fascinating Rise and Complex Legacy of First Lady Edith Wilson
By Rebecca Boggs Roberts
Viking. 302 pp. $30
Barbara A. Perry, the Gerald L. Baliles professor and presidential studies director at the University of Virginia’s Miller Center, is the author of “Jacqueline Kennedy: First Lady of the New Frontier” and “Rose Kennedy: The Life and Times of a Political Matriarch.”
This season's celebs
1) Mischa Barton at Miss Sixty, 2) Lissy Trullie and Leigh Lezark at 3.1 Phillip Lim, 3) Dianna Ross at Diane Von Furstenberg, 4) Mark Ronson at Charlotte’s show, 5) January Jones at Herve Leger, 6) Lindsay Lohan at Charlotte Ronson, 7) Sophia Bush at Herve Leger, 8) Kanye West and Sara Blomquvist at 3.1 Phillip Lim, 9) Milla Jovovich at Rodarte, 10) Jessica Biel at William Rast, 11) Roisin Murphy at Preen, 12) Rufus Wainwright and Jorn Weisbrodt at Miss Sixty, 13) Cory Kennedy at the W Lounge, 14) Aubrey O’Day and Sheiki at William Rast, 15) Peaches Geldof at Charlotte Ronson, 16) Cory Kennedy at Charlotte Ronson, 17) Alexander Wang and Anna Wintour, 18) Jessica Szohr at Anna Sui, 19) Kanye West and Lucy Liu at 3.1 Phillip Lim, 20) Kristen Bell at Miss Sixty, 21) Minka Kelly at Miss Sixty, 22) Sheane Grimes and Brittany Snow at Erin Fetherston, 23) Becki Newton at Phillip Lim, 24) Ellen Von Unwerth and daughter Rebecca Fourteau at Erin Fetherston, 25) Emile Hirsch at William Rast, 26) Mickey Boardman at Ohne Titel, 27) Rachel Bilson at Max Azria, 28) Erin Fetherston, 29) Kirsten Dunst at Rodarte, 30) Alek Wek at Zac Posen, 31) Natalia Vodianova and her kids at DVF, 32) Nicole Richie at Proenza Schouler, 33) Dianna Ross and DVF, 34) Michelle Trachtenberg at Herve Leger, 35) Ashley Jeanne and Alison Lewis, 36) Whitney Port and Olivia Palermo at DVF, 37) Erin Wasson at Alexander Wang, 38) Susie Bubble at Betsey Johnson, 39) Elijah Wood at Rodarte, 40) Peaches Geldof and Stan Rapley at Anna Sui, 41) Gossip Girl’s Amanda Setton at Lorick, 42) Agyness Deyn at Anna Sui, 43) Ryan Lochte at Custo Barcelona, 44) JC Chasez at William Rast, 45) Lindsay Lohan, 46) Kate Lanphear at Alexander Wang, 47) Taylor Momsen at Anna Sui, 48) Zoe Kravitz and Sarah Sophie Flicker at Erin Fetherston , 49) Trace Ayala and Justin Timberlak at William Rast
The #Falcon9 #Block5 #Bangabandhu first stage returned to Port Canaveral this morning. Mary Ellen Jelen was present to well-document the return (along with many others) at 7am.
I was able to swing by between meetings and by 11:20am (3-ish hours after docking) they had already moved the first stage off the drone ship "Of Course I Still Love You", seen here from the top of Exploration Tower at Port Canaveral.
Note the VAB in the background. Also of note: moving the #SpaceX logo higher up the rocket to avoid charring during reentry seems to have worked well.
(Pic: me / We Report Space)
Biography: The life of Ellen Swepson Jackson, a dean and director of affirmative action at Northeastern University since 1978, has been one of involvement, often at the grass roots level, in local and national activities directed toward economic, educational, and political change. For two years in the early 1960s she coordinated, for the Northern Student Movement in Boston, parents groups concerned about the unequal education of the children. She is particularly noted for her work as founder/executive director of Operation Exodus, an inner city busing program in Boston, which transported more than 1000 students to less crowded schools. She is co-author of Family Experiences in Operation Exodus, Inc., published in 1967. She was executive director of the Black Women's Community Development Foundation in 1969 and 1970; project/contract director in the Massachusetts Bureau of Equal Educational Opportunity; and director of Freedom House's Institute on Schools and Education. She has been a delegate to several White House Conferences, including "To Fulfill These Rights" (1966), Children and Youth (1970) and Nutrition and Health (1970). Educated at Boston State Teachers College and the Harvard Graduate School of Education, she has been a fellow at the Institute of Politics of Harvard's Kennedy School of Government, and in the Department of Urban Studies and Planning at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. She has been and continues to be affiliated with numerous organizations and boards, including the Governor's Community Development Coordinating Council, the Committee for Boston, and Women in Politics. She was cofounder and board member of the Young Women's Leadership Development Program, which offered free services to young women from poor neighborhoods. Always an active member of the Democratic Party, she has been a delegate to various conventions. She is also the recipient of awards, honors, citations from many organizations, including the NAACP, Zeta Phi Beta, and the National Association of Negro Business and Professional Women; perhaps the most meaningful tribute was the naming of the Ellen S. Jackson Day Care Center in Boston for her.
Description: The Black Women Oral History Project interviewed 72 African American women between 1976 and 1981. With support from the Schlesinger Library, the project recorded a cross section of women who had made significant contributions to American society during the first half of the 20th century. Photograph taken by Judith Sedwick
Repository: Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America.
Collection: Black Women Oral History Project
Research Guide: guides.library.harvard.edu/schlesinger_bwohp
Questions? Ask a Schlesinger Librarian
Edith Wilson: The first lady who fooled D.C. and ran the White House
Rebecca Boggs Roberts’s ‘Untold Power’ is a riveting look at a president’s powerful spouse and her efforts to conceal his illness
Edith Bolling Galt in her electric automobile. She was the first woman to earn a D.C. driver’s license. (Library of Congress)
By Barbara A. Perry
March 29, 2023 at 8:23 a.m. MST
Unless readers are aficionados of Woodrow Wilson’s presidency, they may possess only vague knowledge that a debilitating stroke incapacitated him in his administration’s final year and that his wife Edith became the unofficial “acting president.” This intriguing tale of how a first lady, with minimal formal education and no government experience, effectively took the reins from the partially paralyzed chief executive and guided his White House, from October 1919 to March 1921, is as riveting as it is improbable.
By virtue of her DNA, author Rebecca Boggs Roberts is well acquainted with Washington’s power dynamics. The daughter of the late political commentator Cokie Roberts and granddaughter of the late House Democratic Majority Leader Hale Boggs, Rebecca also counts on her family tree grandmother Lindy, who served nine terms in Congress after Hale disappeared, and was declared dead, following a 1972 plane crash. Equally genetic, given her father Steven Roberts’s journalistic career, is Rebecca’s flair for writing crisp and engaging narratives. Her book “Untold Power: The Fascinating Rise and Complex Legacy of First Lady Edith Wilson” is quite simply a compelling yarn.
Edith Bolling Galt Wilson. (Library of Congress)
How did Edith Bolling, born and raised in Wytheville, Va., a sleepy town nestled in post-bellum Appalachia, ultimately become one of the most powerful first ladies in American history? As a teenager, she followed her married sister to Washington and embraced the cultural and social life of the booming Gay Nineties city. In 1896, she married the successful, if unexciting, owner of a thriving jewelry store who was almost a decade older than the new Mrs. Edith Bolling Galt. He died a dozen years later, leaving Edith a widow of some means at age 35, unable to bear children after her only pregnancy resulted in a difficult birth and the death of the Galts’ infant son.
Viking
Unlike most women of her era, Edith lived independently, traveling abroad when the spirit moved her, tooling around the nation’s capital in an electric automobile (as the first woman to earn a D.C. driver’s license) and eschewing large soirees for intimate dinners with extended family. She had little interest in politics, opposed women’s suffrage and declined a friend’s invitation to attend Woodrow Wilson’s 1913 inaugural parade and a presidential tea. A friend, the White House physician Cary Grayson, introduced her to the grieving president shortly after Wilson’s first wife, Ellen, died of kidney disease in the second year of his first term.
Although a strait-laced Presbyterian and stodgy academic, Wilson immediately bonded with Edith, 16 years his junior, finding her beautiful, stylish, charming and vivacious. The merry widow added gaiety to his life, and he was as smitten as a teenage schoolboy. Realizing that his lovesickness would appear unseemly so soon after his first wife’s passing, the president initially confined his ardent courtship to secret assignations with the more restrained Edith.
Roberts’s description of Wilson’s wooing springs to life through her careful research of the love notes the couple exchanged almost daily. In addition, the author skillfully deconstructs the second Mrs. Wilson’s 1939 memoir, the first book of its kind penned by a former first lady. This biography is the only one to reflect the recently transcribed memoir chapters written in Edith’s scribbled penmanship and preserved at her birthplace.
First lady Edith Wilson and President Woodrow Wilson, left, arrive in New York on Oct. 11, 1918, to take part in the Liberty Day Parade. (AP)
The Wilsons’ 1915 marriage cemented a fruitful partnership, as the president’s new spouse sustained him through World War I, accompanied him to the Paris peace talks and supported his dogged efforts to secure Senate approval of the Treaty of Versailles. Establishing what modern political scientists now label “the rhetorical presidency,” Woodrow Wilson firmly believed that he could lead Congress and the people by speaking to them directly and in person. It was his overly ambitious cross-country whistle-stop tour that exhausted the president and induced a catastrophic cerebral hemorrhage, paralyzing his left side, affecting his speech and weakening his cognitive ability.
Roberts’s storytelling soars as she leads the reader through Edith’s machinations to hide her husband’s disabilities while maintaining his White House’s functions. She manipulated the Cabinet, Vice President Thomas Marshall and members of Congress to disguise the worst of the president’s symptoms, while making it appear that he maintained control over his faculties and public policy. She literally became his left hand, holding down documents as he signed them with his dominant and unaffected right hand.
From his 1919 stroke until his death in 1924, Edith Wilson maintained the fiction that her husband was functioning normally. She spent the remainder of her long life promoting his legacy as an advocate for freedom at home and abroad. One of her last public appearances, before her death in December 1961 at age 89, was to meet with President John F. Kennedy in the Oval Office when he signed the bill creating the Woodrow Wilson Memorial Commission.
First lady Eleanor Roosevelt, left, and former first lady Edith Wilson attend a Girl Scouts exhibit in Washington in 1934, holding jars of marmalade made by the Scouts. (AP)
In that sense, Edith was no different from all the modern first ladies (including Eleanor Roosevelt, Mamie Eisenhower, Jacqueline Kennedy, Pat Nixon, Nancy Reagan and Hillary Clinton) who supported their debilitated husbands, laid low by illness or scandal, and tried to solidify their legacies if they outlived them. Yet even the influential Roosevelt and Clinton never became “acting presidents.” As Roberts relates, it was JFK’s assassination that prompted the 25th Amendment’s ratification in 1967, providing for the vice president to assume the presidency upon the chief executive’s documented incapacitation. We can be grateful that Edith Wilson’s unprecedented and unofficial substitution for her husband demonstrated the need for such a constitutional remedy for presidential illness.
Barbara A. Perry, the Gerald L. Baliles professor and presidential studies director at the University of Virginia’s Miller Center, is the author of “Jacqueline Kennedy: First Lady of the New Frontier” and “Rose Kennedy: The Life and Times of a Political Matriarch.”
Untold Power
The Fascinating Rise and Complex Legacy of First Lady Edith Wilson
By Rebecca Boggs Roberts
Viking. 302 pp. $30
Barbara A. Perry, the Gerald L. Baliles professor and presidential studies director at the University of Virginia’s Miller Center, is the author of “Jacqueline Kennedy: First Lady of the New Frontier” and “Rose Kennedy: The Life and Times of a Political Matriarch.”
For the half-marathon (21.1 km) results, here are the local (Ottawa & area) participants -- sorted by cities and first name -- in the September 18, 2011, Canada Army Run held in Ottawa, Ontario. There were 6,397 runners in the 21.1 km race, an increase of about 900 runners compared to 2010.
Click here and enter the bib numbers (see below) for the full individual race results. Thank-you to Sportstats.
* Also, click here for race photos by Brightroom™, Inc.
Lists of local half-marathon race participants:
Part A. Ottawa, A-L (see below)
Part B. Ottawa, M-Z (Click here.)
Part C. Other Communities (Alexandria to Magog) (Click here.)
Part D. Other Communities (Maitland to Woodlawn) (Click here.)
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Part A: (Ottawa, bib number & name)
556…Aaron Auyeung
5174…Aaron Guzman
1386…Abbey Saunders
1387…Abdulhak Nagy
5177…Achint Sandhu
1397…Adam Dawe
5179…Adam Desjarlais
1390…Adam Hamilton
3743…Adam Harris
1394…Adam Orton
34107…Adam Struthers
1389…Adam Welcher
7617…Adria Patzer
3427…Adriana Zeleney
3404…Adrienne Mertin
1400…Ahsan Ahmed
572…Al Okroy
5998…Al Stewart
3352…Alain D'arbelles
147…Alain Gauvin
1404…Alain Gendron
116…Alain Therriault
588…Alain Vermette
867…Alan Chaffe
5055…Alan Chan
679…Alan Yeadon
5184…Alana Fong
3750…Alana Morin
1410…Alec Forbes
3752…Alec Wong
1415…Alex Bota
1416…Alex Burnet
5187…Alex Eloise
6103…Alex Havers
3755…Alex Ho
426…Alex Lavoie
5060…Alex Renwick
3758…Alexander Gribbon
6542…Alexandra Averbeck
4978…Alexandra Bushell
1419…Alexandra Gruca-Macaulay
1422…Alexandra Skupek
6105…Alexandra Vallianatos
5189…Alexandra Weirich
1425…Alexis Bosse
3764…Alexis Bunny Conrad
3765…Alice Donachey
6089…Alice Kwong
5193…Alice Retik
6547…Alicia Ch Nier
1427…Alison James
6548…Alison Mccray
3767…Alison Salhany
1021…Allan Crisford
3513…Allan Gauci
1430…Allan O'connor
6551…Allison Grimsey
1434…Allison Lainey
6107…Allison Mackenzie
3639…Allison Meek
6552…Allison Sephton
1440…Alp Oran
3772…Alyson Byrne
5202…Amanda Amaratunga
3781…Amanda Brown
3779…Amanda Macfarlane
5200…Amanda Robertson-Smiderle
5206…Amanda Sully
1339…Amanda Van Beinum
3776…Amanda Watson
3786…Amin Mirzaee
3787…Ammar Riaz
1447…Amy Hiltz
5208…Amy Hum
1446…Amy Plint
1452…Anabela Barreira
3472…Anais Lussier-Labelle
6564…Andr E Morin
1461…Andr St-Laurent
6116…Andre Boivin
1459…Andre Charbonneau
901…Andre Dion
1312…Andre Hiotis
1454…Andre Pharand
1465…Andrea English
1466…Andrea Ferrari
3797…Andrea Fitzgerald
1234…Andrea Holland
6562…Andrea Lau
1306…Andrea Letham
1090…Andrea Matthews
5212…Andrea Mccaffrey
7385…Andrea Mills
5214…Andrea Pietila
3796…Andrea Seaby
3798…Andree Deslauriers
1223…Andree-Anne Girard
7620…Andree-Anne Lamothe
155…Andrew Archibald
3802…Andrew Bellamy
7434…Andrew Buzza
3800…Andrew Chatham
16298…Andrew Colautti
1481…Andrew Feltham
1475…Andrew Ha
3357…Andrew Keleher
156…Andrew Leikucs
1470…Andrew Lenz
3806…Andrew Marble
976…Andrew Mendes
603…Andrew Ng
3803…Andrew Niefer
889…Andrew Parker
7621…Andrew Patzer
1482…Andrew Spurrell
3417…Andrew Staples
1473…Andrew Weekes
1490…Andy Wilson
3575…Angela Hardy
931…Angela Koskie
7397…Angela Lamb
6572…Angela Marcantonio
1121…Angela Scanlon
3809…Angela Steele
3810…Angelo Garcia
5111…Angy Dauth
5226…Anick De Sousa
762…Anika Clark
825…Anita Choquette
7438…Anita Portier
1145…Ann Gregory
6007…Ann Lanthier
3448…Ann Marie Fyfe
7440…Ann Mccaffrey
1497…Ann Piche
5229…Ann Walton
3817…Anna Aylett
1500…Anna Hardy
1289…Anna Hoefnagels
6576…Anna Pham
1502…Anne Bailliu
7624…Anne Biscope
6578…Anne Bowker
3820…Anne Francis
1504…Anne Houston
3449…Anne Mcnamara
1236…Anne Pearce
3821…Anne Strangelove
3826…Anne-Marie Desormeaux
1505…Anne-Marie Fraser
7625…Annie Corriveau
6583…Annie Oger
1507…Annie Plouffe
695…Ann-Marie Reid
5113…Anthea Garrick Menard
1510…Antoine Guimond
1511…Antonio Zappavigna
6123…Antoun Rahal
5232…Anya Pavlova
6588…April Dickson
158…Arif Aziz
4948…Arleigh Romyn
1515…Arthur King
1516…Arthur Winnik
6589…Ashlee Linton
3833…Ashley Brennan
1517…Ashley Browne
6590…Ashley Butcher
1518…Ashley Mulroney
5233…Ashley Proceviat
34117…Ashley Towns
693…Audrey Taylor
1523…Avdo Nalic
527…Aveta Graham
1524…Aydin Mirzaee
6593…Azhra Mcmahon
1526…Barbara Campbell
7428…Barbara Campbell
3461…Barbara Dundas
5062…Barbara Jovaisas
6034…Barbara Mingie
3839…Barnabas Fung
1529…Barry Le Grys
640…Bart Bakker
159…Ben Howe
406…Ben Lawson
6598…Ben Tobali
6601…Beno T Pag
3846…Benoit Goulet
905…Ben-Zion Caspi
1029…Bernard Charlebois
1540…Bernard St-Laurent
1542…Bernie Car
5242…Bernita Butler
727…Betty Bulman
3847…Betty-Jane Horton
6136…Bev Denison
3851…Bill Horne
908…Bill Mceachern
6604…Bill Salminen
6605…Bill Wilson
3852…Billie Hillis
5247…Blair Malcolm
3515…Blake Davis
161…Blake Poirier
6137…Bob Fraser
3585…Bob Mcculloch
927…Bob Mcgillivray
5248…Bob Moquin
6608…Bob Muise
3856…Bob Stevenson
5250…Bonita Martin
6610…Bonnie Mechefske
3859…Bonnie Nelson
5252…Brad Austin
7429…Brad Lobregt
5253…Bradley Fleming
1559…Brandon King
4976…Brenda Bethune
5258…Brenda Jenkins
1562…Brenda Makowichuk
6612…Brenda Primmer
1563…Brenda Quinlan
5256…Brenda Ryan
6525…Brent Burton
1568…Brent Edwards
1567…Brent Russell
1566…Brent Wakeford
3868…Brian Arscott
1580…Brian Berube
5262…Brian Bowering
3680…Brian Davis
1584…Brian Double
428…Brian Harding
1583…Brian Mcneill
3867…Brian Nolet
100…Brian O'higgins
1571…Brian Radey
1575…Brian Rolfe
3431…Brian Sanford
658…Brian Senecal
1572…Brian Tweedie
3346…Brianna Saunders
1585…Brianne Bota
5266…Brigit Jessup
1586…Brigitte Cossette
8…Brigitte Jackstien
1587…Brigitte Joly
6621…Brigitte Martel
5267…Brittany Gallant
1588…Brittany Hinds
1589…Brittany Leblanc
1590…Britt-Mari Sykes
3872…Brodie Fraser
6622…Bronwyn Burke
620…Bruce Jackson
3874…Bruce Moquin
1596…Bruce Moran
6094…Bruce Muise
1595…Bruce Squires
996…Bryan Morris
1599…Bryan Norrie
1597…Bryan Sirois
6145…Bryan Wright
1056…Byron Holland
7630…C Line Beaudoin
7450…C Line Houle
892…Caitlin O'higgins
6147…Caitlin Viitamaki
165…Caleb Walker
3878…Calvin Mak
3879…Calvin Reid
3573…Cameron Beare
3691…Cameron Fraser
1606…Candice Dandurand
343…Candice Hilder
1607…Cara Thibault
6150…Cari Minogue
1608…Carl Marcotte
3882…Carla Harding
1611…Carmen Vierula
1613…Carol Bennett
6154…Carol Doiron
3887…Carole Barabe
3886…Carole Chenard
1197…Carole Harrison
3888…Carolene Preap
3889…Caroline Glynn
5277…Carolyn Brown
5276…Carolyn Phillips
5278…Carolyn Tapp
3897…Carrie Johnston
6156…Carrie Roussin
6641…Carrie Stewart
3899…Carrie-Ann Pierce
3901…Casey Carswell
3900…Casey Thomas
990…Cassandra Chouinard
5997…Cassandra Lively
6074…Cassie Hodgins
7327…Catherine Beacher
1040…Catherine Caron
3678…Catherine Khordoc
3904…Catherine Lacroix
3906…Catherine Milley
5286…Catherine Nesbitt
903…Catherine Peirce
6645…Catherine St. Louis
5288…Catherine Yarker
1630…Cathlin Antonello
1632…Cathy Blanchard
3911…Cathy Gloade
3627…Cathy Takahashi
3913…Celeste Morley
172…Chad Wilson
5091…Chanel Huard
1224…Chantal Campbell
19…Chantal Evans
1637…Chantal Fallows
6651…Chantal Lacroix
3920…Chantal Lanthier
5294…Chantal Nault
1175…Chantal Pilon
7451…Chantal Proulx
5296…Charbel Choueiri
6653…Charlene Mathias
1644…Charlie Rate
6162…Chelsea Bull
6029…Chelsea Macdonell
3932…Cherinet Seid
3937…Cheryl Bateman
3516…Cheryl Birker
1649…Cheryl Giles
3936…Cheryl Kardish-Levitan
3935…Cheryl Mcgrath
5162…Cheryl Mcintyre
7453…Cheryl Perry
5300…Cheryl Shore
5301…Chiara Andrisani
6023…Chloe Macdonell
3946…Chris Bark
1659…Chris Bartholomew
3947…Chris Best
1664…Chris Bowen
130…Chris Bright
6512…Chris Campbell
1667…Chris Davies
6658…Chris Gardner
5306…Chris Garrioch
6075…Chris Hale
1653…Chris Hayes
1663…Chris Henderson
3944…Chris Hill
6659…Chris Liebenberg
3948…Chris Macdonald
5304…Chris Minogue
871…Chris Moule
906…Chris Nestor
1657…Chris Phelan
3954…Chris Rath
3945…Chris Reid
5074…Chris Renwick
5007…Chris Salter
1660…Chris Sliwka
5302…Chris Spiteri
1658…Chris Steele
6661…Chris Sutherland
6662…Chris Weicker
7454…Chris White
7455…Chris Wojcik
6664…Christene White
1674…Christian Boucher
99…Christian Del Valle
1672…Christian Maillet
6666…Christiane Laperri Re
6667…Christie Swann
6668…Christina Gubbels
6669…Christina Jutzi
1676…Christina Romanin
3964…Christine Atwood
3958…Christine Benne
7457…Christine Fortier
778…Christine Geraghty
1681…Christine Halliburton
3673…Christine Hodge
5320…Christine Leung
5315…Christine Marshall
3962…Christine Mayer
1684…Christine Racicot
3361…Christine Rivas
4961…Christine Robbins
3356…Christine Stilborne
1678…Christine Turmaine
934…Christopher Barber
1697…Christopher Cook
3967…Christopher Elliott
528…Christopher Fennell
1698…Christopher Hassall
1703…Christopher Jones
1700…Christopher Linton
3494…Cindy Maraj
6675…Cindy Mcalpine
1705…Cindy Qu
1709…Cindy Scott
1706…Cindy Warwick
5323…Claire Lehan
1713…Claire Millington
1173…Claire Samson
3503…Claude B Land
6680…Claude Papineau
791…Claudia Rutherford
3977…Clemence Allard
1721…Cliff Martin
1725…Colette Kenney
1724…Colette Nault
3978…Colin Baril
1730…Colin Kiviaho
1729…Colin Langille
1728…Colin Martel
1726…Colin Welburn
3563…Colleen Bigelow
1731…Colleen Crane
5992…Connie Acelvari
5330…Connor Grimes
3985…Conrad Kupniewski
816…Constance Craig
1734…Corey Crosby
1002…Cori Dinovitzer
6686…Corinna Simmons
6687…Cory Martin
1027…Court Curry
1737…Courtney Henderson
6688…Courtney Kalbfleisan
3988…Courtney Watson
1739…Craig Bascombe
1743…Craig Blair
106…Craig Carney
1745…Craig Crant
5004…Craig Mantle
3990…Craig Roberts
3383…Craig Rosario
4918…Craig Williams
1747…Cristina Santostefano
1749…Crystal Gottfried
3993…Currie David
1329…Curtis Mcgrath
1751…Cyndi Kennedy
5336…Cynthia Desnoyers
5337…Cynthia Larue
1758…Dale Pike
3999…Dalelle Mensour
1764…Dan Cowan
1762…Dan Dalby
6563…Dan Mcglinchey
4002…Dan Mclaughlin
4000…Dan Moore
1766…Dan Pihlainen
4001…Dan Rolfe
4003…Dan Seekings
6076…Dan Shea
1358…Dan St-Arnaud
178…Dan Steeves
16292…Dan Ziniuk
4005…Dana Van Gulik
1769…Dani Gaucher
7465…Danica Seguin
5340…Daniel Albahary
1777…Daniel Burke
499…Daniel Charlebois
4008…Daniel Gosselin
3595…Daniel Guerrette
5338…Daniel Leonard
4006…Daniel Minor
352…Daniel Pharand
1783…Daniel Reifler
4007…Daniel Suh
1776…Daniel Vincent
6699…Danielle Cote
3648…Danielle Halloran
5346…Danielle Hoegy
7467…Danielle Simard
1785…Danielle Wehbi
1786…Danny Gagne
1788…Darcia Bunny Kmet
6037…Darlene Hackett
697…Darlene Joyce
6707…Darlene Sabourin
6708…Darrell Williams
6503…Darren Boomer
1792…Darren Uchman
5028…Darryl Bilodeau
181…Daryl Howes
1112…Dave Bergeron
1806…Dave Bossmin
1302…Dave Goods
182…Dave Kary
1801…Dave Langlois
1804…Dave Morin-Pelletier
111…Dave Saville
1800…Dave Silvester
552…Dave Spagnolo
3533…Dave Yarker
1796…Dave Yarwood
1835…David Dawson
6188…David Delaney
1823…David Eggleton
6714…David Gagnon
1152…David Gregory
6716…David Gulas
4032…David Hennessy
1822…David Henry
935…David Jackson
1…David Johnston
4023…David Kirk
1829…David Leech
1816…David Liimatainen
1825…David Macquistan
1819…David Mccaw
5353…David Migicovsky
1826…David Nash
3600…David Perry
1242…David Rain
1831…David Rampton
1821…David Sproule
842…David Thomson
3698…David Tobin
1812…David Tuck
1837…Davina Gordon
4035…Davina Walker-Priebe
6190…Dawn Boudreau
1054…Dawn Montgomery
6723…Dawn Styan
1075…Dean Justus
3692…Deb Hogan
4037…Deb Quayle
4038…Debbie Bloom
6727…Debbie Carrick
5144…Debbie Ling
6729…Debby Duford
7470…Debby Simms
7472…Deborah Chamney
3517…Deborah Newhook
6730…Deborah Potter
1843…Deborah Taymun
5150…Dee Sullivan
5064…Deidre Kelly
6733…Demi Kotsovos
4047…Denis Binette
5365…Denis Niles
1846…Denis Thompson
6193…Denise Deschenes
6194…Denise Gillam-Gledhill
4051…Denise Plaa
3732…Denise Thibault
6734…Denise Walter
801…Dennis Bulman
1850…Dennis Waite
1853…Derek Dobson
1854…Derek Fildebrandt
1855…Derek Gledhill
4054…Derek Hille
5372…Derek Lanouette
184…Derek Mcmaster
1852…Derek Parent
504…Derek Smith
7475…Des Keon
1857…Desmond Gosse
1859…Devin Dreeshen
1858…Devin Harrington
6738…Devon Forde
5011…Diana Harrison
4058…Diana Schembri
5374…Diane Dupuis
6090…Diane Mackinder
4062…Diane St-Laurent
1866…Diane Wilson
7478…Dianne Panarella
649…Dick Gunstone
6746…Dillon Vahey
1868…Dion Edmonds
1870…Dj Roy
1874…Dominique Chiasson
4069…Dominique Keuthen
789…Don Andersen
7479…Don Evoy
1876…Don Moors
6749…Don Orr
5119…Dona Hill
7480…Donald Darrell
5966…Donald Henry
1879…Donald Mcfarling
1877…Donald Taylor
6200…Donald Tupper
1022…Donald Waldock
6201…Donna Dandele-Macnabb
7481…Donna Perry
5382…Doris Leung
5084…Doris Mclean
4077…Dorothy Dalton-Smith
1883…Dorothy Kessler
1014…Doug Eagle
4079…Doug Mirau
4080…Douglas Brecknell
1891…Douglas Carles
669…Douglas Cooper
6755…Douglas Loader
1886…Douglas Macaulay
1890…Douglas Mcginn
1887…Douglas Petryk
1889…Douglas Thomas
6757…Drew Clipperton
1893…Drew Dodington
1894…Drew Mcnair
187…Duaine Simms
5384…Duane Forward
1898…Duncan Bunny Shaw
1895…Duncan Mackintosh
1323…Dung Bui
6038…Dvora Rotenberg
4083…Dwayne Aylward
1901…Dwayne Lemon
1902…Dwight Obst
4084…Dylan Price
1136…Dylan Shields
1906…Ed Clouthier
5386…Edith Bostwick
4088…Edith Greenlee
753…Edith Knight
4087…Edith Tam
1913…Edward Fox
7483…Edward Jun
1914…Edward Livingstone
1244…Edward Vonk
5387…Eileen Vincent
1915…Eira Macdonell
5389…Elaine Petrie
5120…Elaine Yardley
7399…Eleanor Ford
7485…Eleanor Hastings
6763…Eleanore Brickell
4093…Eli Tannis
6764…Elisabeth Baechlin
4096…Elissa Renaud
5393…Elizabeth Burn
4101…Elizabeth Howe
1921…Elizabeth Kerr
4100…Elizabeth Murray
4098…Elizabeth Richards
4097…Elizabeth Rodgers
6766…Elizabeth Rose
3651…Elke Keating
4103…Ellen Bunny Campbell
5083…Ellen Carter
1923…Ellen Curtis
3601…Ellen Lamarre
6514…Ellen Nikonorova
5097…Ellen O'halloran
90…Elyse Pratt-Johnson
1925…Elysia Van Zeyl
3311…Emilee Lloyd-Krusky
6768…Emilie Lavigne
4104…Emilie Porlier
1926…Emilie Tougas
1932…Emily Burton
1928…Emily Gildner
3726…Emily Joyce
6769…Emily Larocque
1930…Emily Sharples
4107…Emma Doucet
4108…Emmanuelle Deaton
6770…Enjoli Stevens
6771…Eric Arnold
188…Eric Arseneault
5399…Eric Belchamber
339…Eric Bourlier
4110…Eric Bradbury
3469…Eric Burpee
123…Eric Charland
7423…Eric Sewell
680…Eric Weaver
4921…Erik Husband
3727…Erik Laflamme
6774…Erin Beasley
6213…Erin Beck
6775…Erin Collins
1955…Erin Enros
4122…Erin Ferraris
4119…Erin Holtby
6214…Erin Langton
5409…Erin Mutterback
1958…Etienne Goudreau
4124…Eva Burnett
6777…Evamarie Weicker
6778…Evan Clarke
3373…Evan May
5412…Evelyn Wheeler
1961…Faye Goldman
4126…Fern Lima
189…Fiona Johnston
4127…Flavia Pontes Nascimento
1969…Frances Enright
6783…Frances Muldoon
3384…Frances Ryan
3730…Francesca Craig
593…Francesca Macdonald
1970…Francesca Tauvette
6050…Francine Gaulin
5415…Francine Vachon
1972…Francis Ouimet
6784…Francisco Fernandes De Sousa
965…Francisco Salazar
1973…Franco Pasqualini
660…Francois Dumaine
1979…Francois Lavertu
1099…Frank D'angelo
4138…Frank Gelinas
393…Frank Maloney
4141…Frank Rayal
1985…Franz Ferraris
191…Franz Kirk
1984…Franz Kropp
4142…Fraser Cole
1987…Fraser Pearce
1988…Fred Pelletier
1989…Fred Smith
5420…Frederic Levesque
394…Frederic-Francois Desmarais
1996…Fuen Leal-Santiago
6789…Gabby Moser
6790…Gabe Batstone
763…Gabriela Balajova
6793…Gabrielle Nadeau
4143…Gaby Moreau
6092…Gail Baker-Gregory
6223…Garrett Maurstad
894…Gary Mckenna
84…Gary Wilkes
2004…Gaspare Mangiaracina
2005…Gavin Hunt
6225…Gavin Kelly
4146…Gavin Lemoine
194…Geb Marett
2006…Geneva Collier
2010…Genevieve Ashton
2008…Genevieve Butler
3420…Genevieve Le Jeune
4148…Genevieve Lemieux
5425…Genevieve Paris
2007…Genevieve Pineau
4150…Genevieve Tanguay
792…Gennifer Stainforth
582…Geoff Cooper
636…Geoff Dunkley
3717…Geoff Dunn
4151…Geoff Mroz
2013…Geoff Roth
1287…Geoffrey Dudding
7400…Geoffrey Ford
2017…George Condrut
1003…George Ferrier
975…George Garrard
6511…George Hajecek
5427…George Mcleod
2015…George Wehbi
6798…Georges Rousselle
5428…Georgette Demers
196…Gerald Aubry
4154…Gerry Clarke
2020…Gerry Nigra
6799…Gil Brunette
6226…Gilbert Lepine
1246…Gilbert Nkusi
2028…Gilles Beauparlant
2024…Gilles Lafleur
2030…Gilles Menard
860…Gillian Andersen
2034…Gillian Reid-Schachter
5124…Gillianne Beaulieu
3520…Gina Charos
2035…Gino Rinaldi
6229…Girard A-C
2037…Giuseppe Agnello
1059…Glen Gobel
2039…Glen Trevisani
2042…Glenn Boustead
16259…Glenn Cheney
6802…Glenn Cowan
5430…Glenn Franklin
2041…Glenn Poirier
719…Gloria Baeza
5431…Gloria Teague
674…Gord Baldwin
960…Gord Coulson
2043…Gordon Mcgillivray
2044…Grace Harju
1101…Grace Howland
2046…Graeme Hamilton
2045…Graeme Wardlaw
2051…Graham Acreman
2047…Graham Schuler
2052…Grant Macleod
5435…Greg Brockmann
4167…Greg Haspect
2056…Greg Hussack
6231…Greg Klump
2054…Greg Macdougall
2059…Greg Mcneill
2053…Greg Penner
6806…Greg Zinck
3636…Gregg Reddin
2060…Gregory De Knoop
2063…Guillaume Croisetiere
2062…Guillaume Proulx
2071…Guy Boyd
1017…Guy Pelletier
5437…Guy Warwick
4169…Guylain Thorne
2074…Gyro Inman
2075…Hai Nguyen
342…Harold Boudreau
909…Harold Geller
6812…Harry Fischer
7490…Hazel Ullyatt
1089…Hazen Harty
2081…Heather Bigelow
4170…Heather Carriere
4173…Heather Chew
4172…Heather Cudmore
6235…Heather D Wilson
995…Heather Dye
7491…Heather Gerrior
3375…Heather Mccready
6816…Heather Nixon
3500…Heather Paulusse
1102…Heather Watts
6817…Helen Francis
2084…Helen Wright
6818…Helene Boucher
7386…Helene Leduc
5075…Henri St-Martin
4953…Hidetaka Nishimura
3369…Hieu Nguyen
6819…Hilary Chaiton
2092…Hilary Mellor
6820…Hillary Rose
737…Hollie Anderson
3558…Holly Johnson
4180…Holly Skelton
4181…Holly Stoss
506…Howard Smith
2096…Hugo Whitfield
7493…Iaian Docherty
590…Iain Macdonald
9580…Ian Anderson
2108…Ian Bunny Joiner
6821…Ian Crawford
3699…Ian Graham
5447…Ian Iacovitti
554…Ian Krepps
1311…Ian Malcolm
2099…Ian Mcfarland
2106…Ian Pace
2104…Ian Pickard
500…Ian Roney
2101…Ian Shea
5448…Ian Siegert
2102…Ian White
1248…Ian-Guy Dupuis
6238…Ingrid Berljawsky
6824…Ingrid Neufeld
2109…Ione Jayawardena
1103…Ir Ne Dionne
597…Irvin Hill
5451…Iryna Abramova
2111…Iryna Karpova
2112…Isaac Wesley
6240…Isabelle Beach
5453…Isabelle Cantin
5454…Isabelle Carriere
4190…Isabelle Gosselin
4188…Isabelle Saint-Laurent
5455…Isagani Valencia
2116…Ivan Stefanov
4194…J Carson
5457…J Lahaie
1070…Jack Gilmer
5458…Jack Murta
3459…Jacki Sachrajda
5459…Jaclyn O'Brien
2119…Jacques Olivier
4198…Jaffer Majeed
2132…James Beaupre
2138…James Bunny Sauve
3629…James Campbell
2125…James Derosenroll
2131…James Harvey
2129…James Mcnamee
2130…James Price
6838…James Vannier
710…Jamie Bell
1125…Jamie Hurst
4205…Jamie Mccarthy
7499…Jan Riopelle
2146…Jana Veltheim
2150…Jane Anne Brown
1316…Jane Gibson
2147…Jane Hazel
2148…Jane Latham
5467…Jane Marie Obst
4207…Jane Morris
3531…Jane Rooney
6024…Jane Schofield
1344…Jane Spiteri
6839…Janelle Denton
3675…Janet Cooper
2154…Janet Curran
4981…Janet Hardcastle
4210…Janet Hart
3451…Janet Nuutilainen
542…Janet Perkins
6841…Janet Sol
4213…Janice Chan
6843…Janice Mccoy
2160…Janick Aquilina
113…Jared Broughton
2164…Jasmine Clancy
4224…Jason Adair
4219…Jason Arbuthnot
2167…Jason Baertschi
4221…Jason Bond
1110…Jason Chouinard
2173…Jason Downey
2179…Jason Gagnon
2174…Jason Haug
207…Jason Mah
2180…Jason Meahan
2171…Jason Moodie
2166…Jason Pantalone
6846…Jason Raymond
2168…Jason Riordon
3353…Jason Saunders
1113…Jason Stewart
781…Jason Verner
4222…Jason Walker
1391…Jaswant Singh
2181…Jay Lymer
1360…Jayme Pettit
2186…Jean Bouffard
2187…Jean Lacroix
2185…Jean Lapointe
4228…Jean Mcdonell
4229…Jean Wright
2189…Jean-Christophe Bund
2197…Jean-Francois Brideau
6851…Jean-Guy Perron
4234…Jean-Marc Gionet
2201…Jeanne Millons
4235…Jeanne Percival
389…Jeanne Robitaille
1159…Jeannie Daly
2202…Jeannine Bailliu
80…Jean-Philippe Dion
1249…Jean-Pierre Ch Nier
4236…Jean-Pierre Cote
2206…Jean-Pierre Morin
8019…Jean-Pierre Simard
3534…Jeff Bardell
2217…Jeff Frobel
5480…Jeff Hawn
5481…Jeff Hunt
214…Jeff Mccue
2208…Jeff Moore
6855…Jeff Ross
213…Jeff Smart
4238…Jeff Smart
4241…Jeff Stoss
217…Jeffery Vanderploeg
4243…Jeffrey English
4244…Jeffrey Lafontaine
2218…Jeffrey Macdonald
218…Jeffrey Smith
818…Jenna Blois
5484…Jenna Jessup
6856…Jenna Lacharity
606…Jenna Ladd
2231…Jennifer Adams
4258…Jennifer Balao
3712…Jennifer Balcom
6859…Jennifer Bergeron
711…Jennifer Beyak
2220…Jennifer Biondi
4964…Jennifer Blattman
1076…Jennifer Brenning
6001…Jennifer Bucknall
2222…Jennifer Clinton
4264…Jennifer Degouffe
6861…Jennifer Dumoulin
3616…Jennifer Fergusson
6862…Jennifer Harnden
2223…Jennifer Hartley
5046…Jennifer Hood
3718…Jennifer Leblanc
5493…Jennifer Lim
4265…Jennifer Mccabe
4263…Jennifer Moher
1349…Jennifer Moores
2228…Jennifer Morris
2229…Jennifer Morrison
6863…Jennifer Morse
4253…Jennifer Murphy
3539…Jennifer Nutt
4260…Jennifer Paul
2226…Jennifer Payne
5103…Jennifer Shortall
5485…Jennifer Stadler
2225…Jennifer Taillefer
6868…Jennifer Tighe
4262…Jennifer Tindale
4256…Jennifer Wenzel
16294…Jenny Koumoutsidis
4268…Jenny Lewis
219…Jeremy Irving
6872…Jeremy Kerr
2236…Jeremy Mansfield
2237…Jeremy Mcgee
5497…Jess Keller
4271…Jesse Blondin
4272…Jesse Craig
3559…Jessica Brown
2244…Jessica Devries
2250…Jessica Eamer
1252…Jessica Kight
5498…Jessica Lanouette
2243…Jessica Moss
2249…Jessica O'gorman
4275…Jessica Pancoe
6874…Jessica Roche
4273…Jessica Wilson
690…Jesula Drouillard
4278…Jez Fletcher
6877…Jf Fauteux
6878…Jian Wu
1026…Jill Ainsworth
5500…Jill Frook
4280…Jill Perry
4282…Jill Pomeroy
220…Jill Stapleton
4281…Jill Thompson
2253…Jill Turner
828…Jillian Osborne
120…Jim Carter
4287…Jim Hogan
2254…Jim Lothrop
6267…Jim Mcinnes
4285…Jim Steel
7643…Jimmy Cox
4304…Jo Lle Sabourin
4292…Joan Bard Miller
7380…Joan Carpini
5505…Joan Kam Cheong
6269…Joan Norgren
1181…Joan Tourangeau
6043…Jo-Ann Brault
6887…Joann Garbig
831…Jo-Anne Belliveau
6890…Joanne Bradley
5510…Jo-Anne Guimond
6271…Joanne Johnson
4298…Joanne Merrett
1155…Joanne Ritchie
2257…Joanne Schmid
3555…Jocelyn Kearney
71…Jodi Wendland
6895…Jodi Wilson
6896…Jody Bergen
2261…Jody Delwo
1132…Joe Gunn
2262…Joe Paraskevas
6898…Joel Allaert
2264…Joel Edwards
2265…Joel Elliott
2270…Joel Le Floch
6273…Joel Neuheimer
6900…Joel Pennycook
2267…Joel Weaver
668…Joel Westheimer
98…Joey Rogowy
6902…Johanne Dery
898…John Beaudoin
2281…John Bowen
3657…John Brady
2274…John Carson
2285…John Downey
2293…John Gillissie
2276…John Hamilton
5522…John Hawkins
3658…John Horvath
6280…John Leblanc
989…John Ledo
2273…John Lymer
2284…John Meikle
6904…John Mitchell
3709…John Oliver
4318…John Patrick Sloan
5519…John Pemberton
6905…John Rajman
2287…John Sobey
5520…John Sowiak
5518…John Swift
4312…John Sylvestre
222…John Timmermans
618…Johnathan Macdonald
3364…Jolene Savoie
4915…Jon Mcdougall
316…Jon Neill
2305…Jonathan Carreiro
2299…Jonathan Cox
4321…Jonathan Dawe
862…Jonathan Godin
226…Jonathan Moher
2298…Jonathan Murphy
4319…Jonathan Noynay
5024…Joni Ogawa
4325…Jonny Sullivan
2306…Jon-Rhys Evenchick
2307…Jordan Freed
6907…Jordan Mcleod
5524…Jordan Menzies
5527…Josee Boudreault
7510…Josee Bradley
628…Josee Picard
810…Josee Surprenant
2313…Joseph Kozar
2315…Joseph Smith
567…Josette Day
5964…Josh Larocque
6283…Josh Pringle
4330…Joshua Burrill
16271…Joshua Karanja
7511…Josip Basar
4332…Joy Halverson
2323…Joy Kim
390…Judah Leung
4937…Judy Patterson
7393…Judy Taylor
607…Julia Barss
2327…Julia Bernier
2330…Julia Bunny Fournier
6288…Julia Gardiner
5047…Juliann Castell
1198…Julie Burke
4341…Julie Croteau
2335…Julie Dale
3609…Julie Gourlay
5544…Julie Greenspoon
4344…Julie Laflamme
7392…Julie Lafleche
6923…Julie Laplante
3418…Julie Lefebvre
2331…Julie Murdock
2336…Julie Pickering
2333…Julie Rollwagen
1336…Julien Beauchamp
4346…Julien Bourgeois
7514…June Fawaz
602…Justin Ferns
964…Justin Laroche
6930…Kaari Hukkala
5548…Kaelen Bray
5549…Kaila Mctavish
4982…Kailena Van De Nes
2341…Kailey Mclachlan
5550…Kait Reeves
534…Kaitlin O'reilly
4348…Kammal Tannis
2345…Kara Meldrum
2344…Kara Mitchell
227…Karen Atkinson
5556…Karen Berrigan
6932…Karen Foss
2350…Karen Jardine
3697…Karen Jeffery
5558…Karen Ling
4945…Karen Marshall
5557…Karen Meades
4352…Karen Philpott
807…Karen Sauve
2347…Karen Streek
6938…Karen Timm
6939…Karen Welch
1220…Karine Circe
4362…Karl Blume
5562…Karl St-Hilaire
1182…Karyn Curtis
700…Kate Borowec
4365…Kate Corsten
4364…Kate Davis
5069…Kate Dickson
5026…Kate Lewis
2357…Kate Spellen
1303…Kate Swetnam
6058…Kate Thompson
4366…Katharine Chamberlain
822…Katharine Mullock
2360…Katherine Halhed
2361…Katherine Heath-Eves
6946…Katherine Liston
6947…Katherine Macdonald
5567…Katherine Venance
2366…Kathleen Beamish
2365…Kathleen Bright
2368…Kathleen Carter
2369…Kathleen Denny
2370…Kathleen Foran
2363…Kathleen Hart
5570…Kathleen Heap
7645…Kathleen Holloway Jun
5569…Kathleen Satterthwaite
6950…Kathlene Allen
3662…Kathryn Aubrey-Horvath
6951…Kathryn Burbridge
4368…Kathryn Galvin
5095…Kathy Lewis
6955…Kathy Norris
802…Kathy O'brien
4371…Kathy Suh
4372…Katie Mailhot
4374…Katie Stewart
6958…Katie Tottenham
1194…Katrina Isacsson
3529…Katy Harrison
3297…Kaveh Rikhtegar
6301…Kayla Gregg
6302…Kayt Render
91…Kazutoshi Nishizawa
2374…Keane Grimsrud
6960…Keiko Umemoto
5574…Keith Burnage
6963…Keith Mulligan
2376…Keith Pomakis
1291…Keith Savage
2380…Kel Doig
4379…Kelley Blanchette
6966…Kelly Boyko
6967…Kelly Cooper
2381…Kelly Debruyn
4385…Kelly Gray
4388…Kelly Hewitt
2384…Kelly Mckean
4381…Kelly Roberts
4386…Kelly Tchorewski
4382…Kelly Watters
2382…Kelly Whitty
5581…Kelsey Clark
6308…Kelvin Chan
2387…Ken Backer
6526…Ken Brough
2388…Ken Fong
671…Ken Gibson
229…Ken Grant
4392…Ken Macinnes
1009…Ken Mcnair
6309…Kendall Miller
5584…Kenneth Buajitti
6969…Kent Daboll
3505…Kerry Nolan
2407…Kevin Briggs
911…Kevin Dulude
6975…Kevin Germundson
2401…Kevin Huber
2410…Kevin Mercer
575…Kevin O'brien
2398…Kevin Semeniuk
118…Kevin Wickens
7519…Kezia Martin
2412…Khanh Huynh
6981…Khorina Ou
6982…Khorithy Ou
2413…Kia Goutte
2414…Kien Ly
2417…Kim Baars
6983…Kim Benjamin
5589…Kim Leach
1337…Kim Moir
2418…Kim St-Denis
6051…Kim White
6010…Kim Wilson
5164…Kimberly Rennie
7648…Kirstin Doull
4410…Kitdapawn E
750…Kiza Francis
3452…Kp Mcnamara
2424…Kris Bulmer
2425…Krishna Sharma
2429…Krista Campbell
2426…Krista Gifford
730…Krista Lewis
684…Krista Macdonald
2433…Kristen Beausoleil
4415…Kristen Cairncross
6990…Kristiana Stevens
95…Kristin Le Saux-Farmer
6991…Kristin Macrae
4418…Kristina Beauchesne
4983…Kristina Dyck
4999…Kristine Joan Proudfoot
6315…Kristine Lee
3354…Kristine Simpson
2436…Kristy Belanger
4420…Krystal Hess
4421…Krystel Carrier-Sabourin
2437…Kumar Saha
2438…Kyle Biggar
2439…Kyle Gibbens
6995…Kyle Villenuve
6996…Kym Martin
4423…Kym Shouldice
6997…Kymberlee Lightowlers
4424…L. Pelly
3445…Laen Hanson
5603…Lam Pham
7521…Lamar Mason
2442…Lana Hochman
1298…Larry Chamney
2446…Laura Bayne
6318…Laura Carlone
3436…Laura Cluney
7005…Laura Conway
5082…Laura Forbes
6321…Laura Gover
5606…Laura Griffin
6530…Laura Grohn
5609…Laura Jane Johnson
6320…Laura May
5014…Laura Nichols
5610…Laureen Robinson-Skilliter
2447…Lauren Eyre
3719…Lauren Gamble
5433…Lauren Gouchie
6324…Lauren Kappius
7010…Laurence Ahoussou
7011…Laurent Dutrisac
608…Laurent Potiez
1158…Laurent Roy
5977…Laurie Bouolet
859…Laurie Cairns
7…Laurie Gorman
2448…Laurie Hardage
4431…Laurie Macleod-Kyd
5611…Laurie Maybury
5612…Laurie Maynard
2449…Laurie Meaney-Tobin
4429…Laurie Shusterman
589…Lawrence Wong
7013…Leah Andrews
717…Leah Carson
5615…Leah Syrie
5971…Lee Mccambley
5616…Lee Trainer
7015…Lee Wyndham
7017…Leigh Ann Butler
745…Leigh Howe
7016…Leigh Perreault
344…Leila Ahad
738…Lena Maione
5169…Lenore Macartney
7019…Leo Kadota
2455…Leo Murphy
4437…Leon Sutherland
484…Leona Crabb
1218…Les Woolsey
5618…Lesley Grignon
3360…Lesley Mackay
2456…Leslie Anne Bailliu
4440…Leslie Ashton
7022…Leslie Dauncey
766…Leslie Robertson
994…Lester Mundt
4441…Lexy Scott
3296…Leyla Di Cori
7024…Lia Pirili
2457…Liam Cleary
1346…Liam Kennedy
954…Lidnina Rodriguez
2458…Liisa Vexler
6068…Lillian Serrouya Thibault
4442…Lily Lemay
6501…Lina Seto
5620…Linda Descarie
1169…Linda Doyle
4450…Linda Ferguson
4446…Linda Hamelin
2460…Linda Lewis
7524…Linda Yusak
1332…Lindsay Grace
6332…Lindsay Gracey
5622…Lindsay Harrison
2464…Lindsay Walker
848…Lindsey Gresham
7526…Line Gosselin
2467…Line Robitaille
3303…Linsey Hollett
72…Lisa Balerna
6334…Lisa Bambrick
7030…Lisa Butler
4456…Lisa Dalla Rosa
7031…Lisa Duffett
795…Lisa Gibson
5625…Lisa Gorman
3547…Lisa Grison
3396…Lisa Hansen
7035…Lisa Julian
4457…Lisa Kawaguchi
4453…Lisa Murphy
2470…Lisa Phelan
5629…Lisa Pougnet
4452…Lisa Setlakwe
2474…Lisa-Marie Inman
7037…Lise Arseneau
3581…Lise Perrier
4459…Lissa Seymour
630…Lori Camilucci
5634…Lori Peckham
5633…Lori Swift
7528…Lorna Duguay
2481…Lorne Murdock
507…Lorne Schmidt
7045…Lorraine England
7530…Lou Descarie
2484…Louis Christophe Laurence
4465…Louis Jordon
232…Louis Tay
656…Louise Gresham
5976…Louise Morin
5640…Louise Rachlis
430…Luc Bentolila
638…Lucas Smith
3397…Luce Blouin
6344…Lucie Berthiaume
5643…Lucie Labelle
2488…Lucie Roberge
755…Lucie Villeneuve
997…Lucien Cattrysse
2489…Lucinda Jagger
7049…Lucy Macdonald
2494…Luvy Gonzalez
2495…Lydia Butler
7051…Lynda Cronin
7533…Lynda Weaver
2500…Lyndsey Hill
2502…Lynette Martin
3664…Lynn Diggins
3587…Lynn Marchildon
2504…Lynn Mclewin
5087…Lynn Nightingale
1086…Lynne Russell
2505…Lynne Smart
6346…Lyse Langevin
Information From:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/East_Village,_Manhattan
East Village, Manhattan
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East Village, Manhattan
New York City Neighborhood
Location in Lower Manhattan
Named: 1960s[1]
Streets: 2nd Avenue, 1st Avenue, Avenue A, The Bowery, St. Mark's Place
Subway: F, V, 6 and L
Zip code: 10009, 10003 and 10002
Government
Federal: Congressional Districts 8, 12 and 14
State: New York State Assembly Districts 64, 66 and 74, New York State Senate Districts 25 and 29
City: New York City Council District 2
Local Manhattan Community Board 3
Neighborhood map
The East Village is a neighborhood in the borough of Manhattan in New York City. It lies east of Greenwich Village, south of Gramercy and Stuyvesant Town, and north of the Lower East Side. Within the East Village there are several smaller neighborhoods, including Alphabet City and The Bowery.
The neighborhood was once considered part of the Lower East Side, but in the 1960s it began to develop its own culture and became known as the East Village. Scores of artists and hippies began to move into the area, attracted by the base of Beatniks that had lived there since the 1950s. It has been the site of counterculture, protests and riots. The neighborhood is known as the birthplace and historical home of many artistic movements, including punk rock[2] and the Nuyorican literary movement.[3]
It is still known for a diverse community, vibrant nightlife and artistic sensibility, although in recent decades gentrification has changed the character of the neighborhood
History
Tompkins Square Park is the recreational and geographic heart of the East Village. It has historically been a part of counterculture, protest and riots.
New York City's Fourth of July fireworks over the neighborhood. The East Village's East River Park is a popular viewing destination.[edit] Formation of the neighborhood
Today's East Village was originally a farm owned by Dutch Governor Wouter van Twiller. Petrus Stuyvesant received the deed to this farm in 1651, and his family held on to the land for over seven generations, until a descendant began selling off parcels of the property in the early 1800s. Wealthy townhouses dotted the dirt roads for a few decades until the great Irish and German immigration of the 1840s and 1850s.
Speculative land owners began building multi unit dwellings on lots meant for single family homes, and began renting out rooms and apartments to the growing working class. The "East Village" was formerly known as Klein Deutschland ("Little Germany, Manhattan"); however, Little Germany dissolved after the SS General Slocum burned into the water in New York's East River on June 15, 1904. From the years roughly between the 1850s and the first decade of the 20th century, the "East Village" hosted the largest urban populations of Germans outside of Vienna and Berlin. It was America's first foreign language neighborhood; hundreds of political, social, sports and recreational clubs were set up during this period, some of these buildings still exist.
What is now the East Village once ended at the East River where Avenue C is now located. A large portion of the neighborhood was formed by landfill, including World War II debris and rubble from London, which was shipped across the Atlantic to provide foundation for the Franklin D. Roosevelt Drive.[5]
[edit] The 'East Village' separates from the Lower East Side
Definitions vary, but the boundaries are roughly defined as east of Broadway and the Bowery from 14th Street down to Houston Street.[1]
Looking south from 6th Street down Second Avenue, one of the main thoroughfares through the East Village.Until the mid-1960s, this area was simply the northern part of the Lower East Side, with a similar culture of immigrant, working class life. In the 1950s the migration of Beatniks into the neighborhood later attracted hippies, musicians and artists well into 1960s.[1] The area was dubbed the "East Village", to dissociate it from the image of slums evoked by the Lower East Side. According to the New York Times, a 1964 guide called, "Earl Wilson's New York," wrote that "artists, poets and promoters of coffeehouses from Greenwich Village are trying to remelt the neighborhood under the high-sounding name of 'East Village.'"[1]
Newcomers and real estate brokers popularized the East Village name, and the term was adopted by the popular media by the mid-1960s.[6][7] In 1966 a psychedelic weekly newspaper, The East Village Other, appeared and The New York Times declared that the neighborhood "had come to be known" as the East Village in the June 5, 1967 edition.[1]
[edit] The music scene develops
In 1966 Andy Warhol promoted a series of shows, entitled The Exploding Plastic Inevitable, and featuring the music of the Velvet Underground, in a Polish ballroom on St Marks Place. On June 27, 1967, the Electric Circus opened in the same space with a benefit for the Children's Recreation Foundation (Chairman: Bobby Kennedy). The Grateful Dead, The Chambers Brothers, Sly & the Family Stone, the Allman Brothers were among the many rock bands that performed there before it closed in 1971.
Punk rock icon and writer Richard Hell still lives in the same apartment in Alphabet City that he has had since the 1970s.On March 8, 1968 Bill Graham opened the Fillmore East in a Yiddish Theatre on 2nd Avenue. The venue quickly became known as "The Church of Rock and Roll," with two-show concerts several nights a week. While booking many of the same bands that had played the Electric Circus, Graham particularly used the venue – and its West Coast counterpart, to establish new British bands like The Who, Pink Floyd, The Jimi Hendrix Experience, Cream, and Led Zeppelin. It, too, closed in 1971.
CBGB, the nightclub considered by some to be the birthplace of punk music, was located in the neighborhood, as was the early punk standby A7. No Wave and New York hardcore also emerged in the area’s clubs. Among the many important bands and singers who got their start at these clubs and other venues in downtown Manhattan were: Patti Smith, Arto Lindsay, the Ramones, Blondie, Madonna, Talking Heads, the Plasmatics, Glenn Danzig, Sonic Youth, the Beastie Boys, Anthrax, and The Strokes. From 1983–1993, much of the more radical audio work was preserved as part of the Tellus Audio Cassette Magazine recording project, which was based in the nearby Lower East Side.
[edit] Rise in artistic prominence
Allen Ginsberg, a long-time resident, with poet Peter Orlovsky.Over the last 100 years, the East Village/Lower East Side neighborhood has been considered one of the strongest contributors to American arts and culture in New York.[8] During the great wave of immigration (Germans, Ukrainians, Polish) in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, countless families found their new homes in this area.
The East Village has been the birthplace of cultural icons and movements from the American gangster to the Warhol Superstars, folk music to punk rock, anti-folk to hip-hop, advanced education to organized activism, experimental theater to the Beat Generation and the community of experimental musicians, composers and improvisers now loosely known as the Downtown Scene.
Club 57, on St. Mark's Place, was an important incubator for performance art and visual art in the late 1970s and early 1980s; followed by Now Gallery, 8BC and ABC No Rio.
During the 1980s the East Village art gallery scene helped to galvanize a new post-modern art in America; showing such artists as Kiki Smith, Peter Halley, Keith Haring, Stephen Lack, Greer Lankton, Joseph Nechvatal, Nan Goldin, Jean-Michel Basquiat, David Wojnarowicz, Rick Prol, and Jeff Koons.[9]
[edit] The musical 'Rent'
The East Village is the setting for Jonathan Larson's musical Rent; set in the early 1990s, the story chronicles a group of friends over a year in their struggles against poverty, drug abuse and AIDS.
The musical Rent chronicled a period in the neighborhood's history that is bygone. It opened at the New York Theater Workshop in February 1996.[10] It described a New York City devastated by the AIDS epidemic, drugs and high crime, and followed several characters in the backdrop of their effort to make livings as artists.[11]
[edit] Decline of the art scene
The "Downtown Legends" wall at Mo Pitkins House of Satisfaction featured artists known in the East Village performance scene. A few featured in this photo include the Reverend Jen, Nick Zedd, Allen Ginsberg, Reverend Billy and Murray Hill (pictured).The East Village's performance and art scene has declined since its hey-day of the 1970s and 1980s.[12] One club that had opened to try to resurrect the neighborhood's past artistic prominence was Mo Pitkins' House of Satisfaction, part-owned by Jimmy Fallon of Saturday Night Live. It closed its doors in 2007, and was seen by many as another sign of the continued decline of the East Village performance and art scene, which has mostly moved to Williamsburg, Brooklyn.[13] Rapture Cafe also shut down in April 2008, and the neighborhood lost an important performance space and gathering ground for the gay community. There are still some performance spaces, such as Sidewalk Cafe on Avenue A, where downtown acts find space to exhibit their talent, and the poetry clubs.[14]
Punk scene icons stayed in the neighborhood as it changed. Richard Hell lives in the same apartment he has lived in since the 1970s, and Handsome Dick Manitoba of The Dictators owns and reigns over Manitoba's bar on Avenue B.
[edit] Internal neighborhoods
The East Village contains several hamlets of vibrant communities within itself.
[edit] Alphabet City
Main article: Alphabet City, Manhattan
The Nuyorican Poets Cafe has been located off Avenue C and East 3rd Street since its founding in 1973.Alphabet City comprises nearly two-thirds of the East Village. It also once was the archetype of a dangerous New York City neighborhood. Its turn-around was cause for The New York Times to observe in 2005 that Alphabet City went "from a drug-infested no man's land to the epicenter of downtown cool."[15] Its name comes from Avenues A, B, C, and D, the only avenues in Manhattan to have single-letter names. It is bordered by Houston Street to the south and 14th Street to the north where Avenue C ends. Some famous landmarks include Tompkins Square Park, the Nuyorican Poets Cafe and the Stuyvesant Town private residential community.
[edit] Loisaida
Main article: Loisaida
A Loisaida street fair in the Summer of 2008.Loisaida is a term derived from the Latino (and especially Nuyorican) pronunciation of "Lower East Side", a neighborhood in Manhattan, New York City. The term was originally coined by poet/activist, Bittman "Bimbo" Rivas in his 1974 poem "Loisaida". Loisaida Avenue is now an alternative name for Avenue C in the Alphabet City neighborhood of New York City, whose population has largely been Hispanic (mainly Nuyorican) since the late 1960s.
[edit] St. Mark's Place
Main article: St. Mark's Place
Artist Jim Power, known as the "Mosaic Man" for his public art tiling the neighborhood[16], at the 2009 St. Mark's Place Block Party.Eighth Street becomes St. Mark's place east of Third Avenue. It once had the cachet of Sutton Place, known as a secluded rich enclave in Manhattan, but which by the 1850s had become a place for boarding houses and a German immigrant community.[17] It is named after St Mark's Church in-the-Bowery, which was built on Stuyvesant Street but is now on 10th Street. St. Mark's Place once began at the intersection of the Bowery and Stuyvesant Street, but today the street runs from Third Avenue to Avenue A. Japanese street culture and a Japanese expatriate scene forms in the noodle shops and bars that line St. Mark's Place, also home to an aged punk culture and CBGB's new store. It is home to one of the only Automats in New York City (it has since closed).[18]
St. Mark's is along the “Mosaic Trail”, a trail of 80 mosaic-encrusted lampposts that runs from Broadway down Eighth Street to Avenue A, to Fourth Street and then back to Eighth Street. The project was undertaken by East Village public artist Jim Power, known as the "Mosaic Man".[16]
[edit] The Bowery
Main article: The Bowery
Once synonymous with 'Bowery Bums', the avenue has become a magnet for luxury condominiums as the neighborhood's rapid gentrification continues.The Bowery, former home to the punk-rock nightclub CBGB, was once known for its many homeless shelters, drug rehabilitation centers and bars. The phrase "On The Bowery", which has since fallen into disuse, was a generic way to say one was down-and-out.[19]
The Bow’ry, The Bow’ry!
They say such things,
and they do strange things
on the Bow’ry —From the musical A Trip to Chinatown, 1891
Today, the Bowery has become a boulevard of new luxury condominiums. It also is home to the Amato Opera and the Bowery Poetry Club, contributing to the neighborhood's reputation as a place for artistic pursuit. Artists Amiri Baraka and Taylor Mead hold regular readings and performances in the space.
The redevelopment of the avenue from flophouses to luxury condominiums has met with resistance from long-term residents, who agree the neighborhood has improved, but that its unique, gritty character is also disappearing.[20]
[edit] Parks and green space
[edit] Tompkins Square Park
Main article: Tompkins Square Park
The Tompkins Square dog run was the first in New York City, and is a social scene unto itself.[5]Tompkins Square Park is a 10.5 acre (42,000 m²) public park in the Alphabet City section of the East Village neighborhood in the borough of Manhattan in New York City. It is square in shape, and is bounded on the north by East 10th Street, on the east by Avenue B, on the south by East 7th Street, and on the west by Avenue A. St. Marks Place abuts the park to the west.
[edit] Tompkins Square Park Police Riot
Main article: Tompkins Square Park Police Riot (1988)
The Tompkins Square Park Police Riot was a defining moment for the neighborhood. In the late hours of August 6 into the morning hours of August 7, 1988 a riot broke out in Alphabet City's Tompkins Square Park. Groups of "drug pushers, homeless people and young people known as 'skinheads'" had largely taken over the East Village park, but the neighborhood was divided about what, if anything, should be done about it.[21] The local governing body, Manhattan Community Board 3, adopted a 1 am curfew for the previously 24-hour park, in an attempt to bring it under control.[22] On July 31, a rally against the curfew resulted in several clashes between protesters and police.[23]
[edit] East River Park
Main article: East River Park
East River Park below the Williamsburg Bridge.The park is 57 acres (230,000 m2) that runs along the Franklin D. Roosevelt Drive from Montgomery Street to East 12th Street.[24] It was designed in the 1930s by Robert Moses, who wanted to ensure there was parkland on the Lower East Side.[24]
[edit] Community gardens
There are reportedly over 640 community gardens in New York City—gardens run by local collectives within the neighborhood who are responsible for the gardens' upkeep—and an estimated 10 percent of those are located on the Lower East Side and East Village alone.[25]
[edit] Tower of Toys on Avenue B
The Avenue B and 6th Street Community Garden is one of the neighborhood's more notable for a now removed outdoor sculpture, the Tower of Toys, designed by artist and long-time garden gate-keeper, Eddie Boros. Boros died April 27, 2007.[26] The Tower was controversial in the neighborhood; some viewed it as a masterpiece, others as an eyesore.[26][27] The tower appeared in the opening credits for the television show NYPD Blue and also appears in the musical Rent.[26] In May 2008, it was dismantled. According to NYC Parks Commissioner Adrian Benepe, the tower was rotting in sections that made it a safety hazard.[28] Its removal was seen as another symbol of the fading past of the neighborhood.[28]
[edit] Toyota Children’s Learning Garden
Located at 603 East 11th Street, the Toyota Children's Learning Garden is not technically a community garden, but it also fails to fit in the park category. Designed by landscape architect Michael Van Valkenburgh, the garden opened in May 2008 as part of the New York Restoration Project and is designed to teach children about plants.[29]
[edit] New York City Marble Cemetery
A production of John Reed's All the World's a Grave in the Marble Cemetery, which does not contain headstones.The cemetery is actually two, which sit on 2nd Street between 1st Avenue and 2nd Avenue. They are open the fourth Sunday of every month.[30] The first and more prominent is the City cemetery, which is second oldest non-sectarian cemetery in New York City. It sits next to the oldest public cemetery in New York City not affiliated with any religion, the "New York Marble Cemetery."[31] The cemetery was opened in 1831 and at one point contained ex-U.S. President James Monroe.[32]
[edit] Culture and events
Longtime Mistress of Ceremonies at eatery Lucky Cheng's, Miss Understood stops a bus in front of the restaurant on First Avenue.Other than geography, the East Village's most notable commonalities with Greenwich Village are a colorful history, vibrant social and cultural outlets, and street names that often diverge from the norm.
The Bowery is a north-south avenue which also lends its name to the somewhat overlapping neighborhood of the Bowery; St. Mark's Place, a crosstown street well-known for counterculture businesses; and Astor Place/Cooper Square, home of the Public Theater and the Cooper Union. Nearby universities like New York University (NYU), The New School, and The Cooper Union have dormitories in the neighborhood.
[edit] Ethnicity and religion
Photograph of St. Nicholas with parts of Second Street visible. The church and almost all buildings on the street were demolished in the 1960's and replaced with parking lots.
Former parishioners of St. Mary's Help of Christians pray outside the shuttered church in August 2008.According to 2000 census figures provided by the New York City Department of City Planning, which includes the Lower East Side in its calculation, the neighborhood was 35% Asian, 28% non-Hispanic white, 27% Hispanic and 7% black.[33]
On October 9, 1966, A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada, founder of the International Society for Krishna Consciousness, held the first recorded outdoor chanting session of the Hare Krishna mantra outside of the Indian subcontinent at Tompkins Square Park.[34] This is considered the founding of the Hare Krishna religion in the United States, and the large tree close to the center of the Park is demarcated as a special religious site for Krishna adherents.[34] The late poet Allen Ginsberg, who lived and died in the East Village, attended the ceremony.
There are several Roman Catholic churches in the East Village which have fallen victim to financial hardship particularly in the past decade. Unable to maintain their properties, the Roman Catholic Church has shuttered many of them - including St. Mary's Help of Christians on East 12th Street, as well as St. Ann's. There has recently been much controversy over St. Brigid's, the historical parish on Tompkins Square Park.
[edit] Ukrainian history
Since the 1890s there has been a large Ukrainian concentration roughly from 10th Street to 5th Street, between 3rd Avenue and Avenue A. The post-World War II diaspora, consisting primarily of Western Ukrainian intelligentsia, also settled down in the area. Several churches, including St. George's Catholic Church; Ukrainian restaurants and butcher shops; The Ukrainian Museum; the Shevchenko Scientific Society; and the Ukrainian Cultural Center are evidence of the impact of this culture on the area.
[edit] Gentrification
[edit] New York University, a controversial resident
Residents of the East Village have a love-hate relationship with New York University, which owns and maintains many buildings, particularly in much of downtown Manhattan and in the neighborhoods surrounding its main campus in Greenwich Village (a distinct neighborhood from the East Village).[35]
St. Ann's Church, a rusticated-stone structure on East 12th Street with a Romanesque tower that dated to 1847 was sold to the University to make way for a monolithic 26-story, 700 bed dormitory for students. The University did protect and maintain St. Ann's original facade and small plaza immediately fronting the 12th Street sidewalk. The result is a blended, softer abutment of the new dorm building (which does rise dramatically above the facade) up behind the old St. Ann's entry way. New York University has built many dorms, and this one in particular is now the tallest structure in the area. "There are larger changes going on here," said Lynne Brown, vice president of university relations and public affairs. "I fear this tendency to blame any trend residents don't like happening at the doorstep of NYU," said Brown, mentioning that the university has been one of the longest inhabitants of the East Village. But Nancy Cosie, a 20 year resident and former St. Ann's parishioner, does not buy that argument. "Enough is enough," Cosie exclaimed to The Village Voice, "This is not a campus. This is a neighborhood, and this is my home."[35] NYU's destruction or purchasing of many historic buildings (such as the Peter Cooper post office) have made it symbolic of change that many long-time residents fear is destroying what made the neighborhood interesting and attractive.[36] "I live on Avenue B and 9th Street," an NYU student said. "I know I'm part of the problem - gentrification that is. But where am I supposed to live?"[36]
NYU has often been at odds with residents of both the East and West Villages, as legendary urban preservationist Jane Jacobs battled the school in the 1960s.[37] "She spoke of how universities and hospitals often had a special kind of hubris reflected in the fact that they often thought it was OK to destroy a neighborhood to suit their needs,” said Andrew Berman of the Greenwich Village Society for Historic Preservation.[38]
[edit] Museums, libraries, performance and art spaces
The Bowery Poetry Club.
Sherry Vine and Joey Arias during the 2009 HOWL! Festival.New York Public Library Tompkins Square branch [3]
The Fales Library of NYU
East Village Visitors Center - 308 Bowery
The Ukrainian Museum
New Museum of Contemporary Art
Museum of Jewish Heritage
Performance Space 122
Anthology Film Archives
The Stone
Bouwerie Lane Theatre
Amato Opera
Danspace Project
The Ontological-Hysteric Theater
The Pearl Theatre Company [4]
Stomp! (Theatrical show)
Metropolitan Playhouse[5]
Mercury Lounge (live music)
Sidewalk Cafe (performance and live music)
Bowery Ballroom (concerts and shows)
Nuyorican Poets Cafe (music, poetry, readings, slams)
Bowery Poetry Club (music, poetry, readings, slams)
La MaMa E.T.C. (performance theater)
Cooper Union (speeches, presentations, public lectures and readings)
[edit] Neighborhood festivals
Mayday Festival - May 1; yearly.
Charlie Parker Jazz Festival - August; yearly.[6]
HOWL! Festival - September; yearly.[7][8]
East Village Radio Festival - September 6, 2008 [9]
Tompkins Square Halloween Dog Parade - October; yearly.[10]
East Village Theater Festival - August 3–23, 2009.[11]
FAB! Festival & Block Party - Last weekend in September annually, Sept 25, 2010 [12]
[edit] Media
Many film shoots take place in the East Village; here a period movie with antique police cars is filmed on East 4th Street.[edit] Radio
East Village Radio
[edit] Local news
The Village Voice
The Villager
East-Village.com
EastVillageFeed.com
[edit] Cinemas
Anthology Film Archives
Landmark's Sunshine Theater
Village East Cinema
City Cinema Village East
Two Boots Pioneer Theater
[edit] Notable residents past and present
Handsome Dick Manitoba of The Dictators.
Madonna lived in the neighborhood when she was just starting out in her career.[39]Handsome Dick Manitoba, who owns Manitoba's bar on Avenue B off Tompkins Square Park.
Darren Aronofsky and his wife, Rachel Weisz
Chris Cain, Bassist for the Indie-Rock band We Are Scientists
Barbara Feinman
John Leguizamo
Daniel Radcliffe
Agim Kaba
Rosario Dawson
Tom Kalin
Vashtie Kola director
W. H. Auden[40]
Greer Lankton, Artist/Doll maker
Ellen Stewart founder of La MaMa, E.T.C. (Experimental Theatre Club) in 1961.
Madonna lived there in the 1980s.
John Lurie,musician, painter, actor, producer.
Jean-Michel Basquiat, graffiti artist
David Bowes, painter
Allen Ginsberg (1926–1997), Beat Generation poet and author of Howl.[41]
Keith Haring, neo-pop artist
Claes Oldenburg (1929-), sculptor, had a studio at 46 East 3rd Street in the late 1950s.[42]
Candy Darling, actress/Warhol superstar
Bill Raymond, actor
Ryan Adams, alt-country musician
David Cross, actor, comedian
Negin Farsad, writer, director, comedian
Nan Goldin, photographer
Stephen Lack, actor, painter
Ronnie Landfield, (1947-), painter, lived on E. 11th street, mid-1960s[43]
Kiki Smith sculptor
John Zorn composer, musician
Richard Hell, musician, author
Abbie Hoffman (1936–1989), 1960s political activist[44]
Ayun Halliday, actress and writer, and wife of playwright Greg Kotis
Greg Kotis, playwright, and husband of actress and writer Ayun Halliday
Jerry Rubin (1938–1994), 1960s political activist - with Hoffman founded the Yippies in a basement apartment at 30 St. Marks Place[44]
Cookie Mueller, actress, model
Paul Krassner (1932-), publisher of The Realist
Walter Bowart (1939–2007), co-founder editor/ of The East Village Other
Allan Katzman, co-founder/editor of The East Village Other
Tuli Kupferberg, (1923-), Beat Generation poet, and one of the original Fugs
Ed Sanders, (1939-), New York School poet and one of the original Fugs
Joseph Nechvatal (1951-) early digital artist and founder of the Tellus Audio Cassette Magazine
Randy Harrison, actor
Joel Resnicoff, artist and fashion illustrator.
Regina Spektor, (1980-) Singer-songwriter and pianist.
Rachel Trachtenburg (1993-) singer and musician
Tom Otterness sculptor
Steven Fishbach, runner-up of Survivor: Tocantins
Chloe Sevigny actress
Conor Oberst musician
Lou Reed, musician
Julian Casablancas, musician
Mark Ronson
Arthur Russell, musician[45]
Jack Smith filmmaker, artist
Iggy Pop, performer, musician
Three cores = three streaks.
This is from my remote camera placed at the end of the front pond at LC-37, a 25-second exposure of the United Launch Alliance #DeltaIVHeavy carrying the #ParkerSolarProbe.
Big thanks to Bill and Mary Ellen Jelen for picking up my remotes and sending me the files for me to process.
(Pic: me: We Report Space) — at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station Space Launch Complex 37
Mingle Media TV and Red Carpet Report hosts, Linda Antwi, Ashley Bornancin and Erin White were on the hottest red carpet out there, Oscars Red Carpet at the Dolby Theatre on Sunday after a busy time attending events, getting interviews and photos and bringing you the story from the events we covered. Be sure to watch out for our special magazine for Awards season 2013 coming next week.
Get the Story from the Red Carpet Report Team, follow us on Twitter and Facebook at:
•www.facebook.com/RedCarpetReportTV
Here are the 2013 Oscar Winners by Studio:
•20th Century Fox - 4 Oscars
•Sony - 3 Oscars
•Universal - 3 Oscars
•Warner Bros - 3 Oscars
•Weinstein Co - 3 Oscars
•Disney - 2 Oscars
•DreamWorks - 2 Oscars
•MGM - 2 Oscars
•Sony Pictures Classics - 2 Oscars
•Focus Features - 1 Oscars
For more of Mingle Media TV’s Red Carpet Report coverage, please visit our website and follow us on Twitter and Facebook here:
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Follow our host, Linda at https://twitter.com/LindaIsSoGirlie
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ABOUT THE ACADEMY
The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences is the world's preeminent movie-related organization, with a membership of more than 6,000 of the most accomplished men and women working in cinema. In addition to the annual Academy Awards–in which the members vote to select the nominees and winners-the Academy presents a diverse year-round slate of public programs, exhibitions and events; provides financial support to a wide range of other movie-related organizations and endeavors; acts as a neutral advocate in the advancement of motion picture technology; and, through its Margaret Herrick Library and Academy Film Archive, collects, preserves, restores and provides access to movies and items related to their history. Through these and other activities the Academy serves students, historians, the entertainment industry and people everywhere who love movies.
FOLLOW THE ACADEMY
www.oscars.org
www.facebook.com/TheAcademy
www.youtube.com/Oscars
www.twitter.com/TheAcademy
Ashley's Look -
Ring by LuciousS - www.LuciousS.com
Erin's Look -
Dress by Emil Couture www.emildesign.com/ courtesy of The Ross Group http://www.thereelrossgroup.com/
Hair by Maeven Marie Ramirez salon-eleven.com/
Make Up by Veronica Matiar salon-eleven.com/
Linda's Look -
Dress by Shekhar Rahate - www.ShekharRahate.com
Necklace by Erin Fader Jewelry Design - www.ErinFader.com
BEST PICTURE
• "Amour" Margaret Menegoz, Stefan Arndt, Veit Heiduschka and Michael Katz, Producers
• "Argo" Grant Heslov, Ben Affleck and George Clooney, Producers - WINNER
• "Beasts of the Southern Wild" Dan Janvey, Josh Penn and Michael Gottwald, Producers
• "Django Unchained" Stacey Sher, Reginald Hudlin and Pilar Savone, Producers
• "Les Misérables" Tim Bevan, Eric Fellner, Debra Hayward and Cameron Mackintosh, Producers
• "Life of Pi" Gil Netter, Ang Lee and David Womark, Producers
• "Lincoln" Steven Spielberg and Kathleen Kennedy, Producers
• "Silver Linings Playbook" Donna Gigliotti, Bruce Cohen and Jonathan Gordon, Producers
• "Zero Dark Thirty" Mark Boal, Kathryn Bigelow and Megan Ellison, Producers
BEST FOREIGN FILM
Amour, Austria – WINNER
Kon-Tiki, Norway
No, Chile
A Royal Affair, Denmark
War Witch, Canada
BEST ANIMATED FEATURE FILM
Brave - WINNER
Frankenweenie
ParaNorman
The Pirates! Band of Misfits
Wreck-It Ralph
BEST ANIMATED SHORT FILM
Adam and Dog, Minkyu Lee
Fresh Guacamole, PES
Head over Heels, Timothy Reckart and Fodhla Cronin O’Reilly
Maggie Simpson in The Longest Daycare, David Silverman
Paperman, John Kahrs – WINNER
BEST LIVE ACTION SHORT FILM
Asad, Bryan Buckley and Mino Jarjoura
Buzkashi Boys, Sam French and Ariel Nasr
Curfew, Shawn Christensen - WINNER
Death of a Shadow (Dood van een Schaduw), Tom Van Avermaet and Ellen De Waele
Henry, Yan England
BEST DOCUMENTARY FEATURE
5 Broken Cameras
The Gatekeepers
How to Survive a Plague
The Invisible War
Searching for Sugar Man – WINNER
BEST DOCUMENTARY SHORT SUBJECT
Inocente, Sean Fine and Andrea Nix Fine – WINNER
Kings Point, Sari Gilman and Jedd Wider
Mondays at Racine, Cynthia Wade and Robin Honan
Open Heart, Kief Davidson and Cori Shepherd Stern
Redemption, Jon Alpert and Matthew O’Neill
BEST ACTOR
Bradley Cooper, Silver Linings Playbook
Daniel Day-Lewis, Lincoln – WINNER
Hugh Jackman, Les Miserables
Joaquin Phoenix, The Master
Denzel Washington, Flight
BEST ACTRESS
Jessica Chastain, Zero Dark Thirty
Jennifer Lawrence, Silver Linings Playbook – WINNER
Emmanuelle Riva, Amour
Naomi Watts, The Impossible
Quvenzhané Wallis, Beasts of the Southern Wild
BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR
Alan Arkin, Argo
Robert De Niro, Silver Linings Playbook
Philip Seymour Hoffman, The Master
Tommy Lee Jones, Lincoln
Christoph Waltz, Django Unchained – WINNER
BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
Amy Adams, The Master
Sally Field, Lincoln
Anne Hathaway, Les Miserables – WINNER
Helen Hunt, The Sessions
Jacki Weaver, Silver Linings Playbook
BEST DIRECTOR
Michael Haneke, Amour
Ang Lee, Life of Pi – WINNER
David O. Russell, Silver Linings Playbook
Steven Spielberg, Lincoln
Benh Zeitlin, Beasts of the Southern Wild
BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY
Wes Anderson and Roman Coppola, Moonrise Kingdom
Mark Boal, Zero Dark Thirty
John Gatins, Flight
Michael Haneke, Amour
Quentin Tarantino, Django Unchained – WINNER
BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY
Lucy Alibar and Benh Zeitlin, Beasts of the Southern Wild
Tony Kushner, Lincoln
David Magee, Life of Pi
David O. Russell, Silver Linings Playbook
Chris Terrio, Argo – WINNER
BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY
Anna Karenina, Seamus McGarvey
Django Unchained, Robert Richardson
Life of Pi, Claudio Miranda – WINNER
Lincoln, Janusz Kaminski
Skyfall, Roger Deakins
BEST ORIGINAL SCORE
Anna Karenina, Dario Marianelli
Argo, Alexandre Desplat
Life of Pi, Mychael Danna – WINNER
Lincoln, John Williams
Skyfall, Thomas Newman
BEST ORIGINAL SONG
“Before My Time” from Chasing Ice, Music and Lyric by J. Ralph
“Everybody Needs A Best Friend” from Ted, Music by Walter Murphy; Lyric by Seth MacFarlane
“Pi’s Lullaby” from Life of Pi, Music by Mychael Danna; Lyric by Bombay Jayashri
“Skyfall” from Skyfall, Music and Lyric by Adele Adkins and Paul Epworth – WINNER
“Suddenly” from Les Misérables, Music by Claude-Michel Schönberg; Lyric by Herbert Kretzmer and Alain Boublil
BEST COSTUME DESIGN
Anna Karenina, Jacqueline Durran – WINNER
Les Misérables, Paco Delgado
Lincoln, Joanna Johnston
Mirror Mirror, Eiko Ishioka
Snow White and the Huntsman, Colleen Atwood
BEST FILM EDITING
Argo, William Goldenberg – WINNER
Life of Pi, Tim Squyres
Lincoln, Michael Kahn
Silver Linings Playbook, Jay Cassidy and Crispin Struthers
Zero Dark Thirty, Dylan Tichenor and William Goldenberg
BEST MAKEUP AND HAIRSTYLING
Hitchcock, Howard Berger, Peter Montagna and Martin Samuel
The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey, Peter Swords King, Rick Findlater and Tami Lane
Les Misérables, Lisa Westcott and Julie Dartnell – WINNER
BEST PRODUCTION DESIGN
Anna Karenina, Production Design: Sarah Greenwood; Set Decoration: Katie Spencer
The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey, Production Design: Dan Hennah; Set Decoration: Ra Vincent and Simon Bright
Les Misérables, Production Design: Eve Stewart; Set Decoration: Anna Lynch-Robinson
Life of Pi, Production Design: David Gropman; Set Decoration: Anna Pinnock
Lincoln, Production Design: Rick Carter; Set Decoration: Jim Erickson – WINNER
BEST SOUND EDITING - TIE
Argo, Erik Aadahl and Ethan Van der Ryn
Django Unchained, Wylie Stateman
Life of Pi, Eugene Gearty and Philip Stockton
Skyfall, Per Hallberg and Karen Baker Landers – WINNER
Zero Dark Thirty, Paul N.J. Ottosson - WINNER
BEST SOUND MIXING
Argo, John Reitz, Gregg Rudloff and Jose Antonio Garcia
Les Misérables, Andy Nelson, Mark Paterson and Simon Hayes – WINNER
Life of Pi, Ron Bartlett, D.M. Hemphill and Drew Kunin
Lincoln, Andy Nelson, Gary Rydstrom and Ronald Judkins
Skyfall, Scott Millan, Greg P. Russell and Stuart Wilson
BEST VISUAL EFFECTS
The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey, Joe Letteri, Eric Saindon, David Clayton and R. Christopher White
Life of Pi, Bill Westenhofer, Guillaume Rocheron, Erik-Jan De Boer and Donald R. Elliott –WINNER
Marvel’s The Avengers, Janek Sirrs, Jeff White, Guy Williams and Dan Sudick
Prometheus, Richard Stammers, Trevor Wood, Charley Henley and Martin Hill
Snow White and the Huntsman, Cedric Nicolas-Troyan, Philip Brennan, Neil Corbould and Michael Dawson.
Edith Wilson: The first lady who fooled D.C. and ran the White House
Rebecca Boggs Roberts’s ‘Untold Power’ is a riveting look at a president’s powerful spouse and her efforts to conceal his illness
Edith Bolling Galt in her electric automobile. She was the first woman to earn a D.C. driver’s license. (Library of Congress)
By Barbara A. Perry
March 29, 2023 at 8:23 a.m. MST
Unless readers are aficionados of Woodrow Wilson’s presidency, they may possess only vague knowledge that a debilitating stroke incapacitated him in his administration’s final year and that his wife Edith became the unofficial “acting president.” This intriguing tale of how a first lady, with minimal formal education and no government experience, effectively took the reins from the partially paralyzed chief executive and guided his White House, from October 1919 to March 1921, is as riveting as it is improbable.
By virtue of her DNA, author Rebecca Boggs Roberts is well acquainted with Washington’s power dynamics. The daughter of the late political commentator Cokie Roberts and granddaughter of the late House Democratic Majority Leader Hale Boggs, Rebecca also counts on her family tree grandmother Lindy, who served nine terms in Congress after Hale disappeared, and was declared dead, following a 1972 plane crash. Equally genetic, given her father Steven Roberts’s journalistic career, is Rebecca’s flair for writing crisp and engaging narratives. Her book “Untold Power: The Fascinating Rise and Complex Legacy of First Lady Edith Wilson” is quite simply a compelling yarn.
Edith Bolling Galt Wilson. (Library of Congress)
How did Edith Bolling, born and raised in Wytheville, Va., a sleepy town nestled in post-bellum Appalachia, ultimately become one of the most powerful first ladies in American history? As a teenager, she followed her married sister to Washington and embraced the cultural and social life of the booming Gay Nineties city. In 1896, she married the successful, if unexciting, owner of a thriving jewelry store who was almost a decade older than the new Mrs. Edith Bolling Galt. He died a dozen years later, leaving Edith a widow of some means at age 35, unable to bear children after her only pregnancy resulted in a difficult birth and the death of the Galts’ infant son.
Viking
Unlike most women of her era, Edith lived independently, traveling abroad when the spirit moved her, tooling around the nation’s capital in an electric automobile (as the first woman to earn a D.C. driver’s license) and eschewing large soirees for intimate dinners with extended family. She had little interest in politics, opposed women’s suffrage and declined a friend’s invitation to attend Woodrow Wilson’s 1913 inaugural parade and a presidential tea. A friend, the White House physician Cary Grayson, introduced her to the grieving president shortly after Wilson’s first wife, Ellen, died of kidney disease in the second year of his first term.
Although a strait-laced Presbyterian and stodgy academic, Wilson immediately bonded with Edith, 16 years his junior, finding her beautiful, stylish, charming and vivacious. The merry widow added gaiety to his life, and he was as smitten as a teenage schoolboy. Realizing that his lovesickness would appear unseemly so soon after his first wife’s passing, the president initially confined his ardent courtship to secret assignations with the more restrained Edith.
Roberts’s description of Wilson’s wooing springs to life through her careful research of the love notes the couple exchanged almost daily. In addition, the author skillfully deconstructs the second Mrs. Wilson’s 1939 memoir, the first book of its kind penned by a former first lady. This biography is the only one to reflect the recently transcribed memoir chapters written in Edith’s scribbled penmanship and preserved at her birthplace.
First lady Edith Wilson and President Woodrow Wilson, left, arrive in New York on Oct. 11, 1918, to take part in the Liberty Day Parade. (AP)
The Wilsons’ 1915 marriage cemented a fruitful partnership, as the president’s new spouse sustained him through World War I, accompanied him to the Paris peace talks and supported his dogged efforts to secure Senate approval of the Treaty of Versailles. Establishing what modern political scientists now label “the rhetorical presidency,” Woodrow Wilson firmly believed that he could lead Congress and the people by speaking to them directly and in person. It was his overly ambitious cross-country whistle-stop tour that exhausted the president and induced a catastrophic cerebral hemorrhage, paralyzing his left side, affecting his speech and weakening his cognitive ability.
Roberts’s storytelling soars as she leads the reader through Edith’s machinations to hide her husband’s disabilities while maintaining his White House’s functions. She manipulated the Cabinet, Vice President Thomas Marshall and members of Congress to disguise the worst of the president’s symptoms, while making it appear that he maintained control over his faculties and public policy. She literally became his left hand, holding down documents as he signed them with his dominant and unaffected right hand.
From his 1919 stroke until his death in 1924, Edith Wilson maintained the fiction that her husband was functioning normally. She spent the remainder of her long life promoting his legacy as an advocate for freedom at home and abroad. One of her last public appearances, before her death in December 1961 at age 89, was to meet with President John F. Kennedy in the Oval Office when he signed the bill creating the Woodrow Wilson Memorial Commission.
First lady Eleanor Roosevelt, left, and former first lady Edith Wilson attend a Girl Scouts exhibit in Washington in 1934, holding jars of marmalade made by the Scouts. (AP)
In that sense, Edith was no different from all the modern first ladies (including Eleanor Roosevelt, Mamie Eisenhower, Jacqueline Kennedy, Pat Nixon, Nancy Reagan and Hillary Clinton) who supported their debilitated husbands, laid low by illness or scandal, and tried to solidify their legacies if they outlived them. Yet even the influential Roosevelt and Clinton never became “acting presidents.” As Roberts relates, it was JFK’s assassination that prompted the 25th Amendment’s ratification in 1967, providing for the vice president to assume the presidency upon the chief executive’s documented incapacitation. We can be grateful that Edith Wilson’s unprecedented and unofficial substitution for her husband demonstrated the need for such a constitutional remedy for presidential illness.
Barbara A. Perry, the Gerald L. Baliles professor and presidential studies director at the University of Virginia’s Miller Center, is the author of “Jacqueline Kennedy: First Lady of the New Frontier” and “Rose Kennedy: The Life and Times of a Political Matriarch.”
Untold Power
The Fascinating Rise and Complex Legacy of First Lady Edith Wilson
By Rebecca Boggs Roberts
Viking. 302 pp. $30
Barbara A. Perry, the Gerald L. Baliles professor and presidential studies director at the University of Virginia’s Miller Center, is the author of “Jacqueline Kennedy: First Lady of the New Frontier” and “Rose Kennedy: The Life and Times of a Political Matriarch.”
February 22, 2015: I love old cemeteries. They are usually great places for quiet walks, and I like trying to guess about the deceased people's lives based on their gravestones. Rural Cemetery in Worcester is one of my favorite old cemeteries because it is also an arboretum with many different types of trees and plants. It is also still a functioning crematory and cemetery, with this beautiful chapel.
HALCYON HOT SPRINGS, originally Halcyon Hotsprings, also known simply as Halcyon, was a hot springs resort and spa located on the east side of Upper Arrow Lake, between Galena Bay and Nakusp, in the Kootenay Country of British Columbia, Canada. Halcyon Mountain nearby to the northeast derives its name from the resort. The name Halycon was conferred by Robert Sanderson, a steamboat captain who staked a mineral claim here and opened the first hotel in 1894, in reference to that word's meaning of contentment. The springs attained a worldwide reputation and water from them was bottled for export, reaching customers in London. When the local mining rush ended and steamboat traffic stopped, the hotel changed hands a number of times and became rundown. In 1924, British Army Brigadier-General Dr. Frederick Burnham, who was a surgeon, revamped the hotel as a sanatorium. In 1955, the hotel burnt to the ground, taking with it the life of Dr. Burnham. The site was abandoned due to lack of road access, although a resort has since been rebuilt.
- from 1908 "Lovell's Gazetteer of the Dominion of Canada" - HALCYON HOT SPRINGS, a post settlement and sanitarium in Yale and Cariboo District, B.C., on the Columbia River, adjoining Arrow Lake, and on the C.P.R.. 13 miles from Arrowhead station, 28 miles south of Revelstoke. Besides the sanitarium (Hot Springs), there is general store and telegraph and express offices. The population in 1908 was under 50.
(from - Wrigley's 1918 British Columbia Directory) - HALCYON HOT SPRINGS - a post office and sanitarium on the east shore of Upper Arrow Lake, first port of call from Arrowhead, on the C. P. R. Columbia River route, Revelstoke Provincial Electoral District. This resort is famous for its beneficial waters, and also for fishing and hunting:. Nearest railway is C. P. R. at Arrowhead, 12 miles. Church services fortnightly. The population in 1918 was 25.
The word "halcyon" refers to the Belted Allusion Kingfisher, megaceryle halcyon. Legend tells that the wind god, Aeolus, calmed the winds so that the bird could breed in the winter solstice, hence "halcyon days". / The halcyon was a bird fabled by the ancients to breed in a floating nest on the sea at the winter solstice, with the ability to charm wind and waves into calm for the purpose. Hence halcyon means "calm" or "blissful".
The HALCYON HOT SPRINGS Post Office opened - 1 March 1898 and closed - 30 December 1950.
LINK to a list of the Postmasters who served at the HALCYON HOT SPRINGS Post Office - recherche-collection-search.bac-lac.gc.ca/eng/home/record...
- sent from - / HALCYON • HOT • SPRINGS / AU 25 / 12 / B.C. / - split ring cancel - this split ring hammer (A1-1 / first hammer) was not listed in the Proof Book - it was most likely proofed c. 1898 - (RF C).
Message on postcard reads: Halcyon, B.C. - 25 August 1912 - Dear Mother, It is still fine weather here only rained an hour since I left home - had a long walk up the mountain today & am feeling truly good - expect to leave here next Saturday. Matt.
Matthew Kennedy
(b. 9 September 1883 in Winnipeg, Manitoba - d. 6 July 1917 in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada)
His wife - Ella (nee MacTavish) Kennedy (1886-1953) - Probation officer. Born at Port Hawkesbury, Nova Scotia on 24 May 1886, daughter of John McTavish and Ellen M. Reeves, she was educated at Pictou Academy (Nova Scotia) before coming to Winnipeg in 1906. She worked as a teacher in several rural schools then attended the Winnipeg Business College and took work as a stenographer. She became involved in social service work in March 1918, as a supervisor for mothers’ allowances in Winnipeg. In 1919, she became Manitoba’s second female Probation Officer in the Juvenile Court, succeeding “Lizzie” Proctor, serving until retirement in November 1951. A champion against juvenile delinquency, she helped to organize the Four Square Club at the YWCA and the Big Sister Association of Greater Winnipeg. She was secretary for the Royal Templars of Temperance for 10 years. On 10 September 1913, she married Matthew Nedwill Kennedy (b. 9 September 1883 in Winnipeg, Manitoba - d. 6 July 1917) at Winnipeg, Manitoba. They had no children. She was visiting Vancouver, British Columbia when she became ill and died on 24 April 1953.
Addressed to his mother: Mrs D. Kennedy / 374 Flora Ave. / Winnipeg, Manitoba
His father: David Kennedy
(b. 16 March 1854 in Ireland – d. 16 March 1933 at age 79 in Winnipeg, Manitoba)
His mother: Letitia (nee Nedwill) Kennedy
(b. 5 May 1855 in Ireland – d. 10 June 1933 at age 78 in Winnipeg, Manitoba) - LINK to a photo of her - www.findagrave.com/memorial/178022649/letitia-kennedy
His parents immigrated to Canada in 1882 - they were living at 374 Flora Ave, Winnipeg, Manitoba in 1906.
His two other brothers:
David Duncan Kennedy
(1 August 1886 – 8 August 1972)
William N Kennedy
(1894 – Deceased)
LINK to another postcard addressed to - Mrs. D. Kennedy - this was sent by Mrs. F. C. Fyvie who was their landlord of the house they were living on at 374 Flora Ave in Winnipeg - cdm16114.contentdm.oclc.org/digital/collection/p280501col...
Astronaut John Young, who walked on the Moon during Apollo 16 and commanded the first space shuttle mission, died Friday, Jan. 5, 2018, at the age of 87 from complications of pneumonia. Young began his impressive career at NASA in 1962, when he was selected from among hundreds of young pilots to join NASA's second astronaut class, known as the "New Nine."
“Today, NASA and the world have lost a pioneer," acting NASA Administrator Robert Lightfoot said in a statement. "Astronaut John Young's storied career spanned three generations of spaceflight; we will stand on his shoulders as we look toward the next human frontier.
“John was one of that group of early space pioneers whose bravery and commitment sparked our nation's first great achievements in space. But, not content with that, his hands-on contributions continued long after the last of his six spaceflights -- a world record at the time of his retirement from the cockpit."
Release: NASA Remembers Agency's Most Experienced Astronaut
“It would be hard to overstate the impact that John Young had on human space flight,” said Johnson Space Center Director Ellen Ochoa, a former astronaut herself. “Beyond his well-known and groundbreaking six missions through three programs, he worked tirelessly for decades to understand and mitigate the risks that NASA astronauts face. He had our backs.”
After hearing President Kennedy's bold proposal in 1961 to land a man on the Moon and return him safely to Earth, Young said knew what he had to do.
"I thought returning safely to Earth sounded like a good idea," said Young, who stood on the Moon, drove 16 miles in a lunar rover and spent three nights on the lunar surface. He is the only person to go into space as part of the Gemini, Apollo and space shuttle programs and was the first to fly into space six times -- or seven times, when counting his liftoff from the Moon during Apollo 16.
Video: NASA Remembers Moonwalker, Shuttle Commander John Young
Young was born in San Francisco, California. His family moved to Georgia and then Florida, where he lived for most of his childhood along with his younger brother.
As a boy, Young's favorite pastimes were building model airplanes -- the first hint of his passion for aeronautics -- and reading.
"My grandpa taught me how to read," said Young. "I read the encyclopedia when I was five."
His father, a civil engineer, was Young's role model. Young graduated from Orlando High School and then earned a degree in aeronautical engineering from Georgia Tech, where he graduated with highest honors in 1952.
Following graduation, he joined the Navy and, after a year's service aboard a destroyer, was sent to flight training.
Image Gallery: John Young
He flew fighter planes for four years, then completed test pilot training and served three years at the Navy's Air Test Center, where he heeded the president's call to go to the Moon.
In March 1965, Young made his first flight as an astronaut, joining Gus Grissom on Gemini 3, the first manned flight of that program. As Young prepared, a sense of obligation overruled excitement or any other emotion.
"We were just thinking about doing the job right," Young said.
Young commanded the Gemini 10 mission in July 1966. He and pilot Mike Collins rendezvoused with two Agena target vehicles, and Collins did a spacewalk to retrieve a micrometeorite detector from one of them.
In May 1969, he served as command module pilot on Apollo 10 and flew all the way to the Moon with crewmates Tom Stafford and Gene Cernan. The crew scouted landing sites from lunar orbit and rendezvoused the lunar module and command module in a full dress rehearsal for the Apollo 11 landing two months later.
Young made a return trip to the Moon as commander of Apollo 16 in April 1972. With Ken Mattingly orbiting above in the command module, Young and lunar module pilot Charlie Duke landed in the Descartes highlands. "The moon is a very nice place," Young said. "When we landed, we were 20 minutes behind. Because time on the Moon was so precious, what I remember most is trying to catch up."
NASA Johnson Space Center Bio: John Young
Young and Duke set up scientific equipment and explored lunar highlands in the rover. The mission returned more than 200 pounds of Moon rocks gathered from three geological outings.
Young's career was full of firsts, none more notable than in April 1981, when he commanded Space Shuttle Columbia on its -- and the Shuttle program's -- maiden flight, STS-1. It was the first time a piloted spacecraft was tested in space without previous unpiloted orbital flights. Young and pilot Robert Crippen accomplished more than 130 flight test objectives during their almost 55-hour mission.
In late 1983 Young commanded STS-9, the first Spacelab mission. During the 10-day flight, the six crewmembers worked around the clock in 12-hour shifts, involved in more than 70 experiments in a range of scientific disciplines. The mission returned more scientific and technical data than all the Apollo and Skylab missions combined.
In addition to his six spaceflights, Young was a member of five backup crews. He's logged thousands of hours of training and flight time, including a total of 835 hours in space.
In early 1973, he became chief of the Space Shuttle Branch of the Astronaut Office at Johnson Space Center. The following year, Young, who retired from the Navy as a captain in 1976 after 25 years of military service, was named chief of the Astronaut Office, a post he held until May 1987.
Throughout this time, Young remained an active astronaut, eligible to command space shuttle missions.
Young's numerous awards and special honors included the Congressional Space Medal of Honor, three NASA Distinguished Service Medals, the NASA Outstanding Leadership Medal, two Navy Distinguished Service Medals, three Navy Distinguished Flying Crosses, the Georgia Tech Distinguished Young Alumni Award, the Exceptional Engineering Achievement Award and the American Astronautical Society Space Flight Award.
Those are among more than 80 major honors and awards, including four honorary doctorate degrees, Young has received. He was inducted into the National Aviation Hall of Fame in 1988.
"I've been very lucky, I think," Young said at his retirement from NASA in 2004. As to which moment was most memorable, he says simply, "I liked them all."
Vintage postcard. Photo: 20th Century Fox. Jamie Kennedy, Zak Orth, Leonardo DiCaprio, Dash Mihok, and Harold Perrineau in Romeo + Juliet (Baz Luhrmann, 1996). Caption: Montague. Quarrel I Will Back Thee.
American actor Leonardo DiCaprio (1974) has often played unconventional parts, particularly in biopics and period films. His role in the blockbuster Titanic (1998) cemented DiCaprio's reputation as a teen heartthrob. He became one of the biggest movie stars thanks to his films with the directors Martin Scorsese, Christopher Nolan, and Quentin Tarantino. He won an Oscar and a Golden Globe Award for The Revenant (2015) as well as two other Golden Globes for The Aviator (2004) and The Wolf of Wall Street (2013).
Leonardo Wilhelm DiCaprio was born in Los Angeles, in 1974. He is the only child of Irmelin (née Indenbirken), a legal secretary, and George DiCaprio, an underground comix writer, publisher, and distributor of comic books. His parents separated when he was a year old. When his older stepbrother earned $50,000 for a television commercial, DiCaprio, fascinated with this, decided to become an actor. At age 14, he began his career by appearing in television commercials such as for Matchbox cars by Mattel, which he considered his first role. In 1989, he played the role of Glen in two episodes of the television show The New Lassie. Leo played recurring roles in various television series, such as the sitcom Parenthood (1990-1991) based on the successful comedy film of the same name. He made his film debut as the stepson of an evil landlord in the low-budget horror direct-to-video film Critters 3 (Kristine Peterson, 1991). He was handpicked by Robert De Niro out of 400 young actors to play the lead role in the biographical coming-of-age drama This Boy's Life (Michael Caton-Jones, 1993) with De Niro as his stepfather, and Ellen Barkin as his mother. In 1993, DiCaprio co-starred as the intellectually disabled brother of Johnny Depp's character in What's Eating Gilbert Grape (Lasse Hallström, 1993), a comic-tragic odyssey of a dysfunctional Iowa family. The film became a critical success, earning DiCaprio a National Board of Review Award for Best Supporting Actor and nominations for an Oscar and a Golden Globe. His next films were the Western film The Quick and the Dead (Sam Raimi, 1995) with Sharon Stone, the biopic The Basketball Diaries (Scott Kalvert, 1995) in which he played a teenage Jim Carroll as a drug-addicted high school basketball player and writer, and the erotic drama Total Eclipse (Agnieszka Holland, 1995), a fictionalised account of the homosexual relationship between Arthur Rimbaud (DiCaprio) and Paul Verlaine (David Thewlis). In 1996, DiCaprio appeared opposite Claire Danes in Baz Luhrmann's Romeo + Juliet, an abridged modernisation of William Shakespeare's romantic tragedy of the same name. The project grossed $147 million worldwide and earned DiCaprio a Silver Bear for Best Actor at the 1997 Berlin International Film Festival. DiCaprio then achieved international fame as a star in the epic romance Titanic (James Cameron, 1997), opposite Kate Winslet. Against expectations, Titanic went on to become the highest-grossing film to that point, eventually grossing more than $2.1 billion in box-office receipts worldwide. DiCaprio turned into a superstar, resulting in intense adoration among teenage girls and young women in general that became known as "Leo-Mania"
Leonardo DiCaprio played a self-mocking role in a small appearance in Woody Allen's caustic satire of the fame industry, Celebrity (1998). That year, he also starred in the dual roles of the villainous King Louis XIV and his secret, sympathetic twin brother Philippe in The Man in the Iron Mask (Randall Wallace, 1998). The film received mixed to negative response, but became a box office success, grossing $180 million internationally. DiCaprio was awarded a Golden Raspberry Award for Worst Screen Couple for both incarnations the following year. Leonardo starred in two successful features in 2002. The first was the biographical crime drama Catch Me If You Can (Steven Spielberg, 2002), based on the life of Frank Abagnale Jr., who before his 19th birthday committed check fraud to make millions in the 1960s. The film received favourable reviews and was an international success, becoming DiCaprio's highest-grossing release since Titanic with a total of $351 million worldwide. The second was the historical drama Gangs of New York (Martin Scorsese, 2002) with Cameron Diaz and Daniel Day-Lewis. It marked his first of many collaborations with director Martin Scorsese. Gangs of New York earned a total of $193 million worldwide and received mostly positive reviews. DiCaprio played Howard Hughes in The Aviator (Martin Scorsese, 2004), which DiCaprio also co-produced. In 2005, he was named the commander of the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres for his contributions to the arts. DiCaprio was a mercenary in the political thriller Blood Diamond (Edward Zwick, 2006). He received acclaim for his role opposite Jack Nicholson in the crime drama The Departed (Martin Scorsese, 2006). Budgeted at $90 million, the film grossed $291 million and emerged as DiCaprio and Scorsese's highest-grossing collaboration to date. He reunited with Kate Winslet in the romantic drama Revolutionary Road (Sam Mendes, 2008). DiCaprio is the founder of Appian Way Productions—a production company that has produced some of his films and the documentary series Greensburg (2008–2010)—and the Leonardo DiCaprio Foundation, a non-profit organization devoted to promoting environmental awareness.
Leonardo DiCaprio continued to collaborate with Martin Scorsese in the psychological thriller film Shutter Island (Martin Scorsese, 2010), based on the novel of the same name by Dennis Lehane. The film was a commercial success, grossing $294 million worldwide. DiCaprio starred in the science fiction thriller Inception (Christopher Nolan, 2010), in which he enters the dreams of others to obtain information that is otherwise inaccessible. DiCaprio earned $50 million from the film, becoming his highest payday yet. He was an executive producer for George Clooney's political drama The Ides of March, an adaptation of Beau Willimon's play Farragut North (George Clooney, 2011) with Ryan Gosling. In 2012, DiCaprio starred as a plantation owner, Calvin Candie, in Quentin Tarantino's Spaghetti Western, Django Unchained (2012). DiCaprio's next role was as the millionaire Jay Gatsby in Baz Luhrmann's The Great Gatsby (2013), an adaptation of F. Scott Fitzgerald's 1925 novel of the same name. That year he also starred in the biopic The Wolf of Wall Street (Martin Scorsese, 2013), based on the life of stockbroker Jordan Belfort, who was arrested in the late 1990s for securities fraud and money laundering. The film earned him a Golden Globe and Oscar nominations for Best Actor and Best Picture. DiCaprio was an executive producer on Virunga (Orlando von Einsiedel, 2014), a British documentary film about four people fighting to protect the world's last mountain gorillas from war and poaching. The film was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. In 2015, DiCaprio produced and played fur trapper Hugh Glass in Alejandro G. Iñárritu's survival drama The Revenant. Built on a budget of $135 million, the well-received film earned $533 million worldwide. The film earned him numerous awards, including an Academy Award, a Golden Globe, a BAFTA, a SAG and a Critic's Choice Award for Best Actor. For the next three years, DiCaprio narrated documentaries and served as a producer for films. DiCaprio returned to acting following a break of four years in Quentin Tarantino's comedy-drama Once Upon a Time in Hollywood (2019), opposite Brad Pitt. He received nominations for an Oscar, a Golden Globe and a BAFTA Award for Best Actor. The film earned a total of $374 million against its $90-million budget. DiCaprio's personal life is the subject of widespread media attention. He rarely gives interviews and is reluctant to discuss his private life. Among his former girlfriends are Brazilian model Gisele Bündchen, Israeli model Bar Refaeli, and German model Toni Garrn.
Sources: Wikipedia and IMDb.
And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.
Belgian postcard. Photo: Eagle Lion.
Red headed Moira Shearer (1926-2006) was a luminous star of the British ballet. She became an international film idol with her unforgettable debut as the young ballerina Vicky in The Red Shoes (1948), a classic of the British cinema and probably the most popular film about ballet ever.
Moira Shearer King was born in Dunfermline, Scotland, in 1926. She was the daughter of actor Harold V. King. In 1931 her family moved to Ndola, Northern Rhodesia. Her mother pushed her into ballet and Moira received her first dancing training under a former pupil of Enrico Cecchetti. She returned to Britain in 1936 and trained with Flora Fairbairn in London for a few months before she was accepted as a pupil by the Russian teacher Nicholas Legat. After three years with Legat, she joined the Sadler's Wells Ballet School. However, after the outbreak of the World War II, her parents took her to live in Scotland. The Scottish beauty with her flaming red hair made her debut with Mona Inglesby's International Ballet in 1941 before moving on to the famous Sadler's Wells in 1942. There she was second only to the world renowned prima ballerina, Margot Fonteyn. From 1942 to 1952 Shearer danced all the major classic roles and a full repertoire of revivals and new ballets. She came to international attention for her first film role as the doomed heroine in the ballet-themed film The Red Shoes (Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger, 1948). The film employs the story within a story device. Victoria Page (Shearer), a young, unknown dancer from an aristocratic background meets at a party Boris Lermontov (Anton Walbrook), the ruthless but charismatic impresario of the Ballet Lermontov. He invites her to join his famous ballet company. She becomes the lead dancer in a new ballet called The Red Shoes, itself based on the fairy tale The Red Shoes by Hans Christian Andersen. Vicky is torn between the powerful impresario and a struggling composer (Marius Goring) whom she loves. The film got rave reviews and became one of the highest earning British films of all time. Shearer’s role and the film were so powerful that although she went on to star in other films, she is primarily known for playing ‘Vicky.’ She toured the United States with the Sadler's Wells Ballet in 1949 and in 1950/51. Moira Shearer’s second film was the magnificent spectacle The Tales of Hoffmann (Michael Powell, Emeric Pressburger, 1951), an adaptation of Jacques Offenbach's final opera, Les contes d'Hoffmann. The film co-starred Robert Helpmann and Léonide Massine. It is not just a film of a staged opera, but a true cinematic opera that makes use of film techniques not available in an opera house. Powell and Pressburger were nominated for the Grand Prize of the 1951 Cannes Film Festival, and won the Exceptional Prize. They also won the Silver Bear award for Best Musical at the 1st Berlin International Film Festival.
In 1953, a combination of ill-health, injury and her wish to make a name for herself as an actress made Moira Shearer decide to retire from the ballet stage at age 27. She co-starred with James Mason in a segment of The Story of Three Loves (Vincente Minnelli, Gottfried Reinhardt, 1953), a romantic anthology film made by MGM. She appeared as Titania in A Midsummer Night's Dream at the 1954 Edinburgh Festival. The following year she starred in the British film comedy The Man Who Loved Redheads (Harold French, 1955) based on the play Who is Sylvia? by Terence Rattigan. She toured as Sally Bowles in the play I am a Camera in 1955 and appeared at the Bristol Old Vic as G.B. Shaw’s Major Barbara in 1956. Shearer worked again for Powell on the controversial film Peeping Tom (Michael Powell, 1960) about a sexually repressed serial killer (Karlheinz Böhm) who murders women and films their expressions of terror and dying gasps on film. Its controversial subject and the extremely harsh reception by critics effectively destroyed Powell's career as a director. However, it attracted a cult following, and in later years, it has been re-evaluated and is now considered a masterpiece. A year later she appeared in the musical 1-2-3-4 ou Les Collants noirs/Black Tights (Terence Young, 1961) with Zizi Jeanmaire and Cyd Charisse. It would be Shearer’s last film. Shearer was on the BBC's General Advisory Council from 1970 to 1977 and the Scottish Arts Council from 1971 to 1973. In 1972, she was chosen by the BBC to present the Eurovision Song Contest when it was staged in Edinburgh. In 1977 she played Madame Ranevsky in Anton Chekhov's Cherry Orchard at the Royal Lyceum Theatre in Edinburgh and, in 1978, was Judith Bliss in Noel Coward's Hay Fever. She wrote two books, biographies of the choreographer George Balanchine and the actress Ellen Terry, and a column for The Daily Telegraph. She also gave talks on ballet worldwide. The choreographer Gillian Lynne persuaded her to return to ballet to play the mother of artist L. S. Lowry (Christopher Gable) in the ballet film A Simple Man (1987, Gillian Lynne) for the BBC. In 1950, Moira Shearer had married writer and broadcaster Ludovic Kennedy. The couple had a son, Alastair, and three daughters, Ailsa, Rachel and Fiona. In 2006, Moira Shearer died of natural causes in Oxford, England at the age of 80
Sources: Anna Kisselgoff (The New York Times), Steve Crook (IMDb), The Telegraph, Wikipedia and IMDb.
And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.
May I present shots of the #EchoStar23 launch by #SpaceX atop a legless #Falcon9 rocket, taken directly from Pad 39A. These shots are from two cameras that I set on Monday, and the cameras sat patiently waiting until 2:00 am (ET) Thursday morning to capture these images.
Although I get to process and post these pictures, it would be a glorious oversight for me to not acknowledge the considerable efforts by Bill Jelen and Mary Ellen Jelen for making these images possible. They checked in on the cameras Tuesday afternoon; they waited for a chance to pick them up at 5:00 am Thursday morning, ultimately returning to the Pad Thursday afternoon for pick up and then sent me the files for processing. Also, Jared Haworth gets a shout-out for the dew heaters that kept the lenses warm and for ever-present guidance.
Mingle Media TV and Red Carpet Report hosts, Linda Antwi, Ashley Bornancin and Erin White were on the hottest red carpet out there, Oscars Red Carpet at the Dolby Theatre on Sunday after a busy time attending events, getting interviews and photos and bringing you the story from the events we covered. Be sure to watch out for our special magazine for Awards season 2013 coming next week.
Get the Story from the Red Carpet Report Team, follow us on Twitter and Facebook at:
•www.facebook.com/RedCarpetReportTV
Here are the 2013 Oscar Winners by Studio:
•20th Century Fox - 4 Oscars
•Sony - 3 Oscars
•Universal - 3 Oscars
•Warner Bros - 3 Oscars
•Weinstein Co - 3 Oscars
•Disney - 2 Oscars
•DreamWorks - 2 Oscars
•MGM - 2 Oscars
•Sony Pictures Classics - 2 Oscars
•Focus Features - 1 Oscars
For more of Mingle Media TV’s Red Carpet Report coverage, please visit our website and follow us on Twitter and Facebook here:
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Follow our host, Linda at https://twitter.com/LindaIsSoGirlie
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ABOUT THE ACADEMY
The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences is the world's preeminent movie-related organization, with a membership of more than 6,000 of the most accomplished men and women working in cinema. In addition to the annual Academy Awards–in which the members vote to select the nominees and winners-the Academy presents a diverse year-round slate of public programs, exhibitions and events; provides financial support to a wide range of other movie-related organizations and endeavors; acts as a neutral advocate in the advancement of motion picture technology; and, through its Margaret Herrick Library and Academy Film Archive, collects, preserves, restores and provides access to movies and items related to their history. Through these and other activities the Academy serves students, historians, the entertainment industry and people everywhere who love movies.
FOLLOW THE ACADEMY
www.oscars.org
www.facebook.com/TheAcademy
www.youtube.com/Oscars
www.twitter.com/TheAcademy
Ashley's Look -
Ring by LuciousS - www.LuciousS.com
Erin's Look -
Dress by Emil Couture www.emildesign.com/ courtesy of The Ross Group http://www.thereelrossgroup.com/
Hair by Maeven Marie Ramirez salon-eleven.com/
Make Up by Veronica Matiar salon-eleven.com/
Linda's Look -
Dress by Shekhar Rahate - www.ShekharRahate.com
Necklace by Erin Fader Jewelry Design - www.ErinFader.com
BEST PICTURE
• "Amour" Margaret Menegoz, Stefan Arndt, Veit Heiduschka and Michael Katz, Producers
• "Argo" Grant Heslov, Ben Affleck and George Clooney, Producers - WINNER
• "Beasts of the Southern Wild" Dan Janvey, Josh Penn and Michael Gottwald, Producers
• "Django Unchained" Stacey Sher, Reginald Hudlin and Pilar Savone, Producers
• "Les Misérables" Tim Bevan, Eric Fellner, Debra Hayward and Cameron Mackintosh, Producers
• "Life of Pi" Gil Netter, Ang Lee and David Womark, Producers
• "Lincoln" Steven Spielberg and Kathleen Kennedy, Producers
• "Silver Linings Playbook" Donna Gigliotti, Bruce Cohen and Jonathan Gordon, Producers
• "Zero Dark Thirty" Mark Boal, Kathryn Bigelow and Megan Ellison, Producers
BEST FOREIGN FILM
Amour, Austria – WINNER
Kon-Tiki, Norway
No, Chile
A Royal Affair, Denmark
War Witch, Canada
BEST ANIMATED FEATURE FILM
Brave - WINNER
Frankenweenie
ParaNorman
The Pirates! Band of Misfits
Wreck-It Ralph
BEST ANIMATED SHORT FILM
Adam and Dog, Minkyu Lee
Fresh Guacamole, PES
Head over Heels, Timothy Reckart and Fodhla Cronin O’Reilly
Maggie Simpson in The Longest Daycare, David Silverman
Paperman, John Kahrs – WINNER
BEST LIVE ACTION SHORT FILM
Asad, Bryan Buckley and Mino Jarjoura
Buzkashi Boys, Sam French and Ariel Nasr
Curfew, Shawn Christensen - WINNER
Death of a Shadow (Dood van een Schaduw), Tom Van Avermaet and Ellen De Waele
Henry, Yan England
BEST DOCUMENTARY FEATURE
5 Broken Cameras
The Gatekeepers
How to Survive a Plague
The Invisible War
Searching for Sugar Man – WINNER
BEST DOCUMENTARY SHORT SUBJECT
Inocente, Sean Fine and Andrea Nix Fine – WINNER
Kings Point, Sari Gilman and Jedd Wider
Mondays at Racine, Cynthia Wade and Robin Honan
Open Heart, Kief Davidson and Cori Shepherd Stern
Redemption, Jon Alpert and Matthew O’Neill
BEST ACTOR
Bradley Cooper, Silver Linings Playbook
Daniel Day-Lewis, Lincoln – WINNER
Hugh Jackman, Les Miserables
Joaquin Phoenix, The Master
Denzel Washington, Flight
BEST ACTRESS
Jessica Chastain, Zero Dark Thirty
Jennifer Lawrence, Silver Linings Playbook – WINNER
Emmanuelle Riva, Amour
Naomi Watts, The Impossible
Quvenzhané Wallis, Beasts of the Southern Wild
BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR
Alan Arkin, Argo
Robert De Niro, Silver Linings Playbook
Philip Seymour Hoffman, The Master
Tommy Lee Jones, Lincoln
Christoph Waltz, Django Unchained – WINNER
BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
Amy Adams, The Master
Sally Field, Lincoln
Anne Hathaway, Les Miserables – WINNER
Helen Hunt, The Sessions
Jacki Weaver, Silver Linings Playbook
BEST DIRECTOR
Michael Haneke, Amour
Ang Lee, Life of Pi – WINNER
David O. Russell, Silver Linings Playbook
Steven Spielberg, Lincoln
Benh Zeitlin, Beasts of the Southern Wild
BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY
Wes Anderson and Roman Coppola, Moonrise Kingdom
Mark Boal, Zero Dark Thirty
John Gatins, Flight
Michael Haneke, Amour
Quentin Tarantino, Django Unchained – WINNER
BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY
Lucy Alibar and Benh Zeitlin, Beasts of the Southern Wild
Tony Kushner, Lincoln
David Magee, Life of Pi
David O. Russell, Silver Linings Playbook
Chris Terrio, Argo – WINNER
BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY
Anna Karenina, Seamus McGarvey
Django Unchained, Robert Richardson
Life of Pi, Claudio Miranda – WINNER
Lincoln, Janusz Kaminski
Skyfall, Roger Deakins
BEST ORIGINAL SCORE
Anna Karenina, Dario Marianelli
Argo, Alexandre Desplat
Life of Pi, Mychael Danna – WINNER
Lincoln, John Williams
Skyfall, Thomas Newman
BEST ORIGINAL SONG
“Before My Time” from Chasing Ice, Music and Lyric by J. Ralph
“Everybody Needs A Best Friend” from Ted, Music by Walter Murphy; Lyric by Seth MacFarlane
“Pi’s Lullaby” from Life of Pi, Music by Mychael Danna; Lyric by Bombay Jayashri
“Skyfall” from Skyfall, Music and Lyric by Adele Adkins and Paul Epworth – WINNER
“Suddenly” from Les Misérables, Music by Claude-Michel Schönberg; Lyric by Herbert Kretzmer and Alain Boublil
BEST COSTUME DESIGN
Anna Karenina, Jacqueline Durran – WINNER
Les Misérables, Paco Delgado
Lincoln, Joanna Johnston
Mirror Mirror, Eiko Ishioka
Snow White and the Huntsman, Colleen Atwood
BEST FILM EDITING
Argo, William Goldenberg – WINNER
Life of Pi, Tim Squyres
Lincoln, Michael Kahn
Silver Linings Playbook, Jay Cassidy and Crispin Struthers
Zero Dark Thirty, Dylan Tichenor and William Goldenberg
BEST MAKEUP AND HAIRSTYLING
Hitchcock, Howard Berger, Peter Montagna and Martin Samuel
The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey, Peter Swords King, Rick Findlater and Tami Lane
Les Misérables, Lisa Westcott and Julie Dartnell – WINNER
BEST PRODUCTION DESIGN
Anna Karenina, Production Design: Sarah Greenwood; Set Decoration: Katie Spencer
The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey, Production Design: Dan Hennah; Set Decoration: Ra Vincent and Simon Bright
Les Misérables, Production Design: Eve Stewart; Set Decoration: Anna Lynch-Robinson
Life of Pi, Production Design: David Gropman; Set Decoration: Anna Pinnock
Lincoln, Production Design: Rick Carter; Set Decoration: Jim Erickson – WINNER
BEST SOUND EDITING - TIE
Argo, Erik Aadahl and Ethan Van der Ryn
Django Unchained, Wylie Stateman
Life of Pi, Eugene Gearty and Philip Stockton
Skyfall, Per Hallberg and Karen Baker Landers – WINNER
Zero Dark Thirty, Paul N.J. Ottosson - WINNER
BEST SOUND MIXING
Argo, John Reitz, Gregg Rudloff and Jose Antonio Garcia
Les Misérables, Andy Nelson, Mark Paterson and Simon Hayes – WINNER
Life of Pi, Ron Bartlett, D.M. Hemphill and Drew Kunin
Lincoln, Andy Nelson, Gary Rydstrom and Ronald Judkins
Skyfall, Scott Millan, Greg P. Russell and Stuart Wilson
BEST VISUAL EFFECTS
The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey, Joe Letteri, Eric Saindon, David Clayton and R. Christopher White
Life of Pi, Bill Westenhofer, Guillaume Rocheron, Erik-Jan De Boer and Donald R. Elliott –WINNER
Marvel’s The Avengers, Janek Sirrs, Jeff White, Guy Williams and Dan Sudick
Prometheus, Richard Stammers, Trevor Wood, Charley Henley and Martin Hill
Snow White and the Huntsman, Cedric Nicolas-Troyan, Philip Brennan, Neil Corbould and Michael Dawson.
Information From:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/East_Village,_Manhattan
East Village, Manhattan
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
East Village, Manhattan
New York City Neighborhood
Location in Lower Manhattan
Named: 1960s[1]
Streets: 2nd Avenue, 1st Avenue, Avenue A, The Bowery, St. Mark's Place
Subway: F, V, 6 and L
Zip code: 10009, 10003 and 10002
Government
Federal: Congressional Districts 8, 12 and 14
State: New York State Assembly Districts 64, 66 and 74, New York State Senate Districts 25 and 29
City: New York City Council District 2
Local Manhattan Community Board 3
Neighborhood map
The East Village is a neighborhood in the borough of Manhattan in New York City. It lies east of Greenwich Village, south of Gramercy and Stuyvesant Town, and north of the Lower East Side. Within the East Village there are several smaller neighborhoods, including Alphabet City and The Bowery.
The neighborhood was once considered part of the Lower East Side, but in the 1960s it began to develop its own culture and became known as the East Village. Scores of artists and hippies began to move into the area, attracted by the base of Beatniks that had lived there since the 1950s. It has been the site of counterculture, protests and riots. The neighborhood is known as the birthplace and historical home of many artistic movements, including punk rock[2] and the Nuyorican literary movement.[3]
It is still known for a diverse community, vibrant nightlife and artistic sensibility, although in recent decades gentrification has changed the character of the neighborhood
History
Tompkins Square Park is the recreational and geographic heart of the East Village. It has historically been a part of counterculture, protest and riots.
New York City's Fourth of July fireworks over the neighborhood. The East Village's East River Park is a popular viewing destination.[edit] Formation of the neighborhood
Today's East Village was originally a farm owned by Dutch Governor Wouter van Twiller. Petrus Stuyvesant received the deed to this farm in 1651, and his family held on to the land for over seven generations, until a descendant began selling off parcels of the property in the early 1800s. Wealthy townhouses dotted the dirt roads for a few decades until the great Irish and German immigration of the 1840s and 1850s.
Speculative land owners began building multi unit dwellings on lots meant for single family homes, and began renting out rooms and apartments to the growing working class. The "East Village" was formerly known as Klein Deutschland ("Little Germany, Manhattan"); however, Little Germany dissolved after the SS General Slocum burned into the water in New York's East River on June 15, 1904. From the years roughly between the 1850s and the first decade of the 20th century, the "East Village" hosted the largest urban populations of Germans outside of Vienna and Berlin. It was America's first foreign language neighborhood; hundreds of political, social, sports and recreational clubs were set up during this period, some of these buildings still exist.
What is now the East Village once ended at the East River where Avenue C is now located. A large portion of the neighborhood was formed by landfill, including World War II debris and rubble from London, which was shipped across the Atlantic to provide foundation for the Franklin D. Roosevelt Drive.[5]
[edit] The 'East Village' separates from the Lower East Side
Definitions vary, but the boundaries are roughly defined as east of Broadway and the Bowery from 14th Street down to Houston Street.[1]
Looking south from 6th Street down Second Avenue, one of the main thoroughfares through the East Village.Until the mid-1960s, this area was simply the northern part of the Lower East Side, with a similar culture of immigrant, working class life. In the 1950s the migration of Beatniks into the neighborhood later attracted hippies, musicians and artists well into 1960s.[1] The area was dubbed the "East Village", to dissociate it from the image of slums evoked by the Lower East Side. According to the New York Times, a 1964 guide called, "Earl Wilson's New York," wrote that "artists, poets and promoters of coffeehouses from Greenwich Village are trying to remelt the neighborhood under the high-sounding name of 'East Village.'"[1]
Newcomers and real estate brokers popularized the East Village name, and the term was adopted by the popular media by the mid-1960s.[6][7] In 1966 a psychedelic weekly newspaper, The East Village Other, appeared and The New York Times declared that the neighborhood "had come to be known" as the East Village in the June 5, 1967 edition.[1]
[edit] The music scene develops
In 1966 Andy Warhol promoted a series of shows, entitled The Exploding Plastic Inevitable, and featuring the music of the Velvet Underground, in a Polish ballroom on St Marks Place. On June 27, 1967, the Electric Circus opened in the same space with a benefit for the Children's Recreation Foundation (Chairman: Bobby Kennedy). The Grateful Dead, The Chambers Brothers, Sly & the Family Stone, the Allman Brothers were among the many rock bands that performed there before it closed in 1971.
Punk rock icon and writer Richard Hell still lives in the same apartment in Alphabet City that he has had since the 1970s.On March 8, 1968 Bill Graham opened the Fillmore East in a Yiddish Theatre on 2nd Avenue. The venue quickly became known as "The Church of Rock and Roll," with two-show concerts several nights a week. While booking many of the same bands that had played the Electric Circus, Graham particularly used the venue – and its West Coast counterpart, to establish new British bands like The Who, Pink Floyd, The Jimi Hendrix Experience, Cream, and Led Zeppelin. It, too, closed in 1971.
CBGB, the nightclub considered by some to be the birthplace of punk music, was located in the neighborhood, as was the early punk standby A7. No Wave and New York hardcore also emerged in the area’s clubs. Among the many important bands and singers who got their start at these clubs and other venues in downtown Manhattan were: Patti Smith, Arto Lindsay, the Ramones, Blondie, Madonna, Talking Heads, the Plasmatics, Glenn Danzig, Sonic Youth, the Beastie Boys, Anthrax, and The Strokes. From 1983–1993, much of the more radical audio work was preserved as part of the Tellus Audio Cassette Magazine recording project, which was based in the nearby Lower East Side.
[edit] Rise in artistic prominence
Allen Ginsberg, a long-time resident, with poet Peter Orlovsky.Over the last 100 years, the East Village/Lower East Side neighborhood has been considered one of the strongest contributors to American arts and culture in New York.[8] During the great wave of immigration (Germans, Ukrainians, Polish) in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, countless families found their new homes in this area.
The East Village has been the birthplace of cultural icons and movements from the American gangster to the Warhol Superstars, folk music to punk rock, anti-folk to hip-hop, advanced education to organized activism, experimental theater to the Beat Generation and the community of experimental musicians, composers and improvisers now loosely known as the Downtown Scene.
Club 57, on St. Mark's Place, was an important incubator for performance art and visual art in the late 1970s and early 1980s; followed by Now Gallery, 8BC and ABC No Rio.
During the 1980s the East Village art gallery scene helped to galvanize a new post-modern art in America; showing such artists as Kiki Smith, Peter Halley, Keith Haring, Stephen Lack, Greer Lankton, Joseph Nechvatal, Nan Goldin, Jean-Michel Basquiat, David Wojnarowicz, Rick Prol, and Jeff Koons.[9]
[edit] The musical 'Rent'
The East Village is the setting for Jonathan Larson's musical Rent; set in the early 1990s, the story chronicles a group of friends over a year in their struggles against poverty, drug abuse and AIDS.
The musical Rent chronicled a period in the neighborhood's history that is bygone. It opened at the New York Theater Workshop in February 1996.[10] It described a New York City devastated by the AIDS epidemic, drugs and high crime, and followed several characters in the backdrop of their effort to make livings as artists.[11]
[edit] Decline of the art scene
The "Downtown Legends" wall at Mo Pitkins House of Satisfaction featured artists known in the East Village performance scene. A few featured in this photo include the Reverend Jen, Nick Zedd, Allen Ginsberg, Reverend Billy and Murray Hill (pictured).The East Village's performance and art scene has declined since its hey-day of the 1970s and 1980s.[12] One club that had opened to try to resurrect the neighborhood's past artistic prominence was Mo Pitkins' House of Satisfaction, part-owned by Jimmy Fallon of Saturday Night Live. It closed its doors in 2007, and was seen by many as another sign of the continued decline of the East Village performance and art scene, which has mostly moved to Williamsburg, Brooklyn.[13] Rapture Cafe also shut down in April 2008, and the neighborhood lost an important performance space and gathering ground for the gay community. There are still some performance spaces, such as Sidewalk Cafe on Avenue A, where downtown acts find space to exhibit their talent, and the poetry clubs.[14]
Punk scene icons stayed in the neighborhood as it changed. Richard Hell lives in the same apartment he has lived in since the 1970s, and Handsome Dick Manitoba of The Dictators owns and reigns over Manitoba's bar on Avenue B.
[edit] Internal neighborhoods
The East Village contains several hamlets of vibrant communities within itself.
[edit] Alphabet City
Main article: Alphabet City, Manhattan
The Nuyorican Poets Cafe has been located off Avenue C and East 3rd Street since its founding in 1973.Alphabet City comprises nearly two-thirds of the East Village. It also once was the archetype of a dangerous New York City neighborhood. Its turn-around was cause for The New York Times to observe in 2005 that Alphabet City went "from a drug-infested no man's land to the epicenter of downtown cool."[15] Its name comes from Avenues A, B, C, and D, the only avenues in Manhattan to have single-letter names. It is bordered by Houston Street to the south and 14th Street to the north where Avenue C ends. Some famous landmarks include Tompkins Square Park, the Nuyorican Poets Cafe and the Stuyvesant Town private residential community.
[edit] Loisaida
Main article: Loisaida
A Loisaida street fair in the Summer of 2008.Loisaida is a term derived from the Latino (and especially Nuyorican) pronunciation of "Lower East Side", a neighborhood in Manhattan, New York City. The term was originally coined by poet/activist, Bittman "Bimbo" Rivas in his 1974 poem "Loisaida". Loisaida Avenue is now an alternative name for Avenue C in the Alphabet City neighborhood of New York City, whose population has largely been Hispanic (mainly Nuyorican) since the late 1960s.
[edit] St. Mark's Place
Main article: St. Mark's Place
Artist Jim Power, known as the "Mosaic Man" for his public art tiling the neighborhood[16], at the 2009 St. Mark's Place Block Party.Eighth Street becomes St. Mark's place east of Third Avenue. It once had the cachet of Sutton Place, known as a secluded rich enclave in Manhattan, but which by the 1850s had become a place for boarding houses and a German immigrant community.[17] It is named after St Mark's Church in-the-Bowery, which was built on Stuyvesant Street but is now on 10th Street. St. Mark's Place once began at the intersection of the Bowery and Stuyvesant Street, but today the street runs from Third Avenue to Avenue A. Japanese street culture and a Japanese expatriate scene forms in the noodle shops and bars that line St. Mark's Place, also home to an aged punk culture and CBGB's new store. It is home to one of the only Automats in New York City (it has since closed).[18]
St. Mark's is along the “Mosaic Trail”, a trail of 80 mosaic-encrusted lampposts that runs from Broadway down Eighth Street to Avenue A, to Fourth Street and then back to Eighth Street. The project was undertaken by East Village public artist Jim Power, known as the "Mosaic Man".[16]
[edit] The Bowery
Main article: The Bowery
Once synonymous with 'Bowery Bums', the avenue has become a magnet for luxury condominiums as the neighborhood's rapid gentrification continues.The Bowery, former home to the punk-rock nightclub CBGB, was once known for its many homeless shelters, drug rehabilitation centers and bars. The phrase "On The Bowery", which has since fallen into disuse, was a generic way to say one was down-and-out.[19]
The Bow’ry, The Bow’ry!
They say such things,
and they do strange things
on the Bow’ry —From the musical A Trip to Chinatown, 1891
Today, the Bowery has become a boulevard of new luxury condominiums. It also is home to the Amato Opera and the Bowery Poetry Club, contributing to the neighborhood's reputation as a place for artistic pursuit. Artists Amiri Baraka and Taylor Mead hold regular readings and performances in the space.
The redevelopment of the avenue from flophouses to luxury condominiums has met with resistance from long-term residents, who agree the neighborhood has improved, but that its unique, gritty character is also disappearing.[20]
[edit] Parks and green space
[edit] Tompkins Square Park
Main article: Tompkins Square Park
The Tompkins Square dog run was the first in New York City, and is a social scene unto itself.[5]Tompkins Square Park is a 10.5 acre (42,000 m²) public park in the Alphabet City section of the East Village neighborhood in the borough of Manhattan in New York City. It is square in shape, and is bounded on the north by East 10th Street, on the east by Avenue B, on the south by East 7th Street, and on the west by Avenue A. St. Marks Place abuts the park to the west.
[edit] Tompkins Square Park Police Riot
Main article: Tompkins Square Park Police Riot (1988)
The Tompkins Square Park Police Riot was a defining moment for the neighborhood. In the late hours of August 6 into the morning hours of August 7, 1988 a riot broke out in Alphabet City's Tompkins Square Park. Groups of "drug pushers, homeless people and young people known as 'skinheads'" had largely taken over the East Village park, but the neighborhood was divided about what, if anything, should be done about it.[21] The local governing body, Manhattan Community Board 3, adopted a 1 am curfew for the previously 24-hour park, in an attempt to bring it under control.[22] On July 31, a rally against the curfew resulted in several clashes between protesters and police.[23]
[edit] East River Park
Main article: East River Park
East River Park below the Williamsburg Bridge.The park is 57 acres (230,000 m2) that runs along the Franklin D. Roosevelt Drive from Montgomery Street to East 12th Street.[24] It was designed in the 1930s by Robert Moses, who wanted to ensure there was parkland on the Lower East Side.[24]
[edit] Community gardens
There are reportedly over 640 community gardens in New York City—gardens run by local collectives within the neighborhood who are responsible for the gardens' upkeep—and an estimated 10 percent of those are located on the Lower East Side and East Village alone.[25]
[edit] Tower of Toys on Avenue B
The Avenue B and 6th Street Community Garden is one of the neighborhood's more notable for a now removed outdoor sculpture, the Tower of Toys, designed by artist and long-time garden gate-keeper, Eddie Boros. Boros died April 27, 2007.[26] The Tower was controversial in the neighborhood; some viewed it as a masterpiece, others as an eyesore.[26][27] The tower appeared in the opening credits for the television show NYPD Blue and also appears in the musical Rent.[26] In May 2008, it was dismantled. According to NYC Parks Commissioner Adrian Benepe, the tower was rotting in sections that made it a safety hazard.[28] Its removal was seen as another symbol of the fading past of the neighborhood.[28]
[edit] Toyota Children’s Learning Garden
Located at 603 East 11th Street, the Toyota Children's Learning Garden is not technically a community garden, but it also fails to fit in the park category. Designed by landscape architect Michael Van Valkenburgh, the garden opened in May 2008 as part of the New York Restoration Project and is designed to teach children about plants.[29]
[edit] New York City Marble Cemetery
A production of John Reed's All the World's a Grave in the Marble Cemetery, which does not contain headstones.The cemetery is actually two, which sit on 2nd Street between 1st Avenue and 2nd Avenue. They are open the fourth Sunday of every month.[30] The first and more prominent is the City cemetery, which is second oldest non-sectarian cemetery in New York City. It sits next to the oldest public cemetery in New York City not affiliated with any religion, the "New York Marble Cemetery."[31] The cemetery was opened in 1831 and at one point contained ex-U.S. President James Monroe.[32]
[edit] Culture and events
Longtime Mistress of Ceremonies at eatery Lucky Cheng's, Miss Understood stops a bus in front of the restaurant on First Avenue.Other than geography, the East Village's most notable commonalities with Greenwich Village are a colorful history, vibrant social and cultural outlets, and street names that often diverge from the norm.
The Bowery is a north-south avenue which also lends its name to the somewhat overlapping neighborhood of the Bowery; St. Mark's Place, a crosstown street well-known for counterculture businesses; and Astor Place/Cooper Square, home of the Public Theater and the Cooper Union. Nearby universities like New York University (NYU), The New School, and The Cooper Union have dormitories in the neighborhood.
[edit] Ethnicity and religion
Photograph of St. Nicholas with parts of Second Street visible. The church and almost all buildings on the street were demolished in the 1960's and replaced with parking lots.
Former parishioners of St. Mary's Help of Christians pray outside the shuttered church in August 2008.According to 2000 census figures provided by the New York City Department of City Planning, which includes the Lower East Side in its calculation, the neighborhood was 35% Asian, 28% non-Hispanic white, 27% Hispanic and 7% black.[33]
On October 9, 1966, A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada, founder of the International Society for Krishna Consciousness, held the first recorded outdoor chanting session of the Hare Krishna mantra outside of the Indian subcontinent at Tompkins Square Park.[34] This is considered the founding of the Hare Krishna religion in the United States, and the large tree close to the center of the Park is demarcated as a special religious site for Krishna adherents.[34] The late poet Allen Ginsberg, who lived and died in the East Village, attended the ceremony.
There are several Roman Catholic churches in the East Village which have fallen victim to financial hardship particularly in the past decade. Unable to maintain their properties, the Roman Catholic Church has shuttered many of them - including St. Mary's Help of Christians on East 12th Street, as well as St. Ann's. There has recently been much controversy over St. Brigid's, the historical parish on Tompkins Square Park.
[edit] Ukrainian history
Since the 1890s there has been a large Ukrainian concentration roughly from 10th Street to 5th Street, between 3rd Avenue and Avenue A. The post-World War II diaspora, consisting primarily of Western Ukrainian intelligentsia, also settled down in the area. Several churches, including St. George's Catholic Church; Ukrainian restaurants and butcher shops; The Ukrainian Museum; the Shevchenko Scientific Society; and the Ukrainian Cultural Center are evidence of the impact of this culture on the area.
[edit] Gentrification
[edit] New York University, a controversial resident
Residents of the East Village have a love-hate relationship with New York University, which owns and maintains many buildings, particularly in much of downtown Manhattan and in the neighborhoods surrounding its main campus in Greenwich Village (a distinct neighborhood from the East Village).[35]
St. Ann's Church, a rusticated-stone structure on East 12th Street with a Romanesque tower that dated to 1847 was sold to the University to make way for a monolithic 26-story, 700 bed dormitory for students. The University did protect and maintain St. Ann's original facade and small plaza immediately fronting the 12th Street sidewalk. The result is a blended, softer abutment of the new dorm building (which does rise dramatically above the facade) up behind the old St. Ann's entry way. New York University has built many dorms, and this one in particular is now the tallest structure in the area. "There are larger changes going on here," said Lynne Brown, vice president of university relations and public affairs. "I fear this tendency to blame any trend residents don't like happening at the doorstep of NYU," said Brown, mentioning that the university has been one of the longest inhabitants of the East Village. But Nancy Cosie, a 20 year resident and former St. Ann's parishioner, does not buy that argument. "Enough is enough," Cosie exclaimed to The Village Voice, "This is not a campus. This is a neighborhood, and this is my home."[35] NYU's destruction or purchasing of many historic buildings (such as the Peter Cooper post office) have made it symbolic of change that many long-time residents fear is destroying what made the neighborhood interesting and attractive.[36] "I live on Avenue B and 9th Street," an NYU student said. "I know I'm part of the problem - gentrification that is. But where am I supposed to live?"[36]
NYU has often been at odds with residents of both the East and West Villages, as legendary urban preservationist Jane Jacobs battled the school in the 1960s.[37] "She spoke of how universities and hospitals often had a special kind of hubris reflected in the fact that they often thought it was OK to destroy a neighborhood to suit their needs,” said Andrew Berman of the Greenwich Village Society for Historic Preservation.[38]
[edit] Museums, libraries, performance and art spaces
The Bowery Poetry Club.
Sherry Vine and Joey Arias during the 2009 HOWL! Festival.New York Public Library Tompkins Square branch [3]
The Fales Library of NYU
East Village Visitors Center - 308 Bowery
The Ukrainian Museum
New Museum of Contemporary Art
Museum of Jewish Heritage
Performance Space 122
Anthology Film Archives
The Stone
Bouwerie Lane Theatre
Amato Opera
Danspace Project
The Ontological-Hysteric Theater
The Pearl Theatre Company [4]
Stomp! (Theatrical show)
Metropolitan Playhouse[5]
Mercury Lounge (live music)
Sidewalk Cafe (performance and live music)
Bowery Ballroom (concerts and shows)
Nuyorican Poets Cafe (music, poetry, readings, slams)
Bowery Poetry Club (music, poetry, readings, slams)
La MaMa E.T.C. (performance theater)
Cooper Union (speeches, presentations, public lectures and readings)
[edit] Neighborhood festivals
Mayday Festival - May 1; yearly.
Charlie Parker Jazz Festival - August; yearly.[6]
HOWL! Festival - September; yearly.[7][8]
East Village Radio Festival - September 6, 2008 [9]
Tompkins Square Halloween Dog Parade - October; yearly.[10]
East Village Theater Festival - August 3–23, 2009.[11]
FAB! Festival & Block Party - Last weekend in September annually, Sept 25, 2010 [12]
[edit] Media
Many film shoots take place in the East Village; here a period movie with antique police cars is filmed on East 4th Street.[edit] Radio
East Village Radio
[edit] Local news
The Village Voice
The Villager
East-Village.com
EastVillageFeed.com
[edit] Cinemas
Anthology Film Archives
Landmark's Sunshine Theater
Village East Cinema
City Cinema Village East
Two Boots Pioneer Theater
[edit] Notable residents past and present
Handsome Dick Manitoba of The Dictators.
Madonna lived in the neighborhood when she was just starting out in her career.[39]Handsome Dick Manitoba, who owns Manitoba's bar on Avenue B off Tompkins Square Park.
Darren Aronofsky and his wife, Rachel Weisz
Chris Cain, Bassist for the Indie-Rock band We Are Scientists
Barbara Feinman
John Leguizamo
Daniel Radcliffe
Agim Kaba
Rosario Dawson
Tom Kalin
Vashtie Kola director
W. H. Auden[40]
Greer Lankton, Artist/Doll maker
Ellen Stewart founder of La MaMa, E.T.C. (Experimental Theatre Club) in 1961.
Madonna lived there in the 1980s.
John Lurie,musician, painter, actor, producer.
Jean-Michel Basquiat, graffiti artist
David Bowes, painter
Allen Ginsberg (1926–1997), Beat Generation poet and author of Howl.[41]
Keith Haring, neo-pop artist
Claes Oldenburg (1929-), sculptor, had a studio at 46 East 3rd Street in the late 1950s.[42]
Candy Darling, actress/Warhol superstar
Bill Raymond, actor
Ryan Adams, alt-country musician
David Cross, actor, comedian
Negin Farsad, writer, director, comedian
Nan Goldin, photographer
Stephen Lack, actor, painter
Ronnie Landfield, (1947-), painter, lived on E. 11th street, mid-1960s[43]
Kiki Smith sculptor
John Zorn composer, musician
Richard Hell, musician, author
Abbie Hoffman (1936–1989), 1960s political activist[44]
Ayun Halliday, actress and writer, and wife of playwright Greg Kotis
Greg Kotis, playwright, and husband of actress and writer Ayun Halliday
Jerry Rubin (1938–1994), 1960s political activist - with Hoffman founded the Yippies in a basement apartment at 30 St. Marks Place[44]
Cookie Mueller, actress, model
Paul Krassner (1932-), publisher of The Realist
Walter Bowart (1939–2007), co-founder editor/ of The East Village Other
Allan Katzman, co-founder/editor of The East Village Other
Tuli Kupferberg, (1923-), Beat Generation poet, and one of the original Fugs
Ed Sanders, (1939-), New York School poet and one of the original Fugs
Joseph Nechvatal (1951-) early digital artist and founder of the Tellus Audio Cassette Magazine
Randy Harrison, actor
Joel Resnicoff, artist and fashion illustrator.
Regina Spektor, (1980-) Singer-songwriter and pianist.
Rachel Trachtenburg (1993-) singer and musician
Tom Otterness sculptor
Steven Fishbach, runner-up of Survivor: Tocantins
Chloe Sevigny actress
Conor Oberst musician
Lou Reed, musician
Julian Casablancas, musician
Mark Ronson
Arthur Russell, musician[45]
Jack Smith filmmaker, artist
Iggy Pop, performer, musician
Belgian collectors card, no. A 66.
Red headed Moira Shearer (1926-2006) was a luminous star of the British ballet. She became an international film idol with her unforgettable debut as the young ballerina Vicky in The Red Shoes (1948), a classic of the British cinema and probably the most popular film about ballet ever.
Moira Shearer King was born in Dunfermline, Scotland, in 1926. She was the daughter of actor Harold V. King. In 1931 her family moved to Ndola, Northern Rhodesia. Her mother pushed her into ballet and Moira received her first dancing training under a former pupil of Enrico Cecchetti. She returned to Britain in 1936 and trained with Flora Fairbairn in London for a few months before she was accepted as a pupil by the Russian teacher Nicholas Legat. After three years with Legat, she joined the Sadler's Wells Ballet School. However, after the outbreak of the World War II, her parents took her to live in Scotland. The Scottish beauty with her flaming red hair made her debut with Mona Inglesby's International Ballet in 1941 before moving on to the famous Sadler's Wells in 1942. There she was second only to the world renowned prima ballerina, Margot Fonteyn. From 1942 to 1952 Shearer danced all the major classic roles and a full repertoire of revivals and new ballets. She came to international attention for her first film role as the doomed heroine in the ballet-themed film The Red Shoes (Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger, 1948). The film employs the story within a story device. Victoria Page (Shearer), a young, unknown dancer from an aristocratic background meets at a party Boris Lermontov (Anton Walbrook), the ruthless but charismatic impresario of the Ballet Lermontov. He invites her to join his famous ballet company. She becomes the lead dancer in a new ballet called The Red Shoes, itself based on the fairy tale The Red Shoes by Hans Christian Andersen. Vicky is torn between the powerful impresario and a struggling composer (Marius Goring) whom she loves. The film got rave reviews and became one of the highest earning British films of all time. Shearer’s role and the film were so powerful that although she went on to star in other films, she is primarily known for playing ‘Vicky.’ She toured the United States with the Sadler's Wells Ballet in 1949 and in 1950/51. Moira Shearer’s second film was the magnificent spectacle The Tales of Hoffmann (Michael Powell, Emeric Pressburger, 1951), an adaptation of Jacques Offenbach's final opera, Les contes d'Hoffmann. The film co-starred Robert Helpmann and Léonide Massine. It is not just a film of a staged opera, but a true cinematic opera that makes use of film techniques not available in an opera house. Powell and Pressburger were nominated for the Grand Prize of the 1951 Cannes Film Festival, and won the Exceptional Prize. They also won the Silver Bear award for Best Musical at the 1st Berlin International Film Festival.
In 1953, a combination of ill-health, injury and her wish to make a name for herself as an actress made Moira Shearer decide to retire from the ballet stage at age 27. She co-starred with James Mason in a segment of The Story of Three Loves (Vincente Minnelli, Gottfried Reinhardt, 1953), a romantic anthology film made by MGM. She appeared as Titania in A Midsummer Night's Dream at the 1954 Edinburgh Festival. The following year she starred in the British film comedy The Man Who Loved Redheads (Harold French, 1955) based on the play Who is Sylvia? by Terence Rattigan. She toured as Sally Bowles in the play I am a Camera in 1955 and appeared at the Bristol Old Vic as G.B. Shaw’s Major Barbara in 1956. Shearer worked again for Powell on the controversial film Peeping Tom (Michael Powell, 1960) about a sexually repressed serial killer (Karlheinz Böhm) who murders women and films their expressions of terror and dying gasps on film. Its controversial subject and the extremely harsh reception by critics effectively destroyed Powell's career as a director. However, it attracted a cult following, and in later years, it has been re-evaluated and is now considered a masterpiece. A year later she appeared in the musical 1-2-3-4 ou Les Collants noirs/Black Tights (Terence Young, 1961) with Zizi Jeanmaire and Cyd Charisse. It would be Shearer’s last film. Shearer was on the BBC's General Advisory Council from 1970 to 1977 and the Scottish Arts Council from 1971 to 1973. In 1972, she was chosen by the BBC to present the Eurovision Song Contest when it was staged in Edinburgh. In 1977 she played Madame Ranevsky in Anton Chekhov's Cherry Orchard at the Royal Lyceum Theatre in Edinburgh and, in 1978, was Judith Bliss in Noel Coward's Hay Fever. She wrote two books, biographies of the choreographer George Balanchine and the actress Ellen Terry, and a column for The Daily Telegraph. She also gave talks on ballet worldwide. The choreographer Gillian Lynne persuaded her to return to ballet to play the mother of artist L. S. Lowry (Christopher Gable) in the ballet film A Simple Man (1987, Gillian Lynne) for the BBC. In 1950, Moira Shearer had married writer and broadcaster Ludovic Kennedy. The couple had a son, Alastair, and three daughters, Ailsa, Rachel and Fiona. In 2006, Moira Shearer died of natural causes in Oxford, England at the age of 80
Sources: Anna Kisselgoff (The New York Times), Steve Crook (IMDb), The Telegraph, Wikipedia and IMDb.
And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.
December 19, 2015 (photo: Dec. 31, 2014)
Listed below are the 1,633 runners who have registered (as of Dec. 19, 2015) for the Resolution Run, taking place in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, on the early evening of December 31, 2015. What a way to start your new-year's celebration!
** The run is presented by the Running Room stores across Canada and in 3 USA states, and is sponsored by Pure Protein®
www.resolutionrun.ca/register-cities-s14071
** If you live near one of these cities, why not register for this year's race, or put it on the calendar for next year?
See also, pictures taken by a runner, from:
2014,
2013,
2012,
2011,
2010,
2009.
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The runners for the 5k and 10k races are listed by community, and alphabetically by first name. The larger local communities are listed first.
A. Ontario (Ottawa, Kanata, Nepean, Orleans, etc.)
B. Québec
C. Other Canadian provinces
D. Outside Canada
............................................................................
A.1 Ottawa 5k
Adam Kearney
Aidan Newey
Aisha Suhail
Alan Bolster
Alexander Cau
Alexandra Wilgosh
Alexandre Beaulieu
Allison Dakers
Andrea Clancy
Andreas Weichert
Andy Blenkarn
Andy Lancaster
Angela Quinlan
Angie Kelly
Ann Arsenault
Ann Wesch
Anna Afghan
Anne Fraser
Anne MacDonald
Arlene MacIver
Ashley Cowan
Aurélie Thériault Brillon
Barbara Dundas
Barbara Mingie
Bart Hruda
Ben Grove
Benjamin Rundle
Bernhard Walter
Bilge Diker
Brenda Highmore
Brenda Thomson
Brian Mann
Brian Newman
Bruce Snider
Cameron McEwen
Camille Neyson
Carly St. Germain
Carol Gage
Caroline George
Carolyn Chacksfield
Carrie Reid
Carrie Snider
Carrol Lunau
Catherine Ann Brown
Catherine Healy
Catherine Mavriplis
Cathy Croteau
Catriona Birnie
Celeste Irvine-Jones
Chad Evans
Charlene Caines
Charles Proulx
Cheryl Batchelor
Cheryl McIntyre
Chris Godwin
Christen Den
Christine Boisvert
Christine Derouin
Christine Heron
Christine Warning
Christine Wheeler
Cici Waugh
Claudette Charbonneau
Colleen Bastien
Colleen Hughes
Connie Yuan
Coreen Corcoran
Corinne Ramey
Curtis Hientz
Cynthia Flett
Daniel Charbonneau
Dave Yurach
David Birnie
David Chacksfield
David Derousie
David Desormeaux
David Moffat
David Robbins
Dawn Sheppard
Dawne Rennie
Debbie Kacew
Debbie Sullivan
Deborah Kacew
Demetri Papadatos
Dena Kaplan
Denise Hyde
Denise Walter
Derek hughes
Diana Bourke
Diana Crawford
Diana Harrison
Diane Faubert
Dominique Barrette
Donna Cousineau
Donna Mandeville
Drake Jensen
Elaine Fournier
Elizabeth Labelle
Ellen Manchee
Elsa Varady
Emi Koyanagi
Emily Levesque
Emma Chacksfield
Emma Snider
Erica Dath
Erin Baydak
Erin Collins
Fiona Gilfillan
François Brouard
Gabriela Corluka
Gerry Guillot
Gina Rosa
Harriet Merks
Heather Gordon
Heather Lewis
Heather Martellacci
Heather Stone
Howard Voight
Ina Mann
Isabelle Beaulieu
Iwona Bierylo
Jack Silverstein
Jackie Mantle
Jackson Cau
Jacques Fauteux
Jane Heintz Grove
Jane Maxwell
Janet Lancaster
Janet Murray
Janet White
Janice Bailey
Janice Dunn
Janice Tibbetts
Janice Yemensky
Janik Cazabon
Janna Balkwill
Jason Organ
Jean Kneale
Jean-Paul Beaulieu
Jean-Pierre Ebacher
Jeff Little
Jeffrey Simpson
Jenika Heim
Jennifer Broad
Jennifer Evans
Jennifer Martin
Jennifer Moorehead
Jennifer O'Brien
Jennifer Salahub
Jérémie Neyson
Jerry Ritt
Jessica Turner
Jill Swan
Jim Balkwill
Joan Katz
Joan Norgren
Joanne Lostracco
Joanne McAndless
Joanne Sheahan
John Downey
John Horrigan
Jordan Pepin
Joseph Whitfield
Joshua Flett
Judy McIntosh
Judy Robertson
Judy Taylor
Julie Nantel
Julie Pearson
Julie Stephens
Julie Villeneuve
Karen Afghan
Karen Evans
Karen Harrington
Karen White
Karen Yantha
Karin Buhrmann
Karla Weys
Kate Chacksfield
Katherine Arnup
Katherine Gormley
Katherine Kacew
Kathleen Belair
Kathleen O'Brien
Kathleen Thompson
Kathryn Burke
Kathryn MacInnis
Kathy Adair
Kathy Prentice
Kathy Thomas
Katie Fraser
Kelly Lehto
Kelly Mcgurrin
Kelly St-Jacques
Ken Reynolds
Ken Walker
Kent wallace
Kerry Colpitts
Kerry-Anne Livingstone
Khadija Ahmed
Kim Chretien
Kim Fisher
Krissie Wilson
Kristen Bignell
Kristin Cook
Larry Menard
Laura Cluney
Leandro da Costa
Leila Moharib
Lesley Ouimet
Leslie Reaume
Lev Silverstein
Liane Cau
Lillian Serrouya
Linda Beehler
Lisa Pacarynuk
Lorna Newman
Louise Mandeville
Lucie Simpson
Lucy Lightbown
Luiza Cruceru
Lynn Hannah
Lynn Pacarynuk
Lynn Zolinski
Mackenzie Danner
Marc Langlois
Marc-Andre Lussier
Marg MacGillivray
Margaret Buist
Maria Alvarez
Maria Ward
Marianne Mount
Marielle Mooy
Marisa Caruso
Mark Templin
Marlene Mathon
Martine Lacasse
Mary Blaney
Mary Mackinnon
Mary Murphy
Maryanne Jackson-Hughes
Mary-Ellen Harper
Maryse Deslauriers
Matthew Ho
Meg Steele
Melissa Lett
Melissa Mondor
Michael Arthur
Michael Balkwill
Michael Morin
Michael Stefanison
Michel Charette
Michele Hardy
Micheline Mathon
Michelle Harte
Mike Seymour
Nan Cudmore
Nancy KENMIR
Nancy Wasserman
Natacha Riendeau
Natalie Rundle
Nathalie Gagnon
Nathan Chaput
Nick Charette
Nicky Carpenter
Owen Frank
Pat Liston
Patrcia Balkwill
Patricia Chafe
Patricia Voight
Patrick Blenkarn
Patrick Burt
Patrick McKenna
Pierre Bellemare
Pierre Mandeville
Piyatida Danner
Quinn Fortier
Ramon Maldonado
Ravi Pendakur
Raymond Ouimet
Reid Reynolds
Rhianna Gordon
Richard Lewis
Richard McLaughlin
Richard Weichert
Rick Derouin
Rick Palmer
Robert Adolfson
Robert Cau
Robert Statham
Robin Bois
Robin Corcoran
Ron Sullivan
Ron Taylor
Rosemary O'Brien
Roula Eatrides
Russ Black
Ruth Hurst
Ryan O'Connor
Saari Fauteux-McLellan
Saba Desta
Sally Little
Sandra Burton
Sarah Cleary
Sari Abdallah
Scott Burton
Scott MacIver
Sean Fortier
Shannon Renaud
Sharon Brodo
Shawn Thomson
Shawn Tippins
Sherrie Dagg
Shirley Black
Snow Jackie
Sofia Lazaridis
Sophie Rheault
Stan Baldwin
Stan CUMMINGS
Stan Grabstas
Stephane Parent
Stephanie Breau-Godwin
Stephanie Lemay
Stephanie Patenaude
Stephen Brode
Sue Ashton
Sue Franklin
Susan Ayala
Susan Hayward
Susan Johnston
Susie James
Sylvie Sarault
Tammy Dopson
Tammy Elizabeth Kendrew
Terri Bolster
Theresa Hendricks
Timothy Ramey
Tina Bradford
Todd Mortimer
Tony Bettino
Trevor Allen
Trudy Price
Valerie Noftle
Vera Sarkissian
Vicki Bencze
Vincent Labrosse
Vivian Tors
Wael Hussein
Wendy Cummings
Wendy McCutcheon
Wendy Statham
William Saltman
William Sheahan
A.1 Ottawa 10k
Alex Renwick
Alex Weatherston
Alexandre James
Alison Goss
Allan Stanley
Amy White
Angela King-Suuronen
Angela Nuelle
Anita Choquette
Anna Dodd
anna shannette
Anna Streib
Anne McCarthy
Audrey Taylor
August Wehrmann
Barbara Schedler Fischer
Ben Mooy
Bernard Rousseau
Beth Martin
Beverly Denison
Bob McCulloch
Brian Bax
Brittany Descarie-Smith
Bryan Dickie
Bryan Hetherington
Caitlin Chisholm
Carl Krentz
Carrie Snider
Cassandra Wilson
Catherine Ramey
Chantal Campbell
Chantal Pilon
Charles Bordeleau
Chelle Marshall
Cheryl Giles
Chloe Halpenny
Chris Renwick
Christian Figueredo
Christiane Zeithammel
Christina Gates
Christina Martinez
Christine Hicks
Christine Weatherston
Christopher Galley
Christopher Nicholson
Claude Schryer
Coco Donati
Colleen Grebstad
Courtney Laidler
Craig Piche
Dan Roy
Dana Timus
Darrell Nicholson
Darryl Bilodeau
Dawn Lyons
Dawn Reid
Deb Hogan
Deborah Wolfe
Denise Schwarz
Derek Baker
Diedre Viljoen
Dominique Roy
Don C. Cumming
Donald Bastin
Doug Baines
Doug Mouser
Doug Welsby
Ebert Ephraim
Edmund Thomas
Elise De Francesco
Emilie Creede
Emily Kirke
Emma Holmes
Eric Demers
Erin O'Grady
Felipe Diaz
Francois Trudel
Gabrielle Nadeau
German Espinal
Gillian Montoya
Ginette Lalonde-Kontio
Ginette Lavigne
Ginette Tognet
Glen Gobel
Glenn Campbell
Gordon Buchanan
Greg Bryson
Greta Chase
Guillaume Bourdeloux
Guy Desjardins
Gyro Inman
Hashem Mawlawi
Heather Duff
Heather Saumur
Helen St. Denis
Helene Boyer
Ian Young
In-Leng Ng
Irène Dionne
Jackie Millette
James Buell
James McKirdy
James Moretton
Jamie Tompkins
Jane Lefeuvre
Janice Buell
Jay Rached
Jeff Bardsley
Jen Johnston
Jennifer Hughes Doucet
Jennifer Laughton
Jennifer Spence
Jenny Fowler
Jessica Milne
Jill Baker
Jo-Ann Brault
Joanna Simpson
Joanne perry
Joe Gunn
Joe Smith
Jon Clark
Jonathan Boucher
Josee Poirier
Josephine Pasternak
Judith Heroux
Karen Ephraim
Karen Jeffery
Katherin Halhed
Katherine Halhed
Kathleen Roach
Kathlene Allen
Kathryn Szymczyk
Kathy Dalley-Hunter
Kathy Heney
Kathy Knight-Robinson
Kathy Van Zeyl
Katie Weaver-Rutten
Keith Hendricks
Keith Laughton
Kelly Slumkoski
Kerry Waddell
Kevin Woodley
Kiana Moody
Kristian Suuronen
Kristin Goff
Laco Kovac
Lars Rannes
Laura Stewart
Laura-Lee Brenneman
Lauren Mouser
Laurie Hunt
Leann Halpenny
Linda Newton
Lise Patterson
Lori Mitchell
Lorraine Montoya
Louise Rachlis
Lucie Labelle
Luc-Rock Paquin
Lynda Bordeleau
Madeline Matthews
Malcolm Parsons
Mandy Brooks
Mario Dignard
Marjan Cencen
Mark Mccourt
Martha Ainslie
Martha Mason-Ward
Matthew Chan
Melanie Reed
Mélanie Rivest
Michael Arts
Michael McAuley
Michael Thompson
Michelle Davidson
Michelle Leclair
Michelle Prawer
Mickey Ainslie Holmes
Mirella Giudice
Nancy Porteous
Nick Fidler
Nicole Boyer
Nicole McCann
Nora Ballantyne
Pam Archibald
Pam Kirk
Pascal Bessette
Pat Buchik
Patrice Brassard
Patricia Beh
Patricia Coons
Patrick Hurteau
Paul Denys
Paul Lawless
Paul Roy
Penina Krongold
Peter Andrews
Philippe Boyer
Philippe Doucet
Pierre Deschamps
Pierre LeBlanc
Pilar Bryson
PK Leung
Rachel Nicholson
Rachelle Scully
Ralph Prentice
Renata Manchak
Rene Yaraskavitch
Richard Duranceau
Richard Ernst
Richard Wall
Rob Vanasse
Rob Walsh
Robert Boggs
Roberta Blackburn
Robyn Krentz
Roger Couture
Roger Hunter
Rosemary Nicholson
Ruth Farey
Samuel Nicholson
Sandra Monaghan
Sarah Heer
Scott Marks
Sharleen Conrad
Shawnda Parsons
Shayne Chamberlain
Sindy Hooper
Steacy Johnson
Stephen Woroszczuk
Susan Mack
Suzanne Lafrance
Suzanne MacLean
Suzanne Potvin
Sydney Switzer
Sylvain Brassard
Sylvie Jacques
Tamara Mabley-Chaisson
Tamsin Douglas
Tania Tooke
Tara Delage
Thomas Fischer
Tom Donovan
Tony Machado
Tony Wu
Tracy Wilson
Trevor Chaisson
Valerie Bellemare
Valerie Flynn
Veronika Cencen
Viola Caissy
Wendy Hough
William Britton
William Mouser
Yunsun Hwang
Yves Prevost
A.2 Kanata 5k
Amy Armour
Andrea Haas
Arlene Steadman
Bernie Armour
Bonnie Shaw
Carmen Davidson
Cathy Harris
Cecilia Jorgenson
Colleen Kilty
Daniel Riendeau
Darene Toal-Sullivan
Deborah Mahon
Denise Vierich
Dick Keilty
Elowyn Rodriguez
Emillia Moelgaard
Emily Keilty
Gail Pindar
Gord Champagne
Helen German
Helen Roper
Jaimie Young
Jan mattingly
Janice Tughan
Janik Lowe
Jessi Mirault
Joan Champagne
John Albert
Jordan Pumphrey
Justin Mirault
Kim Ennis
Liz Murphy
Marie-France Horton
Mark Jorgenson
Martin Shaw
Mary Young
Nancy Young
Naomi Morbey
Nathalie Roy
Pamela Ford
Patti Harle
Remi Roy
Ron Pumphrey
Ronald Mahon
Sharon Lee
Sophie ROY
Stefania Gemmell
Susan Brimmell
Suzanne Dunas-Skinner
Tania Johnston
Tom Harle
Trevor Mahon
Wayne mattingly
A.2 Kanata 10k
Andria Robin
Ben Bourgeois
Dennis Lewis
Doug McMillan
Elizabeth Blacquiere
Grazyna Jalowiecki
Jaimee Fleming
James Muir
Jennifer Lyon
Jennifer McAndrew
Jim Scott
Julie Armstrong
Kristi Herridge
Lynn Douglas
Manon Desharnais
Paul Doucette
Shannon Cheney
Sheena Brooks
Sherry Connors
Steve Ristow
Tania Louisseize-Letourneau
A.3 Nepean 5k
Beverley Kemp
Brenda Stanul
Caitlin McMann
Carole Gervais
Catherine Taylor Kelly
Christine Henry
Christopher Hill
Clark Carvish
Dan McGlinchey
Danielle Schneiderman
Darlene Roberts
Dave Henry
David Reid
David Summerbell
Denise Rigden
Dev Kohli
Donna Billard
Donna McKibbon
Emily Sandwell
Gerry Blathwayt
Gillian Brown
Hieu Nguyen
Janet Rumball
Jean Paul Rozon
Joyce McGlinchey
Judy Tubman-Reid
Kara Veurtjes
Katherine Kacew
Kathy Lewis
Kim LaForce
Kimberley Brigden
Krista-Lee Thompson
Laura Cater
Laura Crockatt
Lee Gerig
Lee James
Liz Keighley
Lynda Rozon
Lynn Scott
Marc Lavoie
Marc Rigden
Margaret O'Brien
Mariette Marleau
Marlene Mcafee
Mary Macies
Melanie Dompierre
Michel Dompierre
Michelle Rozon
Nadine Parker
Nancy Harris
Nancy Kelly
Nicole James
Pete Stanul
Preston McMann
Rachel Groulx
Rachel Schneiderman
Randy Roberts
Rebecca Gunn
Rhoda Walker
Rob Veurtjes
Robyn Kemp
Samantha Yocum
Sarah Roach
Shannon Howatt
Tim Brown
Tim LaForce
Tim Sandwell
Tina Ryan
Trish Stanke
Usha Peart
Vicky Eatrides
A.3 Nepean 10k
Alex Meacoe
Barry Kemp
Cathy McGarrity
Chris McGarrity
Corey Wilson
Daniel Lacasse
Ellen Dickson
Gerald Welsh
Heatherth Wall
Helen Bolt
Ian Taylor
Jeanette Alexiuk
John Farrell
Joseph Emas
Karen Beutel
Karen Lauer
Kym Ashton
Michael Eisen
Murray Kelly
Pete Ashton
Shona Kemp
A.4 Orléans, or Orleans, 5k
Alex Lewis
Amanda Russo
Amelie Dube
Ben Kachmar
Brenna Koscher
Brent Smyth
Carole Parent
Celiane Dussault
Cheryl Hughes
Christian Dussault
Cynthia Graham
Cynthia Taylor
Daniel St-James
David Boswell
David Parke
Deborah Baldwin
Diane Levesque
Dominique Cusson
Eann Hodges
Elrik Smyth
Eric Dussault
Evelyn Housch
Farnaz Saeidi
François Dupont
Gary Housch
Glen Sharp
Hélène Dutrisac
Jamie Kelly
Janet Desloges
Janice Christensen
Janice Mcintyre
Joanne Henry
Jocelyne Boivin
John Vice
John White
Jonathan Boswell
Judy Marsh
Karen Gibson
Kathy Berry
Kelly Kennedy
Kelly Koscher
Kyle Simpson
Linda Leslie
Lise Hogue
Lou Descarie
Lynn Lewis
Malaika James
Malcolm Mcintyre
Marie-Eve Dussault
Melissa Boswell
Melissa Graham
Mevan Perera
Michael Hughes
Michelle Quintal
Nadine Labrecque
Nicholas Parke
Nicole Houle
Nirmalee Perera
Rob Vice
Robert Morin
Sandy Moger
Sarah Boswell
Sarah Simpson
Simon Roussin
Sonia Marcotte
Stephanie Ettinger
Stuart Taylor
Suzanne Chartrand-MacKenzie
Suzette Boswell
Sylvie Ouellette
Tresha Thompson
Valerie Jean
Yvette Dube
A.4 Orleans 10k
Alia Blais
Andrew Bouchier
Benoit Dionne
Benoit Lecuyer
Brent Kelly
Carole Boucher
Carole Villeneuve
Cecile Landry
Chiara Ansell
Christopher Mes
Dan Thoms
Daniel Chretien
Danielle Dube
Denise Pittuck
Don Lavictoire
Elise Adams
Eric Mondor
Jason Roberts
Jennifer Parker
Johanne Morin
Julie Boivin
Julie Mes
Karen Mondoux
Kory McDonald
Krista Klages
Leanne Richardson
Linda Descarie
Lucia Scianname
Lyne Rama
Lynn Giroux
Marc-Richard Therrien
Marigold Edwards
Marlene Thoms
Marthe Bergevin
Michael Adams
Michael Garuk
Nancy Roberge
Natalie Loyer
Nicholas Roberge
Paul Dube
Pedro Ibarra
Philippa Gross
Scott Harding
Steve Outhouse
Sue Clement
Suzanne Cote
Sylvie King
Todd Sloan
Veronique Mousseau
Vincent Young
Yan Giroux
A.5 Stittsville 5k
Allyssia Villeneuve
Amelie Chiasson
Andrea Currie
Armando Cabrera
Cathy Chalmers
Claire Collis
Dan Pak
Francoise Stewart
Greg Johnston
Jane Commanda
Jane Martin
Joanne Macneill
Joaquin Fernandez
John Guigue
John McCauley
Karen Johnston
Kelly Ferreira
Laurie Grice
Louise Guigue
Lyndsay Grice
Marcia McCauley
Morgan Guigue
Steve Cashman
Sue McKean
Velvet Embleton
A.5 Stittsville 10k
Daniel Farrell
Jon Andrews
Laurel Andrews
Rebecca Skinner
A.6 Other Ontario 5k
Katlin Duval….Alexandria
Almonte
Amy Toderian
Barbara Booth
Beverley Toderian
Bob Bassett
Bob Mosher
Vicki Bassett
Arnprior
Chris Hale-Love
Denise Murch-D'Amours
Diana Briggs
Leslie Farrell
Mealnie Liard
Karen Woodhall….Ashton
Michael Woodhall….Ashton
Patti Waddell….Ashton
Janet Jones….Bancroft
melissa rossignol….Barrie
Lisa Faulkner….Bourget
Sue Peeke….Bourget
Pam Hadley….Braeside
Jennifer Aubertin….Burlington
Carleton Place
Amanda Etherington
Amber Ballantyne
Caleb Etherington
Claire Campbell
Eileen Campbell
Grace Campbell
Jillian Dean
Lois Ann Graham
Mac Graham
Mikolt Horvath
Paul Nichols
Robin Andrew
Robin Brooks
Skylar Etherington
Suzan Ballantyne
Taylor Brooks
Travis Foster
Emile St-Jean….Carlsbad Springs
Frédérike Bergeron….Carlsbad Springs
Sharon St-Jean….Carlsbad Springs
Carp
Christine Toll
Ellyn Floyd
Jo-Anne Graham
Katie Ferguson
Marco Valenti
Matt Ferguson
Peggy Cooke
Randall Toll
Sally Miller-Taylor
André Paris….Casselman
Danielle Carrière-Paris….Casselman
Denise Charette….Casselman
Marie-Claude Gravel….Casselman
Stéphanie Charette….Casselman
Brian Smith….Chesterville
Mary Lynn Plummer….Chesterville
Linda Brunet….Clarence Creek
Lynn St-Onge….Clarence Creek
Suzanne Brunet….Clarence Creek
Catherine Watson….Clarence Rockland
Roberto Almeida….Cobourg
Carrie Ouimet….Cornwall
Chantal Desnoyers….Cornwall
Diane Ledoux….Cornwall
Joyce Duval….Cornwall
Julie Jarvo….Cornwall
Peggy Seguin….Cornwall
Alex Charette….Cumberland
Caroline Joanisse….Cumberland
Denis Charette….Cumberland
Lynne Charette….Cumberland
Simone Joanisse….Cumberland
Jennifer Campbell….Dunrobin
Neil Campbell….Dunrobin
Sandi Charbonneau….Embrun
Natalie Gamauf….Fitzroy Harbour
Holly Goguen….Frankville
Bruce Grant….Gloucester
Carolyn Garcia Garcia….Gloucester
Dave Marcotte….Gloucester
David Campbell….Gloucester
Erika Penno….Gloucester
Rob Carrick….Gloucester
Theresa Humphrys….Gloucester
John Gordon….Gore Bay
Frances Muldoon….Greely
Jillian Lush….Hammond
Elise Larocque….Hawkesbury
Renée Chartrand….Hawkesbury
Sydney Morgan….Ingleside
Martine Mainville….Johnstown
Kemptville
Barbara Springer
Carmen Mackay
David Springer
Diana Tallman
Don Tallman
Jordan Springer
Kyle Springer
Allan Dean….Kinburn
Amanda Burke….Kinburn
Dawn Dean….Kinburn
Terry Burke….Kinburn
Michale Fyke….Lanark
Ursula Martin….Lanark
Christian Faubert….Limoges
Judith Faubert….Limoges
Manotick
Alexa Ives
Andy Ives
Jenna Wilson
Jill Payne
Lynn Wright
Sara Wilson
Karen Murray….Martintown
Cianne Larivière….Metcalfe
Craig Killin….Metcalfe
Isabelle Paquette….Metcalfe
Laurie Brown….Metcalfe
Steve Brown….Metcalfe
Sylvie J Lapointe….Metcalfe
Tamra White….Metcalfe
Maria Glidden….Mississauga
Deb Bazinet….Moose Creek
Frances Rousse….Moose Creek
Guylaine Villeneuve….Moose Creek
Alan Madge….Morrisburg
Jocelyn Madge….Morrisburg
Ada Gorrie….Munster
Krista Bowman….Navan
Steve Call….Navan
Deborah Burnham….North Augusta
Lonney Burnham….North Augusta
Carl Rogala….North Gower
Kerry Rogala….North Gower
Nathalie Woodstock….North Gower
Ben Scheffer….Osgoode
Celine Audette….Osgoode
Crystal Scheffer….Osgoode
Debbie Kinny….Osgoode
Leanne Stinson….Oxford Station
Perth
Brian McGregor
Caitlin McGregor
David Simpkin
James Simpkin
Kathy Litalien
Sacha Simpkin
Ainsley Christensen….Petawawa
Alison Morris….Petawawa
Jennifer Tarini….Prescott
David McIntyre….Renfrew
Jody Smaggus….Renfrew
Richmond
Barbara Annas
Charles Laperle
Dana Green
Marie Claude Legacy
Norma Green
Rockland
Adaline Keith
Ginette Snook
Lise Joly
Lucie Clermont
Michael Snook
Steven Clermont
Mary Sweetlove….Russell
Rebecca Weisgerber….Russell
Susan Fetzer….Russell
Colette Verjans….Sarsfield
Matt Verjans….Sarsfield
Guy MacLeod….Sharbot Lake
Martha macLeod….Sharbot Lake
Mary Hawkins-Nugent….Smiths Falls
Donna Greenhorn….Spencerville
Janet Greenhorn….Spencerville
Ada Smith-Sparling….St. Catherines
Julie Filion….St-Pascal
Christine Charette….St-Albert
Marie-France MacMillan….St-Albert
Debbie Armstrong….Trenton
Arlene Dupuis….Vars
Joanne Leblanc….Welland
Sue Landry….Westport
Steve Small….Woodlawn
A.6 Other Ontario 10k
Eric Mckinnon….Alexandria
Sue Duval….Alexandria
Jennifer Smith Seguin….Almonte
Katie Beamish….Ashton
Lois Simms-Baldwin….Belleville
Kerry Robertson….Bourget
Ria Robertson….Bourget
Chris Nicholas….Braeside
Joanne Nicholas….Braeside
Stephen Kuban….Brampton
Carleton Place
Amy Stevens
Candice Meredith
Christina Turney
Lisa Brown
Sharon McKinnon
Eric Brown….Carp
Denis Dore….Clarence Creek
Lorraine Kozlowski….Clarence Creek
Terry Quenneville….Cornwall
Cumberland
Daniel Benson
Gayle Mellon
John Joanisse
Josee Adam
Paul Mellon
Debbie Olive….Dunrobin
Fabio Carmosino….Dunrobin
Andy Schan….Embrun
Mike walsh….Embrun
Gloucester
Benson Yee
Brenda Campbell
Diane Stufko
Janet McKeage
John Gilmour
Karen Carriere
Lorna Palmer
Sherry Johnson
Sydney Gilmour
Tessie Douglas….Hammond
Dominique Cavill….Kemptville
Helene Lamadeleine….Kemptville
Jim Miller….Kemptville
Teena Dacey….Kemptville
Zaid Jahoor….Killaloe
Susan Mingie….Kitchener
Melonie Williams….Lanark
Kathi Wilson….Lunenburg
Michel Gareau….Lunenburg
Lori Urquhart….Merrickville
Sally Macinnis….Merrickville
Mory Ghanem….Milton
Romy Machinga….Milton
Cam Mitchell….Mountain
Laure Mitchell….Mountain
Reta Hamilton….Munster
Debra Burns….Navan
Wally Burns….Navan
Alex Gaillard….Newington
Eva Moore….Newington
Kevin Moore….Newington
Marianne Moore….Newington
Julie Sincennes….Niagara Falls
Chris Angel….North Augusta
Kristy Tait-Angel….North Augusta
Laurie Goodwin….North Gower
Linda Henderson….North Gower
Natalie Smith….North Gower
Max Waller….Osgoode
Cindy Gale….Pembroke
Janet Carleton….Perth
Rita Jackson….Perth
Dale Morris….Petawawa
Ashley McGillis….Renfrew
Sandra McGillis….Renfrew
Jaclyn Jerome….Richmond
David Stevens….Rideau Ferry
Erin Crotty….Rockcliffe
Ken Brough….Rockcliffe
Rockland
Christine Hehle
Christine Lepan
Kerry Laliberte
Normand Laliberte
Steven Bradley
Yves Lefebvre
Russell
Dan Faughnan
Derek Johnston
Donna Johnston
Jeff Murphy
Maureen Toohey
Peter Cicalo
Tina Malo
Shirley Meilleur….Summerstown
Shelley Shanessy….Trenton
Kevin McGee….Vanier
Kathleen Morris….Winchester
Alain Phaneuf….Woodlawn
B. Québec 5k
Gatineau
Alain Boisvert
Alison Sorrell
Andre Nault
Anne Bertrand
Anye Lariviere
Audrey-Anne Offroy
Benjamin Johnston
Breann Ronquist
Carole Bertrand
Caroline Huppe
Chantal Dompierre
Christian Marcoux
Danielle Moisan
Denis Boivin
Denise Boivin
Diane Desaulniers
Diane McDougall
Dominique Kenney
Edith Gendron
Fanny Descary
George Johnston
Guy Sirois
Harley Blixhavn
Jacob Johnston
Janie Bertrand
Jean Larose
Jenny Tardiff
Jonathan Crombie
Jonathan Séguin
Josée Lévesque
Judith Lachance
Julie Côté
Kelley Madore
Kim Lamy
Kyna Allard
Luc Miron
Luc Séguin
Lynn McFadden
Mario Desjourdy
Meghann Mcalear
Mélanie Jamieson
Melanie Rainville
Melanie Sabourin
Melany Gauvin
Michele Laplante
Nancy Godin
Natacha Lévesque
Natasha Gareau
Nathalie Deslauriers
Olivier Houle
Pierre Briere
Renee-marie Belair
Rob LeBlanc
Rose-Marie Meretei
Roxanne Takpanie
Shelley Moody
Sophie Tremblay
Suzie Larocque
Sylvia Bouchard
Sylvie Veilleux
Tracey Latimer
TracyLyn Tardiff
Valerie Laframboise
Zinab Bassuny
Robert Lee….Beaconsfield
Alex Vaillancourt….Beauharnois
Claire Trudel….Beauharnois
Joelle Vaillancourt….Beauharnois
André Pilon….Cantley
Josée Benoit….Cantley
Lydia Pilon….Cantley
Nathalie Gauthier….Cantley
Alice Wegmueller….Grenville sur la Rouge
Michel Paquette….Grenville sur la Rouge
Bonnie Macgregor….Grenville sur la Rouge
Diane Corbeil….Laval
Nathalie Pouliot….Longueuil
Glen Swan….Pontiac
Julie Kirkham….Shawville
Jean-Philippe Côté….Terrebonne
Linda Jeffery….Terrebonne
Sophie Guimont….Terrebonne
Carmine Cirella….Val-d'Or
Danielle Gagné….Val-d'Or
Michel Côté….Val-d'Or
Maryse Riendeau….Valleyfield
Micheline Quenneville….Valleyfield
Diane Morin….Wakefield
Roch Charron….Wakefield
B. Québec 10k
Gatineau
Aisha Bassuny
Amy Gagnon
Anelise Alarcon-Moreno
Angela Britten
Annie Bayeur
Annie Valade
Catherine Rooney
Chantal Tubie
Christophe Rene
Dan Pariseau
Daniel Mercer
Danielle Labonté
David Sun
Diane Déry
Diane Ouellette
Elyse Crochetiere
Emilie Belanger
Eric Fournier
Eric Giffard
Eric Hardy
Eric Hebert
Francois Larose
Guylene Theriault
Helena Botelho
Isabelle Beaudry
Isabelle Daly
Jean Faullem
Jennifer Jackson
Joanne Cadieux
Joel Charbonneau
John-Joseph Timinski
Jonathan Raby
Julie Cousineau
Julie Piche
Kayleigh Felice
Larocque Jeffrey
Leah Desjardins
Liana Griffin
Louise Ferland
Marie-Pascal Berthelot
Mario Auclair
Martin Gagnon
Mathieu Larocque
Matthew Saayman
Maude Demers
Mélanie Bouchard
Melanie Lecault
Michel Locas
Nadine Maltais
Nathalie Kock
Nathalie Vachon
Normand Lechasseur
Odette Bernier
Pascal McDonald
Pascal Parent
Rafaëlle Devine
Raphael Mcdonald
Richard Caouette
Richard McDonald
Roch Courcy
Shayna Stawicki
Sheila Laplante
Susi-Paula Gaudencio
Tatiana Barkova-Dufour
Walter Liston
Andrea Benoit Desrochers….Cantley
Claude Desrochers….Cantley
Guy Beaulieu….Cantley
Marie-Claude Cote….Cantley
Patrick Mountford….Cantley
Agathe Lalande….Chelsea
Bruce Devine….Chelsea
Ian Hunter....Chelsea
Michelle Hoyt….Chelsea
Elizabeth Herring….Hatley
Michèle Lampron….Hull
Karolyne Chenier….L'Ange-Gardien
Monique Dube….L'Ange-Gardien
Raymonde Larocque….Matane
Karine Garcia….Pierrefonds
Jane Swan….Pontiac
Janice Swan….Pontiac
Martin Swan….Pontiac
Seamus Swan….Pontiac
Jeff Begley….Saint-Donat-de-Monclair
Veronique Bessette….St-Jean-sur-Richelieu
Annie Larocque….Val-des-monts
Sylvie Arsenault….Val-des-monts
Vidalia Botelho….Val-des-monts
C. Other Canadian Provinces 5k
Kristina Morin….Calgary….Alberta
Gary Boyle….Quispamsis….New Brunswick
Rosemary Boyle….Quispamsis….New Brunswick
Stephanie Boyle….Quispamsis….New Brunswick
Garry Luffman….Baie Verte….Newfoundland
Lillian Sheppard….St. John's….Newfoundland
Philip Sheppard….St. John's….Newfoundland
Debbie Kemp….Lunenburg….Nova Scotia
Jared Richards….Lunenburg….Nova Scotia
Matthew Flanagan….Lunenburg….Nova Scotia
Meghan Magawan….Lunenburg….Nova Scotia
Shauna Richards….Lunenburg….Nova Scotia
Connor Boudreau….Stellarton….Nova Scotia
Kerry Hughes….Stellarton….Nova Scotia
Skylar Boudreau….Stellarton….Nova Scotia
C. Other Canadian Provinces 10k
Megan Boggs….Edmonton….Alberta
Jocelyn Poirier-Hardy….West Vancouver….British Columbia
Peter Carpenter….Riverview….New Brunswick
Sally Carpenter….Riverview….New Brunswick
D. Outside Canada 5k
Erin Smith….Pensacola….Florida
Susan Morbey….Amherst….New Hampshire
Rene Cooper….Malta….New York
Julie Ayotte….Springfield….Virginia
D. Outside Canada 10k
Reed Fendley….LaGrange….Kentucky
John Dudley….Boston….Massachusetts
Dara Byrne….Maplewood….New Jersey
Anna Lessnikova….Trentin….Other
Martin Lissnik….Trentin….Other
Gregg McLeod….West Kirby….Other
Matthias Vetsch….Zufikon….Switzerland
Nancy Buchanan….Zufikon….Switzerland
May I present shots of the #EchoStar23 launch by #SpaceX atop a legless #Falcon9 rocket, taken directly from Pad 39A. These shots are from two cameras that I set on Monday, and the cameras sat patiently waiting until 2:00 am (ET) Thursday morning to capture these images.
Although I get to process and post these pictures, it would be a glorious oversight for me to not acknowledge the considerable efforts by Bill Jelen and Mary Ellen Jelen for making these images possible. They checked in on the cameras Tuesday afternoon; they waited for a chance to pick them up at 5:00 am Thursday morning, ultimately returning to the Pad Thursday afternoon for pick up and then sent me the files for processing. Also, Jared Haworth gets a shout-out for the dew heaters that kept the lenses warm and for ever-present guidance.
Launch: June 25, 1992
Landing: July 9, 1992 Kennedy Space Center, Fl.
Astronauts: Richard N. Richards, Kenneth D. Bowersox, Bonnie J. Dunbar, Ellen S. Baker, Carl J. Meade, Lawrence J. DeLucas and Eugene H. Trinh
Space Shuttle: Columbia
The primary payload was the United States Microgravity Laboratory-I (USML-1), a manned Spacelab module with a connecting tunnel to the orbiter crew compartment. USML-1 was a national effort to advance microgravity research in a broad number of disciplines.
Credit: NASA
Image Number: s50-s-001
Date: January 1992
Launched: April 8, 2002, 4:44:19 p.m. EDT
Landing: April 19, 2002, 12:28:08 p.m. EDT, Kennedy Space Center, Florida
Space Shuttle: Atlantis
Crew: Commander Michael J. Bloomfield, Pilot Stephen N. Frick, Mission Specialists Jerry L. Ross, Steven L. Smith, Ellen Ochoa, Lee M. E. Morin and Rex J. Walheim
STS-110 was another mission dedicated to the International Space Station construction. The launch marked a milestone as Mission Specialist (MS) Jerry Ross became the first human to fly in space seven times, breaking his own and other astronauts' records of six space flights.
Credit: NASA
Image Number: sts110-s-001
Date: August 2001
Launch: July 13, 1995
Landing: July 22, 1995 Kennedy Space Center, Fl.
Astronauts: Terence T. Henricks, Kevin R. Kregel, Nancy Jane Currie, Donald A. Thomas and Mary Ellen Weber
Space Shuttle: Discovery
Numerous experiments were performed, including several biology related. Crew also spoke with ground radio operators as part of Shuttle Amateur Radio Experiment (SAREX), counting around 50 contacts a day for several days of flight.
Credit: NASA
Image Number: sts070-s-001
Date: March 1995
Information From:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/East_Village,_Manhattan
East Village, Manhattan
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
East Village, Manhattan
New York City Neighborhood
Location in Lower Manhattan
Named: 1960s[1]
Streets: 2nd Avenue, 1st Avenue, Avenue A, The Bowery, St. Mark's Place
Subway: F, V, 6 and L
Zip code: 10009, 10003 and 10002
Government
Federal: Congressional Districts 8, 12 and 14
State: New York State Assembly Districts 64, 66 and 74, New York State Senate Districts 25 and 29
City: New York City Council District 2
Local Manhattan Community Board 3
Neighborhood map
The East Village is a neighborhood in the borough of Manhattan in New York City. It lies east of Greenwich Village, south of Gramercy and Stuyvesant Town, and north of the Lower East Side. Within the East Village there are several smaller neighborhoods, including Alphabet City and The Bowery.
The neighborhood was once considered part of the Lower East Side, but in the 1960s it began to develop its own culture and became known as the East Village. Scores of artists and hippies began to move into the area, attracted by the base of Beatniks that had lived there since the 1950s. It has been the site of counterculture, protests and riots. The neighborhood is known as the birthplace and historical home of many artistic movements, including punk rock[2] and the Nuyorican literary movement.[3]
It is still known for a diverse community, vibrant nightlife and artistic sensibility, although in recent decades gentrification has changed the character of the neighborhood
History
Tompkins Square Park is the recreational and geographic heart of the East Village. It has historically been a part of counterculture, protest and riots.
New York City's Fourth of July fireworks over the neighborhood. The East Village's East River Park is a popular viewing destination.[edit] Formation of the neighborhood
Today's East Village was originally a farm owned by Dutch Governor Wouter van Twiller. Petrus Stuyvesant received the deed to this farm in 1651, and his family held on to the land for over seven generations, until a descendant began selling off parcels of the property in the early 1800s. Wealthy townhouses dotted the dirt roads for a few decades until the great Irish and German immigration of the 1840s and 1850s.
Speculative land owners began building multi unit dwellings on lots meant for single family homes, and began renting out rooms and apartments to the growing working class. The "East Village" was formerly known as Klein Deutschland ("Little Germany, Manhattan"); however, Little Germany dissolved after the SS General Slocum burned into the water in New York's East River on June 15, 1904. From the years roughly between the 1850s and the first decade of the 20th century, the "East Village" hosted the largest urban populations of Germans outside of Vienna and Berlin. It was America's first foreign language neighborhood; hundreds of political, social, sports and recreational clubs were set up during this period, some of these buildings still exist.
What is now the East Village once ended at the East River where Avenue C is now located. A large portion of the neighborhood was formed by landfill, including World War II debris and rubble from London, which was shipped across the Atlantic to provide foundation for the Franklin D. Roosevelt Drive.[5]
[edit] The 'East Village' separates from the Lower East Side
Definitions vary, but the boundaries are roughly defined as east of Broadway and the Bowery from 14th Street down to Houston Street.[1]
Looking south from 6th Street down Second Avenue, one of the main thoroughfares through the East Village.Until the mid-1960s, this area was simply the northern part of the Lower East Side, with a similar culture of immigrant, working class life. In the 1950s the migration of Beatniks into the neighborhood later attracted hippies, musicians and artists well into 1960s.[1] The area was dubbed the "East Village", to dissociate it from the image of slums evoked by the Lower East Side. According to the New York Times, a 1964 guide called, "Earl Wilson's New York," wrote that "artists, poets and promoters of coffeehouses from Greenwich Village are trying to remelt the neighborhood under the high-sounding name of 'East Village.'"[1]
Newcomers and real estate brokers popularized the East Village name, and the term was adopted by the popular media by the mid-1960s.[6][7] In 1966 a psychedelic weekly newspaper, The East Village Other, appeared and The New York Times declared that the neighborhood "had come to be known" as the East Village in the June 5, 1967 edition.[1]
[edit] The music scene develops
In 1966 Andy Warhol promoted a series of shows, entitled The Exploding Plastic Inevitable, and featuring the music of the Velvet Underground, in a Polish ballroom on St Marks Place. On June 27, 1967, the Electric Circus opened in the same space with a benefit for the Children's Recreation Foundation (Chairman: Bobby Kennedy). The Grateful Dead, The Chambers Brothers, Sly & the Family Stone, the Allman Brothers were among the many rock bands that performed there before it closed in 1971.
Punk rock icon and writer Richard Hell still lives in the same apartment in Alphabet City that he has had since the 1970s.On March 8, 1968 Bill Graham opened the Fillmore East in a Yiddish Theatre on 2nd Avenue. The venue quickly became known as "The Church of Rock and Roll," with two-show concerts several nights a week. While booking many of the same bands that had played the Electric Circus, Graham particularly used the venue – and its West Coast counterpart, to establish new British bands like The Who, Pink Floyd, The Jimi Hendrix Experience, Cream, and Led Zeppelin. It, too, closed in 1971.
CBGB, the nightclub considered by some to be the birthplace of punk music, was located in the neighborhood, as was the early punk standby A7. No Wave and New York hardcore also emerged in the area’s clubs. Among the many important bands and singers who got their start at these clubs and other venues in downtown Manhattan were: Patti Smith, Arto Lindsay, the Ramones, Blondie, Madonna, Talking Heads, the Plasmatics, Glenn Danzig, Sonic Youth, the Beastie Boys, Anthrax, and The Strokes. From 1983–1993, much of the more radical audio work was preserved as part of the Tellus Audio Cassette Magazine recording project, which was based in the nearby Lower East Side.
[edit] Rise in artistic prominence
Allen Ginsberg, a long-time resident, with poet Peter Orlovsky.Over the last 100 years, the East Village/Lower East Side neighborhood has been considered one of the strongest contributors to American arts and culture in New York.[8] During the great wave of immigration (Germans, Ukrainians, Polish) in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, countless families found their new homes in this area.
The East Village has been the birthplace of cultural icons and movements from the American gangster to the Warhol Superstars, folk music to punk rock, anti-folk to hip-hop, advanced education to organized activism, experimental theater to the Beat Generation and the community of experimental musicians, composers and improvisers now loosely known as the Downtown Scene.
Club 57, on St. Mark's Place, was an important incubator for performance art and visual art in the late 1970s and early 1980s; followed by Now Gallery, 8BC and ABC No Rio.
During the 1980s the East Village art gallery scene helped to galvanize a new post-modern art in America; showing such artists as Kiki Smith, Peter Halley, Keith Haring, Stephen Lack, Greer Lankton, Joseph Nechvatal, Nan Goldin, Jean-Michel Basquiat, David Wojnarowicz, Rick Prol, and Jeff Koons.[9]
[edit] The musical 'Rent'
The East Village is the setting for Jonathan Larson's musical Rent; set in the early 1990s, the story chronicles a group of friends over a year in their struggles against poverty, drug abuse and AIDS.
The musical Rent chronicled a period in the neighborhood's history that is bygone. It opened at the New York Theater Workshop in February 1996.[10] It described a New York City devastated by the AIDS epidemic, drugs and high crime, and followed several characters in the backdrop of their effort to make livings as artists.[11]
[edit] Decline of the art scene
The "Downtown Legends" wall at Mo Pitkins House of Satisfaction featured artists known in the East Village performance scene. A few featured in this photo include the Reverend Jen, Nick Zedd, Allen Ginsberg, Reverend Billy and Murray Hill (pictured).The East Village's performance and art scene has declined since its hey-day of the 1970s and 1980s.[12] One club that had opened to try to resurrect the neighborhood's past artistic prominence was Mo Pitkins' House of Satisfaction, part-owned by Jimmy Fallon of Saturday Night Live. It closed its doors in 2007, and was seen by many as another sign of the continued decline of the East Village performance and art scene, which has mostly moved to Williamsburg, Brooklyn.[13] Rapture Cafe also shut down in April 2008, and the neighborhood lost an important performance space and gathering ground for the gay community. There are still some performance spaces, such as Sidewalk Cafe on Avenue A, where downtown acts find space to exhibit their talent, and the poetry clubs.[14]
Punk scene icons stayed in the neighborhood as it changed. Richard Hell lives in the same apartment he has lived in since the 1970s, and Handsome Dick Manitoba of The Dictators owns and reigns over Manitoba's bar on Avenue B.
[edit] Internal neighborhoods
The East Village contains several hamlets of vibrant communities within itself.
[edit] Alphabet City
Main article: Alphabet City, Manhattan
The Nuyorican Poets Cafe has been located off Avenue C and East 3rd Street since its founding in 1973.Alphabet City comprises nearly two-thirds of the East Village. It also once was the archetype of a dangerous New York City neighborhood. Its turn-around was cause for The New York Times to observe in 2005 that Alphabet City went "from a drug-infested no man's land to the epicenter of downtown cool."[15] Its name comes from Avenues A, B, C, and D, the only avenues in Manhattan to have single-letter names. It is bordered by Houston Street to the south and 14th Street to the north where Avenue C ends. Some famous landmarks include Tompkins Square Park, the Nuyorican Poets Cafe and the Stuyvesant Town private residential community.
[edit] Loisaida
Main article: Loisaida
A Loisaida street fair in the Summer of 2008.Loisaida is a term derived from the Latino (and especially Nuyorican) pronunciation of "Lower East Side", a neighborhood in Manhattan, New York City. The term was originally coined by poet/activist, Bittman "Bimbo" Rivas in his 1974 poem "Loisaida". Loisaida Avenue is now an alternative name for Avenue C in the Alphabet City neighborhood of New York City, whose population has largely been Hispanic (mainly Nuyorican) since the late 1960s.
[edit] St. Mark's Place
Main article: St. Mark's Place
Artist Jim Power, known as the "Mosaic Man" for his public art tiling the neighborhood[16], at the 2009 St. Mark's Place Block Party.Eighth Street becomes St. Mark's place east of Third Avenue. It once had the cachet of Sutton Place, known as a secluded rich enclave in Manhattan, but which by the 1850s had become a place for boarding houses and a German immigrant community.[17] It is named after St Mark's Church in-the-Bowery, which was built on Stuyvesant Street but is now on 10th Street. St. Mark's Place once began at the intersection of the Bowery and Stuyvesant Street, but today the street runs from Third Avenue to Avenue A. Japanese street culture and a Japanese expatriate scene forms in the noodle shops and bars that line St. Mark's Place, also home to an aged punk culture and CBGB's new store. It is home to one of the only Automats in New York City (it has since closed).[18]
St. Mark's is along the “Mosaic Trail”, a trail of 80 mosaic-encrusted lampposts that runs from Broadway down Eighth Street to Avenue A, to Fourth Street and then back to Eighth Street. The project was undertaken by East Village public artist Jim Power, known as the "Mosaic Man".[16]
[edit] The Bowery
Main article: The Bowery
Once synonymous with 'Bowery Bums', the avenue has become a magnet for luxury condominiums as the neighborhood's rapid gentrification continues.The Bowery, former home to the punk-rock nightclub CBGB, was once known for its many homeless shelters, drug rehabilitation centers and bars. The phrase "On The Bowery", which has since fallen into disuse, was a generic way to say one was down-and-out.[19]
The Bow’ry, The Bow’ry!
They say such things,
and they do strange things
on the Bow’ry —From the musical A Trip to Chinatown, 1891
Today, the Bowery has become a boulevard of new luxury condominiums. It also is home to the Amato Opera and the Bowery Poetry Club, contributing to the neighborhood's reputation as a place for artistic pursuit. Artists Amiri Baraka and Taylor Mead hold regular readings and performances in the space.
The redevelopment of the avenue from flophouses to luxury condominiums has met with resistance from long-term residents, who agree the neighborhood has improved, but that its unique, gritty character is also disappearing.[20]
[edit] Parks and green space
[edit] Tompkins Square Park
Main article: Tompkins Square Park
The Tompkins Square dog run was the first in New York City, and is a social scene unto itself.[5]Tompkins Square Park is a 10.5 acre (42,000 m²) public park in the Alphabet City section of the East Village neighborhood in the borough of Manhattan in New York City. It is square in shape, and is bounded on the north by East 10th Street, on the east by Avenue B, on the south by East 7th Street, and on the west by Avenue A. St. Marks Place abuts the park to the west.
[edit] Tompkins Square Park Police Riot
Main article: Tompkins Square Park Police Riot (1988)
The Tompkins Square Park Police Riot was a defining moment for the neighborhood. In the late hours of August 6 into the morning hours of August 7, 1988 a riot broke out in Alphabet City's Tompkins Square Park. Groups of "drug pushers, homeless people and young people known as 'skinheads'" had largely taken over the East Village park, but the neighborhood was divided about what, if anything, should be done about it.[21] The local governing body, Manhattan Community Board 3, adopted a 1 am curfew for the previously 24-hour park, in an attempt to bring it under control.[22] On July 31, a rally against the curfew resulted in several clashes between protesters and police.[23]
[edit] East River Park
Main article: East River Park
East River Park below the Williamsburg Bridge.The park is 57 acres (230,000 m2) that runs along the Franklin D. Roosevelt Drive from Montgomery Street to East 12th Street.[24] It was designed in the 1930s by Robert Moses, who wanted to ensure there was parkland on the Lower East Side.[24]
[edit] Community gardens
There are reportedly over 640 community gardens in New York City—gardens run by local collectives within the neighborhood who are responsible for the gardens' upkeep—and an estimated 10 percent of those are located on the Lower East Side and East Village alone.[25]
[edit] Tower of Toys on Avenue B
The Avenue B and 6th Street Community Garden is one of the neighborhood's more notable for a now removed outdoor sculpture, the Tower of Toys, designed by artist and long-time garden gate-keeper, Eddie Boros. Boros died April 27, 2007.[26] The Tower was controversial in the neighborhood; some viewed it as a masterpiece, others as an eyesore.[26][27] The tower appeared in the opening credits for the television show NYPD Blue and also appears in the musical Rent.[26] In May 2008, it was dismantled. According to NYC Parks Commissioner Adrian Benepe, the tower was rotting in sections that made it a safety hazard.[28] Its removal was seen as another symbol of the fading past of the neighborhood.[28]
[edit] Toyota Children’s Learning Garden
Located at 603 East 11th Street, the Toyota Children's Learning Garden is not technically a community garden, but it also fails to fit in the park category. Designed by landscape architect Michael Van Valkenburgh, the garden opened in May 2008 as part of the New York Restoration Project and is designed to teach children about plants.[29]
[edit] New York City Marble Cemetery
A production of John Reed's All the World's a Grave in the Marble Cemetery, which does not contain headstones.The cemetery is actually two, which sit on 2nd Street between 1st Avenue and 2nd Avenue. They are open the fourth Sunday of every month.[30] The first and more prominent is the City cemetery, which is second oldest non-sectarian cemetery in New York City. It sits next to the oldest public cemetery in New York City not affiliated with any religion, the "New York Marble Cemetery."[31] The cemetery was opened in 1831 and at one point contained ex-U.S. President James Monroe.[32]
[edit] Culture and events
Longtime Mistress of Ceremonies at eatery Lucky Cheng's, Miss Understood stops a bus in front of the restaurant on First Avenue.Other than geography, the East Village's most notable commonalities with Greenwich Village are a colorful history, vibrant social and cultural outlets, and street names that often diverge from the norm.
The Bowery is a north-south avenue which also lends its name to the somewhat overlapping neighborhood of the Bowery; St. Mark's Place, a crosstown street well-known for counterculture businesses; and Astor Place/Cooper Square, home of the Public Theater and the Cooper Union. Nearby universities like New York University (NYU), The New School, and The Cooper Union have dormitories in the neighborhood.
[edit] Ethnicity and religion
Photograph of St. Nicholas with parts of Second Street visible. The church and almost all buildings on the street were demolished in the 1960's and replaced with parking lots.
Former parishioners of St. Mary's Help of Christians pray outside the shuttered church in August 2008.According to 2000 census figures provided by the New York City Department of City Planning, which includes the Lower East Side in its calculation, the neighborhood was 35% Asian, 28% non-Hispanic white, 27% Hispanic and 7% black.[33]
On October 9, 1966, A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada, founder of the International Society for Krishna Consciousness, held the first recorded outdoor chanting session of the Hare Krishna mantra outside of the Indian subcontinent at Tompkins Square Park.[34] This is considered the founding of the Hare Krishna religion in the United States, and the large tree close to the center of the Park is demarcated as a special religious site for Krishna adherents.[34] The late poet Allen Ginsberg, who lived and died in the East Village, attended the ceremony.
There are several Roman Catholic churches in the East Village which have fallen victim to financial hardship particularly in the past decade. Unable to maintain their properties, the Roman Catholic Church has shuttered many of them - including St. Mary's Help of Christians on East 12th Street, as well as St. Ann's. There has recently been much controversy over St. Brigid's, the historical parish on Tompkins Square Park.
[edit] Ukrainian history
Since the 1890s there has been a large Ukrainian concentration roughly from 10th Street to 5th Street, between 3rd Avenue and Avenue A. The post-World War II diaspora, consisting primarily of Western Ukrainian intelligentsia, also settled down in the area. Several churches, including St. George's Catholic Church; Ukrainian restaurants and butcher shops; The Ukrainian Museum; the Shevchenko Scientific Society; and the Ukrainian Cultural Center are evidence of the impact of this culture on the area.
[edit] Gentrification
[edit] New York University, a controversial resident
Residents of the East Village have a love-hate relationship with New York University, which owns and maintains many buildings, particularly in much of downtown Manhattan and in the neighborhoods surrounding its main campus in Greenwich Village (a distinct neighborhood from the East Village).[35]
St. Ann's Church, a rusticated-stone structure on East 12th Street with a Romanesque tower that dated to 1847 was sold to the University to make way for a monolithic 26-story, 700 bed dormitory for students. The University did protect and maintain St. Ann's original facade and small plaza immediately fronting the 12th Street sidewalk. The result is a blended, softer abutment of the new dorm building (which does rise dramatically above the facade) up behind the old St. Ann's entry way. New York University has built many dorms, and this one in particular is now the tallest structure in the area. "There are larger changes going on here," said Lynne Brown, vice president of university relations and public affairs. "I fear this tendency to blame any trend residents don't like happening at the doorstep of NYU," said Brown, mentioning that the university has been one of the longest inhabitants of the East Village. But Nancy Cosie, a 20 year resident and former St. Ann's parishioner, does not buy that argument. "Enough is enough," Cosie exclaimed to The Village Voice, "This is not a campus. This is a neighborhood, and this is my home."[35] NYU's destruction or purchasing of many historic buildings (such as the Peter Cooper post office) have made it symbolic of change that many long-time residents fear is destroying what made the neighborhood interesting and attractive.[36] "I live on Avenue B and 9th Street," an NYU student said. "I know I'm part of the problem - gentrification that is. But where am I supposed to live?"[36]
NYU has often been at odds with residents of both the East and West Villages, as legendary urban preservationist Jane Jacobs battled the school in the 1960s.[37] "She spoke of how universities and hospitals often had a special kind of hubris reflected in the fact that they often thought it was OK to destroy a neighborhood to suit their needs,” said Andrew Berman of the Greenwich Village Society for Historic Preservation.[38]
[edit] Museums, libraries, performance and art spaces
The Bowery Poetry Club.
Sherry Vine and Joey Arias during the 2009 HOWL! Festival.New York Public Library Tompkins Square branch [3]
The Fales Library of NYU
East Village Visitors Center - 308 Bowery
The Ukrainian Museum
New Museum of Contemporary Art
Museum of Jewish Heritage
Performance Space 122
Anthology Film Archives
The Stone
Bouwerie Lane Theatre
Amato Opera
Danspace Project
The Ontological-Hysteric Theater
The Pearl Theatre Company [4]
Stomp! (Theatrical show)
Metropolitan Playhouse[5]
Mercury Lounge (live music)
Sidewalk Cafe (performance and live music)
Bowery Ballroom (concerts and shows)
Nuyorican Poets Cafe (music, poetry, readings, slams)
Bowery Poetry Club (music, poetry, readings, slams)
La MaMa E.T.C. (performance theater)
Cooper Union (speeches, presentations, public lectures and readings)
[edit] Neighborhood festivals
Mayday Festival - May 1; yearly.
Charlie Parker Jazz Festival - August; yearly.[6]
HOWL! Festival - September; yearly.[7][8]
East Village Radio Festival - September 6, 2008 [9]
Tompkins Square Halloween Dog Parade - October; yearly.[10]
East Village Theater Festival - August 3–23, 2009.[11]
FAB! Festival & Block Party - Last weekend in September annually, Sept 25, 2010 [12]
[edit] Media
Many film shoots take place in the East Village; here a period movie with antique police cars is filmed on East 4th Street.[edit] Radio
East Village Radio
[edit] Local news
The Village Voice
The Villager
East-Village.com
EastVillageFeed.com
[edit] Cinemas
Anthology Film Archives
Landmark's Sunshine Theater
Village East Cinema
City Cinema Village East
Two Boots Pioneer Theater
[edit] Notable residents past and present
Handsome Dick Manitoba of The Dictators.
Madonna lived in the neighborhood when she was just starting out in her career.[39]Handsome Dick Manitoba, who owns Manitoba's bar on Avenue B off Tompkins Square Park.
Darren Aronofsky and his wife, Rachel Weisz
Chris Cain, Bassist for the Indie-Rock band We Are Scientists
Barbara Feinman
John Leguizamo
Daniel Radcliffe
Agim Kaba
Rosario Dawson
Tom Kalin
Vashtie Kola director
W. H. Auden[40]
Greer Lankton, Artist/Doll maker
Ellen Stewart founder of La MaMa, E.T.C. (Experimental Theatre Club) in 1961.
Madonna lived there in the 1980s.
John Lurie,musician, painter, actor, producer.
Jean-Michel Basquiat, graffiti artist
David Bowes, painter
Allen Ginsberg (1926–1997), Beat Generation poet and author of Howl.[41]
Keith Haring, neo-pop artist
Claes Oldenburg (1929-), sculptor, had a studio at 46 East 3rd Street in the late 1950s.[42]
Candy Darling, actress/Warhol superstar
Bill Raymond, actor
Ryan Adams, alt-country musician
David Cross, actor, comedian
Negin Farsad, writer, director, comedian
Nan Goldin, photographer
Stephen Lack, actor, painter
Ronnie Landfield, (1947-), painter, lived on E. 11th street, mid-1960s[43]
Kiki Smith sculptor
John Zorn composer, musician
Richard Hell, musician, author
Abbie Hoffman (1936–1989), 1960s political activist[44]
Ayun Halliday, actress and writer, and wife of playwright Greg Kotis
Greg Kotis, playwright, and husband of actress and writer Ayun Halliday
Jerry Rubin (1938–1994), 1960s political activist - with Hoffman founded the Yippies in a basement apartment at 30 St. Marks Place[44]
Cookie Mueller, actress, model
Paul Krassner (1932-), publisher of The Realist
Walter Bowart (1939–2007), co-founder editor/ of The East Village Other
Allan Katzman, co-founder/editor of The East Village Other
Tuli Kupferberg, (1923-), Beat Generation poet, and one of the original Fugs
Ed Sanders, (1939-), New York School poet and one of the original Fugs
Joseph Nechvatal (1951-) early digital artist and founder of the Tellus Audio Cassette Magazine
Randy Harrison, actor
Joel Resnicoff, artist and fashion illustrator.
Regina Spektor, (1980-) Singer-songwriter and pianist.
Rachel Trachtenburg (1993-) singer and musician
Tom Otterness sculptor
Steven Fishbach, runner-up of Survivor: Tocantins
Chloe Sevigny actress
Conor Oberst musician
Lou Reed, musician
Julian Casablancas, musician
Mark Ronson
Arthur Russell, musician[45]
Jack Smith filmmaker, artist
Iggy Pop, performer, musician
Landmark hotel in downtown NYC, in April 2013. Home, at one time or another, to many artists, writers, musicians, actors, and others. According to Wikipedia (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hotel_Chelsea), these include:
"Literary artists. During its lifetime Hotel Chelsea has provided a home to many great writers and thinkers including Mark Twain, O. Henry, Herbert Huncke, Dylan Thomas, Arthur C. Clarke, William S. Burroughs, Gregory Corso, Arnold Weinstein, Leonard Cohen, Sharmagne Leland-St. John, Arthur Miller, Quentin Crisp, Gore Vidal, Tennessee Williams, Allen Ginsberg, Jack Kerouac (who wrote On the Road there), Robert Hunter, Jack Gantos, Brendan Behan, Simone de Beauvoir, Jean-Paul Sartre, Thomas Wolfe, Charles Bukowski, Raymond Kennedy, Matthew Richardson, James T. Farrell, Valerie Solanas, Mary Cantwell, René Ricard.
Charles R. Jackson, author of The Lost Weekend, committed suicide in his room on September 21, 1968.
Actors and film directors. The hotel has been a home to actors and film directors such as Stanley Kubrick, Jonas Mekas (was long-time resident from 1967 to 1974), Shirley Clarke, Mitch Hedberg, Dave Hill, Miloš Forman, Lillie Langtry, Ethan Hawke, Dennis Hopper, Vincent Gallo, Patricia Chica, Maria Beatty, Eddie Izzard, Uma Thurman, Elliott Gould, Elaine Stritch, Michael Imperioli, Jane Fonda, Russell Brand, Abel Ferrara's Driller Killer film star Baybi Day, Gaby Hoffmann and her mother, the Warhol film star Viva, and Edie Sedgwick.
Musicians. Much of Hotel Chelsea's history has been colored by the musicians who have resided or visited there. Some of the most prominent names include Grateful Dead, Tom Waits, Patti Smith, Iggy Pop, Bobby "Werner" Strete, Mod Fun, Virgil Thomson, Chick Corea, Alexander Frey, Jeff Beck, Dee Dee Ramone, Johnny Thunders, Mink Deville, Neon Leon/King Lion, Phil Lynott, Henri Chopin, John Cale, Édith Piaf, Joni Mitchell, Bob Dylan, Alice Cooper, Alejandro Escovedo, Janis Joplin, Jimi Hendrix, Peter Walker, Canned Heat, Sid Vicious, J.D. Stooks,Vivian Stanshall, Richard Hell, Jobriath Boone, Little Annie, Rufus Wainwright, Lance Loud, Abdullah Ibrahim/Sathima Bea Benjamin/Jean Grae, Vasant Rai, Jacques Labouchere, and Leonard Cohen. Madonna lived at the Chelsea in the early eighties, returning in 1992 to shoot photographs for her book, Sex, in room 822. Falco, Ryan Adams, The Libertines, The Fuse (UK), Michael McDermott, Melissa Auf der Maur, Tim Freedman, and Anthony Kiedis have spent time at The Chelsea. Taylor Momsen's band, the Pretty Reckless, did a photo shoot in room 822 of the Chelsea. British pop band La Roux shot the second version of the music video for their song "In for the Kill" at the Chelsea.
Visual artists. The hotel has featured and collected the work of the many visual artists who have passed through. Robert Blackburn, Larry Rivers, Brett Whiteley, Christo, Arman, Francesco Clemente, Julian Schnabel, Ching Ho Cheng, David Remfry, Philip Taaffe, Ralph Gibson, Frida Kahlo, Diego Rivera, Robert Crumb, Ellen Cantor, Jasper Johns, Edie Sedgwick, Claes Oldenburg, Vali Myers, Donald Baechler, Herbert Gentry, Willem de Kooning, Robert Mapplethorpe, Lynne Drexler, Nora Sumberg and Henri Cartier-Bresson have all spent time at the hotel. Painter and ethnomusicologist Harry Everett Smith lived and died in Room 328. The painter Alphaeus Philemon Cole lived there for 35 years until his death in 1988 at age 112.
Fashion designers. Charles James, credited with being America's first couturier who influenced fashion in the 1940s and 1950s. In 1964 he moved into the Chelsea, dying there of pneumonia in 1978.
The facade of the hotel in December 2010.
Warhol superstars. Hotel Chelsea is often associated with the Warhol superstars, as Andy Warhol and Paul Morrisey directed Chelsea Girls (1966), a film about his Factory regulars and their lives at the hotel. Chelsea residents from the Warhol scene included Edie Sedgwick, Viva, Ultra Violet, Mary Woronov, Holly Woodlawn, Andrea Feldman, Nico, Paul America, René Ricard and Brigid Berlin."
For the 5 kilometre race results and photos...here are the local (Ottawa & area) participants -- sorted by cities and first name -- in the September 19, 2010, Canada Army Run held in Ottawa, Ontario.
Click here and enter the bib numbers for the full individual race results. Race photos here. (6,760 runners in the 5 km race)
Thank-you to Sportstats.
Part A. Ottawa (see below)
Part B. Other Communities (Alexandria to Navan) (Click here.)
Part C. Other Communities (Nepean to Woodlawn) (Click here.)
Part A:
12036…Aaron Kennedy
12454…Acton Kilby
7417…Adam Daniow
10248…Adam Mcleod
12409…Adam Yahn
13856…Ademir Vrolijk
14356…Adrien Barrieau
12050…Afton Maisonneuve
8420…Agathe Houle
14250…Ahmad Sakr
14321…Ahsan Ahmed
14600…Aidan Westdal
9010…Aime Larochelle
7952…Airi Trant
8265…Al Charron
7187…Al Thompson
14035…Alain D'arbelles
9532…Alain Desgranges
10416…Alain Dionne
7861…Alain Rabeau
7504…Alan Bolster
7001…Alan Tomalty
8715…Alana Blouin
14025…Alana Detenbeck
12757…Alana Fong
14499…Alana Macewen
9662…Alanna Macaulay
12132…Alanna Yaraskavitch
7983…Alecks Zarama
10172…Alex Braden
14052…Alex Graham
14102…Alex Lyon
12729…Alex Patch
13192…Alexander Gaillard
10699…Alexander Leslie
13108…Alexandra Desouza L'heureux
9008…Alexandra Laplante
12105…Alexandra Vincent
13636…Alexandre Poiget
14153…Alexandre Prenoveau
12894…Alexandria Beck
11577…Alexandria Gerrior
9743…Alexis Leblanc
14322…Ali Belbachir
14036…Ali El-Jaby
10402…Alice Leung
10095…Alicia Li
10008…Alicia Noonan
14423…Alicia Whiting
12911…Alison Benn
8853…Alison Evans Adnani
8468…Alison Jerome
14363…Alison Mckittrick
12825…Alison Morris
9474…Alison Pier
8753…Allison Cassie
8343…Allison Coons
10422…Allison Desroches
14031…Allison Downton
8137…Allison Ellis
14109…Allison Mackenzie
13372…Ally Lamothe
10360…Allysan Dinn
13439…Almut Macdonald
8777…Amanda Colton
12815…Amanda Elliott
8965…Amanda Kalbfleisch
11944…Amanda Krisciunas
5786…Amanda Pavlovic
10440…Amanda Pyykonen
13867…Amanda Watson
10150…Amanda Weatherdon
7950…Amanda-Kate Tracy
7820…Amber Nickerson
11904…Amelie Armstrong
9881…Amelie O'sullivan
7793…Amira Mohamed
8675…Amy Arcand
14489…Amy Cambell
13313…Amy Johnson
12176…Amy Jutras
12097…Amy Muller
9823…Amy Read
13690…Ana Robert
8532…Anaek Jande
9304…Anastasia Tserotas
8013…Andre Marin
14115…Andre Materman
7941…Andre Thivierge
8682…Andrea Auger
12109…Andrea Brauner
8285…Andrea Chippa
9491…Andrea Ethier
12541…Andrea Evans
8969…Andrea Karklins
10902…Andrea Mccaffrey
4782…Andrea Mrozek
7874…Andrea Rousseau
12690…Andrea Szenteszky/Merils
10976…Andrea White
8466…Andreas Reichert
12372…Andreas Vander Pluym
9374…Andree Ball
12982…Andrew Buchan
7528…Andrew Butson
9822…Andrew Cooney
12485…Andrew Currie
12275…Andrew Fainer
12009…Andrew Fourney
8488…Andrew Harris
7290…Andrew Keleher
10152…Andrew Klassen
12527…Andrew Leslie
14319…Andrew Lessard
10113…Andrew Maffre
14111…Andrew Mallam
12863…Andrew Mcdougall
14515…Andrew Mendes
11901…Andrew Mulawyshyn
13630…Andrew Pinsent
7362…Andrew Roberts
8599…Andrew Robertson
12741…Andrew Woolsey
14206…Andrew Zurowski
10401…Andy Burgess
10238…Andy Shelp
9569…Andy Wielgosz
9427…Angeline Law
7429…Angelo Garcia
9202…Angelo Ricci
9714…Angie Ermel
9550…Anika Rowland
8678…Ann Arsenault
9328…Ann Walton
11194…Anna Macintyre
14239…Anna Von Dadelszen
8072…Anne Bailliu
12504…Anne Bauer
3838…Anne Biscope
8719…Anne Bowker
14493…Anne Edwards
14443…Anne Ethier
12143…Anne Fitzpatrick
13946…Anne Thombs
13957…Anne-Sophie Alarie
8362…Annette Lebel
10677…Annik Beaudry
7866…Ann-Marie Reid
13975…Anthony Barnshaw
12643…Anthony Glaser
10240…Anthony Ippolito
10532…Anthony Weeks
14151…Antoine Plenderleith
14476…Anyk Glussich
10169…April Whitehead
12251…Arlene Maciver
13320…Armin Kamal
9113…Arthur Moulie
10256…Aruna Rajulu
12850…Ash Ahmadzadeh
13528…Asha Mohiddin
7826…Ashlee Oleinikow
9971…Ashley Browne
12394…Ashley Butcher
7214…Ashley Lavery
7775…Ashley Mccann
6259…Ashley Tannis
8236…Ashley Tuttle
14150…Audrey Perreault
12736…Audrey Vermette
9884…Austen Brown
8130…Avery Stirling
13710…Barbara Routliffe
11305…Barbara Saville
9377…Barry Dupont
13391…Barry Le Grys
12714…Barry Lemoine
8459…Barry Rowland
13465…Beatrice Maluski-Cain
13556…Ben Murray
7529…Benjamin Buttera
8029…Benjamin Oman
9533…Benny Ling
14338…Bernard Tremblay
13718…Beth Sabourin
13644…Beth-Anne Poulin
11409…Betty Letendre
10798…Bev Carroll
8879…Bev Furniss
10197…Bill Grand
10455…Bill Mackay
7376…Bill Rostek
11903…Bill Salminen
7533…Bingbing Cai
13069…Blair Crawford
7345…Blake Carruthers
9530…Blake Dooley
13638…Blake Poirier
13829…Blanche Tree
9501…Bob Eagleson
14117…Bob Mccrindle
13551…Bob Muise
9523…Bob Ryan
13947…Bob Thombs
13515…Bogaah Mensah
12276…Bonnie Boretsky
11985…Bonnie Vinet-Paradis
9548…Borishka Croteau
9622…Brad Mills
13905…Brad Young
7585…Bradley Davis
9084…Brady Meldrum
14268…Breanna Muller
7543…Brenda Cerson
8404…Brenda Etchells
9405…Brenda Quinlan
14632…Brendan Potter
9135…Brent Odonnell
7167…Brent Pilon
7246…Brent Weatherdon
8527…Brett Mac Lean
9789…Brett Maxwell
9894…Brian Blanche
12898…Brian Deeks
13157…Brian Fava
10215…Brian Kells
13534…Brian Montgomery
7029…Brian Radey
7011…Brian Rolfe
13251…Brianna Harris
13206…Bridget Gervais
14581…Bridget Kehoe
7225…Bridget Mallon
14520…Brigid Bedard
10026…Brigitte Archambault
13121…Brigitte Dionne
12008…Brigitte Menard
9559…Britt-Mari Sykes
10176…Bronwyn Anderson
10083…Bruce Covington
7310…Bruce Donaldson
12389…Bruce Fischer
9702…Bruce Waid
13591…Bruno Paltrinieri
9464…Bryan Mackay
14288…Bryce Halls
11546…Bryce Lemoine
7332…Bunny - Andy Fong
8518…Bunny - Gary Rush
7326…Bunny - Liam Ohuiginn
8519…Bunny- Bruce Moquin
7333…Bunny- Ellen Campbell
7329…Bunny- James Wildsmith
7331…Bunny- Julia Fournier
7330…Bunnypatrick Girard
11123…C Soulodre
12087…Caitlin Devlin
14172…Caitlin Salvino
7728…Caludia Langevin
11126…Calum Urzinger
7663…Calvin Hanselmann
8795…Cameron Cribb
13637…Camille Poiget
13876…Camille West
7087…Candace Anderson
8491…Candi Ager
12060…Candi Munroe
7699…Carey Jones
12064…Carl Perreault
8389…Carla Pino
13679…Carleen Ridley
10135…Carly Parrish
9138…Carol Anne Owen
8595…Carol Campbell
14064…Carol Huffman
7204…Carol Mclean
12107…Carol Rosenthall
10746…Carol Skillen
9760…Carole Quenneville
13813…Carole Thomas
11906…Caroline Ebata
8058…Caroline Lavigne
14232…Caroline Matt
7805…Caroline Murray
7545…Carolyn Chacksfield
12173…Carolyn Charters
12257…Carolyn Fornataro
9100…Carolyn Montague
7286…Carolyn Turner
9209…Carrie Roberts
9037…Carrol Lunau
12069…Carter Saunders
13008…Casey Carswell
7544…Casey Cerson
7032…Cassidy Leclerc
7530…Catarina Buttera
14425…Catharine Brady
7596…Catherine Desmarais
11973…Catherine Griffin
9495…Catherine Jackson
14447…Catherine Jolicoeur
12084…Catherine Mackin
7862…Catherine Radatus
10251…Catherine Sainte-Marie
13752…Catherine Siot
14456…Catherine Winters
7977…Catherine Wood
8108…Cathy Jackson
9044…Cathy Maclean
12245…Cathy Nolan
7949…Cavell Townley
10465…Celeste Irvine-Jones
7505…Celia Bond
7436…Chandrashan Premakanthan
12492…Chantal Brisson
8351…Chantal Evans
9605…Chantal Nicholson
9480…Chantal Rosenberger
8239…Chantal Roy
13736…Chantal Sayde
7563…Chantale Cobbold
9419…Charlene Winchester
10558…Charles Bernard
8067…Charles Frost
14407…Charles Trombley
7439…Chelsey Quirk
12833…Chenchen Hou
14543…Cheri Reddin
14208…Cherinet Seid
12495…Cheryl Brouse
12574…Cheryl Caldwell
7464…Chloe Adlard
8587…Chris Anderson
12971…Chris Brown
14462…Chris Bygrove
8122…Chris Carruthers
8762…Chris Chartrand
9508…Chris Coveny
7579…Chris Dauphinais
7582…Chris Davey
9835…Chris Davis
14599…Chris Denison
14227…Chris Garrioch
11431…Chris Goddard
14485…Chris Goy
10264…Chris Hale
14509…Chris Holmes
11954…Chris Isaac Mckay
12774…Chris Jourdeuil
7725…Chris Lamarre
13373…Chris Landry
14097…Chris Li
7334…Chris Lynam
13519…Chris Mick
9096…Chris Moffit
7800…Chris Morash
14411…Chris Mullins
13641…Chris Polowick
9588…Chris Schroeder
7403…Chris Sheridan
9303…Chris Travers
7062…Christa Van Sickle
12327…Christene White
11889…Christian Figueredo
10368…Christian Giguere
7931…Christie Swann
12670…Christina Chevrette
8516…Christina Kaeser
9460…Christina Leclerc
14369…Christina Leibbrandt
14220…Christina Silmser
8317…Christina Sluyter
10093…Christina Yee
14552…Christina Young
11898…Christine Atwood
11920…Christine Besnard
7517…Christine Bray-Duhamel
8860…Christine Fikis
9490…Christine Ford
8299…Christine Foster
13408…Christine Leon
11008…Christine Nicasio
10874…Christophe Kervegant-Tanguy
9630…Christopher Cullen
9441…Christopher Fillmore
14432…Christopher Knowlton
10359…Christopher Macarthur
13471…Christopher Marton
7873…Christopher Rotherforth
9492…Christopher St. Jacques
13604…Christy Peeters
7142…Chuck Bing
7726…Chuck Lamarre
14200…Cici Waugh
13980…Cindy Bennett
13109…Cindy Desouza L'heureux
7940…Cindy Termorshuizen
13979…Claire Baudry
9698…Claire Cockburn
7684…Claire Horwich
12070…Clara Saunders
7591…Clare Demerse
7743…Clarissa Lewis
7896…Claude Schryer
12420…Claudette Moise
10297…Claudia Hintz
9947…Clayton Ryder
12157…Clinton Laidlaw
10321…Cody Gaudet
7586…Cole Davis
8640…Colin Kelly
7216…Colin Muldoon
7551…Colt Charlebois
14242…Colt Hardcore
12044…Connie Paris
9040…Connor Macdonald
13447…Connor Mackenzie
13520…Conor Middleton
10258…Conrad Hladik
14466…Corinne Ginnish
12152…Corrina Morehouse
13156…Costas Farassoglou
13959…Courtney Anderson
7855…Courtney Powless
4785…Craig King
7718…Craig Kuziemsky
8556…Cricket Riberdy
9928…Criss Gibran
12807…Crystal Foubert
9035…Crystal Louie
12468…Crystal-Lee Rooney
12874…Crystel Marly Arseneault
7418…Curtis Smith
9543…Cyndi Demers
13021…Cynthia Chaput
12112…Cynthia Desnoyers
9679…Cynthia Gee
12586…Cynthia Horvath
13900…Dalaila Wyse
9587…Dale Brown
7289…Dale Potter
12823…Dalelle Mensour
13440…Damian Macdonald
7121…Dan Mckinney
10456…Dan Mikaelian
8656…Dan Newell
12446…Dana Pandolfi
9159…Dana Paul
14216…Daniel Albahary
9918…Daniel Giguere
13302…Daniel Jamieson
13492…Daniel Mcguire
12646…Daniel Morris
14133…Daniel Muir
10027…Daniel Poulin
14408…Daniel Raymond
7442…Daniele Riendeau
9977…Danielle Bernier
12924…Danielle Bisson
13035…Danielle Cirillo
8199…Danielle Cormier
7046…Danielle Fainer
12338…Danielle Grenier
13270…Danielle Hoegy
7735…Danielle Lee
9183…Danielle Plunkett
7554…Danny Chin
7156…Dany Huard
12764…Daphne Vaudry
13580…Dara Ohuiginn
7215…Darcy Lavery
8637…Darcy Terrell
9959…Darl Dimillo
9995…Darlene Charron
9117…Darlene Mulvihill
7188…Darren Clark
13068…Darren Coyle
8920…Darren Handley
12556…Darren Jerome
7283…Darren Knight
7039…Darren Poole
12904…Dave Bellefleur
12512…Dave Carlson
12474…Dave Etchells
8377…Dave Johnson
12715…Dave Johnston
14203…Dave Young
12737…David Badour
14007…David Claxton
14566…David Davidson
8316…David Dimitri
9859…David Elms
13169…David Foster
7655…David Hall
12349…David Leahy
13500…David Mclaren
12255…David Molnar
13651…David Pratt
13683…David Rietkoetter
7889…David Sankoff
8524…David Thorpe
10223…Davide Pisanu
11989…Dawn Styan
11125…Dawn Urzinger
14614…Dean Corno
8066…Dean Duteau
9672…Dean Morewood
10298…Deanne Chafe
10599…Debbie Murray
13613…Debbie Peterson
10407…Debby Barsi
11952…Deborah Broad
11486…Deborah Trotman
12047…Debra Hughes
10454…Deena El-Sawy
12277…Delphine Wallace
9644…Demian Seiden
12552…Denise Gillam-Gledhill
9273…Denise St. Jean
8573…Dennis St. Louis
13869…Dennis Weatherdon
14178…Derek Smith
733…Derrick Marshall
7803…Desirai Moyer
7991…Deven Bhatla
12810…Devon Kampman
10211…Devon Shulist
12077…Devon Taylor
8857…Diana Farah
7580…Diane Dauphinais
12636…Diane Dupuis
12611…Diane Gallant
13039…Dianne Clarke
9985…Dimitris Foss
13428…Dino Luberti
7213…Dominic Lessard
7200…Dominik Rymsza
10336…Dominique Ansell
9553…Dominique Baker
7211…Dominique Chiasson
13470…Dominique Martel-Lamothe
9488…Dominique St-Denis
7953…Dominique Trudeau
10647…Don Eatherley
9376…Don Rooke
7467…Donald Allan
8798…Donald Cumming
9403…Donna Blois
12074…Donna Dufour
8031…Donna Mirasty
13747…Donna Sianchuk
14188…Doreen Taylor-Claxton
9766…Doris Chu
1069…Doris Mclean
13572…Dorota Nierobis
12602…Doug Crummey
14426…Douglas Briscoe
13421…Douglas Loader
13892…Douglas Wong
7210…Duncan Elbourne
8724…Ed Brady
12342…Edith Bernard
14459…Edith Bostwick
7761…Edmund Mah
12753…Edouard Larocque
7244…Edward Boushey
7987…Edward Miner
8971…Eileen Keefe
9338…Eileen Whyte
13055…Elaine Copson
13293…Elena Ienzi
10186…Elena Pecherskaya
7849…Elena Petre
9703…Elise Vandette
7008…Elizabeth Burn
10355…Elizabeth Conway
7622…Elizabeth Finnigan
10613…Elizabeth Fournier
14445…Elizabeth Fry
11404…Elizabeth Glover
8896…Elizabeth Goheen
7656…Elizabeth Hall
11956…Elizabeth Hayman
13331…Elizabeth Kerr
7956…Elizabeth Valentine
12762…Elizabeth Vaudry
14224…Elizabeth W12
9549…Ella Rowland
7923…Ella Stewart
11986…Ellen Hogan
9002…Ellen Lamarre
14574…Elly Crow
7248…Elly Robertson
8638…Emery Terell
8659…Emilie Adams
11919…Emilie Plater
11700…Emily Coleman
14266…Emily Gerbasi
8645…Emily Hamilton
10271…Emily Hewitt
14565…Emily Lafreniere
14293…Emily Lister
13535…Emily Montgomery
13676…Emily Rick
12481…Emily Thomas
9855…Emily Vingerhoeds
11403…Emma Cianfaglione
9125…Emma-Lee Newby
13353…Engelina Kruizinga
13150…Eric Eryou
13409…Eric Lepine
10358…Eric Macarthur
10457…Eric Noel
7903…Eric Shear
13824…Eric Torelli
12557…Erica Leslie
12263…Erich Farrell
11990…Erik Jolliffe
12696…Erika Williams
7486…Erin Beasley
14615…Erin Beck
7564…Erin Collins
333…Erin Drybrough
8344…Erin Johnstone
8020…Erin O'higgins
8621…Erin Sarsfield
12014…Erma Seekings
7473…Ernesto Angeles
10324…Eryn O'niell
7513…Estelle Bourlon
12229…Esther Moghadam
13357…Ethan Labelle
12455…Ethan Macdonald
13877…Eunice West
14080…Eva Lacelle
8164…Eva Rehder
8581…Evelyn Lannon
13328…Faye Kennedy
12686…Florent Fournier
11735…Fortino Cruz
14401…Fran Enright
8697…France Beare
12804…Francine Vachon
8340…Francois Bak
1553…Francois De La Chevrotiere
13592…Francois Paltrinieri
14155…Francois Proulx
13426…Frank Lozanski
10651…Fred Pelletier
10394…Frederic Theriault
12632…Frederick S. Gannon
10450…Gabriel Bouchard
7428…Gabrielle Lambert
9110…Gabrielle Moser
12549…Gabrielle Nadeau
7722…Gaetan Laforest
8293…Gail Harlow-Bolt
9528…Gary Avann
14277…Gary Cunningham
12763…Gary Vaudry
8315…Gemma Riley-Laurin
10075…Genevieve Cholette
12675…Genevieve Gales
8925…Genevieve Harte
12363…Genevieve Joly
7721…Genevieve Lacroix
10325…Genevieve Lemieux
9061…Genevieve Martin
8391…Genevieve Sorel
14267…Geoff Blair
7426…Geoff Plint
13887…Geoff Wilson
10446…Geoff Wilton
11933…George Kovacs
13396…George Leblanc
14214…George Marko
12745…George Mcleod
8390…George Reklitis
8399…George Weber
13811…Georges Thenor-Louis
13024…Gerry Chartrand
10432…Ghaith Dhaidan
8654…Gianna Inglese
13060…Gil Couch
10331…Gilles Duguay
10107…Gillian Goddard
12811…Gillian Howell
13677…Gillian Rick
14002…Gina Charos
7311…Gina Donaldson
12170…Gina Landriault
10923…Gina Palmese
7975…Gina Whiting
8143…Ginette Miron
7828…Ginette Orlicky
9759…Gino Moretti
8125…Giovanni Vivolo
8371…Gisela Grossman
12295…Gisele Steele
12838…Giuseppe (Joey) Porchetta
12536…Gizem Eras
9718…Glen Pilon
13087…Glenda Davies
13175…Glenn Franklin
8252…Glenn Horne
10799…Glenn R. Carroll
7025…Gloria Hache
12859…Gordon Allison
7966…Gordon Wallace
12540…Grace Yee
8695…Graeme Beales
7223…Graeme Beare
12901…Graham Bell
8566…Grayson Ivey
8565…Greg Ivey
14221…Greg Jensen
12165…Greg Kimball
13342…Greg Knighton
14333…Greg Pinard
7448…Greg Weatherdon
11972…Gregory Adams
7281…Guy Pitre
11581…Guy Thibault
10379…Hai Nguyen
9277…Hailey Stewart
11191…Hailie Pedley
10293…Hannah Hopkins
9558…Hannah Sykes
7052…Haris Gisavi
11955…Harold Mckay
12678…Harry Ehret
12312…Hayley Goodman
8232…Hazel Stoute
12873…Heather Arnold
10813…Heather Cosgrove
14275…Heather Fisher
11576…Heather Gerrior
11256…Heather Jamieson
9465…Heather Mackay
12311…Heather Macleod
7797…Heather Moore
10139…Heather Munro
14468…Heather Wilson
10244…Heather Woltman
9344…Heather Wright
9503…Hector Capetillo
9360…Helen Huang
9072…Helen Mcdowell
12817…Helena Herby
9150…Helene Paquin
10914…Henri Monette
9426…Henry Strong
9297…Hermelle Thivierge
7193…Hidetaka Nishimura
10763…Hilda Chow
14295…Hiro Dozono
9695…Hollie Mclean
9651…Howard Smith
9323…Howard Voight
13119…Hubert Dinel
13258…Hugo Hazledine
8014…Hugo Marin
7118…Ian Briggs
13082…Ian Dalling
14077…Ian Kluke
9724…Ian Pedley
10719…Ian Thomson
7173…Iryna Karpova
7461…Isabel Chin
13698…Isabel Rodrigue
8694…Isabelle Beach
13984…Isabelle Blondeau
9433…Isabelle D'souza
10160…Isabelle Gilbert
9705…Isabelle Gingrich
12642…J.W.Gilbert Rose
13274…Jack Hopkins
13314…Jack Johnson
9268…Jack Snyder
7453…Jackie Bonisteel
9978…Jackie Oncescu
8604…Jackie Poole
14325…Jacob Cardinal Tremblay
11579…Jacob Thibault
8846…Jacqueline Emery
12106…Jacqueline Guarisco
9009…Jacqueline Laplante
11033…Jacqueline Mackay
7641…Jacques Gobin
13753…Jacqui Sirois
9834…Jacquie Lemaire
12559…Jaffer Majeed
9896…Jaime Mclean
7974…Jaime Whetstone
12771…James Allard
8696…James Beales
12948…James Bowie
14254…James C Stewart
12290…James Cantellow
13115…James Dickson
14440…James Griff
10759…James Hill
13316…James Jones
9396…James Kierstead
9837…James Mcmichael
7180…James Moore
13597…James Paul
7848…James Peters
13649…James Powers
7003…James Pyzevas
7430…James Stewart
7927…James Stockwell
7957…James Vannier
7147…Jamie Bell
7119…Jamie Mclennan
10442…Jamie Ryan
10363…Jamie Snider
10879…Jan Labelle
7724…Jane Lajoie
12834…Jane Le Fresne
9895…Jane Rudolf
7911…Jane Smith
9975…Janel Chiasson
10049…Janet Mcintyre
8686…Janice Bailey
10017…Janice Chan
7984…Janice Zeitz
9493…Jantine Van Kregten
13481…Jari Mccready
14412…Jasmine Viau
14585…Jasmine Vos
7998…Jason Brazeau
8917…Jason Hamilton
7393…Jason Lannon
13410…Jason Leroux
10243…Jason Moreau
7893…Jason Saunders
12617…Jason St.Pierre
14192…Jason Thompson
12478…Jason Warwick
8426…Jason Wiltshire
8608…Jay Asselin
8504…Jay Janzen
13436…Jay Lymer
13601…Jay Paxton
10182…Jay Reid
12425…Jayme Drainville
12427…Jean Daoust
9946…Jean De Bellefeuille
12662…Jean Francois Martel
8746…Jeanette Caron
14523…Jean-Francois Fauteux
11640…Jean-Francois Leduc
13299…Jean-Guy Isaya
7512…Jean-Marc Boulet
12380…Jeannine Bailliu
12122…Jean-Paul Nadeau
10306…Jeff Cranton
13084…Jeff Daniels
7071…Jeff Johns
11169…Jeff Lepoidevin
13420…Jeff Lloyd
7753…Jeff Lockert
7926…Jeff Stiles
12877…Jeffery Attala
13285…Jeffrey Hunter
9967…Jeffrey Pelletier
13888…Jeffrey Wilson
12550…Jenah Thompson
11910…Jenelle Power
12178…Jenna Cormier
8618…Jenna Hurst
8962…Jenna Jones
10367…Jenna Matsukubo
14313…Jenna Stirling
7821…Jennie Nieradka
10559…Jennifer Bennett
8714…Jennifer Blattman
8716…Jennifer Born
13005…Jennifer Carneiro Demers
12787…Jennifer Conley
6507…Jennifer Dagg
8805…Jennifer Dare
12095…Jennifer Dumoulin
12582…Jennifer Fitzpatrick
12062…Jennifer Gibson
8902…Jennifer Grandy
8940…Jennifer Hood
8132…Jennifer Irwin
10153…Jennifer Koussaya-Kent
13406…Jennifer Lemire
7748…Jennifer Lim
8109…Jennifer Macinnis
14606…Jennifer Madigan
9102…Jennifer Moorehead
7798…Jennifer Moores
14544…Jennifer Morin
9437…Jennifer Murphy
9745…Jennifer Naddaf
9937…Jennifer Paul
9194…Jennifer Read
7867…Jennifer Reid
7905…Jennifer Shortall
7319…Jennifer St.Pierre
8512…Jennifer Thiessen
7090…Jeppe Henningsen
12479…Jeremy Ferrall
7930…Jeremy Sumner
13030…Jerome Choi
14023…Jerry Dechnik
14450…Jerry Kovacs
10385…Jessey Basi
8790…Jessica Cox
14497…Jessica Dean
11892…Jessica Fletcher
13174…Jessica Frankland
12345…Jessica Reddin
8346…Jessica Skinner
12166…Jessica Souannhaphanh
7565…Jessie Cook
12851…Jill Aiello
14518…Jill Perry
14193…Jill Thompson
11921…Jim Baker
7587…Jim Davis
7425…Jim Louter
12776…Jim Quinn
12444…Joan Mcewen
9129…Joan Norgren
9207…Joan Riznek-Ricardo
9726…Jo-Ann Pedley
10653…Joanna Lee
13969…Joanne Baker Baker
8406…Jo-Anne Belliveau
12301…Joanne Blackburn
8567…Joanne Ivey
11991…Joanne Jolliffe
11324…Joanne Macneil
9507…Jocelyn Hanna
13598…Jocelyn Paul
8643…Jocelyn Swift
9310…Jodi Turner
12177…Jodie Hoffart
7097…Joe Coballe
7369…Joe Kemp
7301…Joe Kresovic
12099…Joe Marques
8339…Joey Bak
7757…Joey Mackenzie
7273…Joffre St-Martin
14602…Joh N Smith
9547…Johannita Rowland
9852…John Armstrong
7485…John Basile
10795…John Boyd
7534…John Caminiti
12797…John Coltess
8854…John Ewing
7082…John Gazo
9580…John Gibberd
8068…John Gordon
12580…John Nethercott
7830…John Ortiz
9590…John Pasqua
9160…John Pavelich
9174…John Pick
8413…John Rochon
7934…John Szabo
9308…John Turnbull
7037…Johnathan Macdonald
7675…Joleen Hind
10047…Jolene Head
9064…Jolene Maxwell
13526…Jon Moberly
13714…Jon Ruddy
14413…Jonathan Diamantstein
13307…Jonathan Jeffrey
14081…Jonathan Laflamme
12159…Jonathan Laidlaw
7745…Jonathan Liddell
10272…Jonathan Matthews
9106…Jonathan Morley
14179…Jonathan Smith
10119…Jordan Fraser
9866…Jordan Merkas
11029…Jordan Pellerin
9715…Jordy Finnigan
13608…Jorge Perez
8307…Jose Mari Perez
13533…Jose Montes Castilla
7475…Joseph Arbour
12639…Joseph Harding
7816…Joseph Ngare
10090…Joseph Smith
9505…Joseph Wilkinson
12988…Josh Burrill
7016…Josh Moore
13427…Joshua Lozanski
14118…Jovette Mcdonald
8602…Joy Delacruz-Shea
9410…Joyce Contant
9934…Judith Lamesse
10263…Judy Brockelbank
10510…Judy Fox
10361…Judy Lam
8074…Judy Mcintosh
14410…Julia Barry
10373…Julia Garant
11181…Julia Gingrich
11322…Julia Marshall
14332…Julia Nikonorova
11485…Julia Trotman-St. Hill
8075…Juliana Laboucane
9742…Julie Beaulieu
14522…Julie Bedard
10806…Julie Chouinard
9478…Julie Chubb
8837…Julie Dufour
12790…Julie Emond
14075…Julie Keith
13403…Julie Leger
10888…Julie Lesperance
13523…Julie Milligan
10055…Julie Nault
13623…Julie Pickering
13885…Julie Wills
7992…Justin Bhatla
7065…Justin Lalonde
9669…Justin Vienneau
10369…Kaitie Jourdeuil
8483…Kaitlin Bell
7413…Kaitlynn Dinn
7951…Kamil Tracz
6260…Kammal Tannis
9660…Kane Newell
8677…Karen Armstrong
11932…Karen Brown
10010…Karen Elchakieh
11356…Karen Elliott
10842…Karen Frederick
8564…Karen Hurley
12051…Karen Johnstone
8998…Karen Lahay
8447…Karen Leslie
9059…Karen Marshall
10199…Karen Mcnaught
9203…Karen Richard
9466…Karen Sutherland
12001…Karen Vandenhoven
9614…Karen Vinczeffy
7181…Karine Dion
12486…Karyn Lessard
9733…Karyn O'flaherty
7482…Kate Barbosa
8171…Kate Clost
12782…Kate Costello
11649…Kate Headley
13546…Kate Morrison
12637…Kate Todd
9746…Katerina Naddaf
13849…Katerina Venderova
10384…Katherine Swim
13804…Katherine Taylor
7257…Katherine Yee
10108…Kathleen Hurley
7500…Kathryn Blair
12282…Kathryn Gibson
14495…Kathryn Gough
8231…Kathy Crowe
9028…Kathy Litalien
7577…Katie Dalton
14108…Katie Macdonnell
12210…Katie Malcolm
13548…Katie Morrissey
10255…Katrina Ellis
9200…Kayt Render
7040…Kazutoshi Nishizawa
12309…Keith Hendricks
12505…Keith Kawall
7127…Kelly Crawford
10537…Kelly Jung
13333…Kelly Keyes
9831…Kelly Louie
7322…Kelly Mccann
14526…Kelly Patrick
12080…Kelly Stirling
8283…Kelly-Anne Campbell
14442…Kelsey Saha
14580…Kendra Kehoe
14291…Kenneth Coleman
8648…Kerri Hunter
12085…Kerry Maloney
7063…Kerstyn Farrell
8001…Kevin Buttle
9576…Kevin Cotten
13448…Kevin Maclean
9067…Kevin Mccarragher
10412…Kevin Moher
10717…Kevin Platford
10426…Kevin Smith
7235…Kevin Swan
10096…Kevin Wong
12043…Khallad Karime
8748…Kim Carriere
14511…Kim Holmes
13404…Kim Lehto
11802…Kim Ling
8111…Kimberley Coleman
12347…Kimberley Merkas
9728…Kimberly Stewart
8693…Kimby Barton
12640…Kingston Harding
14541…Kirstie Parisien
13346…Klaus Kollenberg
7457…Koni Bennett
13483…Koreena Mcculloch
13742…Kris Shaw
10225…Krista Brown
13889…Krista Wilson
11402…Kristen Cianfaglione
8810…Kristen Decaire
13289…Kristen Hutchinson
13443…Kristen Macgowan
7841…Kristen Parker
7732…Kristin Le Saux-Farmer
8839…Kristina Dyck
14479…Kristina Jensen
12490…Kristine Baker
14348…Kristine Dempster
10307…Kristy Fleet
7365…Krzysztof Malczynski
13107…Kyle Desormeaux
6504…Kyle Klumper
13502…Kyle Mclaughlin
14344…Landen Moore
9650…Larkin Mosscrop
8309…Larry Hoskins
52…Larry Mccloskey
13578…Larry O'brien
12980…Lars Brusven
14022…Laura Dawson
9981…Laura Garrow
9911…Laura Griffin
13244…Laura Halpenny
8489…Laura Harris
12180…Laura Johnson
12731…Laura Kealey
8189…Laura May
12330…Laura Meaney
13509…Laura Medeiros
13660…Laura Radey
14173…Laura Scholtes
8325…Laura Ziebell
14628…Laureen Harper
11915…Laurel Murray
7646…Lauren Gouchie
8954…Lauren Hutchings
8302…Laurie Hunt
12742…Leanne Forman
9858…Lee Jacobs
8526…Leif Thorpe
12635…Lenka Acreman
9694…Leo Kiu
8437…Leonard Post
12068…Lesley Kathnelson
11999…Lesley Mackay
13866…Lesley Warren
11968…Leslie Blades
14096…Leslie Levita
9099…Leslie Mondle
13669…Leslie Rendell
8303…Leslie Youngson
8350…Lia Hiltz
14289…Liam Bell
13218…Liam Gordon
9118…Liam Mulvihill
14539…Liam Price
12259…Liam Wood
12941…Lianne Bouffard
14608…Lianne Wright
10584…Lilly Wood
8701…Linda Beehler
12142…Linda Desgranges
10849…Linda Hall
9369…Linda Leung
8438…Linda Post
12189…Linda Yusak
12865…Lindsay Andrusek
12806…Lindsay Doyle
8276…Lindsay Sinclair
10235…Lindy Ledohowski
10688…Linsay Janzen
8097…Lisa Calloway
9950…Lisa Cox
8867…Lisa Forbes
13204…Lisa Georges
8892…Lisa Gibson
10046…Lisa Hamilton
12840…Lisa Mouchet
9185…Lisa Poirier
10712…Lisa St-Denis
8627…Lisa Valentino
10396…Lise Brandi-Hansen
7096…Lise Piche
8427…Lise St-Andre
12949…Lissa Boyd
8287…Liz Goodman
7293…Liz Maguire
12480…Loretta Saunders
10988…Lori Di Pierdomenico
12028…Lori Eagleson
10736…Lori Pepper
10583…Lori Wood
14572…Louis Romeo Montgrain
9440…Louise Fortin
9114…Louise Moulie
12459…Lucas Mcgreal
10241…Lucia Monique Ippolito
14434…Lucie Tasse
13547…Lucy Morrison
9057…Luize Marie Marquez
9494…Lukas Ratkowski
8401…Luke Allan
12227…Luke Young
9469…Lyn Crozier
10816…Lynda Cronin
13173…Lynda Franc
8237…Lyne Billings
9178…Lynette Pike
8872…Lynn Fournier
12824…Lysann Boisvert
14467…Lyse Patenaude
9451…Mackie Elliot
12780…Maddy Gibson
13895…Madeleine Woods
9589…Madison Schroeder
10309…Maggie Pawelec
10817…Magnus Cronin
7606…Manon Drake
14364…Marc Andre Bouchard
7058…Marc Berube
14514…Marc Dumaine
9017…Marc Lefebvre
7282…Marc Magierowicz
11942…Marc St Pierre
7053…Marcel Losier
8852…Marcia Evans
7769…Marcia Matsuo
12443…Marco Vocisano
8653…Marcus Ibbotson
9768…Marek Szymborski
8065…Marg Duteau
12220…Margaret Coleman-Mclean
9910…Margaret Hazel
11117…Marguerite Joyce
12246…Maria Barrett
12181…Maria Gomez
11908…Maria Lemus
10466…Maria Menard
7802…Maria Mottillo
9916…Marian Kneitz
10050…Marie Andree Paquin
12201…Marie Avila
9938…Marie Cocking
13138…Marie Dupuis
9531…Marie Engelmann
8891…Marie Gervais
10072…Marie Martin
12603…Marie Paul
10535…Marie Poirier
13599…Marie-Eve Paul
12664…Marie-France Horton
12362…Marie-France Joly
8086…Marie-France Sexton
7212…Marie-Jeanne Carola
8921…Marie-Lise Handley
12158…Marilyn Laidlaw
12033…Marina Murphy
11893…Marion Ings
8337…Marion Lapham
7772…Marion May
8942…Marisa Hopp
9512…Mark Bracko
13994…Mark Budd
8755…Mark Caverson
8885…Mark Gaillard
13217…Mark Goodchild
10265…Mark Menary
7850…Mark Phillips
7370…Mark Thompson
13825…Mark Totten
11951…Marlene St Pierre
13583…Marni Oliver
12183…Marta Gomez
10365…Marta Jarzabek
10249…Marta Piresferreira
13816…Martell Thompson
7498…Martin Bisson-Dubois
7056…Martin Gerrits
13363…Martin Laflamme
10299…Martin Stahl
14496…Martine Goulet
8698…Mary Beaudry
11966…Mary Brassard
11897…Mary Van Buren
12449…Mary-Ellen Maybee
13719…Mathew Sabourin
7601…Mathias Dormann
12411…Mathieu Stanton
7144…Matt Closs
8960…Matt Jelly
7837…Matt Paquette
8529…Matt Riopelle
8028…Matthew Arnott
7420…Matthew Bernhardt
12961…Matthew Brean
12965…Matthew Britt
13027…Matthew Chiasson
14008…Matthew Claxton
10809…Matthew Clement
12812…Matthew Colvil
7773…Matthew Mayer
10602…Matthew Pappas
9966…Matthew Pelletier
13411…Matthieu Leroux
13392…Maud Le Monnier
12171…Maureen Carroll
12581…Maureen Mccann
7315…Maureen O'connor
7833…Maureen O'Higgins
8893…Max Gibson
9368…Maxime Plater
10287…Maximilien Haghighat Talab
8767…May Chow
7995…Maya Aden
13168…Maylanye Fortin
7845…Meena Paul
7044…Megan Halhed
13287…Megan Hurley
14586…Megan Mcleod
12316…Megan Paterson
7360…Megan Rocquin
10339…Megan Trottier
9668…Meggan Phelan
8000…Meghan Bryant
9885…Melanie Burston
10357…Melanie Carkner
12250…Melanie Dubeau
7619…Melanie Farrell
13319…Melanie Jupp
10644…Melanie Mitchell
7381…Melanie Patina
9097…Melinda Mollineaux
13576…Melinda Nycholat
8789…Melissa Cosman
7576…Melissa Dahabieh
12344…Melissa Favaro
13310…Melissa Jess
10004…Melissa Radford
9872…Mercedes Marin
14444…Meredith Rocchi
12658…Merina Shulist
10404…Mia Mackechnie
9408…Mia Meldrum
12883…Michael Bamber
12946…Michael Boutet
8754…Michael Cassie
8284…Michael Chippa
9593…Michael Cuddihy
12375…Michael Davie
14258…Michael Diamond
12188…Michael Faulkner
8904…Michael Greene
7450…Michael Howitt
13351…Michael Krkic
9007…Michael Langlois
11098…Michael Mcginn
7183…Michael Mckiernan
9133…Michael Noynay
13614…Michael Petryk
12354…Michael St. Denis
9863…Michael Sulyha
12816…Michael Thompson
9314…Michael Van Aanhout
8484…Michael W Fawcett
9130…Michaela Norgren
7088…Michel Anglehart
7611…Michel Duhamel
12089…Michele Burkholder
7415…Michele Motiuk
10146…Michelle Blundell
8780…Michelle Conway
12781…Michelle Costello
12667…Michelle Crawley
12129…Michelle Gravelle
7340…Michelle Haines
9506…Michelle Joos
12583…Michelle Lefebvre
8575…Michelle Lindsay
13480…Michelle Mccombs
7808…Michelle Naylor
10926…Michelle Pineo
9210…Michelle Robichaud
12115…Michelle Straver
9912…Michelle Taylor
9983…Michelle Toutant
10443…Michelle Whitty
9711…Michelle Zakrison
7203…Miguel Bussiere
12663…Mikael Tremblay-Martel
11116…Mikaela Nicholson
12622…Mike Bushey
10515…Mike Clark
13207…Mike Giles
13230…Mike Greenly
14510…Mike Holmes
10445…Mike Kosavic
8250…Mike Scott
9893…Mike Seymour
13759…Mike Smith
10077…Mike Ward
13455…Mikel Magnusson
12463…Milan Patel
8298…Miriam Bloom
9923…Mithony Phan
12981…Moe Bsat
8288…Molly Goodman
12082…Monica Waterhouse
9615…Monique Lecompte
7522…Montana Brisbin
7268…Morgan Dickson
10257…Morgan Hladik
10533…Morgan Weeks
9986…Mumtaz Jaffer
10024…Murray Beare
7817…My-Chau Nguyen
13023…Mylene Charron
12179…Mylene Gomez
10242…Myriam Bower
8015…Nadim Missaghian
8398…Nadine Carroll
12278…Nammie Patel
8720…Nancy Boyd
8835…Nancy Dudek
9969…Nancy Dupuis
12487…Nancy Kalil
9309…Nancy Turnbull
8769…Naomi Christensen
12688…Natacha Tremblay
9773…Natalia Ng
7742…Natalie Lemay-Calcutt
13510…Natalie Melanson
13594…Natalie Paquette
9922…Natalie Phan
7166…Natalie Pilon
12222…Natasha Brennan
8462…Natasha Rueter
14257…Natasha Stewart
8796…Nathalie Croteau
13412…Nathalie Levasseur
13842…Navpreet Uppal
9238…Nazish Saleem
13203…Neil George
8009…Neil Irwin
9095…Neil Mispelaar
9280…Nelson Stokes
13213…Ngatho Githii
13962…Nicholas Anderson
12969…Nicholas Brousseau
13214…Nicholas Glennon
7660…Nicholas Handfield-Jones
9515…Nicholas Johnstone
14311…Nicholas Laughton
7352…Nicholas Newell
7073…Nicholas Schroeder
7456…Nicholas Tyler
9738…Nick Brunt
14210…Nick Doucette
13343…Nick Knighton
13429…Nick Luberti
13807…Nick Taylor-Vaisey
12621…Nickola Hockey
12847…Nicola Adams
12945…Nicolas Bourgogne
14040…Nicole Flanagan
10335…Nicole Loreto
8923…Nigel Harrison
13259…Nik Hazledine
7709…Nikolay Khotylev
9472…Nikta Fallahi
14553…Ninar Younes
13266…No Name, See Sportstats
14584…No Name, See Sportstats
9361…Noel Mcginnity
13228…Norma Green
13154…Olakunle Fajimi
14305…Olivia King
14488…Olivier Blue F-Bosh
7270…Olivier Choiniere
12855…Omar Allam
11745…Omar Diaz
9291…Omar Tareen
8300…Orlandd Foster
13260…Oscar Hazledine
7789…Oscar Metcalfe
13095…Oweeny De Silva
12698…Owen Savage
7402…Padme Raina
13254…Pam Hatton
12149…Pamela Bazinet
8304…Pamela Louie
8151…Pamela Vezina
10700…Pamela Wilson
12930…Parker Blois
7493…Pascal Bessette
10581…Pascale Castonguay
12548…Pascale Robillard
7149…Pat Barbeau
12118…Pat Horner
7487…Patricia Begin
12800…Patricia Innes
12417…Patricia Maloney
9112…Patricia Mosher
10437…Patricia Pearson
12098…Patricia Slaunwhite
12364…Patricia Turner
9324…Patricia Voight
12852…Patrick Alden
8057…Patrick Calnan
9540…Patrick Fletcher
8490…Patrick Harris
13268…Patrick Hodges
7010…Patrick Kirkham
7343…Patrick Lennox
7891…Patrick Saumur
13851…Patrick Vienneau
13977…Paul Barnshaw
9610…Paul Bazinet
7050…Paul Desgranges
8827…Paul Dionne
9955…Paul Duff
8862…Paul Finnigan
12551…Paul Gledhill
13229…Paul Greene
10288…Paul Haghighat Talab
8011…Paul Jonah
8646…Paul Karpiak
11943…Paul Krisciunas
9003…Paul Lamarre
7764…Paul Marchand
12124…Paul Racine
13701…Paul Romeo
7942…Paul Thompson
9315…Paul Van Aanhout
8651…Paula Ibbotson
13932…Paull Leamen
9180…Pei Pilgrim
8513…Penny Burton
9123…Penny Napke
14438…Perry Stansel
9565…Peter Bogart
13034…Peter Cianfaglione
14414…Peter Crow
14033…Peter Dudley
8030…Peter Fisher
13243…Peter Halpennny
7113…Peter Johnston
10122…Peter Mackay
13449…Peter Maclean
9378…Peter Orange
9181…Peter Pilgrim
7865…Peter Redekop
13731…Peter Saunders
12211…Peter Williams
9674…Petra Morewood
12770…Phil Jourdeuil
7364…Phil Rogers
9401…Phil Shilling
7250…Philip Corey
9716…Philip Pilon
12732…Philipp Guerin
8722…Philippe Boyer
14204…Philippe-Jacques Zaor
7690…Phillip Hughes-Morash
8655…Pia Newell Santiago
8003…Pierre Elhamoui
9799…Pierre Langevin
12356…Pierre-Pascal Duquette
10903…Pierrette Mccartney
11435…Pippa Leslie
9979…Pippa Sellers
7674…Pj Hewitt
10323…Porter Heffernan
7012…Predrag Bosnjak
10949…Prem Sharma
7497…Prescilla Bisier
9641…Quy Ha
8405…R Harman
8976…Rachael Kennedy
10691…Rachel Archer
7444…Rachel Armstrong
7527…Rachel Burgess
7832…Rachel Oueis
12808…Rachel Sheil
13418…Radek Linhart
9364…Rajiv Bhatla
14253…Raluca Dobre
11575…Randall Gerrior
14315…Randall Wilson
9538…Raquel Vinhais
7894…Rasha Saymeh
9143…Ray O'flaherty
14154…Raymond Prenoveau
13611…Real Perriard
13284…Rebecca Humphries
11939…Rebecca Knowlton
9557…Rebecca Mahler
9699…Rebecca Ross
7391…Rebecca Rousseau
8023…Rebecca Stallwood
9560…Rebecca Trueman
10175…Rebecca Wemyss
8800…Red Curtis
12575…Regan Braund
12853…Reji Alex
11663…Remi Ares
14304…Remy Poulin
9034…Renee Longpre
7787…Renee Mendrisky
8819…Ricardo Dias
12429…Richard Bisier
8721…Richard Boyd
11165…Richard Cotnam
10818…Richard Cronin
7661…Richard Handfield-Jones
13926…Richard Hayes
9599…Richard Lamoureux
10043…Rick Lessard
12751…Rick Mongeon
7836…Rick Palmer
9038…Ricky Ma
13893…Ricky Wong
10210…Rigel Shulist
9717…Riley Finnigan
8689…Ritu Banerjee
12668…Rob Blier
7536…Rob Carrick
12027…Rob Duncan
14134…Rob Muir
14583…Rob Parker
13729…Rob Saric
9568…Robert Bailey
10177…Robert Charrois
14473…Robert Cooper
7079…Robert Graham
7271…Robert Lamothe
10061…Robert Maranger
11962…Robert Mcintyre
13524…Robert Milligan
9107…Robert Morley
12657…Robert Walker
7380…Robert Watt
7632…Roberto Galeano
12973…Robin Browne
7556…Robin Chu
7141…Robyn Spicer
7989…Rod Vanderzalm
13844…Rohit Vaish
14237…Roman Ulyanov
13233…Ron Grossman
14441…Ron Maceachern
13680…Ron Ridley
13407…Ronald Lennox
13837…Ronan Tunney
9827…Rose Ngo
9719…Ross Ermel
12120…Roxanne Temple
7221…Roya Macdonald
10291…Ruben Saikaley
7677…Ruby Ho
10236…Rueban Balasubramaniam
10079…Russ Fitzpatrick
14207…Russell Christie
10233…Russell Francis
14228…Ryan Bush
7628…Ryan Fortner
13924…Ryan Garrett
7673…Ryan Hendy
10372…Ryan Jankovich
9816…Ryan Newton
11227…Ryan Squires
12083…Ryley Mackin
12224…S Slade
10646…Sabina Grossman
8649…Sabrina Dadrian-Kassabian
8880…Sabrina Gagne
8609…Said Hussien
14427…Sam Mackechnie
12317…Sam Paquette
12403…Samantha Burke
8467…Samantha Jerome
10080…Samantha Marcotte
12752…Samantha Mongeon
7404…Samantha Tysick
13146…Sami Elkout
7098…Sammy Diamantstein
14055…Sandra Gruescu
7064…Sandra Lalonde
11818…Sandra Monaghan
8050…Sandra Ryan
14365…Sandy Macleod
10138…Sara Jefferson
10748…Sara Lachance
13886…Sara Wilshaw
7471…Sarah Anderson
14446…Sarah Bennett
12303…Sarah Blackburn
13097…Sarah Degen
13123…Sarah Donahue
12683…Sarah El-Saliby
10118…Sarah Fraser
10780…Sarah Gisele
13242…Sarah Hahn
13288…Sarah Hurley
14083…Sarah Laliberte
12542…Sarah Leighton
7027…Sarah Leverton
13430…Sarah Luberti
8218…Sarah Michelle Pham
13567…Sarah Nesbitt
9230…Sarah Rudolph
12298…Sarah Turcotte
11996…Sarah Vandenhoven
9929…Sarah Verreault
14424…Sarto Leblanc
9583…Sasha Poirier
7758…Scot Maclean
14409…Scott Barry
14287…Scott Dupont
7116…Scott Evans
12022…Scott Gillespie
13280…Scott Howat
7750…Scott Lindsay
13615…Scott Phelan
13806…Scott Taylor
9399…Scott Thompson
7639…Sean Giovannetti
7701…Sean Jorgensen
10377…Sean Murtha
8093…Sean O'reilly
8652…Sebastian Ibbotson
7186…Sebastian Saville
8622…Sebastien Ares
7509…Sebastien Bouchard
9574…Serge Bidnyk
7682…Shana Hopkins
8934…Shane Hennessy
14612…Shannon Kelly
12703…Shannon King
9524…Shannon Ryan
10982…Shannon Youmelle
8937…Sharon Hiebert
10178…Shauna Maclean
7476…Shawn Arcand
9511…Shawn Boeyen
11907…Shawn Goudge
13335…Shawn Kidman
7831…Shawn Osborne
9177…Shawn Pigeon
13697…Shawn Rodgers
8776…Shawna Colbey
12435…Shawna Grosskleg
14621…Sheefra Brisbin
9046…Sheila Macleod
12445…Shelley Fleming
9425…Shelley Hale
12020…Sheri Curkovic
8742…Sherri-Ann Cameron
6508…Shona Mcculloch
7763…Simmi Mangat
10185…Simon Ferrand
9739…Simon Gagne
13929…Simon Jacques
7233…Simon Jones
13375…Simon Laplante
13413…Simon Levasseur
7232…Simon Mcdermott
14463…Simon Mclennan
9220…Simone Rose-Oliver
7794…Sonia Moioli
8106…Sophea Smith
12256…Sophia Molnar
14513…Sophie Goguen
14620…Sophie Hamel
9198…Sophie Reinhard
14328…Speedy Gonzales
10387…Spencer Rolfe
11756…Stacey Fox
10136…Stacey Lacroix
11950…Stacey Luce
14196…Stefan Van Kessel
7659…Steffan Hammonds
7135…Stephane Brunet
7636…Stephane Gauthier
7860…Stephane Quimper
8388…Stephane Thivierge
8668…Stephanie Anderton
9357…Stephanie Brunet
11961…Stephanie Culleton
13096…Stephanie De Silva
8849…Stephanie Etchells
13464…Stephanie Malley
14331…Stephanie Monteith
8455…Stephanie Niles
9149…Stephanie Paolin
10221…Stephanie Parisien
8222…Stephanie Parker
13696…Stephanie Rocque
7925…Stephanie Stewart
7076…Stephen Cutts
7047…Stephen Difruscio
8563…Stephen Donoghue
13132…Stephen Downs
13264…Stephen Hendrie
7731…Stephen Lawson
12691…Stephen Merils
8017…Stephen Morton
10217…Stephen Powell
13685…Stephen Ritchie
7535…Steve Campbell
14059…Steve Heath
8955…Steve Hutchings
13456…Steve Mahood
9086…Steve Meldrum
13648…Steve Power
13942…Steve Shaddoc
12735…Steve Westley
12254…Steven Molnar
14340…Steven Walker
13878…Steven West
10734…Steven Winters
13904…Steven Yankowich
11059…Stuart Campbell
14454…Stuart Macmillan
9068…Stuart Mccarthy
10167…Stuart Mccubbin
7255…Stuart Thomas
10370…Sue Jourdeuil
9032…Sue London
7185…Sullivan Brown
9504…Susan Domina
13269…Susan Hodgson
14538…Susan Mckay
9948…Susan Nevitt-Yelle
9132…Susan North
11895…Susan Oneid
9842…Susan-Belle Ferguson
8680…Susanna Atkinson
7288…Suzanne Hotson
10168…Suzanne Laverty
14550…Suzanne Maclean
8124…Suzi Vivolo
7239…Suzie Abcarius
8997…Suzie Lafreniere
10239…Sydney Shelp
13188…Sylvain Gagne
14310…Sylvain Osborne
12943…Sylvie Bourassa-Muise
9974…Sylvie Chiasson
8456…Sylvie Cote
9409…Sylvie Giroux
9616…Tabitha Legault
7300…Tamara Knighton
13730…Tamara Sarkisian
7613…Tammy Dupuis
11623…Tanja Sredic
12875…Tanya Ashton
12002…Tanya Cullen
11478…Tanya Desjardins
7739…Tanya Leger
7070…Tara Read
13800…Tara Sweeney
8956…Taylor Hutchings
9463…Ted Mackay
8275…Terri Sinclair
7568…Terry Cowan
9968…Terry Warren
13177…Tess Fremont-Cote
13321…Tessa Kampman
12119…Thea Temple
8865…Theresa Flaherty
7691…Theresa Humphrys
7749…Thiago Lima
14314…Thivisha Rajagopal
10290…Thom Haghighat Talab
14273…Thomas Gallagher
10883…Thomas Lamarre
12390…Thomas Pereira
11304…Thomas Saville
13596…Thusyanthan Pathmalingam
7746…Thuy Lieu
7469…Tiago Alves De Jesus
11367…Tiana Burton
12595…Tiffany Patten
7859…Tiffany Pursoo
14557…Tim Gibel
10850…Tim Hanley
9908…Tim Norman
10254…Timothy Hopkins
10586…Tina Meldrum
13326…Tobin Kelly
8977…Tobin Kennedy
13755…Todd Smaridge
12573…Tom Caldwell
14617…Tom Echlin
9422…Tom Fleming
9626…Tom Grace
13337…Tom Kilby
13389…Tom Lawson
8016…Tom Morel
13691…Tom Roberts
7196…Tom Steen
7078…Tomas Graham
13438…Tonda Maccharles
9484…Tony Curkovic
10088…Tony Tran
8806…Tracey Davis
8056…Tracey Mcdonald
9388…Tracey Mcdonald
7948…Tracey Tong
13857…Tracey Wait
12501…Tracy O'connor
14174…Tracy Seymour
8254…Tracy Tabuchi
9654…Tracy Walden
10334…Travis Boisvenue
11890…Travis Martin
9394…Treena Skory
12382…Trevor Berg
9864…Trevor Cavanagh
7547…Trevor Chaisson
13245…Trevor Halpenny
14101…Trevor Luten
8957…Trish Hutchings
14465…Troy Gilbert
12466…Tyler Allan
13031…Tyler Christian
7754…Tyler Longpre
7272…Tyler Mabo
7397…Ursula Melinz
8667…Valerie Anderson
13915…Valerie Delaney
13135…Vallier Dufour
11048…Vanessa Meikle
7935…Vanessa Talbot
8808…Venissa De Castro
10140…Veronica Benoit
9873…Veronique Boudreau
14570…Veronique Morin
1966…Veronqiue St-Denis
8077…Vicky Williams
12244…Victoria Calladine
14015…Victoria Crosbie
7704…Victoria Keaney
9673…Victoria Procunier
9861…Victoria Thomson
14486…Vincent Extreme-Kiwi Turpin
7555…Vinod Choyi
13890…Virginia Wolfe
7324…Vitaly Pecherskiy
12136…Ward Sb Powell
10247…Wendy Alexis
7688…Wendy Hough
12034…Wendy Jermyn
12205…Wendy Mak
7914…Wendy Snyder
7437…Wes Huffman
8282…Will Messervey
9566…William Aikman
7007…William Bain
14255…William Dods
7662…William Handfield-Jones
13275…William Hopkins
8454…William Kuchapski
8366…William Mcgowan
13600…William Paul
7864…William Read
10092…William Yee
9774…Wojciech Kulacz
13754…Xander Sirois
8219…Xuan Huyen Pham
7346…Yannick Brisebois
7807…Yasir Naqvi
13311…Yiuen Jiang
13748…Yves Sikubwabo
14307…Yvonne Burton
7629…Zander Fraser
13833…Zoe Trudel
7396…Zu Vuong
May I present shots of the #EchoStar23 launch by #SpaceX atop a legless #Falcon9 rocket, taken directly from Pad 39A. These shots are from two cameras that I set on Monday, and the cameras sat patiently waiting until 2:00 am (ET) Thursday morning to capture these images.
Although I get to process and post these pictures, it would be a glorious oversight for me to not acknowledge the considerable efforts by Bill Jelen and Mary Ellen Jelen for making these images possible. They checked in on the cameras Tuesday afternoon; they waited for a chance to pick them up at 5:00 am Thursday morning, ultimately returning to the Pad Thursday afternoon for pick up and then sent me the files for processing. Also, Jared Haworth gets a shout-out for the dew heaters that kept the lenses warm and for ever-present guidance.
.
See also, an album of 2014 Perth Kilt Run pictures in Flickr: www.flickr.com/photos/ianhun/sets/72157645345849905/
.........................................................................................................
June 22, 2013, 6:12 p.m.
LIST OF RACE PARTICIPANTS (page 2 of 2)
The following runners and walkers participated in the 8 km Perth Kilt Run.
The bib numbers & names are listed by Ontario community (see the list below), then by other provinces, and international. The names are additionally sorted alphabetically by last name.
......................................................................................
In addition to this set of pictures in Flickr, see also each runner's official race photos. (Click and enter bib # or last name.)
......................................................................................
List of Runners and Walkers from:
A. Perth
B. Ottawa
C. Kanata
D. Carleton Place
E. Nepean
F. Smiths Falls
**For A through F, please CLICK HERE.
G. Other Communities in Ontario
H. Other Provinces
I. International
**For G, H, I, please SEE BELOW.
................................................................................
Bib #........Name..... Community......Age
G. Other Communities in Ontario
1…….Elizabeth Aaltonen…..Ajax…..15
392…..Daniel Cross…..Ajax…..58
1397….Janet Nichols…..Ajax…..47
535…..Sue Duval…..Alexandria…..52
1131….Wendy MacLeod…..Alexandria…..34
1411….Amber Ogilvie…..Alexandria…..38
1492….Tom Poirier…..Alexandria…..49
1856….Kathy Theoret…..Alexandria…..33
61……Adrian Baker…..Almonte…..57
138…..Duncan Bird…..Almonte…..7
136…..Andrea Bird…..Almonte…..36
139…..Pamela Biron…..Almonte…..29
153…..Quinn Blaskie…..Almonte…..14
154…..Spencer Blaskie…..Almonte…..15
151…..Angele Blaskie…..Almonte…..43
152…..Mark Blaskie…..Almonte…..45
244…..Doreen Byrne…..Almonte…..48
428…..Robbie Davidson…..Almonte…..58
769…..Adam Hamilton…..Almonte…..41
1412….Josh O'Gorman…..Almonte…..17
1663….Jason Schooley…..Almonte…..41
1696….Jenny Sheffield…..Almonte…..42
1738….Susan Snow…..Almonte…..44
1737….Gord Snow…..Almonte…..46
1812….Kathleen Stroud…..Almonte…..44
1830….Fran Switch…..Almonte…..58
2038….Bob Woods…..Almonte…..62
328…..Jennifer Clayton…..Ameliasburgh…..38
327…..Dan Clayton…..Ameliasburgh…..41
25……Ann marie Andrews…..Amherstview…..40
26……Gary Andrews…..Amherstview…..42
81……Caelan Barker…..Amherstview…..21
516…..Teresa Drummond…..Amherstview…..49
993…..Arianne Laframboise…..Amherstview…..21
994…..Laura Laframboise…..Amherstview…..49
995…..Pierre Laframboise…..Amherstview…..56
1254….Deborah McKee…..Amherstview…..48
1638….Leigh Scatchard…..Anmore…..44
1110….Margo MacIntosh…..Apple Hill…..40
163…..Karen Boese…..Arnprior…..53
185…..Andrew Bradley…..Arnprior…..33
187…..Melanie Bradley…..Arnprior…..39
214…..Caitlin Brydges…..Arnprior…..37
497…..Sebastian Donis…..Arnprior…..13
494…..Emily Donis…..Arnprior…..14
496…..Madeleine Donis…..Arnprior…..16
505…..Jane Dowd…..Arnprior…..57
645…..Jaques Galley…..Arnprior…..13
643…..Cha-Cha Galley…..Arnprior…..15
644…..David Galley…..Arnprior…..49
936…..Andy Kalnins…..Arnprior…..58
1124….Jennifer MacLean…..Arnprior…..39
1926….Tony Veale…..Arnprior…..42
2060….Wonnietta Zarb…..Arnprior…..50
2059….Joe Zarb…..Arnprior…..54
634…..Sandy Fredette…..Ashton…..55
840…..Sally Hodgson…..Ashton…..48
1474….Black Peter…..Ashton…..58
794…..Mattea Hartley…..Athens…..16
792…..Angela Hartley…..Athens…..42
793…..Kevin Hartley…..Athens…..43
39……Caden Armstrong…..Aurora…..19
40……Leslie Armstrong…..Aurora…..52
1072….Valerie Loni…..Aurora…..53
1071….Gino Loni…..Aurora…..55
177…..Kylie Boudreau…..Balderson…..27
391…..Susan Crosbie…..Balderson…..55
513…..Arlene Doyle…..Balderson…..51
1195….Jenny McBride…..Balderson…..35
1243….Steve Mcintosh…..Balderson…..30
1423….Gloria Opzoomer…..Balderson…..64
1656….Sonja Schmidt…..Balderson…..39
1845….Wendy Taylor…..Balderson…..49
1100….Terry MacFarlane…..Barrie…..51
1892….Emilie Tremblay…..Bath…..13
1891….Dean Tremblay…..Bath…..43
291…..Paul Cehan…..Battersea…..49
2061….Christopher Zaremba…..Battersea…..40
2062….Tatyana Zaremba…..Battersea…..42
1141….Forest Mahoney…..Beachburg…..16
1144….Savannah Mahoney…..Beachburg…..18
1142….Kevin Mahoney…..Beachburg…..51
1682….Alison Seely…..Beachburg…..48
77……Diane Baradziej…..Beamsville…..51
1694….Kevin Sharpe…..Beamsville…..54
268…..Garry Carl…..Belleville…..57
333…..Diane Coates…..Belleville…..50
340…..John Coffin…..Belleville…..31
1228….Shane McGill…..Belleville…..47
1473….Joy Petch…..Belleville…..52
1472….Bill Petch…..Belleville…..53
1928….Jerry Vickers…..Belleville…..71
37……Matt Armitage…..Boulder…..48
1562….Ria Robertson…..Bourget…..53
708…..Josianne Goudreau…..Bradford…..28
1384….Nicole Murray…..Braeside…..40
813…..Megan Hennessy…..Brighton…..25
6…….Laurie Adrain…..Brockville…..45
171…..Nieves Bonuchi…..Brockville…..70
270…..Marianne Carlyle…..Brockville…..51
280…..Patricia Carter…..Brockville…..57
329…..Mary Clayton…..Brockville…..68
363…..Bernie Cormier…..Brockville…..42
402…..Liam C Cullen…..Brockville…..71
693…..Connie Glashan…..Brockville…..66
1065….Cameron Locke…..Brockville…..11
1401….Patricia Noonan…..Brockville…..38
1538….Sharon Riddell…..Brockville…..47
1537….Kevin Riddell…..Brockville…..51
1876….Catherine Thorp…..Brockville…..46
2056….Paige Young…..Brockville…..18
2050….Brenda Young…..Brockville…..44
1744….Devlin Spears…..Burlington…..13
1746….Norman Spears…..Burlington…..46
1966….Anne Warnock…..Burlington…..45
1519….Kevin Ready…..Burnstown…..40
1931….Andrew Vignuzzi…..Burritts Rapids…..46
1295….John McNie…..Cambridge…..56
2042….Josh Wright…..Cambridge…..36
150…..Sue Blanchard…..Carlsbad Springs…..52
149…..Richard Blanchard…..Carlsbad Springs…..55
8…….Dave Albers…..Carp…..58
240…..Hans Buser…..Carp…..66
414…..Liam Czaharynski…..Carp…..13
412…..Ilija Czaharynski…..Carp…..21
415…..Michael Czaharynski…..Carp…..22
413…..Jasna Czaharynski…..Carp…..50
416…..Sean Czaharynski…..Carp…..51
602…..Kathy Fischer…..Carp…..58
704…..James Goodway…..Carp…..22
779…..Nick Hare…..Carp…..74
834…..Raina Ho…..Carp…..64
989…..Hannah Lacaille…..Carp…..15
988…..Carolyn Lacaille…..Carp…..48
1439….Martha Palmer…..Carp…..51
1437….Angus Palmer…..Carp…..52
1599….Darlene Rudolph…..Carp…..48
1706….Alyssa Shields…..Carp…..14
1794….Lesley Stonebridge…..Carp…..22
1793….Carole Stonebridge…..Carp…..50
1795….Murray Stonebridge…..Carp…..54
1975….Nancy Wawia Robb…..Carp…..45
2037….James Wood…..Carrying Place…..32
320…..Mary Elizabeth Clark…..Cobourg…..55
1319….Sandy Metz…..Cochrane…..39
1320….Shayne Metz…..Cochrane…..47
803…..Kathleen Hay…..Cornwall…..52
947…..Daniel Kelly…..Cornwall…..44
1070….Tracy Loney…..Cornwall…..39
1204….Tania McClements…..Cornwall…..36
1965….John Warner…..Cornwall…..64
2008….Sylvie Willems…..Dalkeith…..39
812…..Nathan Hendry…..Deep River…..32
1209….Kate McDavison…..Deep River…..33
1834….Erin Szumsky…..Deep River…..32
357…..Ann-Marie Cooper…..Dundas…..45
828…..Richard Hillier…..Dunrobin…..20
806…..Terry Headrick…..Edwards…..46
1844….Gord Taylor…..Elfin burg…..57
490…..Lois Don…..Elmvale…..57
134…..Luc Bilodeau…..Embrun…..32
233…..Sean Burnett…..Embrun…..33
863…..Ruzica Howell…..Embrun…..48
862…..Darryl Howell…..Embrun…..49
1868….James Thompson-Slaven…..Embrun…..59
1649….Ian Port…..England…..44
1647….Christine Port…..England…..47
424…..Lauren Dallin…..Ennismore…..49
423…..Doug Dallin…..Ennismore…..55
749…..Melissa Guay…..Enterprise…..37
356…..Wendy Coombs…..Fallbrook…..60
355…..John Coombs…..Fallbrook…..66
939…..Karen Karnis…..Fergus…..34
1610….Kathy Ryan…..Fournier…..46
97……Kevin Beatty…..Frankford…..37
958…..Mike Kerr…..Frankville…..65
3…….Roberta Abbott…..Gananoque…..48
21……David Anderson…..Gananoque…..49
184…..Heather Bracken…..Gloucester…..61
198…..James Brooks…..Gloucester…..23
431…..Natalie Davis…..Gloucester…..34
451…..William Denis…..Gloucester…..22
775…..Sandra Hanson…..Gloucester…..40
1043….Michael G. Lepage…..Gloucester…..32
1756….Janet St. Louis-Brooks…..Gloucester…..55
1878….David Tinsley…..Gloucester…..55
325…..Emily Clarmo…..Greeley…..36
115…..Jamie Bennett…..Greely…..58
919…..Claire Johnstone…..Greely…..43
1363….Andrew Morrow…..Greely…..44
1841….Mylaine Tardif…..Greely…..52
1484….Amanda Tiahnybok…..Greely…..24
1939….Stephanie Wade…..Greely…..40
365…..Jennifer Corput…..Green Valley…..36
460…..Jeff Dewar…..Green Valley…..46
500…..Henri Dore…..Green Valley…..66
321…..Paul Clark…..Guelph…..63
405…..Karrie Cumming…..Guelph…..38
404…..John Cumming…..Guelph…..39
817…..Meghan Hewitt…..Guelph…..27
1109….Laurie MacIntosh…..Guelph…..47
1149….Ian Malcolm…..Guelph…..37
1218….Tara McDonald…..Guelph…..33
1219….Trish McDonald…..Guelph…..35
1246….Tina McIntyre…..Guelph…..38
1324….Angela Miller…..Guelph…..50
2004….Ryan Whitney…..Guelph…..28
1752….Janet Springer…..Haley Station…..49
1839….Kayla Tanguay…..Haley Station…..26
422…..Jennifer Daley…..Hamilton…..29
1296….Scott McNie…..Hamilton…..57
1527….Ron Reid…..Hammond…..64
750…..Barb Guiden…..Inverary…..54
951…..Shannon Kennedy…..Iroquois Falls…..33
2…….Nathan Abbass…..Jasper…..26
931…..Judy-Lynn Jordan…..Jasper…..42
4…….Kevin Adamsons…..Kars…..34
621…..Scott Fotheringham…..Kars…..51
140…..Denis Bisson…..Kemptville…..52
146…..Mark Blaisdell…..Kemptville…..50
354…..Emily Conway…..Kemptville…..52
473…..Marcel Dinelle…..Kemptville…..53
721…..John Gray…..Kemptville…..48
783…..Roxanne Harrington…..Kemptville…..50
1326….Emma Miller…..Kemptville…..12
1333….Norman Miller…..Kemptville…..17
1327….Jeff Miller…..Kemptville…..52
1377….Kevin Munroe…..Kemptville…..45
1521….Harrison Reed…..Kemptville…..15
1520….Belinda Reed…..Kemptville…..52
1535….Dale Richardson…..Kemptville…..61
1591….Christine Routliffe…..Kemptville…..42
1768….Sheri Steeves…..Kemptville…..41
1836….Diana Tallman…..Kemptville…..46
1837….Don Tallman…..Kemptville…..62
1951….Greg Walsh…..Kemptville…..44
224…..Amanda Burke…..Kinburn…..38
232…..Terry Burke…..Kinburn…..39
545…..Colleen Eames…..Kinburn…..33
546…..Daniel Eames…..Kinburn…..37
778…..Maxine Hare…..Kinburn…..40
912…..Tim Jenkins…..Kinburn…..52
911…..Lynne Jenkins…..Kinburn…..55
1265….Barbara McKenzie…..Kinburn…..44
96……Peter Beattie…..Kingston…..64
102…..Robert Beeney…..Kingston…..81
164…..Richard Boivin…..Kingston…..58
229…..Krys Burke…..Kingston…..59
242…..Catherine Byers…..Kingston…..45
243…..Kay Byers-Richards…..Kingston…..13
571…..Brad Ethier…..Kingston…..43
618…..Julie Fossitt…..Kingston…..37
628…..Savvas Frantzeskos…..Kingston…..38
642…..Karen Gagnon…..Kingston…..52
659…..Carolyn Gauthier…..Kingston…..40
718…..Tessa Grant…..Kingston…..20
723…..Andrea Greek…..Kingston…..50
735…..Erin Greentree…..Kingston…..11
734…..Anna Greentree…..Kingston…..13
736…..Gary Greentree…..Kingston…..48
759…..Luanne Halerewich…..Kingston…..46
787…..Meggie Harris…..Kingston…..30
788…..Mel Harris-Baker…..Kingston…..34
1036….Jordan Leitch…..Kingston…..27
1192….Lisa McAvoy…..Kingston…..48
1241….Sara McIlveen…..Kingston…..23
1279….Regan McLeod…..Kingston…..37
1278….Gordon McLeod…..Kingston…..41
1307….Amanda Meekel…..Kingston…..22
1308….John Meekel…..Kingston…..57
1357….Kelly Morrice…..Kingston…..53
1368….Jeffrey Mountjoy…..Kingston…..23
1375….Pam Mundell…..Kingston…..48
1435….Richard Palimaka…..Kingston…..55
1456….Craig Patton…..Kingston…..39
1554….Angie Roberts…..Kingston…..61
1597….Daniel Roy…..Kingston…..21
1714….Laurie Sinon…..Kingston…..49
1792….Janet Stokes…..Kingston…..50
1798….Lynn Stoute…..Kingston…..57
1847….Lori Templeton…..Kingston…..56
1982….Kristina Weld…..Kingston…..29
2030….Erin Wing…..Kingston…..22
2031….James Wing…..Kingston…..57
2041….Emilie Wright…..Kingston…..37
523…..Daniel Dumont…..Kingsville…..68
84……Lesley Barr…..Lanark…..21
135…..Jennie Bingley…..Lanark…..43
144…..Norma Blair…..Lanark…..67
175…..Jeannette Bosman…..Lanark…..38
390…..Kate Crosbie…..Lanark…..25
551…..Angus Edmundson…..Lanark…..13
747…..Pamela Grimm…..Lanark…..31
945…..Debbie Keaney…..Lanark…..53
1049….Nick Levac…..Lanark…..31
1226….Suzanne McFarlane…..Lanark…..39
1297….Sharron McOuatt…..Lanark…..52
1624….Megan Moore…..Lanark…..25
1376….Juanita Munro…..Lanark…..53
1466….Christine Peringer…..Lanark…..53
1622….Alana Sargeant…..Lanark…..22
1625….Rick Sargeant…..Lanark…..55
1623….Joan Sargeant…..Lanark…..56
1785….Lori Stewart…..Lanark…..39
1822….Mark Suthers…..Lanark…..69
1883….Austin Topping…..Lanark…..11
1884….Jamie Topping…..Lanark…..36
1919….Beth-Anne Van Noppen…..Lanark…..46
1923….Amy Vanderspank…..Lanark…..37
1979….Gabriel Weekes…..Lanark…..20
1980….Randy Weekes…..Lanark…..64
2025….Shawn Wilson…..Lanark…..51
2014….Carol Wilson…..Lanark…..54
2058….Jenni Yuill…..Lanark…..30
260…..James Campbell…..Lombardy…..53
581…..Jane Farrell…..Lombardy…..59
607…..Cara Fleming…..Lombardy…..41
1005….Drew Lampman…..Lombardy…..42
1705….Roxanne Shew…..Lombardy…..50
1704….Raphael Shew…..Lombardy…..52
1720….Karen Smereka…..Lombardy…..52
315…..David Chute…..London…..73
1675….Victoria Scott…..London…..22
1669….Brent Scott…..London…..57
1838….Peter Tangredi…..London…..54
1214….Karen McDonald…..L'Orignal…..46
158…..Peter Blood…..Lyndhurst…..67
1886….Toni Towle…..Lyndhurst…..55
201…..Keith Brousseau…..Maberly…..42
272…..Sara Carpenter…..Maberly…..55
271…..Brian Carpenter…..Maberly…..56
755…..Tyler Guthrie…..Maberly…..21
754…..Gail Guthrie…..Maberly…..51
981…..Tabetha Koeslad…..Maberly…..17
980…..Jeannette Koeslad…..Maberly…..47
2079….Ross Leader…..Maberly…..60
1156….Susan Marble…..Maberly…..60
1874….Lillian Thornton…..Maberly…..10
1873….Kate Thornton…..Maberly…..13
808…..Kim Helyer…..Madoc…..28
1568….Tim Rodger…..Madoc…..28
1220….Karen McDonald Hurley…..Maitland…..55
1699….Jeff Shepherd…..Mallorytown…..21
1698….Janet Shepherd…..Mallorytown…..49
1833….JoAnne Sytsma…..Mallorytown…..56
1888….Cathie Trayner…..Mallorytown…..54
1889….Robert Trayner…..Mallorytown…..54
113…..Gillian Bender…..Manotick…..20
112…..Alexandra Bender…..Manotick…..23
264…..Terri Campbell…..Manotick…..40
256…..Bonnie Campbell…..Manotick…..54
265…..Terry Campbell…..Manotick…..73
648…..Mary Gardam…..Manotick…..54
647…..John Gardam…..Manotick…..56
876…..Susan Ibach…..Manotick…..43
937…..Andrew Karn…..Manotick…..28
1222….Josh McEvoy…..Manotick…..20
1223….Rebecca McEvoy…..Manotick…..22
1404….Marie Norris…..Manotick…..50
1593….Bronwen Rowe…..Manotick…..19
1592….Allison Rowe…..Manotick…..20
181…..Mona-Marie Bowles…..McDonald's Corners…..53
53……Barbara Bacon…..Merrickville…..48
314…..Katharine Church…..Merrickville…..30
968…..Robert King…..Merrickville…..50
1108….Sally MacInnis…..Merrickville…..60
1106….Chuck MacInnis…..Merrickville…..61
1446….Rob Paradis…..Merrickville…..59
1579….Graham Ross…..Merrickville…..51
1760….Malcolm Stadig…..Merrickville…..40
1805….Andrea Stringel…..Merrickville…..41
1806….Gus Stringel…..Merrickville…..43
1848….Steve Templeton…..Merrickville…..50
35……Wally Archibald…..Metcalfe…..48
160…..Jana Blythe…..Metcalfe…..37
657…..Fran Gaudet…..Metcalfe…..51
963…..Craig Killin…..Metcalfe…..57
1491….Dale Poirier…..Metcalfe…..45
1942….Catherine Waitman…..Metcalfe…..60
957…..Derek Kerr…..Milton…..38
1453….Charlotte Paton…..MInden…..11
1451….Betty Paton…..MInden…..14
1454….Jennifer Paton…..MInden…..48
1452….Blake Paton…..MInden…..49
580…..David Farmer…..Mississauga…..65
979…..Andy Kis…..Mississauga…..49
1964….Dana Wareing…..Mississauga…..38
66……Alison Ball…..Mississippi Mills…..57
1306….John Meek…..Moose Creek…..40
1747….Silvia Speck…..Moose Creek…..42
1819….Nicole Sullivan…..Morrisburg…..28
717…..Stephanie Grant…..Munster…..36
731…..Leslie Greene…..Munster…..38
730…..Jason Greene…..Munster…..40
770…..Reta Hamilton…..Munster…..63
1732….Nancy Ann Smith…..Munster…..56
1722….Allan Smith…..Munster…..57
364…..Krista Corneil…..Navan…..40
1949….Kim Wallace…..Newcastle…..43
409…..Judy Curry…..North Augusta…..49
1044….Tammy LeRiche…..North Augusta…..38
1566….Jason Rockburne…..North Augusta…..40
1534….Emily Richards…..North Bay…..25
1901….Glenn Tunnock…..North Bay…..64
2022….Natalie Wilson…..North Bay…..44
254…..Sherry Connors…..North Gower…..42
488…..Lori Doehler…..North Gower…..43
1325….Eleanor Miller…..North Gower…..19
1334….Robert Miller…..North Gower…..54
407…..Scott Cummings…..Oakville…..54
883…..John Inglis…..Ompah…..67
888…..Deborah Irwin…..Orillia…..60
15……Joelle Allaire…..Orleans…..43
33……Joseph Arbour…..Orleans…..74
63……William Baldwin…..Orleans…..51
251…..Carol Cameron…..Orleans…..61
337…..Deborah Coburn…..Orleans…..35
343…..Brooke Colman…..Orleans…..8
345…..Devin Colman…..Orleans…..11
346…..Kathryn Colman…..Orleans…..41
450…..Marc Denis…..Orleans…..52
514…..Julie Dregas…..Orleans…..42
743…..Liette Greyeyes…..Orleans…..40
774…..Ron Hanson…..Orleans…..41
1013….Don Lavictoire…..Orleans…..60
1064….Alexi Livingston…..Orleans…..14
1211….Jason McDonald…..Orleans…..39
1215….Ken McDonald…..Orleans…..64
1318….Astrid Mesterom…..Orleans…..53
1366….Michelle Morrow…..Orleans…..30
1447….Isabelle Patenaude…..Orleans…..47
1449….Camille Patenaude Hanson…..Orleans…..12
1450….Emma Patenaude Hanson…..Orleans…..12
1480….David Phan…..Orleans…..30
1606….Rene Russo…..Orleans…..57
1695….Leslie Shaver…..Orleans…..56
1711….Lois Simms-Baldwin…..Orleans…..50
1895….Charmaine Trottier…..Orleans…..47
1898….Melanie Trumpower…..Orleans…..41
2005….Christal Whittaker…..Orleans…..44
2006….Kathy Wiens…..Orleans…..43
2057….Vincent Young…..Orleans…..49
2052….David Young…..Orleans…..63
791…..Michelle Harte…..Osgoode…..45
972…..Debbie Kinny…..Osgoode…..48
1009….Daniel Langlois…..Osgoode…..42
1441….Linda Panich- Langlois…..Osgoode…..49
603…..Tom Fitzgerald…..Oshawa…..57
760…..Donald Halikowski…..Oshawa…..64
1947….James Wallace…..Oshawa…..36
143…..Helen Blair…..Pakenham…..67
761…..Robin Hall…..Pakenham…..46
987…..Cory Kruger…..Pakenham…..40
69……Don Ball…..Parham…..51
1174….Don Marshall…..Parham…..60
20……Mike Amyotte…..Pembroke…..58
1536….Dave Cashin…..Pembroke…..19
394…..Roberta Crowle…..Pembroke…..43
399…..Samantha Csisztu…..Pembroke…..10
400…..Thomas Csisztu…..Pembroke…..13
398…..Michael Csisztu…..Pembroke…..47
429…..Melissa Davies…..Pembroke…..32
835…..Richard Hobart…..Pembroke…..55
907…..Terra Janz…..Pembroke…..29
1310….Jerry Melanson…..Pembroke…..45
1349….Jenny Montgomery…..Pembroke…..29
1445….Carlie Paquette…..Pembroke…..28
1464….Christine Penner…..Pembroke…..28
1840….Tricia Tansowny…..Pembroke…..39
1853….Roshani Thambithurai…..Pembroke…..38
1852….Godwin Thambithurai…..Pembroke…..39
1927….Amy Verney…..Pembroke…..28
1935….Anita Voldock…..Pembroke…..38
1946….Aaron Wallace…..Pembroke…..20
1950….Stephanie Wallace…..Pembroke…..54
116…..Jeff Bennett…..Perth Road…..44
548…..Margaret Eberle…..Perth Road…..38
680…..Francis Gillespie…..Perth Road…..58
1664….Jessica Schooley…..Perth Road…..33
1697….Angela Shepherd…..Perth Road…..46
1851….Tyler Thake…..Perth Road…..32
1047….Joanne Lesniewski…..Petawawa…..34
1855….Melanie Theilmann…..Petawawa…..35
148…..Katherine Blanchard…..Peterborough…..57
207…..Karen Ruth Brown…..Peterborough…..44
547…..Gary Earle…..Peterborough…..69
600…..Elizabeth Finlan…..Peterborough…..23
810…..Judi Hendry…..Peterborough…..57
815…..Rob Hetherington…..Peterborough…..41
859…..Julie Horne…..Peterborough…..36
1167….Susan Mariutti…..Peterborough…..56
1371….Shannon Mulgrew…..Peterborough…..40
1385….Devon Nagle…..Peterborough…..28
1444….Adam Papp…..Peterborough…..61
1478….Stephen Peterson…..Peterborough…..43
1508….Christine Quinn…..Peterborough…..48
1509….Paul Quinn…..Peterborough…..56
1549….Jill Ritchie…..Peterborough…..42
1595….Brenda Roxburgh…..Peterborough…..42
1596….Bruce Roxburgh…..Peterborough…..44
1791….Karen Stoker…..Peterborough…..57
1843….Danielle Tassie…..Peterborough…..39
2045….Bruce Wurtele…..Peterborough…..41
465…..Laura Dickinson…..Plainfield…..23
464…..Heather Dickinson…..Plainfield…..39
466…..Mike Dickinson…..Plainfield…..45
486…..Mike Dodds…..Port Colborne…..36
19……Jackson Alyssa…..Port Perry…..20
897…..Karen Jackson…..Port Perry…..51
898…..Kenneth Jackson…..Port Perry…..51
753…..Colleen Gurnsey…..Portland…..55
790…..Terri Harrison…..Portland…..42
476…..Mark Dirksen…..Prescott…..41
477…..Claudine Dirksen-Fenard…..Prescott…..43
710…..Sam Gow…..Prescott…..16
861…..Christine Houston…..Prescott…..40
1402….Sandy Noonan…..Prescott…..39
584…..Joe Federer…..Renfrew…..58
598…..Debbie Fiebig…..Renfrew…..55
1090….Debbie Macdonald…..Renfrew…..56
1238….Pat McGregor…..Renfrew…..61
1244….Bonnie McIntyre…..Renfrew…..43
1247….Tom McIntyre…..Renfrew…..50
1481….Tim Phinney…..Renfrew…..56
1552….Tara Roach…..Renfrew…..39
1559….Cailin Robertson…..Renfrew…..20
1727….John Smith…..Renfrew…..50
1815….Jayne Styles…..Renfrew…..50
1967….Faye Warren…..Renfrew…..60
29……Robin Annas…..Richmond…..61
461…..Maggie Dewar…..Richmond…..19
463…..Travis Dewar…..Richmond…..21
462…..Sue Dewar…..Richmond…..54
772…..Jason Hands…..Richmond…..37
1018….Megan Lawton…..Richmond…..16
1017….Courtney Lawton…..Richmond…..20
1016….Andy Lawton…..Richmond…..51
1256….Aidan McKenna…..Richmond…..17
1258….Claire McKenna…..Richmond…..20
1257….Catherine McKenna…..Richmond…..48
1260….Michael McKenna…..Richmond…..48
1676….Julia Scouten…..Richmond…..34
1877….Joe Tierney…..Richmond…..20
2021….Lorna Wilson…..Richmond…..47
1286….Walter McNally…..Richmond Hill…..37
369…..Mary Ellen Cotter…..Rideau Ferry…..19
368…..Amy Cotter…..Rideau Ferry…..22
1766….Ann Steenburgh…..Rideau Ferry…..51
1770….David Stevens…..Rideau Ferry…..61
173…..Susan Booth…..Rockland…..37
172…..Steven Booth…..Rockland…..44
199…..Lisa Brooks…..Roslin…..44
605…..Barry Flanigan…..Roslin…..75
1532….Kathy Rice…..Roslin…..68
1531….Dave Rice…..Roslin…..70
1804….Barb Stratton…..Seeley's Bay…..46
599…..Martina Field…..Sharbot Lake…..52
724…..Jeff Green…..Sharbot Lake…..52
952…..Jack Kent…..Sharbot Lake…..23
953…..Karl Kent…..Sharbot Lake…..60
478…..Alison Dixie…..Spencerville…..37
733…..Janet Greenhorn…..Spencerville…..23
732…..Donna Greenhorn…..Spencerville…..61
1293….Mary McNeely…..Spencerville…..64
1329….Kim Miller…..Spencerville…..56
573…..John Evoy…..St. Catharines…..41
1134….Caron MacMillan…..Stirling…..49
1567….Robert Rodger…..Stirling…..58
1616….Carrie Salsbury…..Stirling…..56
23……Susan Andre…..Stittsville…..58
51……Harvey Auerback…..Stittsville…..36
72……Kieran Balon…..Stittsville…..10
73……Michelle Balon…..Stittsville…..41
71……Jeff Balon…..Stittsville…..56
108…..Sandy Bell…..Stittsville…..50
212…..Brenda Bruce…..Stittsville…..60
219…..Elizabeth Buiting…..Stittsville…..42
283…..Steve Cashman…..Stittsville…..51
288…..Cameron Caughey…..Stittsville…..16
335…..Mark Cobbold…..Stittsville…..50
342…..Claire Collis…..Stittsville…..74
419…..Catherine Dabee…..Stittsville…..67
440…..Kathy De Sousa…..Stittsville…..36
524…..Kenneth Dumont…..Stittsville…..61
532…..Barry Durling…..Stittsville…..39
562…..Cameron Ellis…..Stittsville…..57
636…..David Frost…..Stittsville…..48
669…..Lisa Gerrard…..Stittsville…..37
674…..Donna Gibson…..Stittsville…..49
712…..Janice Graham…..Stittsville…..50
758…..Kevin Haggerty…..Stittsville…..38
762…..Heather Hamann…..Stittsville…..56
763…..Rob Hambly…..Stittsville…..39
845…..Julia Hoffe…..Stittsville…..17
841…..Brendan Hoffe…..Stittsville…..19
843…..Erin Hoffe…..Stittsville…..22
844…..Gary Hoffe…..Stittsville…..55
894…..Abbie Jackson…..Stittsville…..14
899…..Krista Jackson…..Stittsville…..43
932…..Joel Joseph…..Stittsville…..42
941…..Susie Karrys…..Stittsville…..54
955…..Tristan Kereluk-Roy…..Stittsville…..10
971…..Barry Kinny…..Stittsville…..42
1127….Alexandra MacLeod…..Stittsville…..21
1129….Guy MacLeod…..Stittsville…..53
1150….Kirsten Maludzinski…..Stittsville…..50
1180….Tracey Martin…..Stittsville…..46
1198….Deborah McCarthy…..Stittsville…..52
1201….John McCauley…..Stittsville…..53
1203….Brian McClean…..Stittsville…..62
1216….Moira Mcdonald…..Stittsville…..50
1217….Paul Mcdonald…..Stittsville…..55
1227….Deb McGeachy…..Stittsville…..45
1240….Elizabeth McHugh…..Stittsville…..54
1248….Valerie McIntyre…..Stittsville…..54
1305….Alison Medaglia…..Stittsville…..51
1354….Denise Morin…..Stittsville…..47
1356….Steve Morin…..Stittsville…..47
1400….Daria Noonan…..Stittsville…..42
1405….Sharon Norton…..Stittsville…..62
1432….Rita Paine…..Stittsville…..56
1459….Cheryl Pauls…..Stittsville…..35
1460….Duane Pauls…..Stittsville…..38
1494….David Porter…..Stittsville…..47
1495….Nicole Porter…..Stittsville…..48
1496….Catherine Postma…..Stittsville…..57
1497….Robert Postma…..Stittsville…..59
1542….Kim Ridgers…..Stittsville…..32
2090….Marc Roy…..Stittsville…..43
1651….Lesley Scharf…..Stittsville…..57
1652….Ted Scharf…..Stittsville…..57
1668….Robb Schoular…..Stittsville…..51
1751….Shani Spooner…..Stittsville…..40
1750….Ross Spooner…..Stittsville…..43
1758….Alexis St.Pierre…..Stittsville…..12
1759….Taunya St.Pierre…..Stittsville…..39
1780….Francoise Stewart…..Stittsville…..59
1863….Evan Thomas…..Stittsville…..17
1865….Heather Thomas…..Stittsville…..52
1858….Alan Thomas…..Stittsville…..54
1904….David Tweedie…..Stittsville…..41
2017….Hope Wilson…..Stittsville…..19
2024….Shane Wilson…..Stittsville…..21
2023….Sandra Wilson…..Stittsville…..48
2020….Ken Wilson…..Stittsville…..51
2054….Mary Young…..Stittsville…..44
1881….Autumn Toninger…..Stouffville…..12
1882….Ralph Toninger…..Stouffville…..42
442…..Tammy Deamicis…..Sudbury…..53
908…..Bob Jeffery…..Sudbury…..54
1224….Marjorie McEwen…..Sudbury…..60
1303….Peter McPherson…..Sudbury…..60
1581….Nicholas Ross…..Sudbury…..42
1842….Kyle Tarlton…..Sudbury…..33
411…..Peggy Cuthbert…..Sydenham…..42
1002….Alastair Lamb…..Sydenham…..54
1294….Heather Mcnie…..Sydenham…..59
1533….Wayne Rice…..Sydenham…..50
1728….Karen Smith…..Sydenham…..39
1731….Matthew Smith…..Sydenham…..43
1821….Grant Sutherland…..Sydenham…..51
1850….Tanya Thake…..Sydenham…..36
1264….Alex McKenzie…..Tamworth…..14
1604….Katie-Jo Russell…..Tamworth…..14
1602….David Russell…..Tamworth…..50
992…..Katie Ladd…..Tay Valley…..46
683…..Shannon Gilliland…..Thornhill…..21
682…..Glenda Gilliland…..Thornhill…..53
681…..David Gilliland…..Thornhill…..54
852…..Joan Hollywood…..Tichborne…..65
853…..Rudy Hollywood…..Tichborne…..67
126…..Kevin Bertrand…..Timmins…..33
572…..Marti Evans…..Tiny…..44
36……Lexie Armitage…..Toronto…..55
44……Mandy Ashton…..Toronto…..30
76……Libby Bandeen…..Toronto…..53
103…..Brooke Beezer…..Toronto…..27
228…..Jaimie Burke…..Toronto…..28
471…..Laurie Dillonschalk…..Toronto…..44
797…..Michelle Harwood…..Toronto…..16
796…..Meghan Harwood…..Toronto…..19
798…..Tina Harwood…..Toronto…..51
795…..Dave Harwood…..Toronto…..54
832…..Laura Hitchin…..Toronto…..59
858…..Robyn Hoogendam…..Toronto…..29
882…..Katherine Ing…..Toronto…..48
1050….Jennifer Leveridge…..Toronto…..39
1060….Daniel Little…..Toronto…..51
1074….Elizabeth Lorimer…..Toronto…..29
1120….Don MacLean…..Toronto…..59
1182….Anne Mather…..Toronto…..32
1526….Martin Reid…..Toronto…..53
1564….Rebecca Robock…..Toronto…..28
1563….Lee Robock…..Toronto…..59
1644….Andrew Schalk…..Toronto…..43
1962….Ryan Ward…..Toronto…..35
1977….Laura Webster…..Toronto…..28
1978….Zac Webster…..Toronto…..30
2015….Cindy Wilson…..Toronto…..46
782…..William Harman…..Unionville…..70
950…..Kim Kennedy…..Vankleek Hill…..36
751…..Anne Guillet…..Vernon…..51
929…..Victoria Jones…..Waterloo…..19
927…..Suzanne Jones…..Waterloo…..48
652…..Donald Garfat…..Westmeath…..48
83……Judy Barr…..Westport…..54
209…..Steve Brown…..Westport…..48
303…..Lynda Chenier…..Westport…..55
714…..Diane Graham-Lynn…..Westport…..59
836…..Beverly Hodgins…..Westport…..54
1008….Sue Landry…..Westport…..54
197…..Andrew Brokenshire…..Whitby…..41
1023….Daniel Lee…..Whitby…..32
1024….Krista Lee…..Whitby…..35
1506….Johnny Purdue…..Whitby…..28
85……Jodie Barrett…..White Lake…..44
156…..Marley Blok…..White Lake…..11
1730….Linda Smith…..White Lake…..37
1936….Elisabeth von Bloedau…..White Lake…..66
606…..Melanie Flaro…..Williamstown…..33
617…..Jonas Fossitt…..Winchester…..63
1500….B Poushinsky…..Windsor…..58
236…..Steve Burns…..Woodlawn…..53
235…..Kathi Burns…..Woodlawn…..54
493…..Pam Donaldson…..Woodlawn…..45
663…..Kelly Geddis…..Woodlawn…..43
1042….randy leon…..Woodlawn…..44
1734….Shelby Smith…..Woodlawn…..21
1961….Roxanne Ward…..Woodlawn…..57
332…..Megan Closs…..Yarker…..10
330…..Kate Closs…..Yarker…..13
331…..Mary Closs…..Yarker…..39
1908….Susan Ubdegrove…..Yarker…..41
2011….Shannon Williams…..Yarker…..42
H. Other Canadian Residents (outside Ontario)
1274….Douglas Mclean…..Aylmer, QC…..54
223…..Jim Burgess…..Chelsea, QC…..70
833…..Fay Hjartarson…..Chelsea, QC…..60
867…..Ian Hunter…..Chelsea, QC…..62
923…..Karen Jones…..Chelsea, QC…..50
141…..Marie-Eve Bisson…..Gatineau, QC…..31
326…..Gilbert Clavette…..Gatineau, QC…..39
349…..Ana Conan…..Gatineau, QC…..28
651…..Jason Gardiner…..Gatineau, QC…..38
685…..Isabelle Giordano…..Gatineau, QC…..31
996…..Genevieve Lagrange…..Gatineau, QC…..37
1048….Brian Letourneau…..Gatineau, QC…..55
1394….Paula Neumann…..Gatineau, QC…..44
1395….Steve Neumann…..Gatineau, QC…..49
1577….Lisa Roots…..Gatineau, QC…..39
1618….Terry SanCartier…..Gatineau, QC…..42
1813….Avery Sturgeon…..Gatineau, QC…..16
1428….Steve Oudhuis…..Luskville, QC…..47
1612….Wendy Ryan…..Luskville, QC…..45
866…..Matt Hunt…..Montreal, QC…..40
1169….Bradley Marr…..Montreal, QC…..23
1825….Janice Swan…..Pontiac, QC…..15
1827….Seamus Swan…..Pontiac, QC…..19
1824….Jane Swan…..Pontiac, QC…..50
180…..Carmen Bowles…..Quebec, QC…..44
2036….Brian Wood…..St. Eustache, QC…..68
566…..Ann-Marie Engelberts…..Wakefield, QC…..57
597…..Dennis Ferris…..Wakefield, QC…..57
1470….Kelly Peskett…..Wakefield, QC…..47
842…..Brian Hoffe…..Calgary, Alta…..50
444…..Nathan Decicco…..Victoria, BC…..34
1953….John Walsh…..St. John's, NL…..40
62……Grace Baker…..Halifax, NS…..24
2028….Tanya Wiltshire…..Halifax, NS…..32
2016….Ewan Wilson…..Lunenburg, NS…..10
2019….Kathi Wilson…..Lunenburg, NS…..37
2018….Ian Wilson…..Lunenburg, NS…..41
I. International Residents
816…..Susan Heuser…..Cary, NC, USA…..33
1431….Rick Florez…..Raleigh, NC, USA…..33
695…..Wendi Godwin…..Raleigh, NC, USA…..34
1430….Elizabeth Pagano…..Raleigh, NC, USA…..33
1828….Devin Swann…..Raleigh, NC, USA…..32
248…..Henry Caldwell…..Lyme, NH, USA…..22
247…..Heather Caldwell…..Lyme, NH, USA…..50
1803….Wendy Strassner…..Henrietta, NY, USA…..48
1802….Mark Strassner…..Henrietta, NY, USA…..55
1903….John Tuttle…..Rochester, NY, USA…..49
1251….Leah McKay…..Lyn, USA…..22
746…..Mark Griffin…..Springfield, USA…..54
2087….Tom Fuller…..Australia.....34
2089….Mathew Gayford…..Australia.....41
2088….Lucas Robson…..Australia.....26
2083….Karen Taylor-Dyrda…..Australia.....55
2082….Lisa White…..Australia.....39
34……Scott Arbuthnot…..Karnataka, India…..48
.
025
Information from:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grand_Central_Terminal
Grand Central Terminal
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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"Grand Central Station" redirects here. For the connected New York City Subway station, see Grand Central – 42nd Street (New York City Subway). For other uses, see Grand Central Station (disambiguation).
Grand Central Terminal
Grand Central test.jpg
View inside the Main Concourse, facing east
Station statistics
Address 89 East 42nd Street at Park Avenue,
New York City, NY 10017
Lines
Hudson Line Harlem Line New Haven Line New Canaan Branch
Danbury Branch
Connections New York City Subway:
NYCS 4 NYCS 5 NYCS 6 NYCS 6d NYCS 7 NYCS 7d 42nd Street Shuttle
at Grand Central – 42nd Street
MTA New York City Bus:
M1, M2, M3, M4, M42, M101, M102, M103
Platforms 44 high-level platforms
Tracks 67
Other information
Opened 1871
Rebuilt 1913, 1994 — 2000
Accessible Handicapped/disabled access
Owned by Midtown TDR Ventures
Fare zone 1
Services
Preceding station MTA NYC logo.svg Metro-North Railroad Following station
Terminus Harlem Line
Harlem-125th Street
toward Wassaic
Hudson Line
Harlem-125th Street
toward Poughkeepsie
New Haven Line
Harlem-125th Street
toward New Haven-State Street
Danbury Branch
Harlem-125th Street
(limited)
toward Danbury
New Canaan Branch
Harlem-125th Street
(limited)
toward New Canaan
Grand Central Terminal
U.S. National Register of Historic Places
U.S. National Historic Landmark
NYC Landmark
Grand Central Terminal
Grand Central Terminal is located in New York City
Location: 89 East 42nd Street at Park Avenue, New York City
Coordinates: 40°45′10.08″N 73°58′35.48″W / 40.7528°N 73.9765222°W / 40.7528; -73.9765222Coordinates: 40°45′10.08″N 73°58′35.48″W / 40.7528°N 73.9765222°W / 40.7528; -73.9765222
Built/Founded: 1903
Architect: Reed and Stem;
Warren and Wetmore
Architectural style(s): Beaux-Arts
Added to NRHP: January 17, 1975
August 11, 1983 (increase)[1]
Designated NHL: December 8, 1976[2]
Designated NYCL: August 2, 1967
NRHP Reference#: 75001206
83001726 (increase)
Grand Central Terminal (GCT) — sometimes mistakenly called Grand Central Station or shortened to simply Grand Central — is a terminal station at 42nd Street and Park Avenue in Midtown Manhattan in New York City. Built by and named for the New York Central Railroad in the heyday of American long-distance passenger trains, it is the largest train station in the world by number of platforms:[3] 44, with 67 tracks along them. They are on two levels, both below ground, with 41 tracks on the upper level and 26 on the lower, though the total number of tracks along platforms and in rail yards exceeds 100. When the Long Island Rail Road's new station, below the existing levels, opens (see East Side Access), Grand Central will offer a total of 75 tracks and 48 platforms. The terminal covers an area of 48 acres (19 ha).
The terminal serves commuters traveling on the Metro-North Railroad to Westchester, Putnam, and Dutchess counties in New York State, and Fairfield and New Haven counties in Connecticut.
Although the terminal has been properly called "Grand Central Terminal" since 1913, many people continue to refer to it as "Grand Central Station". "Grand Central Station" is the name of the nearby post office, as well as the name of a previous rail station on the site, and is also used to refer to a New York City subway station at the same location.
Contents
[hide]
* 1 Layout
o 1.1 Main Concourse
+ 1.1.1 Ceiling
o 1.2 Dining Concourse and lower level tracks
o 1.3 Vanderbilt Hall and Campbell Apartment
o 1.4 Solari display board
o 1.5 Subway station
o 1.6 Grand Central North
* 2 History
o 2.1 Grand Central Depot
o 2.2 Grand Central Station
o 2.3 Grand Central Terminal
+ 2.3.1 Construction
+ 2.3.2 Covering Park Avenue
+ 2.3.3 Terminal City
+ 2.3.4 Grand Central Art Galleries
+ 2.3.5 Proposals for demolition and towers
o 2.4 Bombing
o 2.5 Restorations
* 3 LIRR's East Side Access Project
* 4 Impact on design of transit centers
* 5 Filming at Grand Central
* 6 See also
* 7 References
* 8 Bibliography
* 9 External links
[edit] Layout
Grand Central Terminal on a weekday morning
Grand Central Terminal, along 42nd Street
The tracks are numbered according to their geographic location in the terminal building rather than the trains' destinations, because all of the trains terminate at Grand Central. There are 31 tracks in revenue service on the upper level. These are numbered from 11 to 42, from the most eastern track to the most western track. Tracks 22 and 31 were removed in the late 90's to build concourses for Grand Central North, track 12 was removed to expand the platform between tracks 11 and 13, and track 14 is only used for loading a garbage train. The lower level has 26 tracks, numbered from 100 to 126, east to west, though only tracks 102-112, and 114-116 are currently used for passenger service. This makes it easy for passengers to quickly locate where their train is departing from, and removes much of the confusion of finding trains in an immense terminal. Often, local and off-peak trains depart from the lower level while express, super-express, and peak trains depart from the main concourse. Odd numbered tracks are usually on the east side (right side facing north) of the platform; even numbered tracks on the west.
Besides train platforms, Grand Central contains restaurants (the most famous of which is the Oyster Bar) and fast food outlets (surrounding the Dining Concourse on the level below the Main Concourse), delis, bakeries, newsstands, a gourmet and fresh food market, an annex of the New York Transit Museum, and more than forty retail stores. Grand Central generally contains only private outlets and small franchises. There are no chain outlets in the complex, except for a Starbucks coffee shop and a Rite Aid pharmacy/convenience store.
A "secret" sub-basement known as M42 lies under the Terminal, containing the AC to DC converters used to supply DC traction current to the Terminal. The exact location of M42 is a closely guarded secret and does not appear on maps, though it has been shown on television, most notably, the History Channel program Cities of the Underworld and also a National Geographic special. The original rotary converters were not removed in the late 20th century when solid state ones took over their job, and they remain as a historical record. During World War II, this was one of the most guarded facilities because its sabotage would greatly impair troop movement on the Eastern Seaboard.[4] Despite it being a secret, Adolf Hitler was aware of this facility and sent two spies to sabotage it. The spies were arrested by the FBI before they could strike. It is said that any unauthorized person entering the facility during the war risked being shot on sight: the rotary converters used at the time could have easily been crippled by a bucket of sand.
From 1924 through 1944, the attic of the east wing contained a 7,000-square-foot art school and gallery space, the Grand Central School of Art.
The clock in the Main Concourse
The Redstone missile making a guest appearance (photograph 1957)
[edit] Main Concourse
The Main Concourse is the center of Grand Central. The space is cavernous and usually filled with bustling crowds. The ticket booths are here, although many now stand unused or repurposed since the introduction of ticket vending machines. The large American flag was hung in Grand Central Terminal a few days after the September 11 attacks on the World Trade Center. The main information booth is in the center of the concourse. This is a perennial meeting place, and the four-faced clock on top of the information booth is perhaps the most recognizable icon of Grand Central. Each of the four clock faces is made from opal, and both Sotheby's and Christie's have estimated the value to be between $10 million and $20 million. Within the marble and brass pagoda lies a "secret" door that conceals a spiral staircase leading to the lower level information booth.
Outside the station, the clock in front of the Grand Central facade facing 42nd Street contains the world's largest example of Tiffany glass and is surrounded by sculptures carved by the John Donnelly Company of Minerva, Hercules, and Mercury and designed by French sculptor Jules-Felix Coutan. At the time of its unveiling (1914) this trio considered to be the largest sculptural group in the world. It was 48 feet (14.6 m) high, the clock in the center having a circumference of 13 feet (4 m).
The upper level tracks are reached from the Main Concourse or from various hallways and passages branching off from it. On the east side of the Main Concourse is a cluster of food purveyor shops called Grand Central Market.
[edit] Ceiling
Grand Central Terminal ceiling
In fall 1998, a 12-year restoration of Grand Central revealed the original luster of the Main Concourse's elaborately decorated astronomical ceiling. The original ceiling, painted in 1912 by French artist Paul César Helleu, was eventually replaced in the late 1930s to correct falling plaster. This new ceiling was obscured by decades of what people thought was coal and diesel smoke. Spectroscopic examination revealed that it was mostly tar and nicotine from tobacco smoke. A single dark patch remains above the Michael Jordan Steakhouse, left untouched by renovators to remind visitors of the grime that once covered the ceiling.
There are two peculiarities to this ceiling: the sky is backwards, and the stars are slightly displaced. One explanation is that the constellations are backwards because the ceiling is based on a medieval manuscript that visualized the sky as it would look from outside the celestial sphere. According to this explanation, since the celestial sphere is an abstraction (stars are not all at equal distances from Earth), this view does not correspond to the actual view from anywhere in the universe. The stars are displaced because the manuscript showed a (reflected) view of the sky in the Middle Ages, and since then the stars shifted due to precession of the equinoxes. Most people, however, simply think that Helleu reversed the image by accident. When the embarrassed Vanderbilt family learned the ceiling was painted backwards, they maintained that the ceiling reflected God's view of the sky.
The Oyster Bar, Grand Central's oldest business
There is a small dark circle in the midst of the stars right above the image of Pisces. In a 1957 attempt to counteract feelings of insecurity spawned by the Soviet launch of Sputnik, Grand Central's Main Concourse played host to an American Redstone missile. With no other way to erect the missile, the hole was cut so the rocket could be lifted into place. Historical Preservation dictated that this hole remain (as opposed to being repaired) as a testament to the many uses of the Terminal over the years.
[edit] Dining Concourse and lower level tracks
The Dining Concourse is below the Main Concourse. It contains many fast food outlets and restaurants, including the world-famous Oyster Bar with its Guastavino tile vaults, surrounding central seating and lounge areas and provides access to the lower level tracks. The two levels are connected by numerous stairs, ramps, and escalators.
[edit] Vanderbilt Hall and Campbell Apartment
Group of statues and clock on the facade
Vanderbilt Hall, named for the Vanderbilt family who built and owned the station, is just off the Main Concourse. Formerly the main waiting room for the terminal, it is now used and rented out for various events. The Campbell Apartment is an elegantly restored cocktail lounge, located just south of the 43rd Street/Vanderbilt Avenue entrance, that attracts a mix of commuters and tourists. It was at one time the office of 1920s tycoon John W. Campbell and replicates the galleried hall of a 13th-century Florentine palace.[5]
[edit] Solari display board
Main article: Solari departure board
The original display board was an electromechanical display that displayed times and track numbers of arriving and departing trains. It contained rows of flip panels that displayed train information. It became a New York institution, as its many displays would flap simultaneously to reflect changes in train schedules, an indicator of just how busy Grand Central was. A small example of this type of device hangs in the Museum of Modern Art as an example of outstanding industrial design.
The flap-board destination sign was replaced with high resolution mosaic LCDs modules[6] manufactured by Solari Udine of Italy: the maker of the original flap boards for train stations and airports. Similar modules are now also used on the trains, both on the sides to display the destination, and on the interior to display the time, next station, calling points and other passenger information.
[edit] Subway station
Ramp to the subway, 1912
Main article: Grand Central – 42nd Street (New York City Subway)
The subway platforms at Grand Central are reached from the Main Concourse. Built by the Interborough Rapid Transit Company (IRT) rather than the New York Central Railroad, the subway areas of the station lack the majesty that is present throughout most of the rest of Grand Central, although they are in similar condition to its track levels. The shuttle platforms were originally an express stop on the original IRT subway, opened in 1904. Once the IRT Lexington Avenue Line was extended uptown in 1918, the original tracks were converted to shuttle use. One track remains connected to the downtown Lexington Avenue local track but is not in revenue service. A fire in the 1960s destroyed much of the shuttle station, which has been rebuilt. The only signs of the fire damage are truncated steel beams visible above the platforms.
[edit] Grand Central North
Gct.ogg
Play video
Video architectural tour of Grand Central Terminal
(High-res version on Internet Archive)
Grand Central North, opened on August 18, 1999, provides access to Grand Central from 45th Street, 47th Street, and 48th Street. It is connected to the Main Concourse through two long hallways, the Northwest Passage (1,000 feet long) and Northeast Passage (1,200 feet long), which run parallel to the tracks on the upper level.[7] Entrances are at the northeast corner of East 47th Street and Madison Avenue (Northwest Passage), northeast corner of East 48th Street and Park Avenue (Northeast Passage), and on the east and west sides of 230 Park Avenue (Helmsley Building) between 45th and 46th Streets. A fifth entrance will open in September 2011 on the south side of 47th Street between Park and Lexington avenues.[8] The 47th Street passage provides access to the upper level tracks and the 45th Street passage provides access to the lower level tracks. Elevator access is available to the 47th Street (upper level) passage from street level on the north side of E. 47th Street, between Madison and Vanderbilt Avenues. There is no elevator access to the actual train platforms from Grand Central North; handicapped access is provided through the main terminal.
Nearing the very end of the passages, there is an Arts for Transit mosaic installation by Ellen Driscoll, an artist from Brooklyn.[7]
The entrances to Grand Central North were originally open from 6:30 AM to 9:30 PM Monday through Friday and 9 AM to 9:30 PM on Saturday and Sunday. As of summer 2006, Grand Central North was closed on weekends, with the MTA citing low usage and the need to save money by the shutdown.[9] Prior to the closing, about 6,000 people used Grand Central North on a typical weekend,[10] and about 30,000 on weekdays.
Ideas for a northern entrance to Grand Central were discussed since at least the 1970s. Construction on Grand Central North lasted from 1994 to 1999 and cost $75 million.[7] Delays were attributed to the incomplete nature of the original blueprints of Grand Central and previously undiscovered groundwater beneath East 45th Street. As of 2007, the passages are not air-conditioned.
The passages in the terminal are:
* Metro-North Railroad upper level
* Northwest and Northeast passages
* 47th Street cross-passage
* 45th Street cross-passage
* Metro-North Railroad lower level
[edit] History
Three buildings serving essentially the same function have stood on this site. The original large and imposing scale was intended by the New York Central Railroad to enhance competition and compare favorably in the public eye with the archrival Pennsylvania Railroad and smaller lines.
[edit] Grand Central Depot
Looking out the north end of the Murray Hill Tunnel towards the station in 1880. Note the labels for the New York and Harlem and New York and New Haven Railroads; the New York Central and Hudson River was off to the left. The two larger portals on the right allowed some horse-drawn trains to continue further downtown.
Grand Central Depot brought the trains of the New York Central and Hudson River Railroad, the New York and Harlem Railroad, and the New York and New Haven Railroad together in one large station. The station opened in October 1871. The original plan was for the Harlem Railroad to start using it on October 9, 1871 (moving from their 27th Street depot), the New Haven Railroad on October 16, and the Hudson River Railroad on October 23, with the staggering done to minimize confusion. However, the Hudson River Railroad did not move to it until November 1, which puts the other two dates in doubt. The headhouse building containing passenger service areas and railroad offices was an "L" shape with a short leg running east-west on 42nd Street and a long leg running north-south on Vanderbilt Avenue. The train shed, north and east of the head house, had two innovations in U.S. practice: the platforms were elevated to the height of the cars, and the roof was a balloon shed with a clear span over all of the tracks.
The New Haven and New York Central trains were initially in side by side different stations, which created chaos in baggage transfer. The combined Grand Central Depot serviced both railroads.
The exterior of Grand Central Station c. 1904.
The interior of Grand Central Station c. 1904.
View in the excavation for the new Grand Central Terminal, Sept. 1907
[edit] Grand Central Station
Between 1899 and 1900, the head house was essentially demolished. It was expanded from three to six stories with an entirely new facade, on plans by railroad architect Bradford Gilbert. The train shed was kept. The tracks that previously continued south of 42nd Street were removed and the train yard reconfigured in an effort to reduce congestion and turn-around time for trains. The reconstructed building was renamed Grand Central Station.
[edit] Grand Central Terminal
[edit] Construction
Between 1903 and 1913, the entire building was torn down in phases and replaced by the current Grand Central Terminal, which was designed by the architectural firms of Reed and Stem and Warren and Wetmore, who entered an agreement to act as the associated architects of Grand Central Terminal in February 1904. Reed & Stem were responsible for the overall design of the station, Warren and Wetmore added architectural details and the Beaux-Arts style. Charles Reed was appointed the chief executive for the collaboration between the two firms, and promptly appointed Alfred T. Fellheimer as head of the combined design team. This work was accompanied by the electrification of the three railroads using the station and the burial of the approach in the Park Avenue tunnel. The result of this was the creation of several blocks worth of prime real estate in Manhattan, which were then sold for a large sum of money. The new terminal opened on February 2, 1913.[11]
French sculptor Jules-Alexis Coutan created what was, at the time of its unveiling in 1914, considered the largest sculptural group in the world. It was 48 feet (15 m) high, the clock in the center having a circumference of 13 feet (4.0 m). It depicted Mercury flanked by Hercules and Minerva and was carved by the John Donnelly Company.
[edit] Covering Park Avenue
To accommodate ever-growing rail traffic into the restricted Midtown area, William J. Wilgus, chief engineer of the New York Central Railroad took advantage of the recent electrification technology to propose a novel scheme: a bi-level station below ground.
Upper level (mainline) layout
Lower level (suburban) layout
Arriving trains would go underground under Park Avenue, and proceed to an upper-level incoming station if they were mainline trains, or to a lower-level platform if they were suburban trains. In addition, turning loops within the station itself obviated complicated switching moves to bring back the trains to the coach yards for servicing. Departing mainline trains reversed into upper-level platforms in the conventional way.
Burying electric trains underground brought an additional advantage to the railroads: the ability to sell above-ground air rights over the tracks and platforms for real-estate development. With time, prestigious apartment and office buildings were erected around Grand Central, which turned the area into the most desirable commercial office district in Manhattan.
The terminal also did away with bifurcating Park Avenue by introducing a "circumferential elevated driveway" that allowed Park Avenue traffic to traverse around the building and over 42nd Street without encumbering nearby streets. The building was also designed to eventually reconnect both segments of 43rd Street by going through the concourse if the City of New York demanded it.
[edit] Terminal City
View of Grand Central around 1918
The construction of Grand Central created a mini-city within New York, including the Commodore Hotel and various office buildings. It spurred construction throughout the neighborhood in the 1920s including the Chrysler Building.
In 1928, the New York Central built its headquarters in a 34-story building (now called the Helmsley Building) straddling Park Avenue on the north side of the Terminal.
There is a secret platform, number 61, under the station.[12] This was used to convey President Franklin D. Roosevelt and his limousine directly into the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel so the public and press didn't see his polio-caused disability. This platform was part of the original design of the Waldorf Astoria. It was mentioned in The New York Times in 1929 but was first used by General Pershing in 1938.[13]
From 1939 to 1964 CBS Television occupied a large portion of the terminal building, particularly above the main waiting room. The space contained four studios (41-44), network master control, film projection and recording, and facilities for local station WCBS-TV. In 1958, the first major videotape operations facility in the world opened in a former rehearsal room on the seventh floor of the main terminal building. The facility used fourteen Ampex VR-1000 videotape recorders. The CBS Evening News began its broadcasts there with Douglas Edwards. Many historic events during this period, such as John Glenn's Mercury-Atlas 6 space mission, were broadcast from this location. Edward R. Murrow's "See It Now" originated from Grand Central, including his famous broadcasts on Senator Joseph McCarthy. The Murrow broadcasts were recreated in George Clooney's movie "Good Night, and Good Luck." The movie took a number of liberties, in that it implied the CBS News and corporate offices were in the same building as the studios. In reality, the news offices were located first in the GCT office building, north of the main terminal, and later in the nearby Graybar Building; corporate offices at the time were at 485 Madison Avenue. The long-running panel show "What's My Line?" was first broadcast from the GCT studios, as were "The Goldbergs" and "Mama". The former studio space is now in use as tennis courts, which are operated by Donald Trump.
[edit] Grand Central Art Galleries
Grand Central Art Galleries reception for the dance troupe of Uday Shankar at the January 31, 1934, opening of "The Races of Man." From left: Timir Baran, Shirali, Simkie, Walter Leighton Clark, Kanak-Lata, artist Malvina Hoffman, Uday Shankar, and Erwin S. Barrie.
From 1922 to 1958 Grand Central Terminal was the home of the Grand Central Art Galleries, which were established by John Singer Sargent, Edmund Greacen, Walter Leighton Clark, and others.[14] The founders had sought a location in Manhattan that was central and easily accessible, and through the support of Alfred Holland Smith, president of the New York Central Railroad, the top of the terminal was made available. A 10-year lease[15] was signed, and the galleries, together with the railroad company, invested more than $100,000 in preparing the space.[16] The architect was William Adams Delano, best known for designing Yale Divinity School's Sterling Quadrangle.
At their opening, the galleries extended over most of the terminal's sixth floor, 15,000 square feet (1,400 m2), and offered eight main exhibition rooms, a foyer gallery, and a reception area.[17] A total of 20 display rooms were planned for what was intended as "...the largest sales gallery of art in the world."[16] The official opening was March 22, 1923,[17] and featured paintings by Sargent, Charles W. Hawthorne, Cecilia Beaux, Wayman Adams, and Ernest Ipsen. Sculptors included Daniel Chester French, Herbert Adams, Robert Aitken, Gutzon Borglum, and Frederic MacMonnies. The event attracted 5,000 people and received a glowing review from The New York Times.
A year after they opened, the galleries established the Grand Central School of Art, which occupied 7,000 square feet (650 m2) on the seventh floor of the east wing of the terminal. The school was directed by Sargent and Daniel Chester French. Its first year teachers included painters Jonas Lie and Nicolai Fechin, sculptor Chester Beach, illustrator Dean Cornwell, costume designer Helen Dryden, and muralist Ezra Winter.[18][19]
The Grand Central Art Galleries remained in the terminal until 1958, when they moved to the Biltmore Hotel. When the Biltmore was demolished in 1981 they relocated to 24 West 57th Street.[20] They ceased operations in 1994.
[edit] Proposals for demolition and towers
In 1947, over 65 million people, the equivalent of 40% of the population of the United States, traveled through Grand Central. However, railroads soon fell into a major decline with competition from government subsidized highways and intercity airline traffic.
In 1954, William Zeckendorf proposed replacing Grand Central with an 80-story, 4,800,000-square-foot (446,000 m2) tower, 500 feet (150 m) taller than the Empire State Building. I. M. Pei created a pinched-cylinder design that took the form of a glass cylinder with a wasp waist. The plan was abandoned. In 1955, Erwin S. Wolfson made his first proposal for a tower north of the Terminal replacing the Terminal's six-story office building. A revised Wolfson plan was approved in 1958 and the Pan Am Building (now the MetLife Building) was completed in 1963.
Although the Pan Am Building bought time for the terminal, the New York Central Railroad continued its precipitous decline. In 1968, facing bankruptcy, it merged with the Pennsylvania Railroad to form the Penn Central Railroad. The Pennsylvania Railroad was in its own precipitous decline and in 1964 had demolished the ornate Pennsylvania Station (despite pleas to preserve it) to make way for an office building and the new Madison Square Garden.
In 1968, Penn Central unveiled plans for a tower designed by Marcel Breuer even bigger than the Pan Am Building to be built over Grand Central.
The plans drew huge opposition, most prominently from Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis. She said:
"Is it not cruel to let our city die by degrees, stripped of all her proud monuments, until there will be nothing left of all her history and beauty to inspire our children? If they are not inspired by the past of our city, where will they find the strength to fight for her future? Americans care about their past, but for short term gain they ignore it and tear down everything that matters. Maybe… this is the time to take a stand, to reverse the tide, so that we won't all end up in a uniform world of steel and glass boxes."
New York City filed a suit to stop the construction. The resulting case, Penn Central Transportation Co. v. New York City (1978), was the first time that the Supreme Court ruled on a matter of historic preservation. The Court saved the terminal, holding that New York City's Landmarks Preservation Act did not constitute a "taking" of Penn Central's property under the Fifth Amendment and was a reasonable use of government land-use regulatory power.
Penn Central went into bankruptcy in 1970 in what was then the biggest corporate bankruptcy in American history. Title to Grand Central passed to Penn Central's corporate successor, American Premier Underwriters (APU) (which in turn was absorbed by American Financial Group). The Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) signed a 280-year lease in 1994 and began a massive restoration. Midtown TDR Ventures, LLC, an investment group controlled by Argent Ventures LLC, purchased the station from American Financial in December, 2006.[21] The New York Post reported in July 2007 that TDR is controlled by Argent Ventures.[22]
[edit] Bombing
On September 11, 1976 a group of Croatian nationalists planted a bomb in Grand Central Station, which was discovered by authorities who unsuccessfully tried to defuse it. The resulting explosion killed a NYPD bomb squad specialist, and wounded more than thirty people.[23] Following the 9/11 attacks, it was briefly thought that the significant date of September 11 signifying an attack against a New York landmark might indicate Croat nationalist forces at work again.[23]
[edit] Restorations
Lower Concourse
Lower Concourse - Food Court
Donald Trump
Grand Central and its neighborhood fell on hard times during the financial collapse of its host railroads and the near bankruptcy of New York City itself.
In 1974, Donald Trump bought the Commodore Hotel to the east of the terminal for $10 million and then worked out a deal with Jay Pritzker to transform it into one of the first Grand Hyatt hotels. Trump negotiated various tax breaks and, in the process, agreed to renovate the exterior of the terminal. The complementary masonry from the Commodore was covered with a mirror-glass "slipcover" façade - the masonry still exists underneath. In the same deal, Trump optioned Penn Central's rail yards on the Hudson River between 59th and 72nd Streets that eventually became Trump Place, the biggest private development in New York City.
The Grand Hyatt opened in 1980 and the neighborhood immediately began a transformation. Trump sold his interest in the hotel for $142 million, establishing him as a big-time player in New York real estate.
Metro-North
Throughout this period, the interior of Grand Central was dominated by huge billboard advertisements, with perhaps the most famous being the giant Kodak Colorama photos that ran along the entire east side, and the Westclox "Big Ben" clock over the south concourse.
Amtrak left the station on April 7, 1991, with the completion of the Empire Connection, which allowed trains from Albany, Toronto, and Montreal to use Penn Station. Previously, travelers had to change stations via subway, bus, or cab. Since then, Grand Central has exclusively served Metro-North Railroad. Amtrak returned to Grand Central temporarily in October 2008 while construction was performed on the Empire Connection.
In 1994, the MTA signed a long term lease on the building and began massive renovations. All billboards were removed. These renovations were mostly finished in 1998, though some of the minor refits (such as replacement of electromechanical train information displays with electronic displays at track entries) were not completed until 2000. The most striking effect was the restoration of the Main Concourse ceiling, revealing the painted skyscape and constellations. The original baggage room, later converted into retail space and occupied for many years by Chemical Bank, was removed, and replaced with a mirror image of the West Stairs. Although the baggage room had been designed by the original architects, the restoration architects found evidence that a set of stairs mirroring those to the West was originally intended for that space. Other modifications included a complete overhaul of the Terminal's superstructure and the replacement of the electromechanical Omega Board train arrival/departure display with a purely electronic display that was designed to fit into the architecture of the Terminal aesthetically.
The original quarry in Tennessee was located and reopened specifically to provide matching stone to replace damaged stone and for the new East Staircase. Each piece of new stone is labeled with its installation date and the fact that it was not a part of the original Terminal building.
Ending in 2007, the exterior was again cleaned and restored, starting with the west facade on Vanderbilt Avenue and gradually working counterclockwise. The project involved cleaning the facade, rooftop light courts, and statues; filling in cracks, repointing stones on the facade, restoring the copper roof and the building's cornice, repairing the large windows of the Main Concourse, and removing the remaining blackout paint applied to the windows during World War II. The result is a cleaner, more attractive, and structurally sound exterior, and the windows allow much more light into the Main Concourse.
[edit] LIRR's East Side Access Project
Main article: East Side Access
The MTA is in the midst of an ambitious project to bring Long Island Rail Road trains into the terminal via the East Side Access Project. The project was spurred by a study that showed that more than half of LIRR riders work closer to Grand Central than Penn Station.[24]
A new bi-level, eight-track tunnel will be excavated under Park Avenue, more than 90 feet (27 m) below the Metro-North track and more than 140 feet (43 m) below the surface. Reaching the street from the lowest level, more than 175 feet (53 m) deep, will take about 10 minutes.[25]
LIRR trains will access Park Avenue via the existing lower level of the 63rd Street Tunnel, connecting to its main line running through Sunnyside Yard in Queens. Extensions are being added on both the Manhattan and Queens sides.
Cost estimates jumped from $4.4 billion in 2004 to $6.4 billion in 2006. The MTA said that some small buildings on the route in Manhattan will be torn down to make way for air vents.[26] Cardinal Edward Egan criticized the plan, noting concerns about the tracks, which will largely be on the west side of Park Avenue, and their impact on St. Patrick's Cathedral.[26]
The project is scheduled for completion by 2016.[27]
[edit] Impact on design of transit centers
The exterior of Grand Central Terminal
Ramp to Lower Concourse. - area under archway has remarkable acoustical properties
Colonnade
The design for Grand Central was an innovation in transit hub design, and continues to influence designers.[citation needed] One new concept was the use of ramps (as opposed to staircases) for conducting passengers and luggage through the facility. Another was wrapping Park Avenue around the Terminal above the street, creating a second level for picking up and dropping off of passengers. As airline travel replaced railroads in the latter half of the 20th century, Grand Central design innovations were later incorporated into the hub airport.
Grand Central Terminal was listed on the National Register of Historic Places and further declared a National Historic Landmark in 1976.[2][28][29]
The Grand Central Terminal Park Avenue Viaduct was additionally listed on the National Register in 1983.
[edit] Filming at Grand Central
Grand Central Terminal has been used in numerous film and tv productions over the years. Kyle McCarthy handles production at Grand Central Terminal for MTA Metro-North Railroad. According to her "Grand Central is one of the quintessential New York places. Whether filmmakers need an establishing shot of arriving in New York or transportation scenes, the restored landmark building is visually appealing and authentic."[30]
Below is a small sample of the films that have been filmed at Grand Central Terminal:
German postcard by Kunst und Bild, Berlin, no. A 212. Photo: London Films. Publicity still for The Man Who Loved Redheads (Harold French, 1955).
Red headed Moira Shearer (1926-2006) was a luminous star of the British ballet. She became an international film idol with her unforgettable debut as the young ballerina Vicky in The Red Shoes (1948), a classic of the British cinema and probably the most popular film about ballet ever.
Moira Shearer King was born in Dunfermline, Scotland, in 1926. She was the daughter of actor Harold V. King. In 1931 her family moved to Ndola, Northern Rhodesia. Her mother pushed her into ballet and Moira received her first dancing training under a former pupil of Enrico Cecchetti. She returned to Britain in 1936 and trained with Flora Fairbairn in London for a few months before she was accepted as a pupil by the Russian teacher Nicholas Legat. After three years with Legat, she joined the Sadler's Wells Ballet School. However, after the outbreak of the World War II, her parents took her to live in Scotland. The Scottish beauty with her flaming red hair made her debut with Mona Inglesby's International Ballet in 1941 before moving on to the famous Sadler's Wells in 1942. There she was second only to the world renowned prima ballerina, Margot Fonteyn. From 1942 to 1952 Shearer danced all the major classic roles and a full repertoire of revivals and new ballets. She came to international attention for her first film role as the doomed heroine in the ballet-themed film The Red Shoes (Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger, 1948). The film employs the story within a story device. Victoria Page (Shearer), a young, unknown dancer from an aristocratic background meets at a party Boris Lermontov (Anton Walbrook), the ruthless but charismatic impresario of the Ballet Lermontov. He invites her to join his famous ballet company. She becomes the lead dancer in a new ballet called The Red Shoes, itself based on the fairy tale The Red Shoes by Hans Christian Andersen. Vicky is torn between the powerful impresario and a struggling composer (Marius Goring) whom she loves. The film got rave reviews and became one of the highest earning British films of all time. Shearer’s role and the film were so powerful that although she went on to star in other films, she is primarily known for playing ‘Vicky.’ She toured the United States with the Sadler's Wells Ballet in 1949 and in 1950/51. Moira Shearer’s second film was the magnificent spectacle The Tales of Hoffmann (Michael Powell, Emeric Pressburger, 1951), an adaptation of Jacques Offenbach's final opera, Les contes d'Hoffmann. The film co-starred Robert Helpmann and Léonide Massine. It is not just a film of a staged opera, but a true cinematic opera that makes use of film techniques not available in an opera house. Powell and Pressburger were nominated for the Grand Prize of the 1951 Cannes Film Festival, and won the Exceptional Prize. They also won the Silver Bear award for Best Musical at the 1st Berlin International Film Festival.
In 1953, a combination of ill-health, injury and her wish to make a name for herself as an actress made Moira Shearer decide to retire from the ballet stage at age 27. She co-starred with James Mason in a segment of The Story of Three Loves (Vincente Minnelli, Gottfried Reinhardt, 1953), a romantic anthology film made by MGM. She appeared as Titania in A Midsummer Night's Dream at the 1954 Edinburgh Festival. The following year she starred in the British film comedy The Man Who Loved Redheads (Harold French, 1955) based on the play Who is Sylvia? by Terence Rattigan. She toured as Sally Bowles in the play I am a Camera in 1955 and appeared at the Bristol Old Vic as G.B. Shaw’s Major Barbara in 1956. Shearer worked again for Powell on the controversial film Peeping Tom (Michael Powell, 1960) about a sexually repressed serial killer (Karlheinz Böhm) who murders women and films their expressions of terror and dying gasps on film. Its controversial subject and the extremely harsh reception by critics effectively destroyed Powell's career as a director. However, it attracted a cult following, and in later years, it has been re-evaluated and is now considered a masterpiece. A year later she appeared in the musical 1-2-3-4 ou Les Collants noirs/Black Tights (Terence Young, 1961) with Zizi Jeanmaire and Cyd Charisse. It would be Shearer’s last film. Shearer was on the BBC's General Advisory Council from 1970 to 1977 and the Scottish Arts Council from 1971 to 1973. In 1972, she was chosen by the BBC to present the Eurovision Song Contest when it was staged in Edinburgh. In 1977 she played Madame Ranevsky in Anton Chekhov's Cherry Orchard at the Royal Lyceum Theatre in Edinburgh and, in 1978, was Judith Bliss in Noel Coward's Hay Fever. She wrote two books, biographies of the choreographer George Balanchine and the actress Ellen Terry, and a column for The Daily Telegraph. She also gave talks on ballet worldwide. The choreographer Gillian Lynne persuaded her to return to ballet to play the mother of artist L. S. Lowry (Christopher Gable) in the ballet film A Simple Man (1987, Gillian Lynne) for the BBC. In 1950, Moira Shearer had married writer and broadcaster Ludovic Kennedy. The couple had a son, Alastair, and three daughters, Ailsa, Rachel and Fiona. In 2006, Moira Shearer died of natural causes in Oxford, England at the age of 80
Sources: Anna Kisselgoff (The New York Times), Steve Crook (IMDb), The Telegraph, Wikipedia and IMDb.
And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.
German postcard by F.B.Z., no. 148. Photo: Baron / Rank. Moira Shearer as Cinderella for Sadler's Wells Ballet performance.
Red headed Moira Shearer (1926-2006) was a luminous star of the British ballet. She became an international film idol with her unforgettable debut as the young ballerina Vicky in The Red Shoes (1948), a classic of the British cinema and probably the most popular film about ballet ever.
Moira Shearer King was born in Dunfermline, Scotland, in 1926. She was the daughter of actor Harold V. King. In 1931 her family moved to Ndola, Northern Rhodesia. Her mother pushed her into ballet and Moira received her first dancing training under a former pupil of Enrico Cecchetti. She returned to Britain in 1936 and trained with Flora Fairbairn in London for a few months before she was accepted as a pupil by the Russian teacher Nicholas Legat. After three years with Legat, she joined the Sadler's Wells Ballet School. However, after the outbreak of the World War II, her parents took her to live in Scotland. The Scottish beauty with her flaming red hair made her debut with Mona Inglesby's International Ballet in 1941 before moving on to the famous Sadler's Wells in 1942. There she was second only to the world renowned prima ballerina, Margot Fonteyn. From 1942 to 1952 Shearer danced all the major classic roles and a full repertoire of revivals and new ballets. She came to international attention for her first film role as the doomed heroine in the ballet-themed film The Red Shoes (Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger, 1948). The film employs the story within a story device. Victoria Page (Shearer), a young, unknown dancer from an aristocratic background meets at a party Boris Lermontov (Anton Walbrook), the ruthless but charismatic impresario of the Ballet Lermontov. He invites her to join his famous ballet company. She becomes the lead dancer in a new ballet called The Red Shoes, itself based on the fairy tale The Red Shoes by Hans Christian Andersen. Vicky is torn between the powerful impresario and a struggling composer (Marius Goring) whom she loves. The film got rave reviews and became one of the highest earning British films of all time. Shearer’s role and the film were so powerful that although she went on to star in other films, she is primarily known for playing ‘Vicky.’ She toured the United States with the Sadler's Wells Ballet in 1949 and in 1950/51. Moira Shearer’s second film was the magnificent spectacle The Tales of Hoffmann (Michael Powell, Emeric Pressburger, 1951), an adaptation of Jacques Offenbach's final opera, Les contes d'Hoffmann. The film co-starred Robert Helpmann and Léonide Massine. It is not just a film of a staged opera, but a true cinematic opera that makes use of film techniques not available in an opera house. Powell and Pressburger were nominated for the Grand Prize of the 1951 Cannes Film Festival, and won the Exceptional Prize. They also won the Silver Bear award for Best Musical at the 1st Berlin International Film Festival.
In 1953, a combination of ill-health, injury and her wish to make a name for herself as an actress made Moira Shearer decide to retire from the ballet stage at age 27. She co-starred with James Mason in a segment of The Story of Three Loves (Vincente Minnelli, Gottfried Reinhardt, 1953), a romantic anthology film made by MGM. She appeared as Titania in A Midsummer Night's Dream at the 1954 Edinburgh Festival. The following year she starred in the British film comedy The Man Who Loved Redheads (Harold French, 1955) based on the play Who is Sylvia? by Terence Rattigan. She toured as Sally Bowles in the play I am a Camera in 1955 and appeared at the Bristol Old Vic as G.B. Shaw’s Major Barbara in 1956. Shearer worked again for Powell on the controversial film Peeping Tom (Michael Powell, 1960) about a sexually repressed serial killer (Karlheinz Böhm) who murders women and films their expressions of terror and dying gasps on film. Its controversial subject and the extremely harsh reception by critics effectively destroyed Powell's career as a director. However, it attracted a cult following, and in later years, it has been re-evaluated and is now considered a masterpiece. A year later she appeared in the musical 1-2-3-4 ou Les Collants noirs/Black Tights (Terence Young, 1961) with Zizi Jeanmaire and Cyd Charisse. It would be Shearer’s last film. Shearer was on the BBC's General Advisory Council from 1970 to 1977 and the Scottish Arts Council from 1971 to 1973. In 1972, she was chosen by the BBC to present the Eurovision Song Contest when it was staged in Edinburgh. In 1977 she played Madame Ranevsky in Anton Chekhov's Cherry Orchard at the Royal Lyceum Theatre in Edinburgh and, in 1978, was Judith Bliss in Noel Coward's Hay Fever. She wrote two books, biographies of the choreographer George Balanchine and the actress Ellen Terry, and a column for The Daily Telegraph. She also gave talks on ballet worldwide. The choreographer Gillian Lynne persuaded her to return to ballet to play the mother of artist L. S. Lowry (Christopher Gable) in the ballet film A Simple Man (1987, Gillian Lynne) for the BBC. In 1950, Moira Shearer had married writer and broadcaster Ludovic Kennedy. The couple had a son, Alastair, and three daughters, Ailsa, Rachel and Fiona. In 2006, Moira Shearer died of natural causes in Oxford, England at the age of 80
Sources: Anna Kisselgoff (The New York Times), Steve Crook (IMDb), The Telegraph, Wikipedia and IMDb.
And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.
Information From:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/East_Village,_Manhattan
East Village, Manhattan
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Jump to: navigation, search
East Village, Manhattan
New York City Neighborhood
Location in Lower Manhattan
Named: 1960s[1]
Streets: 2nd Avenue, 1st Avenue, Avenue A, The Bowery, St. Mark's Place
Subway: F, V, 6 and L
Zip code: 10009, 10003 and 10002
Government
Federal: Congressional Districts 8, 12 and 14
State: New York State Assembly Districts 64, 66 and 74, New York State Senate Districts 25 and 29
City: New York City Council District 2
Local Manhattan Community Board 3
Neighborhood map
The East Village is a neighborhood in the borough of Manhattan in New York City. It lies east of Greenwich Village, south of Gramercy and Stuyvesant Town, and north of the Lower East Side. Within the East Village there are several smaller neighborhoods, including Alphabet City and The Bowery.
The neighborhood was once considered part of the Lower East Side, but in the 1960s it began to develop its own culture and became known as the East Village. Scores of artists and hippies began to move into the area, attracted by the base of Beatniks that had lived there since the 1950s. It has been the site of counterculture, protests and riots. The neighborhood is known as the birthplace and historical home of many artistic movements, including punk rock[2] and the Nuyorican literary movement.[3]
It is still known for a diverse community, vibrant nightlife and artistic sensibility, although in recent decades gentrification has changed the character of the neighborhood
History
Tompkins Square Park is the recreational and geographic heart of the East Village. It has historically been a part of counterculture, protest and riots.
New York City's Fourth of July fireworks over the neighborhood. The East Village's East River Park is a popular viewing destination.[edit] Formation of the neighborhood
Today's East Village was originally a farm owned by Dutch Governor Wouter van Twiller. Petrus Stuyvesant received the deed to this farm in 1651, and his family held on to the land for over seven generations, until a descendant began selling off parcels of the property in the early 1800s. Wealthy townhouses dotted the dirt roads for a few decades until the great Irish and German immigration of the 1840s and 1850s.
Speculative land owners began building multi unit dwellings on lots meant for single family homes, and began renting out rooms and apartments to the growing working class. The "East Village" was formerly known as Klein Deutschland ("Little Germany, Manhattan"); however, Little Germany dissolved after the SS General Slocum burned into the water in New York's East River on June 15, 1904. From the years roughly between the 1850s and the first decade of the 20th century, the "East Village" hosted the largest urban populations of Germans outside of Vienna and Berlin. It was America's first foreign language neighborhood; hundreds of political, social, sports and recreational clubs were set up during this period, some of these buildings still exist.
What is now the East Village once ended at the East River where Avenue C is now located. A large portion of the neighborhood was formed by landfill, including World War II debris and rubble from London, which was shipped across the Atlantic to provide foundation for the Franklin D. Roosevelt Drive.[5]
[edit] The 'East Village' separates from the Lower East Side
Definitions vary, but the boundaries are roughly defined as east of Broadway and the Bowery from 14th Street down to Houston Street.[1]
Looking south from 6th Street down Second Avenue, one of the main thoroughfares through the East Village.Until the mid-1960s, this area was simply the northern part of the Lower East Side, with a similar culture of immigrant, working class life. In the 1950s the migration of Beatniks into the neighborhood later attracted hippies, musicians and artists well into 1960s.[1] The area was dubbed the "East Village", to dissociate it from the image of slums evoked by the Lower East Side. According to the New York Times, a 1964 guide called, "Earl Wilson's New York," wrote that "artists, poets and promoters of coffeehouses from Greenwich Village are trying to remelt the neighborhood under the high-sounding name of 'East Village.'"[1]
Newcomers and real estate brokers popularized the East Village name, and the term was adopted by the popular media by the mid-1960s.[6][7] In 1966 a psychedelic weekly newspaper, The East Village Other, appeared and The New York Times declared that the neighborhood "had come to be known" as the East Village in the June 5, 1967 edition.[1]
[edit] The music scene develops
In 1966 Andy Warhol promoted a series of shows, entitled The Exploding Plastic Inevitable, and featuring the music of the Velvet Underground, in a Polish ballroom on St Marks Place. On June 27, 1967, the Electric Circus opened in the same space with a benefit for the Children's Recreation Foundation (Chairman: Bobby Kennedy). The Grateful Dead, The Chambers Brothers, Sly & the Family Stone, the Allman Brothers were among the many rock bands that performed there before it closed in 1971.
Punk rock icon and writer Richard Hell still lives in the same apartment in Alphabet City that he has had since the 1970s.On March 8, 1968 Bill Graham opened the Fillmore East in a Yiddish Theatre on 2nd Avenue. The venue quickly became known as "The Church of Rock and Roll," with two-show concerts several nights a week. While booking many of the same bands that had played the Electric Circus, Graham particularly used the venue – and its West Coast counterpart, to establish new British bands like The Who, Pink Floyd, The Jimi Hendrix Experience, Cream, and Led Zeppelin. It, too, closed in 1971.
CBGB, the nightclub considered by some to be the birthplace of punk music, was located in the neighborhood, as was the early punk standby A7. No Wave and New York hardcore also emerged in the area’s clubs. Among the many important bands and singers who got their start at these clubs and other venues in downtown Manhattan were: Patti Smith, Arto Lindsay, the Ramones, Blondie, Madonna, Talking Heads, the Plasmatics, Glenn Danzig, Sonic Youth, the Beastie Boys, Anthrax, and The Strokes. From 1983–1993, much of the more radical audio work was preserved as part of the Tellus Audio Cassette Magazine recording project, which was based in the nearby Lower East Side.
[edit] Rise in artistic prominence
Allen Ginsberg, a long-time resident, with poet Peter Orlovsky.Over the last 100 years, the East Village/Lower East Side neighborhood has been considered one of the strongest contributors to American arts and culture in New York.[8] During the great wave of immigration (Germans, Ukrainians, Polish) in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, countless families found their new homes in this area.
The East Village has been the birthplace of cultural icons and movements from the American gangster to the Warhol Superstars, folk music to punk rock, anti-folk to hip-hop, advanced education to organized activism, experimental theater to the Beat Generation and the community of experimental musicians, composers and improvisers now loosely known as the Downtown Scene.
Club 57, on St. Mark's Place, was an important incubator for performance art and visual art in the late 1970s and early 1980s; followed by Now Gallery, 8BC and ABC No Rio.
During the 1980s the East Village art gallery scene helped to galvanize a new post-modern art in America; showing such artists as Kiki Smith, Peter Halley, Keith Haring, Stephen Lack, Greer Lankton, Joseph Nechvatal, Nan Goldin, Jean-Michel Basquiat, David Wojnarowicz, Rick Prol, and Jeff Koons.[9]
[edit] The musical 'Rent'
The East Village is the setting for Jonathan Larson's musical Rent; set in the early 1990s, the story chronicles a group of friends over a year in their struggles against poverty, drug abuse and AIDS.
The musical Rent chronicled a period in the neighborhood's history that is bygone. It opened at the New York Theater Workshop in February 1996.[10] It described a New York City devastated by the AIDS epidemic, drugs and high crime, and followed several characters in the backdrop of their effort to make livings as artists.[11]
[edit] Decline of the art scene
The "Downtown Legends" wall at Mo Pitkins House of Satisfaction featured artists known in the East Village performance scene. A few featured in this photo include the Reverend Jen, Nick Zedd, Allen Ginsberg, Reverend Billy and Murray Hill (pictured).The East Village's performance and art scene has declined since its hey-day of the 1970s and 1980s.[12] One club that had opened to try to resurrect the neighborhood's past artistic prominence was Mo Pitkins' House of Satisfaction, part-owned by Jimmy Fallon of Saturday Night Live. It closed its doors in 2007, and was seen by many as another sign of the continued decline of the East Village performance and art scene, which has mostly moved to Williamsburg, Brooklyn.[13] Rapture Cafe also shut down in April 2008, and the neighborhood lost an important performance space and gathering ground for the gay community. There are still some performance spaces, such as Sidewalk Cafe on Avenue A, where downtown acts find space to exhibit their talent, and the poetry clubs.[14]
Punk scene icons stayed in the neighborhood as it changed. Richard Hell lives in the same apartment he has lived in since the 1970s, and Handsome Dick Manitoba of The Dictators owns and reigns over Manitoba's bar on Avenue B.
[edit] Internal neighborhoods
The East Village contains several hamlets of vibrant communities within itself.
[edit] Alphabet City
Main article: Alphabet City, Manhattan
The Nuyorican Poets Cafe has been located off Avenue C and East 3rd Street since its founding in 1973.Alphabet City comprises nearly two-thirds of the East Village. It also once was the archetype of a dangerous New York City neighborhood. Its turn-around was cause for The New York Times to observe in 2005 that Alphabet City went "from a drug-infested no man's land to the epicenter of downtown cool."[15] Its name comes from Avenues A, B, C, and D, the only avenues in Manhattan to have single-letter names. It is bordered by Houston Street to the south and 14th Street to the north where Avenue C ends. Some famous landmarks include Tompkins Square Park, the Nuyorican Poets Cafe and the Stuyvesant Town private residential community.
[edit] Loisaida
Main article: Loisaida
A Loisaida street fair in the Summer of 2008.Loisaida is a term derived from the Latino (and especially Nuyorican) pronunciation of "Lower East Side", a neighborhood in Manhattan, New York City. The term was originally coined by poet/activist, Bittman "Bimbo" Rivas in his 1974 poem "Loisaida". Loisaida Avenue is now an alternative name for Avenue C in the Alphabet City neighborhood of New York City, whose population has largely been Hispanic (mainly Nuyorican) since the late 1960s.
[edit] St. Mark's Place
Main article: St. Mark's Place
Artist Jim Power, known as the "Mosaic Man" for his public art tiling the neighborhood[16], at the 2009 St. Mark's Place Block Party.Eighth Street becomes St. Mark's place east of Third Avenue. It once had the cachet of Sutton Place, known as a secluded rich enclave in Manhattan, but which by the 1850s had become a place for boarding houses and a German immigrant community.[17] It is named after St Mark's Church in-the-Bowery, which was built on Stuyvesant Street but is now on 10th Street. St. Mark's Place once began at the intersection of the Bowery and Stuyvesant Street, but today the street runs from Third Avenue to Avenue A. Japanese street culture and a Japanese expatriate scene forms in the noodle shops and bars that line St. Mark's Place, also home to an aged punk culture and CBGB's new store. It is home to one of the only Automats in New York City (it has since closed).[18]
St. Mark's is along the “Mosaic Trail”, a trail of 80 mosaic-encrusted lampposts that runs from Broadway down Eighth Street to Avenue A, to Fourth Street and then back to Eighth Street. The project was undertaken by East Village public artist Jim Power, known as the "Mosaic Man".[16]
[edit] The Bowery
Main article: The Bowery
Once synonymous with 'Bowery Bums', the avenue has become a magnet for luxury condominiums as the neighborhood's rapid gentrification continues.The Bowery, former home to the punk-rock nightclub CBGB, was once known for its many homeless shelters, drug rehabilitation centers and bars. The phrase "On The Bowery", which has since fallen into disuse, was a generic way to say one was down-and-out.[19]
The Bow’ry, The Bow’ry!
They say such things,
and they do strange things
on the Bow’ry —From the musical A Trip to Chinatown, 1891
Today, the Bowery has become a boulevard of new luxury condominiums. It also is home to the Amato Opera and the Bowery Poetry Club, contributing to the neighborhood's reputation as a place for artistic pursuit. Artists Amiri Baraka and Taylor Mead hold regular readings and performances in the space.
The redevelopment of the avenue from flophouses to luxury condominiums has met with resistance from long-term residents, who agree the neighborhood has improved, but that its unique, gritty character is also disappearing.[20]
[edit] Parks and green space
[edit] Tompkins Square Park
Main article: Tompkins Square Park
The Tompkins Square dog run was the first in New York City, and is a social scene unto itself.[5]Tompkins Square Park is a 10.5 acre (42,000 m²) public park in the Alphabet City section of the East Village neighborhood in the borough of Manhattan in New York City. It is square in shape, and is bounded on the north by East 10th Street, on the east by Avenue B, on the south by East 7th Street, and on the west by Avenue A. St. Marks Place abuts the park to the west.
[edit] Tompkins Square Park Police Riot
Main article: Tompkins Square Park Police Riot (1988)
The Tompkins Square Park Police Riot was a defining moment for the neighborhood. In the late hours of August 6 into the morning hours of August 7, 1988 a riot broke out in Alphabet City's Tompkins Square Park. Groups of "drug pushers, homeless people and young people known as 'skinheads'" had largely taken over the East Village park, but the neighborhood was divided about what, if anything, should be done about it.[21] The local governing body, Manhattan Community Board 3, adopted a 1 am curfew for the previously 24-hour park, in an attempt to bring it under control.[22] On July 31, a rally against the curfew resulted in several clashes between protesters and police.[23]
[edit] East River Park
Main article: East River Park
East River Park below the Williamsburg Bridge.The park is 57 acres (230,000 m2) that runs along the Franklin D. Roosevelt Drive from Montgomery Street to East 12th Street.[24] It was designed in the 1930s by Robert Moses, who wanted to ensure there was parkland on the Lower East Side.[24]
[edit] Community gardens
There are reportedly over 640 community gardens in New York City—gardens run by local collectives within the neighborhood who are responsible for the gardens' upkeep—and an estimated 10 percent of those are located on the Lower East Side and East Village alone.[25]
[edit] Tower of Toys on Avenue B
The Avenue B and 6th Street Community Garden is one of the neighborhood's more notable for a now removed outdoor sculpture, the Tower of Toys, designed by artist and long-time garden gate-keeper, Eddie Boros. Boros died April 27, 2007.[26] The Tower was controversial in the neighborhood; some viewed it as a masterpiece, others as an eyesore.[26][27] The tower appeared in the opening credits for the television show NYPD Blue and also appears in the musical Rent.[26] In May 2008, it was dismantled. According to NYC Parks Commissioner Adrian Benepe, the tower was rotting in sections that made it a safety hazard.[28] Its removal was seen as another symbol of the fading past of the neighborhood.[28]
[edit] Toyota Children’s Learning Garden
Located at 603 East 11th Street, the Toyota Children's Learning Garden is not technically a community garden, but it also fails to fit in the park category. Designed by landscape architect Michael Van Valkenburgh, the garden opened in May 2008 as part of the New York Restoration Project and is designed to teach children about plants.[29]
[edit] New York City Marble Cemetery
A production of John Reed's All the World's a Grave in the Marble Cemetery, which does not contain headstones.The cemetery is actually two, which sit on 2nd Street between 1st Avenue and 2nd Avenue. They are open the fourth Sunday of every month.[30] The first and more prominent is the City cemetery, which is second oldest non-sectarian cemetery in New York City. It sits next to the oldest public cemetery in New York City not affiliated with any religion, the "New York Marble Cemetery."[31] The cemetery was opened in 1831 and at one point contained ex-U.S. President James Monroe.[32]
[edit] Culture and events
Longtime Mistress of Ceremonies at eatery Lucky Cheng's, Miss Understood stops a bus in front of the restaurant on First Avenue.Other than geography, the East Village's most notable commonalities with Greenwich Village are a colorful history, vibrant social and cultural outlets, and street names that often diverge from the norm.
The Bowery is a north-south avenue which also lends its name to the somewhat overlapping neighborhood of the Bowery; St. Mark's Place, a crosstown street well-known for counterculture businesses; and Astor Place/Cooper Square, home of the Public Theater and the Cooper Union. Nearby universities like New York University (NYU), The New School, and The Cooper Union have dormitories in the neighborhood.
[edit] Ethnicity and religion
Photograph of St. Nicholas with parts of Second Street visible. The church and almost all buildings on the street were demolished in the 1960's and replaced with parking lots.
Former parishioners of St. Mary's Help of Christians pray outside the shuttered church in August 2008.According to 2000 census figures provided by the New York City Department of City Planning, which includes the Lower East Side in its calculation, the neighborhood was 35% Asian, 28% non-Hispanic white, 27% Hispanic and 7% black.[33]
On October 9, 1966, A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada, founder of the International Society for Krishna Consciousness, held the first recorded outdoor chanting session of the Hare Krishna mantra outside of the Indian subcontinent at Tompkins Square Park.[34] This is considered the founding of the Hare Krishna religion in the United States, and the large tree close to the center of the Park is demarcated as a special religious site for Krishna adherents.[34] The late poet Allen Ginsberg, who lived and died in the East Village, attended the ceremony.
There are several Roman Catholic churches in the East Village which have fallen victim to financial hardship particularly in the past decade. Unable to maintain their properties, the Roman Catholic Church has shuttered many of them - including St. Mary's Help of Christians on East 12th Street, as well as St. Ann's. There has recently been much controversy over St. Brigid's, the historical parish on Tompkins Square Park.
[edit] Ukrainian history
Since the 1890s there has been a large Ukrainian concentration roughly from 10th Street to 5th Street, between 3rd Avenue and Avenue A. The post-World War II diaspora, consisting primarily of Western Ukrainian intelligentsia, also settled down in the area. Several churches, including St. George's Catholic Church; Ukrainian restaurants and butcher shops; The Ukrainian Museum; the Shevchenko Scientific Society; and the Ukrainian Cultural Center are evidence of the impact of this culture on the area.
[edit] Gentrification
[edit] New York University, a controversial resident
Residents of the East Village have a love-hate relationship with New York University, which owns and maintains many buildings, particularly in much of downtown Manhattan and in the neighborhoods surrounding its main campus in Greenwich Village (a distinct neighborhood from the East Village).[35]
St. Ann's Church, a rusticated-stone structure on East 12th Street with a Romanesque tower that dated to 1847 was sold to the University to make way for a monolithic 26-story, 700 bed dormitory for students. The University did protect and maintain St. Ann's original facade and small plaza immediately fronting the 12th Street sidewalk. The result is a blended, softer abutment of the new dorm building (which does rise dramatically above the facade) up behind the old St. Ann's entry way. New York University has built many dorms, and this one in particular is now the tallest structure in the area. "There are larger changes going on here," said Lynne Brown, vice president of university relations and public affairs. "I fear this tendency to blame any trend residents don't like happening at the doorstep of NYU," said Brown, mentioning that the university has been one of the longest inhabitants of the East Village. But Nancy Cosie, a 20 year resident and former St. Ann's parishioner, does not buy that argument. "Enough is enough," Cosie exclaimed to The Village Voice, "This is not a campus. This is a neighborhood, and this is my home."[35] NYU's destruction or purchasing of many historic buildings (such as the Peter Cooper post office) have made it symbolic of change that many long-time residents fear is destroying what made the neighborhood interesting and attractive.[36] "I live on Avenue B and 9th Street," an NYU student said. "I know I'm part of the problem - gentrification that is. But where am I supposed to live?"[36]
NYU has often been at odds with residents of both the East and West Villages, as legendary urban preservationist Jane Jacobs battled the school in the 1960s.[37] "She spoke of how universities and hospitals often had a special kind of hubris reflected in the fact that they often thought it was OK to destroy a neighborhood to suit their needs,” said Andrew Berman of the Greenwich Village Society for Historic Preservation.[38]
[edit] Museums, libraries, performance and art spaces
The Bowery Poetry Club.
Sherry Vine and Joey Arias during the 2009 HOWL! Festival.New York Public Library Tompkins Square branch [3]
The Fales Library of NYU
East Village Visitors Center - 308 Bowery
The Ukrainian Museum
New Museum of Contemporary Art
Museum of Jewish Heritage
Performance Space 122
Anthology Film Archives
The Stone
Bouwerie Lane Theatre
Amato Opera
Danspace Project
The Ontological-Hysteric Theater
The Pearl Theatre Company [4]
Stomp! (Theatrical show)
Metropolitan Playhouse[5]
Mercury Lounge (live music)
Sidewalk Cafe (performance and live music)
Bowery Ballroom (concerts and shows)
Nuyorican Poets Cafe (music, poetry, readings, slams)
Bowery Poetry Club (music, poetry, readings, slams)
La MaMa E.T.C. (performance theater)
Cooper Union (speeches, presentations, public lectures and readings)
[edit] Neighborhood festivals
Mayday Festival - May 1; yearly.
Charlie Parker Jazz Festival - August; yearly.[6]
HOWL! Festival - September; yearly.[7][8]
East Village Radio Festival - September 6, 2008 [9]
Tompkins Square Halloween Dog Parade - October; yearly.[10]
East Village Theater Festival - August 3–23, 2009.[11]
FAB! Festival & Block Party - Last weekend in September annually, Sept 25, 2010 [12]
[edit] Media
Many film shoots take place in the East Village; here a period movie with antique police cars is filmed on East 4th Street.[edit] Radio
East Village Radio
[edit] Local news
The Village Voice
The Villager
East-Village.com
EastVillageFeed.com
[edit] Cinemas
Anthology Film Archives
Landmark's Sunshine Theater
Village East Cinema
City Cinema Village East
Two Boots Pioneer Theater
[edit] Notable residents past and present
Handsome Dick Manitoba of The Dictators.
Madonna lived in the neighborhood when she was just starting out in her career.[39]Handsome Dick Manitoba, who owns Manitoba's bar on Avenue B off Tompkins Square Park.
Darren Aronofsky and his wife, Rachel Weisz
Chris Cain, Bassist for the Indie-Rock band We Are Scientists
Barbara Feinman
John Leguizamo
Daniel Radcliffe
Agim Kaba
Rosario Dawson
Tom Kalin
Vashtie Kola director
W. H. Auden[40]
Greer Lankton, Artist/Doll maker
Ellen Stewart founder of La MaMa, E.T.C. (Experimental Theatre Club) in 1961.
Madonna lived there in the 1980s.
John Lurie,musician, painter, actor, producer.
Jean-Michel Basquiat, graffiti artist
David Bowes, painter
Allen Ginsberg (1926–1997), Beat Generation poet and author of Howl.[41]
Keith Haring, neo-pop artist
Claes Oldenburg (1929-), sculptor, had a studio at 46 East 3rd Street in the late 1950s.[42]
Candy Darling, actress/Warhol superstar
Bill Raymond, actor
Ryan Adams, alt-country musician
David Cross, actor, comedian
Negin Farsad, writer, director, comedian
Nan Goldin, photographer
Stephen Lack, actor, painter
Ronnie Landfield, (1947-), painter, lived on E. 11th street, mid-1960s[43]
Kiki Smith sculptor
John Zorn composer, musician
Richard Hell, musician, author
Abbie Hoffman (1936–1989), 1960s political activist[44]
Ayun Halliday, actress and writer, and wife of playwright Greg Kotis
Greg Kotis, playwright, and husband of actress and writer Ayun Halliday
Jerry Rubin (1938–1994), 1960s political activist - with Hoffman founded the Yippies in a basement apartment at 30 St. Marks Place[44]
Cookie Mueller, actress, model
Paul Krassner (1932-), publisher of The Realist
Walter Bowart (1939–2007), co-founder editor/ of The East Village Other
Allan Katzman, co-founder/editor of The East Village Other
Tuli Kupferberg, (1923-), Beat Generation poet, and one of the original Fugs
Ed Sanders, (1939-), New York School poet and one of the original Fugs
Joseph Nechvatal (1951-) early digital artist and founder of the Tellus Audio Cassette Magazine
Randy Harrison, actor
Joel Resnicoff, artist and fashion illustrator.
Regina Spektor, (1980-) Singer-songwriter and pianist.
Rachel Trachtenburg (1993-) singer and musician
Tom Otterness sculptor
Steven Fishbach, runner-up of Survivor: Tocantins
Chloe Sevigny actress
Conor Oberst musician
Lou Reed, musician
Julian Casablancas, musician
Mark Ronson
Arthur Russell, musician[45]
Jack Smith filmmaker, artist
Iggy Pop, performer, musician
Mingle Media TV and Red Carpet Report hosts, Linda Antwi, Ashley Bornancin and Erin White were on the hottest red carpet out there, Oscars Red Carpet at the Dolby Theatre on Sunday after a busy time attending events, getting interviews and photos and bringing you the story from the events we covered. Be sure to watch out for our special magazine for Awards season 2013 coming next week.
Get the Story from the Red Carpet Report Team, follow us on Twitter and Facebook at:
•www.facebook.com/RedCarpetReportTV
Here are the 2013 Oscar Winners by Studio:
•20th Century Fox - 4 Oscars
•Sony - 3 Oscars
•Universal - 3 Oscars
•Warner Bros - 3 Oscars
•Weinstein Co - 3 Oscars
•Disney - 2 Oscars
•DreamWorks - 2 Oscars
•MGM - 2 Oscars
•Sony Pictures Classics - 2 Oscars
•Focus Features - 1 Oscars
For more of Mingle Media TV’s Red Carpet Report coverage, please visit our website and follow us on Twitter and Facebook here:
•www.facebook.com/minglemediatvnetwork
•www.facebook.com/RedCarpetReportTV
•www.youtube.com/MingleMediaTVNetwork
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•www.twitter.com/minglemediatv
Follow our host, Linda at https://twitter.com/LindaIsSoGirlie
Follow our host, Ashley at https://twitter.com/AshleyBInspired
ABOUT THE ACADEMY
The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences is the world's preeminent movie-related organization, with a membership of more than 6,000 of the most accomplished men and women working in cinema. In addition to the annual Academy Awards–in which the members vote to select the nominees and winners-the Academy presents a diverse year-round slate of public programs, exhibitions and events; provides financial support to a wide range of other movie-related organizations and endeavors; acts as a neutral advocate in the advancement of motion picture technology; and, through its Margaret Herrick Library and Academy Film Archive, collects, preserves, restores and provides access to movies and items related to their history. Through these and other activities the Academy serves students, historians, the entertainment industry and people everywhere who love movies.
FOLLOW THE ACADEMY
www.oscars.org
www.facebook.com/TheAcademy
www.youtube.com/Oscars
www.twitter.com/TheAcademy
Ashley's Look -
Ring by LuciousS - www.LuciousS.com
Erin's Look -
Dress by Emil Couture www.emildesign.com/ courtesy of The Ross Group http://www.thereelrossgroup.com/
Hair by Maeven Marie Ramirez salon-eleven.com/
Make Up by Veronica Matiar salon-eleven.com/
Linda's Look -
Dress by Shekhar Rahate - www.ShekharRahate.com
Necklace by Erin Fader Jewelry Design - www.ErinFader.com
BEST PICTURE
• "Amour" Margaret Menegoz, Stefan Arndt, Veit Heiduschka and Michael Katz, Producers
• "Argo" Grant Heslov, Ben Affleck and George Clooney, Producers - WINNER
• "Beasts of the Southern Wild" Dan Janvey, Josh Penn and Michael Gottwald, Producers
• "Django Unchained" Stacey Sher, Reginald Hudlin and Pilar Savone, Producers
• "Les Misérables" Tim Bevan, Eric Fellner, Debra Hayward and Cameron Mackintosh, Producers
• "Life of Pi" Gil Netter, Ang Lee and David Womark, Producers
• "Lincoln" Steven Spielberg and Kathleen Kennedy, Producers
• "Silver Linings Playbook" Donna Gigliotti, Bruce Cohen and Jonathan Gordon, Producers
• "Zero Dark Thirty" Mark Boal, Kathryn Bigelow and Megan Ellison, Producers
BEST FOREIGN FILM
Amour, Austria – WINNER
Kon-Tiki, Norway
No, Chile
A Royal Affair, Denmark
War Witch, Canada
BEST ANIMATED FEATURE FILM
Brave - WINNER
Frankenweenie
ParaNorman
The Pirates! Band of Misfits
Wreck-It Ralph
BEST ANIMATED SHORT FILM
Adam and Dog, Minkyu Lee
Fresh Guacamole, PES
Head over Heels, Timothy Reckart and Fodhla Cronin O’Reilly
Maggie Simpson in The Longest Daycare, David Silverman
Paperman, John Kahrs – WINNER
BEST LIVE ACTION SHORT FILM
Asad, Bryan Buckley and Mino Jarjoura
Buzkashi Boys, Sam French and Ariel Nasr
Curfew, Shawn Christensen - WINNER
Death of a Shadow (Dood van een Schaduw), Tom Van Avermaet and Ellen De Waele
Henry, Yan England
BEST DOCUMENTARY FEATURE
5 Broken Cameras
The Gatekeepers
How to Survive a Plague
The Invisible War
Searching for Sugar Man – WINNER
BEST DOCUMENTARY SHORT SUBJECT
Inocente, Sean Fine and Andrea Nix Fine – WINNER
Kings Point, Sari Gilman and Jedd Wider
Mondays at Racine, Cynthia Wade and Robin Honan
Open Heart, Kief Davidson and Cori Shepherd Stern
Redemption, Jon Alpert and Matthew O’Neill
BEST ACTOR
Bradley Cooper, Silver Linings Playbook
Daniel Day-Lewis, Lincoln – WINNER
Hugh Jackman, Les Miserables
Joaquin Phoenix, The Master
Denzel Washington, Flight
BEST ACTRESS
Jessica Chastain, Zero Dark Thirty
Jennifer Lawrence, Silver Linings Playbook – WINNER
Emmanuelle Riva, Amour
Naomi Watts, The Impossible
Quvenzhané Wallis, Beasts of the Southern Wild
BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR
Alan Arkin, Argo
Robert De Niro, Silver Linings Playbook
Philip Seymour Hoffman, The Master
Tommy Lee Jones, Lincoln
Christoph Waltz, Django Unchained – WINNER
BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
Amy Adams, The Master
Sally Field, Lincoln
Anne Hathaway, Les Miserables – WINNER
Helen Hunt, The Sessions
Jacki Weaver, Silver Linings Playbook
BEST DIRECTOR
Michael Haneke, Amour
Ang Lee, Life of Pi – WINNER
David O. Russell, Silver Linings Playbook
Steven Spielberg, Lincoln
Benh Zeitlin, Beasts of the Southern Wild
BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY
Wes Anderson and Roman Coppola, Moonrise Kingdom
Mark Boal, Zero Dark Thirty
John Gatins, Flight
Michael Haneke, Amour
Quentin Tarantino, Django Unchained – WINNER
BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY
Lucy Alibar and Benh Zeitlin, Beasts of the Southern Wild
Tony Kushner, Lincoln
David Magee, Life of Pi
David O. Russell, Silver Linings Playbook
Chris Terrio, Argo – WINNER
BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY
Anna Karenina, Seamus McGarvey
Django Unchained, Robert Richardson
Life of Pi, Claudio Miranda – WINNER
Lincoln, Janusz Kaminski
Skyfall, Roger Deakins
BEST ORIGINAL SCORE
Anna Karenina, Dario Marianelli
Argo, Alexandre Desplat
Life of Pi, Mychael Danna – WINNER
Lincoln, John Williams
Skyfall, Thomas Newman
BEST ORIGINAL SONG
“Before My Time” from Chasing Ice, Music and Lyric by J. Ralph
“Everybody Needs A Best Friend” from Ted, Music by Walter Murphy; Lyric by Seth MacFarlane
“Pi’s Lullaby” from Life of Pi, Music by Mychael Danna; Lyric by Bombay Jayashri
“Skyfall” from Skyfall, Music and Lyric by Adele Adkins and Paul Epworth – WINNER
“Suddenly” from Les Misérables, Music by Claude-Michel Schönberg; Lyric by Herbert Kretzmer and Alain Boublil
BEST COSTUME DESIGN
Anna Karenina, Jacqueline Durran – WINNER
Les Misérables, Paco Delgado
Lincoln, Joanna Johnston
Mirror Mirror, Eiko Ishioka
Snow White and the Huntsman, Colleen Atwood
BEST FILM EDITING
Argo, William Goldenberg – WINNER
Life of Pi, Tim Squyres
Lincoln, Michael Kahn
Silver Linings Playbook, Jay Cassidy and Crispin Struthers
Zero Dark Thirty, Dylan Tichenor and William Goldenberg
BEST MAKEUP AND HAIRSTYLING
Hitchcock, Howard Berger, Peter Montagna and Martin Samuel
The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey, Peter Swords King, Rick Findlater and Tami Lane
Les Misérables, Lisa Westcott and Julie Dartnell – WINNER
BEST PRODUCTION DESIGN
Anna Karenina, Production Design: Sarah Greenwood; Set Decoration: Katie Spencer
The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey, Production Design: Dan Hennah; Set Decoration: Ra Vincent and Simon Bright
Les Misérables, Production Design: Eve Stewart; Set Decoration: Anna Lynch-Robinson
Life of Pi, Production Design: David Gropman; Set Decoration: Anna Pinnock
Lincoln, Production Design: Rick Carter; Set Decoration: Jim Erickson – WINNER
BEST SOUND EDITING - TIE
Argo, Erik Aadahl and Ethan Van der Ryn
Django Unchained, Wylie Stateman
Life of Pi, Eugene Gearty and Philip Stockton
Skyfall, Per Hallberg and Karen Baker Landers – WINNER
Zero Dark Thirty, Paul N.J. Ottosson - WINNER
BEST SOUND MIXING
Argo, John Reitz, Gregg Rudloff and Jose Antonio Garcia
Les Misérables, Andy Nelson, Mark Paterson and Simon Hayes – WINNER
Life of Pi, Ron Bartlett, D.M. Hemphill and Drew Kunin
Lincoln, Andy Nelson, Gary Rydstrom and Ronald Judkins
Skyfall, Scott Millan, Greg P. Russell and Stuart Wilson
BEST VISUAL EFFECTS
The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey, Joe Letteri, Eric Saindon, David Clayton and R. Christopher White
Life of Pi, Bill Westenhofer, Guillaume Rocheron, Erik-Jan De Boer and Donald R. Elliott –WINNER
Marvel’s The Avengers, Janek Sirrs, Jeff White, Guy Williams and Dan Sudick
Prometheus, Richard Stammers, Trevor Wood, Charley Henley and Martin Hill
Snow White and the Huntsman, Cedric Nicolas-Troyan, Philip Brennan, Neil Corbould and Michael Dawson.
PAGE 1 of 2
See also:
a) 2010 Army Run results for Ottawa & area runners;
c) 2011 Army Run photos by a runner.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
.
Sept. 14, 2011. For the 21.1 km (13 mile) half-marathon race, the following local runners have registered with the Running Room for the Sept. 18th Canada Army Run in Ottawa. The list is sorted by community (Ottawa first) and then by first name.
* On Sept. 18th, 16,000 runners participated in the 21.1 km and 5 km races.
Part A. Ottawa
Part B. Other Communities (e.g., Gatineau, Kanata, Nepean, Orleans)
A. Ottawa
1,….Adriana Zeleney
2,….Adrien Barrieau
3,….Adrienne Mertin
4,….Ajay Singh
5,….Al Okroy
6,….Al Stewart
7,….Alain Therriault
8,….Alain Vermette
9,….Alan Chaffe
10,….Alan Chan
11,….Alan Yeadon
12,….Alex Renwick
13,….Alex Turner
14,….Alexandra Averbeck
15,….Alice Kwong
16,….Alicia Chénier
17,….Alison McCray
18,….Alla Laporte
19,….Allan Crisford
20,….Allan Gauci
21,….Allison Gracie
22,….Allison Grimsey
23,….Allison Meek
24,….Allison Sephton
25,….Allister Hain
26,….Amanda van beinum
27,….Amber Tower
28,….Amy Glover
29,….Anais Lussier-Labelle
30,….Andre Dion
31,….andre hiotis
32,….Andrea Karklins
33,….Andrea Lau
34,….Andrea Letham
35,….Andrea Matthews
36,….Andrea Mills
37,….Andrée Morin
38,….Andree-Anne Girard
39,….Andrew Butson
40,….Andrew Mendes
41,….Andrew Ng
42,….andrew staples
43,….Andrew Young
44,….Angela Feurstein
45,….Angela Hardy
46,….Angela Koskie
47,….Angela Lamb
48,….Angela Marcantonio
49,….Angy Dauth
50,….Anika Clark
51,….Anita Choquette
52,….Ann Gregory
53,….Ann Lanthier
54,….Ann Marie Fyfe
55,….Anna Hoefnagels
56,….Anna Pham
57,….Anne Bowker
58,….Anne McNamara
59,….Anne Pearce
60,….Annie Oger
61,….Ann-Marie Reid
62,….Anthea Garrick Menard
63,….April Dickson
64,….Arleigh Romyn
65,….Ashlee Linton
66,….Ashley Butcher
67,….Audrey Taylor
68,….Azhra McMahon
69,….Barbara Burkhard
70,….Barbara Campbell
71,….Barbara Dundas
72,….Barbara Gibbon
73,….Barbara Jovaisas
74,….Barbara Mingie
75,….Bart Bakker
76,….Ben Tobali
77,….Ben-Zion Caspi
78,….Bernard Charlebois
79,….Betty Bulman
80,….Bill McEachern
81,….Bill Salminen
82,….Bill Wilson
83,….Blake Davis
84,….Bob McCulloch
85,….Bob McGillivray
86,….Bob MUISE
87,….Bonnie Mechefske
88,….Brad Lobregt
89,….Bradley Conley
90,….Bradley Davis
91,….Brenda Bethune
92,….Brent Tower
93,….Brian Davis
94,….Brian O'Higgins
95,….Brian Sanford
96,….Brian Senecal
97,….Brigitte Martel
98,….Brittany Hunt
99,….Bruce Jackson
100,….Bruce Muise
101,….Bryan Morris
102,….Caitlin O'Higgins
103,….Cameron Beare
104,….Cameron Fraser
105,….Carole Harrison
106,….Carolyn Frank
107,….Cassandra Chouinard
108,….Cassandra Lively
109,….Cassandra Lombardo
110,….Cassie Hodgins
111,….Catherine Caron
112,….Catherine Khordoc
113,….Catherine Peirce
114,….Catherine Pound
115,….Catherine St. Louis
116,….Catherine Wallace
117,….Cathy Takahashi
118,….Chanel Huard
119,….Chantal Campbell
120,….Chantal Lacroix
121,….Chantal Pilon
122,….Charity Dowdell
123,….Charlene Mathias
124,….Chelsea MacDonell
125,….Cheryl Birker
126,….Cheryl McIntyre
127,….Chloe MacDonell
128,….Chris Bright
129,….Chris Gardner
130,….Chris Hale
131,….Chris Liebenberg
132,….Chris Moule
133,….Chris Nestor
134,….Chris Renwick
135,….Chris Salter
136,….Chris Sutherland
137,….Chris Weicker
138,….Christene White
139,….Christian Del Valle
140,….Christiane Laperrière
141,….Christie Swann
142,….Christina Gubbels
143,….Christina Jutzi
144,….Christina Martinez
145,….Christina Mullally
146,….Christine Geraghty
147,….Christine Hodge
148,….Christine Robbins
149,….Christine Smith
150,….Christopher Farrell
151,….Cindy Maraj
152,….Claire Samson
153,….Claude Béland
154,….Claude Papineau
155,….Claudia Rutherford
156,….Colleen Bigelow
157,….Connie Acelvari
158,….Constance Craig
159,….Cori Dinovitzer
160,….Corinna Simmons
161,….Cory Martin
162,….Court Curry
163,….Courtney Ka;bflsiech
164,….Courtney Powless
165,….Craig Carney
166,….Craig Mantle
167,….Craig Rosario
168,….Curtis McGrath
169,….Dan Shea
170,….Dan St-Arnaud
171,….Daniel Guerrette
172,….Darlene Goodwin
173,….Darlene Hackett
174,….Darlene Joyce
175,….Darlene Sabourin
176,….Darryl Bilodeau
177,….Dave Bergeron
178,….Dave Dawson
179,….Dave Goods
180,….Dave Saville
181,….Dave Yarker
182,….David Gagnon
183,….David Gregory
184,….David Gulas
185,….David Jackson
186,….David Perry
187,….David Rain
188,….David Thomson
189,….David Tobin
190,….Dawn Montgomery
191,….Dawn Styan
192,….Dawna LaBonte-Parkhill
193,….Dean Justus
194,….Deb Tully
195,….Debbie Carrick
196,….Debbie Ling
197,….Debby Duford
198,….Deborah Newhook
199,….Deborah Potter
200,….Dee Sullivan
201,….Deidre Kelly
202,….Demi Kotsovos
203,….Denise Couillard
204,….Denise Senecal
205,….Denise Walter
206,….Dennis Bulman
207,….Derek Wasmund
208,….Devon Forde
209,….Devon Scott
210,….Diana Crawford
211,….Diana Harrison
212,….Diana Seidl
213,….Diane Mackinder
214,….Dick Gunstone
215,….Dillon Vahey
216,….Don Andersen
217,….Dona Hill
218,….Donald Cottrell
219,….Donald Waldock
220,….Doreen Lipovski
221,….Doris McLean
222,….Doug Eagle
223,….Douglas Cooper
224,….Douglas Loader
225,….Drew Clipperton
226,….Dung Bui
227,….Dvora Rotenberg
228,….Edith Knight
229,….Edward Vonk
230,….Eileen harris
231,….Eileen Tosky-McKinnon
232,….Elaine Rufiange
233,….Eleanor Ford
234,….Eleanore Brickell
235,….Elisabeth Baechlin
236,….Elizabeth Rose
237,….Elke Keating
238,….Ellen Carter
239,….Ellen Lamarre
240,….Ellen O'Halloran
241,….Elyse Pratt-Johnson
242,….Emilie Lavigne
243,….Emily Joyce
244,….Emily Larocque
245,….Emma Morris
246,….Emmanuelle Arnould-Lalonde
247,….Enjoli Stevens
248,….Eric Arnold
249,….Eric Burpee
250,….Eric Charland
251,….Eric Sewell
252,….Eric Weaver
253,….Erik Laflamme
254,….Erin Beasley
255,….Erin Collins
256,….Evamarie Weicker
257,….Evan Clarke
258,….Evan May
259,….Fannie Gouault
260,….Fiona Da Costa
261,….Frances Enns
262,….Frances Muldoon
263,….Francesca Craig
264,….Francesca Macdonald
265,….Francine Gaulin
266,….Francisco Fernandes de Sousa
267,….Francisco Salazar
268,….Francois Dumaine
269,….Francoise Mulligan
270,….Frank D'Angelo
271,….Frank Gildenhaar
272,….Gabe Batstone
273,….Gabriela Balajova
274,….Gabrielle Nadeau
275,….Gail Baker-Gregory
276,….Gary McKenna
277,….Gary Wilkes
278,….Gavin Lemoine
279,….Genevieve Cholette
280,….Genevieve Le Jeune
281,….Gennifer Stainforth
282,….Geoff Cooper
283,….Geoff Dunkley
284,….Geoff Dunn
285,….Geoffrey Dudding
286,….Geoffrey Ford
287,….George Ferrier
288,….George Garrard
289,….George Tsuji
290,….Georges Rousselle
291,….Gil Brunette
292,….Gillian Andersen
293,….Gillianne Beaulieu
294,….Gina Charos
295,….Gisele Salazar
296,….Glen Gobel
297,….Glenn Cowan
298,….Gloria Baeza
299,….Gord Baldwin
300,….Gord Coulson
301,….Gord Maddison
302,….Grace Howland
303,….Greg Zinck
304,….Gregg Reddin
305,….Guy Pelletier
306,….Harold Geller
307,….Harry Fischer
308,….Hazen Harty
309,….Heather McCready
310,….Heather Nixon
311,….Heather Paulusse
312,….Heather Watts
313,….Hélène Nadeau
314,….Helen Francis
315,….Helene Boucher
316,….Helene Leduc
317,….Henri St-Martin
318,….Hidetaka Nishimura
319,….Hieu Nguyen
320,….Hilary Chaiton
321,….Hillary Rose
322,….Hollie Anderson
323,….Holly Johnson
324,….Hui Xu
325,….Iain Macdonald
326,….Ian Crawford
327,….Ian Graham
328,….Ian MacVicar
329,….Ian Malcolm
330,….Ian-Guy Dupuis
331,….Ilana Bleichert
332,….Iliana Oris Valiente
333,….Irène Dionne
334,….Irvin Hill
335,….Jack Gilmer
336,….Jacki Sachrajda
337,….Jacob Hardonk
338,….Jacqueline Roy
339,….Jacques Gobin
340,….James Campbell
341,….James Peters
342,….James Vannier
343,….James Zarull
344,….Jamie Bell
345,….Jamie Hurst
346,….Jane Gibson
347,….Jane Rooney
348,….Jane Schofield
349,….Jane Spiteri
350,….Janelle Denton
351,….Janet Cooper
352,….Janet Hardcastle
353,….Janet Nuutilainen
354,….Janet Sol
355,….Janice McCoy
356,….Jared Broughton
357,….Jasmine Lefebvre
358,….Jason Chouinard
359,….Jason Raymond
360,….Jason Stewart
361,….Jason Verner
362,….Jay Wheadon
363,….Jayme Pettit
364,….JD Adams
365,….Jean-Guy Perron
366,….JEannie Daly
367,….Jean-Philippe Dion
368,….Jean-Pierre Chénier
369,….Jeff Bardell
370,….Jeff Ross
371,….Jenna Lacharity
372,….Jenna Ladd
373,….Jennifer Balcom
374,….Jennifer Bergeron
375,….Jennifer Beyak
376,….Jennifer Blattman
377,….Jennifer Brenning
378,….Jennifer Bucknall
379,….Jennifer Dumoulin
380,….Jennifer Fergusson
381,….Jennifer Fraser
382,….Jennifer Harnden
383,….Jennifer Hood
384,….Jennifer Leblanc
385,….Jennifer Moores
386,….Jennifer Morse
387,….Jennifer Nutt
388,….Jennifer Shortall
389,….Jennifer Tighe
390,….Jennifer Wilson
391,….Jenny Bascur
392,….Jessica Brown
393,….Jessica Goldfarb
394,….Jessica Kight
395,….Jessica Roche
396,….Jessie Blanchette
397,….Jian Wu
398,….Jill Ainsworth
399,….Jill Marsh
400,….Jillian Osborne
401,….Jim Carter
402,….Jim Walsh
403,….JJ Wilson
404,….Joan Tourangeau
405,….Jo-Ann Brault
406,….Joann Garbig
407,….Jo-Anne Belliveau
408,….Joanne Bradley
409,….Joanne Ritchie
410,….Jocelyn Kearney
411,….Jodi Wilson
412,….Jody Bergen
413,….Jody McKinnon
414,….Joe Gunn
415,….Joel Allaert
416,….Joel Pennycook
417,….Joel Westheimer
418,….Joey Rogowy
419,….John Beaudoin
420,….John Brady
421,….John Cunningham
422,….John Horvath
423,….John Ledo
424,….John Lovell
425,….John Mitchell
426,….John Oliver
427,….Johnathan MacDonald
428,….Jolene Savoie
429,….Jonathan Godin
430,….Jonathon Connolly
431,….Joni Ogawa
432,….Jordan McLeod
433,….Josée Picard
434,….Josée Surprenant
435,….Josette Day
436,….Joshua Lemoine
437,….Judy Taylor
438,….Julia Barss
439,….Juliann Castell
440,….Julie Burke
441,….Julie Charlebois
442,….Julie Gourlay
443,….Julie Lafleche
444,….Julie Laplante
445,….Julie Lefebvre
446,….Julien Beauchamp
447,….Justin Ferns
448,….Justin Laroche
449,….Justin Pike
450,….Kaari Hukkala
451,….Kailena van de Nes
452,….Karen Foss
453,….Karen Jeffery
454,….Karen Marshall
455,….Karen Sauve
456,….Karen Welch
457,….Karine Circé
458,….Karine Moreau
459,….Karyn Curtis
460,….Kate Borowec
461,….Kate Dickson
462,….Kate Lewis
463,….Kate Sherwood
464,….Kate Sinnott
465,….Kate Swetnam
466,….Kate Thompson
467,….Kate Truglia
468,….Katharine Mullock
469,….Katherine Liston
470,….Katherine MacDonald
471,….Kathleen McNulty
472,….Kathlene Allen
473,….Kathryn Aubrey-Horvath
474,….Kathryn Burbridge
475,….Kathryn Scott
476,….Kathy Lewis
477,….Kathy McLaughlin
478,….Kathy Norris
479,….Kathy O'Brien
480,….Katie Tottenham
481,….Katrina Isacsson
482,….Katy Alp
483,….Katy Harrison
484,….Kazutoshi Nishizawa
485,….Keiko Umemoto
486,….Keith Mulligan
487,….Keith Savage
488,….Kelly Boyko
489,….Kelly Cooper
490,….Ken Gibson
491,….Ken McNair
492,….Kent Daboll
493,….Kerry Nolan
494,….Kevin Adams
495,….Kevin de Snayer
496,….Kevin Dulude
497,….Kevin Germundson
498,….Kevin O'Brien
499,….Kevin Wickens
500,….Khorina Ou
501,….Kim Benjamin
502,….Kim Moir
503,….Kim White
504,….kim Wilson
505,….Kimberly Rennie
506,….Kinza Slater
507,….Kiza Francis
508,….KP McNamara
509,….Krista Lewis
510,….Krista MacDonald
511,….Kristiana Stevens
512,….Kristin Le Saux-Farmer
513,….Kristin Macrae
514,….Kristina Dyck
515,….Kristyn Berube
516,….Kyle Villenuve
517,….Kym Martin
518,….Laen Hanson
519,….Larry Chamney
520,….Laura Cluney
521,….Laura Conway
522,….Laura Forbes
523,….Laura Rees
524,….Laura Smith
525,….Lauren Clarke
526,….Lauren Gamble
527,….Laurent Potiez
528,….Laurent Roy
529,….Laurie Bouolet
530,….Laurie Cairns
531,….Lawrence Matthews
532,….Lawrence Wong
533,….Leah Andrews
534,….Leah Carson
535,….Lee Wyndham
536,….Leigh Ann Butler
537,….Leigh Howe
538,….Leigh Perreault
539,….Lena Dikranian
540,….Lena Maione
541,….Lenore Macartney
542,….Leo Kadota
543,….Les Woolsey
544,….Lesley Mackay
545,….Leslie Dauncey
546,….Leslie Robertson
547,….Lester Mundt
548,….Lia Pirili
549,….Liam Kennedy
550,….Liang Chen
551,….Lidnina Rodriguez
552,….Liliana Morse
553,….Lillian Serrouya Thibault
554,….Lina Kastner
555,….Linda Doyle
556,….Linda Hall
557,….Lindsay Grace
558,….Lindsey Gresham
559,….Lisa Allen
560,….Lisa Butler
561,….Lisa Duffett
562,….Lisa Gibson
563,….Lisa Grison
564,….Lisa Hughes
565,….Lisa Julian
566,….Lise Arseneau
567,….Lise Perrier
568,….Liz O'Neill
569,….Lori Camilucci
570,….Lori Mockson
571,….Lorraine England
572,….Louise Gresham
573,….Louise Morin
574,….Lucas Smith
575,….Luce Blouin
576,….Lucie Villeneuve
577,….Lucy MacDonald
578,….Luke Wu
579,….Lynda Cronin
580,….Lynn Arnone
581,….Lynn Diggins
582,….Lynn Marchildon
583,….Lynn Nightingale
584,….lynn Sewell
585,….Lynne Russell
586,….Madeleine Gravel
587,….Malette Genevieve
588,….Mallory MacWilliams
589,….Malvern Ena
590,….Mandy Fisher
591,….Manon Bouchard
592,….Manon Therriault
593,….Marc Huot
594,….Marcelle Gauthier
595,….Margaret Michalski
596,….Maria Alvarez
597,….Maria Pooley
598,….Marie Mathe Drader
599,….Marie Poirier
600,….Marie Shinmoto
601,….Marie1980 Bonnet
602,….Marie-Catherine Labramboise
603,….Marielle Emond
604,….Marigold Edwards
605,….Marilyn Warren
606,….Mario Villemaire
607,….Marion May
608,….Marja Verloop
609,….Marjie Brown
610,….Mark McGill
611,….Mark Vanasse
612,….mark ward
613,….Marlena Coverston
614,….Marta Wajda
615,….Martha Tobin
616,….Martin Cheliak
617,….Martin Gerrits
618,….Martine Lalonde
619,….Mary Murphy
620,….Matt Dooley
621,….Matthew Cox
622,….Matthew Eglin
623,….Matthew Morash
624,….Matthew Whelen
625,….Matthew Whyte
626,….Matthew Wilcox
627,….Matus Culen
628,….Maureen Feagan
629,….Maureen Lamothe
630,….Maureen Nestor
631,….Maurice Desjardins
632,….Meagan Campbell
633,….Meaghan Stone
634,….Meghan Callahan
635,….Melanie Farrell
636,….Melissa Kampman
637,….Melissa Shaw
638,….Mercedeth Bowerman
639,….Michael Arts
640,….Michael Corneau
641,….Michael D'Asti
642,….Michael Grainger
643,….Michael Hewett
644,….Michael Holmes
645,….Michael McGinn
646,….Michael McLean
647,….Michael McMahon
648,….Michael Morin
649,….Michael Nagy
650,….Michel Bouchard
651,….Michelle Adkins
652,….Michelle Couture
653,….Michelle Day
654,….Michelle Keough
655,….Michelle Zidek
656,….Mikaela Malta
657,….Mike Chambers
658,….Mike Herzog
659,….Mike Hopper
660,….Mike Mazerolle
661,….Mike O'Flaherty
662,….Mike Saray
663,….Mike White
664,….Mikhail Gorbounov
665,….Monica Martinez
666,….Monique Cousineau
667,….Monique Loney
668,….Nancy C Green
669,….Nancy Faraday-Smith
670,….nancy green
671,….Nancy Kalil
672,….Nancy MacDonell
673,….Nancy Sullivan
674,….Natalie Fernandes
675,….Natalie Fraser
676,….Natalie Phan
677,….Natalie Sachrajda
678,….Natasha Carraro
679,….Nate Rotman
680,….Nathalie Gougeon
681,….Nathan MacWilliam
682,….Neiges Senechal
683,….Neil Mackinder
684,….Nelly Staudte-Blondeaux
685,….Nicole Duguay
686,….Nicole Slunder
687,….Nicole Vaillancourt
688,….Olivier Dumetz
689,….Olivier Fichet
690,….Olle de Bruin
691,….padma Parthasarathy
692,….Pamela Biron
693,….Pamela Cushing
694,….Pascal Ilboudo
695,….Pat Liston
696,….Patricia Horner
697,….Patricia Lovett
698,….Patricia Mcdonell
699,….Patrick Dauncey
700,….Patrick Gray
701,….Patrick Miron
702,….Patti Gamble
703,….Paul Krga
704,….Paul MacNeil
705,….Paul Williamson
706,….Peggy Gibson
707,….Perry Graham
708,….Peter Cantrell
709,….Peter Dinsdale
710,….Peter Fisher
711,….Peter Linkletter
712,….Peter Stapleton
713,….Phat Nguyen
714,….Phil Busby
715,….Philip Hunter
716,….Pierre Ingram
717,….PK Leung
718,….Prichya Sethchindapong
719,….Quinn Russell
720,….R Harman
721,….Rachel Abraham
722,….Rachel Pitcher
723,….Rachelle Watson
724,….Rajkumar Nagarajan
725,….Randy Guthro
726,….Randy McElligott
727,….Raymonde Langevin
728,….Rebeca Ricardo
729,….Rebecca Li
730,….Rebecca Powell
731,….Rebecca Shewfelt
732,….Renata Manchak
733,….rene danis
734,….Rene Hawkes
735,….Rene Yaraskavitch
736,….Renee Langille
737,….Rene-Louis Bourgeau
738,….Richard Campbell
739,….Richard Cronin
740,….Richard Dobson
741,….Richard Lewis
742,….Richard Roda
743,….richard wall
744,….Richard Whitlock
745,….Rick Goodwin
746,….Rick O'Grady
747,….Riley Hennessey
748,….Rita Hearty
749,….Rob Bolduc
750,….Rob Casey
751,….Rob Gilmour
752,….Robert Adolfson
753,….Robert Kalbfleisch
754,….Robert Miron
755,….Robert Richardson
756,….Robin Fox
757,….Robyn Handley
758,….Rocio Battisti
759,….Rockey Whitmore
760,….Rod Begg
761,….Roger Hunter
762,….Roger Langevin
763,….Ron Newhook
764,….Rose Parent
765,….Roxanne Harper
766,….Roxanne Hutchings
767,….Ruben Vroegop
768,….Rue Quizon
769,….Russell McDonnell
770,….Ruth Farey
771,….Ryan Hennessy
772,….Sabrina Avery
773,….Sabrina Quraeshi
774,….Sam Geller
775,….Samanta Jacques-Arsenault
776,….Samantha Hunter
777,….Samantha O'Neill
778,….Samy El-Jaby
779,….SANDRA Chong
780,….sandra harwood
781,….Sandra Kuchta
782,….Sandra Monaghan
783,….Sandra Monforton
784,….Sandra Moorman
785,….Sanjeev Bhanjana
786,….Sara Boucher
787,….Sarah Armstrong
788,….Sarah Gee
789,….Sarah Geiger
790,….Scott Rawlings
791,….Scott Tomlinson
792,….Sean Adams
793,….Sean McElhinney
794,….Sean O'Brien
795,….Sébastien Taillefer
796,….Shannon McMillan-Kunstadt
797,….Shari Goodfellow
798,….Shari Nurse
799,….sharon hiebert
800,….Sharon Murphy
801,….Sharon Tobin
802,….Shauna Hanratty
803,….Shawn Hollinger
804,….Shawn Osborne
805,….Shawn Pigeon
806,….Shawna Colbey
807,….Shawna Moffatt
808,….Shawnna Van Drunen
809,….Sheila Bondesen
810,….Shelley Chambers
811,….Shelly Stackpole
812,….Shonna Tuck
813,….Sierra Phillips
814,….Siobhan Jones
815,….sohaila moghadam
816,….Solita Pacheco
817,….Sophie Dazé
818,….Sophie Lebel
819,….soraya moghadam
820,….Stella Gaerke
821,….Stephane Castonguay
822,….Stephane Parent
823,….Stephanie Cote
824,….Stephanie Crisford
825,….Stephanie Earle
826,….stephanie jack
827,….Stephen Day
828,….Stephen Shew
829,….Stephen Wild
830,….Stephen Woroszczuk
831,….Steve Astels
832,….Steve Boivin
833,….Steve Campbell
834,….Steve Gleddie
835,….Steve Inkpen
836,….Steve Morin
837,….Steve Moritsugu
838,….Steven Dixon
839,….Steven Molnar
840,….Stuart Palmer
841,….Sue MacPherson
842,….Suleena Duhaime
843,….Susan Foran
844,….Susan Ford
845,….Susan Gershman
846,….Susan Harvey
847,….Susan Johnston
848,….Susan Leslie
849,….Susan Lovell
850,….Susan Mak Chin
851,….Susan McLeod
852,….Susan Nally
853,….Susan Oneid
854,….Susan Ostergaard
855,….Susan Trimble
856,….Susan Ward
857,….Susan Whitmore
858,….Susan Wynne
859,….Suzanne Sinnamon
860,….Svetlana Ulitsky
861,….Sylvain Huard
862,….Sylvain Lachance
863,….Sylvia Duffy
864,….Sylvie Bourassa-Muise
865,….Sylvie Corbin
866,….Takuya Tazawa
867,….Tal Elharrar
868,….Tamara Marshall
869,….Tammy Frye
870,….Tania Bennett
871,….Tanya Richard
872,….Tara MacDougall
873,….Tara Painter
874,….Tara Ward
875,….Tara Wong
876,….Tarjinder Kainth
877,….Ted Damen
878,….Terri Bolster
879,….Terry Godbold
880,….Terry McDermott
881,….Terry Monger
882,….Thea Worthylake
883,….Theresa Robertson
884,….Thomas Bujaki
885,….Thomas Harrison
886,….Thomas Ryan
887,….Thuy (Twee) Tran
888,….Tiffanie Seguin
889,….Tina Fallis
890,….Tobin Kennedy
891,….Tod Strickland
892,….Tom Morris
893,….Tom Pierson
894,….Tony McLaughlin
895,….Tracy Chubaty
896,….Tracy Corneau
897,….Tracy Ferne
898,….Tracy Gagnon
899,….Tricia Brown
900,….Valerie Oickle
901,….Valerie Saunders
902,….Vanessa Buchanan
903,….vanessa mendoza
904,….Vanessa Pierson
905,….Victor Krawczuk
906,….Victoria Graham
907,….Victoria Keaney
908,….Wade Smith
909,….Warren Isfan
910,….Wendy Lee
911,….wendy statham
912,….Will Summers
913,….Willem Stevens
914,….William Chisholm
915,….William Godfrey
916,….William Simmering
917,….wilma Berti
918,….Yannick Sirois
919,….Youna Zhang
920,….Yulia Maistrovski
921,….Yvonne McKinnon
922,….Zachary Chrumka
END OF OTTAWA
B. Other Communities
923,….Leslee Davis Einmann,….A
924,….Terry Koronewski,….Alexandria
925,….Andrea Bird,….Almonte
926,….Daphne Lainson,….Almonte
927,….Jason Lainson,….Almonte
928,….Jenny Sheffield,….Almonte
929,….Karen Stillman,….Almonte
930,….Connie Palubiskie,….Arnprior
931,….Emily Sheffield,….Arnprior
932,….Jenn Hunt,….Arnprior
933,….Melissa Needham,….Arnprior
934,….Mike Poirier,….Arnprior
935,….Peter O'Gorman,….Arnprior
936,….Trish Heffernan,….Arnprior
937,….Avril Van Aert,….Ashton
938,….Nicholas Saray,….Ashton
939,….Peter Cottreau,….Ashton
940,….Rod Clow,….Athens
941,….Terri Gray,….Athens
942,….Erin Kingdom,….Aylmer
943,….Luc Lacombe,….Aylmer
944,….Jean-Pierre Sauve,….Beachburg
945,….Lynne Blackburn,….Bourget
946,….Raymond Lalande,….Bourget
947,….Dianne Dillon-Samson,….Brockville
948,….murray regush,….Brockville
949,….Alex McDermott,….Cantley
950,….Carol Jr Groulx,….Cantley
951,….Guy Beaulieu,….Cantley
952,….marie-claude côté,….cantley
953,….Pierre-Yves Authier,….Cantley
954,….Bruce Rafuse,….Carleton place
955,….Chris Loder,….Carleton Place
956,….Jenni Kerteston,….Carleton Place
957,….Jennifer Derksen,….Carleton Place
958,….megan thomson,….carleton place
959,….Natasha Foster,….Carleton Place
960,….Pascale Michaud,….Carleton Place
961,….Rob Illingworth,….Carleton Place
962,….Anna Li,….Carp
963,….Dayle Mulligan,….Carp
964,….Gerard Rumleskie,….Carp
965,….Kathy Fischer,….Carp
966,….Lyne Michaud,….Carp
967,….Murray Stonebridge,….Carp
968,….Nancy Wawia Robb,….Carp
969,….André Paris,….Casselman
970,….bob sweetlove,….casselman
971,….Danielle Carrière-Paris,….Casselman
972,….mary sweetlove,….Casselman
973,….Judy Bragg,….Chalk River
974,….Christine Tardiff-Mullen,….Chelsea
975,….Ian Hunter,….Chelsea
976,….Julie Dupuis,….Chelsea
977,….Natasha Stobert….Chelsea
978,….Patty Chevalier Samm,….Chelsea
979,….Ray Folkins,….Chelsea
980,….Richard Gilker,….Chelsea
981,….James Duncan,….Clayton
982,….Andrea Bailey-tait,….Cornwall
983,….Carl Brida,….Cornwall
984,….cathy bourgon,….cornwall
985,….Craig Henry,….Cornwall
986,….Deborah Furniss,….Cornwall
987,….Garth Wigle,….Cornwall
988,….Geneviève Lajoie,….Cornwall
989,….Jane McLaren,….Cornwall
990,….Jenna Martineau,….Cornwall
991,….Joanne Filliol,….Cornwall
992,….Kathleen Hay,….Cornwall
993,….Mathieu Bruyere,….Cornwall
994,….Matthew Smith,….Cornwall
995,….Terry Quenneville,….Cornwall
996,….Carl Vaillancourt,….crysler
997,….Debra Kennette,….Crysler
998,….Bruce Bell,….Cumberland
999,….Craig McHugh,….Cumberland
1000,….Greg Morris,….cumberland
1001,….Hailey Bell,….Cumberland
1002,….Jacinthe Choquet,….Cumberland
1003,….Leslie Anne Patry,….Cumberland
1004,….Monique Garneau,….Cumberland
1005,….natalie tate,….cumberland
1006,….Janet Campbell,….Dunrobin
1007,….Lois Jacobs,….Dunrobin
1008,….Russel Long,….Dunrobin
1009,….Tara Sosnowski,….Elizabethtown
1010,….Andy Dalcourt,….Embrun
1011,….Celin Alexiuk,….Embrun
1012,….Eric Deschamps,….Embrun
1013,….Gregory Harper,….Embrun
1014,….Julie Wallace,….Embrun
1015,….Martine Quinn,….Embrun
1016,….Paul Roy,….Embrun
1017,….Rachelle Quinn,….Embrun
1018,….Richard Quinn,….Embrun
1019,….Pierre Denis,….Emburn
1020,….Bill Sheppard,….Gananoque
1021,….Pierre Doucette,….Gananoque
1022,….Roberta Abbott,….Gananoque
1023,….Steacy Kavaner,….Gananoque
GATINEAU
1024,….Alain Rollin
1025,….Alexander Schwab
1026,….Alexandre Farley
1027,….Allan Wilson
1028,….André Brissette
1029,….André Mollema
1030,….Andre Schutten
1031,….Anik Benoit
1032,….Anik Lacasse
1033,….Anne-Marie Chapman
1034,….Annick Lafontaine
1035,….Annick Nault
1036,….Annie Cloutier
1037,….Annie Paradis
1038,….Anthony Rose
1039,….Benoit Gagnon
1040,….Benoit Genest
1041,….Benoit Guérette
1042,….Bernard Audy
1043,….Blair Mehan
1044,….Brian Sharpe
1045,….Bruno Lafreniere
1046,….Candida Cianci
1047,….Chantal Larocque
1048,….chantal potvin
1049,….Chantale Lussier-Ley
1050,….Charles Vigneault
1051,….Christopher Saunders
1052,….Claude Tremblay
1053,….Dan Mayer
1054,….Danika Lavallee
1055,….David Georgieff
1056,….David Sewell
1057,….Debbie Joanisse
1058,….Debra Ferderber
1059,….Diane Ouellette
1060,….Dominique Babin
1061,….Elizabeth Sousa
1062,….Eric Silins
1063,….Fannie Bisson
1064,….Francoise Bessette
1065,….Gabrielle Drouin
1066,….Genevieve Sabourin
1067,….Gilles Thériault
1068,….Guylaine Proulx
1069,….Hélène Belleau
1070,….Helene Tremblay-Allen
1071,….isabelle deslandes
1072,….Isabelle Léger
1073,….Isabelle Phaneuf
1074,….Jacob Roberts
1075,….Jaime McGillivray
1076,….james buell
1077,….Jean Guenette
1078,….Jeffrey Muller
1079,….Jennifer Smith
1080,….Jinny Williamson
1081,….Johanne Branchaud
1082,….Johanne Di Tomasso
1083,….Josée Lafontaine
1084,….Julie Fortin
1085,….Julie Myers
1086,….Julie Piche
1087,….Julie-Anne Macdonald
1088,….Karine Lamarre
1089,….Kate Smith
1090,….Kent Hugh
1091,….Kevin Quesnel
1092,….Kim Paine
1093,….Laurent Bellard
1094,….Leisa McGillivray
1095,….Loïc Le Bihan
1096,….Louis Simon
1097,….Lucie Lalonde
1098,….Lynn Melancon
1099,….magali couture
1100,….Manon Lachance
1101,….Marc Allaire
1102,….Marc Martin
1103,….Marie-Eve Bergevin-Scott
1104,….Mark Ellison
1105,….Mark Schindel
1106,….Martin Yshikawa
1107,….Martine Dupuis
1108,….martine pellerin
1109,….Mélanie Lauzon
1110,….Mélanie Vivier
1111,….Michel Brown
1112,….Michel Lapointe
1113,….Michelle Aubie
1114,….Miguel Gagnon
1115,….Mikaly Gagnon
1116,….nancy jane russell
1117,….Nancy Jean
1118,….Natacha Mustaikis
1119,….Nathalie Brunet
1120,….Nell van Walsum
1121,….Noel Paine
1122,….Patrice Forget
1123,….Patrice Gaudreault
1124,….patricia le bihan
1125,….Paul Gould
1126,….Peter Balogh
1127,….Philippe Boutin
1128,….Philippe Jr Ngassam
1129,….Pier Enright
1130,….Raymond Desjardins
1131,….Raymonde D'Amour
1132,….Raynald Côté
1133,….Rejean Lacroix
1134,….Sandra Roberts
1135,….Simon Larouche
1136,….Sonia Béland
1137,….Stéphane Siegrist
1138,….Stéphanie Dicaire
1139,….Suzanne Ramsay
1140,….Sylvain Marier
1141,….tayeb mesbah
1142,….Thomas Cort
1143,….Valerie Parent
1144,….Veronique Tremblay
1145,….vincent bolduc
1146,….Virginie Corneau
1147,….Wayne Saunders
1148,….Yves Phaneuf
1149,….Zoë Couture
END OF GATINEAU
1150,….Catherine Clifford,….Gloucester
1151,….Chantal Dupuis,….Gloucester
1152,….Christine Newman Coulson,….Gloucester
1153,….David Sinclair,….Gloucester
1154,….Jeannie LeBlanc,….Gloucester
1155,….Roberta Battisti-Valle,….Gloucester
1156,….Ryan Luck,….Gloucester
1157,….Samuel Valle,….Gloucester
1158,….Virginia Mofford,….Gloucester
1159,….Barbra Draper,….Gracefield
1160,….An Vo,….Greely
1161,….Angele Vanderlaan,….Greely
1162,….Anthony Wielemaker,….Greely
1163,….Debbie McLeod,….Greely
1164,….Jennifer Frechette,….Greely
1165,….Joseph Boucher,….Greely
1166,….Lana Pieroway,….Greely
1167,….Linda Corke,….Greely
1168,….paula christiansen,….Greely
1169,….Ricky Grisel,….Greely
1170,….Sean Burrows,….Greely
1171,….Sonya Thornley,….Greely
1172,….Sarah Waddell,….Hammond
1173,….Lorne Thomas,….Hawkesbury
1174,….Karen Keeler,….Iroquois
1175,….Keira Cameron,….Iroquois
KANATA
1176,….Adrian Salt
1177,….Aimée Riggs-Willey
1178,….Al Doyle
1179,….Alan Doody
1180,….Alexei Novikov
1181,….Allyssia Villeneuve
1182,….Alyson Maynard
1183,….Anne Collis
1184,….Ben Schmidt
1185,….Bernie Armour
1186,….Bill Gilchrist
1187,….Billy Seaman
1188,….Bobbie Nevin
1189,….Brian Smith
1190,….Carleen Hicks
1191,….Carmen Davidson
1192,….Caron Fitzpatrick
1193,….Cecilia Jorgenson
1194,….Chantal Kaye
1195,….Chris McCallum
1196,….Cindy Seaman
1197,….Colleen Gilchrist
1198,….Colleen Kilty
1199,….Dan Kelly
1200,….David Bohn
1201,….Debbie Olive
1202,….Deby Knowlton
1203,….Derek Andersen
1204,….Deryl Rasquinha
1205,….Don Lonie
1206,….Erin Waterfall
1207,….Greg Dow
1208,….Harvey Chatterton
1209,….Ian Marrs
1210,….James Fairlie
1211,….Jan Donak
1212,….Janet Smith
1213,….Jeff Zhao
1214,….Jennifer Barr
1215,….Jennifer Upson
1216,….Jim Lambley
1217,….Joan McFaul
1218,….Joshua Tolmie
1219,….Karen Hanna
1220,….Karen Ramsay
1221,….Karen Zerr
1222,….Kathleen Westbury
1223,….Keith Aguinaga
1224,….Kelly abb Davis
1225,….Kenneth Klassen
1226,….Kevin Rankin
1227,….Kimberley Bohn
1228,….Kimberley Robinson
1229,….Kindell Tolmie
1230,….Lanny Underhill
1231,….Leanne Pelley
1232,….Lee-Anne Clare
1233,….Loretta Masaro
1234,….Luisa De Amicis
1235,….Mark Calder
1236,….Martine Dumas
1237,….Mary Anne Jackson-Hughes
1238,….Michel Fleury
1239,….Michelle Calder
1240,….Nancy Dow
1241,….Naomi Morbey
1242,….Natalie Reid-Matte
1243,….Natasha Riddiford
1244,….Neil Marshall
1245,….neil Maxwell
1246,….Pamela Ford
1247,….Paul Sabourin
1248,….Peter Clark
1249,….Phil Blanchfield
1250,….Pierrette McCartney
1251,….Raymond Wong
1252,….Rebecca Campbell
1253,….Rick Wynen
1254,….Ron Pumphrey
1255,….Sarah Currie
1256,….Sasha Richards
1257,….Shannon Moore
1258,….Sharon Fine
1259,….Sheri Cayouette
1260,….Sherri Nevin
1261,….Sridhar Erukulla
1262,….Susan Brimmell
1263,….Susan Korporal
1264,….Tanis Roadhouse
1265,….Terri Scott
1266,….Theresa Marshall
1267,….Tom Auger
1268,….Tracey Dunfield
1269,….Wei Zhou
1270,….William Greenfield
1271,….William Jorgenson
1272,….Yvonne Relf
END OF KANATA
1273,….Alexandra Pontbriand,….Kemptville
1274,….Alicia Hutton,….Kemptville
1275,….Dave Springer,….Kemptville
1276,….David Hutton,….Kemptville
1277,….Fiona Tracey,….Kemptville
1278,….James Pede,….Kemptville
1279,….Joanne Desormeaux,….Kemptville
1280,….Kahy-ann Gibson,….Kemptville
1281,….Michelle Crook,….Kemptville
1282,….Roxanne Harrington,….Kemptville
1283,….Stephanie Rose,….Kemptville
1284,….Teena Dacey,….Kemptville
1285,….Tricia McRae,….Kemptville
1286,….Ron Stadnyk,….Kinburn
1287,….Sean McTernan,….Kinburn
1288,….Dan Keaney,….Lanark
1289,….Debbie Keaney,….Lanark
1290,….Scott Shaver,….Lanark
1291,….Lisa Paradis,….Limoges
1292,….Shanna Delorme,….Limoges
1293,….Matthew Dyer,….Luskville
1294,….Nicholas Sturgeon,….Luskville
1295,….Brian Carpenter,….Maberly
1296,….Dawn Kennedy,….Maitland
1297,….Scott Clucas,….Maitland
1298,….Cat Oakley,….Manotick
1299,….Dennis Blinn,….Manotick
1300,….Fiona Valliere,….Manotick
1301,….Marie Norris,….Manotick
1302,….Mark Seaman,….Manotick
1303,….Nick MacDonald,….Manotick
1304,….Tracey Major,….Manotick
1305,….Heather Purdy,….Martintown
1306,….Alysun Lillico,….Masham
1307,….Jennifer Selwyn,….Masham
1308,….Bruce Bourgeault,….Metcalfe
1309,….Craig Killin,….Metcalfe
1310,….Diane Coupal,….Metcalfe
1311,….Erika Morris,….Metcalfe
1312,….Fran Gaudet,….Metcalfe
1313,….Kazimierz Krzyzanowski,….Metcalfe
1314,….Peter Klein,….Metcalfe
1315,….Scott Robertson,….Metcalfe
1316,….doug wilson,….Morrisburg
1317,….Kasey Bennett,….Morrisburg
1318,….shari keyes,….Morrisburg
1319,….Adam Sulis,….Mountain
1320,….Raymond Sherrer,….Mountain
1321,….ada gorrie,….Munster
1322,….Angela Walsh,….Navan
1323,….Carole Charlebois,….Navan
1324,….Kathy Goff,….Navan
NEPEAN
1325,….Aaron Doering
1326,….Abrinna Doering
1327,….Alexei Pogrebtsov
1328,….Amy Fan
1329,….Amy Kutyma
1330,….Andrea McDonald
1331,….Andrew Johnston
1332,….angad sandhu
1333,….Bernadette Bernard
1334,….Caroline Bachynski
1335,….Caroline Bredeson
1336,….Carolyn Perkins
1337,….Chantelle Woods
1338,….Chris Bredeson
1339,….Chris Fitzgerald
1340,….Christopher Hill
1341,….Claudio Sicoli
1342,….Colleen Bird
1343,….Corrina Morehouse
1344,….Cynthia Field-Rose
1345,….Dan Lacasse
1346,….Darryl Sitland
1347,….David Reid
1348,….David Ross
1349,….Diane Ferguson
1350,….Dionne Wilson
1351,….Donna McKibbon
1352,….Doug Simpson
1353,….Erik Youngson
1354,….Face Wallace
1355,….Fallon Carrier
1356,….Gary Bazdell
1357,….Gary Guymer
1358,….Gary Miles
1359,….Gary Thomas
1360,….George Heron
1361,….Gerry Blathwayt
1362,….Hieu Nguyen
1363,….Jack Kwan
1364,….Jane Hext
1365,….Janice Richard
1366,….Jason Feist
1367,….Jennifer McDonell
1368,….Jennilee Gavina
1369,….Jessica McKittrick
1370,….Joanie Ouellette
1371,….Jo-Anne Janigan
1372,….John Hall
1373,….Joseph Emas
1374,….Judy Tubman-Reid
1375,….Julie White
1376,….Karleen Heer
1377,….Kathryn Hill
1378,….Katie Squires
1379,….Kelly MacGregor
1380,….Kevin LaRoche
1381,….Laura Clark
1382,….Laura McLellan
1383,….Leslie Doering
1384,….Leslie Rodgers
1385,….Lillian Hayward
1386,….Linda Billyard
1387,….Linda Koenders
1388,….Maria Marcantonio
1389,….Martin Glennon
1390,….martin jobin
1391,….Martyn Hodgson
1392,….Maureen Corrigan
1393,….Melanie White
1394,….Mike Horne
1395,….Miranda Dulmage
1396,….M-J Malcolm
1397,….Patrick Murnaghan
1398,….Patti-Lynn Dougan
1399,….Paul Bush
1400,….Peter Bayne
1401,….Ramon Lashley
1402,….Renee Leahy
1403,….Richard Thomas
1404,….Roslyn Dacey
1405,….Ruth Glenwright
1406,….Ryan Ellement
1407,….Ryan Holmes
1408,….Ryan Squires
1409,….Sandra Lett
1410,….Shannon Matheson
1411,….Shelley Doering
1412,….Sheyla Dussault
1413,….Stephanie Dunne
1414,….Tania Falls
1415,….Tannia Shamas
1416,….Tim Sandwell
1417,….Tom Blackwell
1418,….tony blake
1419,….Tracy Murray
1420,….Vance White
END OF NEPEAN
1421,….Joanne McFall Smith,….North Gower
1422,….Keith Colwell,….North Gower
1423,….Natalie Smith,….North Gower
ORLEANS
1424,….Ab Ettinger
1425,….adam menzies
1426,….Alain Brulé
1427,….Alexandra Gaudes
1428,….Anita Taylor
1429,….Anke Berndt
1430,….Anne McCarthy
1431,….Annie Elizabeth Gauthier
1432,….Barry Lightowlers
1433,….Benoit Lecuyer
1434,….Brent Kelly
1435,….Brent Smyth
1436,….Brian Wiens
1437,….Camille Poirier
1438,….Carmen Saumure
1439,….Carole Gaudes
1440,….Casey Martin
1441,….Charles Momy
1442,….Charles Sincennes
1443,….Cheryl Glazier
1444,….Chris Morrison
1445,….Christina Michaud
1446,….Christine Baird
1447,….CIndy Ettinger
1448,….Colleen Boicey
1449,….Cynthia Taylor
1450,….Daniel Morency
1451,….Danielle Poisson
1452,….Dave King
1453,….David Cameron
1454,….David Leeder
1455,….David Tischhauser
1456,….David Young
1457,….Deborah Baldwin
1458,….Diane Gauthier
1459,….Diane Levesque
1460,….Don Lavictoire
1461,….Eann Hodges
1462,….Edith Chartrand
1463,….Elise Grenier
1464,….Eric Christensen
1465,….Ernie Yip
1466,….Frank Barrett
1467,….Fred Saikaly
1468,….Glenda Davies
1469,….Helene Boyer
1470,….Hinesh Chauhan
1471,….James Waite
1472,….Jason Roberts
1473,….Jean Lavictoire
1474,….Jean-Noel Gilbert
1475,….Jean-Pierre Contant
1476,….Jeff Danforth
1477,….Jennifer Caldbick
1478,….Jennifer Chauhan
1479,….Jennifer Schenkel
1480,….Jo Nuttall
1481,….Joanne Henry
1482,….Jo-Anne Matheson
1483,….Josee Pothier
1484,….Judy Thomson
1485,….Karen Minna
1486,….Kathleen Danforth
1487,….Kathryn McNicoll
1488,….Kathy Wiens
1489,….Kevin Beaudette
1490,….Kevin Piccott
1491,….Kristina Perrier
1492,….Kristy Singleton
1493,….Laura Regnier
1494,….Linda LeBlanc
1495,….Lissa Allaire
1496,….Lois Simms-Baldwin
1497,….Lucie Mainguy
1498,….Lyne Orser
1499,….Lynn Galarneau
1500,….Malcolm Parsons
1501,….Marc-Andre Blanke
1502,….Marie-Josee Homsy
1503,….Marie-Josee Legault
1504,….Marieve Lavigne
1505,….Marshall Clark
1506,….Max LeBreton
1507,….Melanie Trumpower
1508,….Michael Brown
1509,….Michelle Cote
1510,….Michelle Momy
1511,….Michelle Ward
1512,….Miranda Guiney
1513,….Moira Carriere
1514,….Nadine Tischhauser
1515,….Nancy Camacho
1516,….Nancy Neilson
1517,….Nancy Roberge
1518,….Nathalie Gougeon
1519,….Nathan Lightowlers
1520,….Nicole Boyer
1521,….Paul Holmes
1522,….Paul Menard
1523,….Peter Belair
1524,….Priya Chopra
1525,….Rachel Taylor
1526,….Ralph Hodgins
1527,….Richard Loewen
1528,….Roanna Casey
1529,….Robert Sauve
1530,….Russ Kajganich
1531,….Russ Stewart
1532,….Sandra Cook
1533,….Sandra Craig-Browne
1534,….Sandy Clark
1535,….Sandy Moger
1536,….Scot Bryant
1537,….Serena McCauley
1538,….Serge Arseneault
1539,….Shawnda Parsons
1540,….Shayne Chamberlain
1541,….Sonia Laneuville
1542,….Sophie Hollingsworth
1543,….Stacey Grenier
1544,….Stan Baldwin
1545,….Stephane Montpetit
1546,….Stephanie Ducharme
1547,….Steve Lamontagne
1548,….Stuart Taylor
1549,….Susan Poisson
1550,….Tanja Scharf
1551,….Tara Redmond
1552,….Teresa Janz
1553,….Terry Brown
1554,….Terry Flynn
1555,….Theresa Momy
1556,….Todd Sloan
1557,….Tony Paoletti
1558,….Vivianne Gaudet
1559,….William Baldwin
1560,….william mcgowan
1561,….Yvon Gagnier
END OF ORLEANS
1562,….Denise Hudson,….Osgoode
1563,….Kevin Wylie,….Osgoode
1564,….Nancy Bleses,….Osgoode
1565,….Shaun Dunne,….Oxford Mills
1566,….Garry Hartlin,….Pembroke
1567,….Jennifer Tu,….Pembroke
1568,….john menzies,….Pembroke
1569,….Kathy Herault,….Pembroke
1570,….Leanne Van Bavel,….Pembroke
1571,….Michelle Moir,….Pembroke
1572,….Rene Sauve,….Pembroke
1573,….Rocky Peplinski,….Pembroke
1574,….Steven McCorkle,….Pembroke
1575,….Tammy Peplinski,….Pembroke
1576,….Vay Tu,….Pembroke
1577,….Sue Matte,….Perth
1578,….Susan Bulley,….Perth
1579,….Francis Gillespie,….Perth Road Village
See also: (2010 Army Run results for Ottawa & area runners); (2009 Army Run results)
.
.
Sept. 6, 2010. For the half-marathon race, the following local runners have registered with the Running Room for the Sept. 19th Canada Army Run in Ottawa. The list is sorted by community (Ottawa first) and then by first name.
Part A. Ottawa
Part B. Other Communities (e.g., Kanata, Nepean, Gatineau)
A. Ottawa
1…Adam Martin
2…Adriana Ducic
3…Adrien Barrieau
4…Adwin Gallant
5…Aideen Smith
6…Aili Ignacy
7…Alain Vermette
8…Alan Born
9…Alan Mulawyshyn
10…Alan Yeadon
11…Alecks Zarama
12…Alex Peach
13…Alexa Hutchinson
14…Alexis Tervo
15…Alia Waterfall
16…Alice Adamo
17…Alison Cunningham
18…Alison McCray
19…Alison Mulawyshyn
20…Alison Young
21…Allan Gauci
22…Allison Seymour
23…Amanda Brown
24…Amanda Haddad
25…Amanda Halladay
26…Amanda Main
27…Amanda Mulawyshyn
28…Amanda Pavlovic
29…Amber Steeves
30…Amelie Armstrong
31…Amy Donaghey
32…Amy Johnson
33…Amy Rose
34…André François Giroux
35…Andre Morency
36…Andre Rancourt
37…Andrea Matthews
38…Andrea Wenham
39…Andrew Ha
40…Andrew Hawley
41…Andrew Kelly
42…Andrew Matwick
43…Andrew Mendes
44…Andrew Ng
45…Andrew Norgaard
46…Andrew Postma
47…andrew staples
48…Andrew Young
49…Andy Acelvari
50…Angela Lamb
51…Angela Romany
52…Angela Walter
53…Anika Clark
54…Anita Barewal
55…Anita Choquette
56…Anita Portier
57…Anka Crowe
58…Ann Lanthier
59…Ann MacDonald
60…Anna Aylett
61…Anna Dabros
62…Anna Wilkinson
63…Anna-Maria Frescura
64…Anne Finn
65…Anthony Robertson
66…Antonia Marrs
67…Ashleigh Craig
68…Ashley Allott
69…Ashley Harrington
70…Audra Swinton
71…Audrey Corsi Caya
72…B Schmidt
73…Barbara Burkhard
74…Barbara Chisholm
75…Barbara Mingie
76…Barry Walker
77…Beate Pradel
78…Ben-Zion Caspi
79…Bernard Charlebois
80…Berny Gordon
81…Betty Bulman
82…Beverly Clarkson
83…Bhaskar Gopalan
84…Bill McEachern
85…Billy Wilson
86…Bob McGillivray
87…Bonnie Stewart
88…Brad Mackay
89…Brad Wood
90…Brandon McArthur
91…Breanne Merklinger
92…Brent Miller
93…Brian Davis
94…Brian O'Higgins
95…Brian Ray
96…Brian Senecal
97…Brian Storosko
98…Brian Tweedie
99…Brigitte Jackstien
100…Brittany Hinds
101…Bruce McLaurin
102…Bruce Sheppard
103…Bryan Hofmeister
104…Cal Mitchell
105…Cameron Fraser
106…Candice Therien
107…Carly Lachance
108…Carmelle Sullivan
109…Carmen Vierula
110…Catherine Caron
111…Catherine Pound
112…Catherine Wallace
113…Cathy Green
114…Cecilia Ho
115…Chad Scarborough
116…Chad Wilson
117…Chantal Campbell
118…Chantal Pilon
119…Chantelle Lalonde
120…Charlene Mathias
121…Charlene Ruberry
122…Charlotte Newton
123…Cherrie Meloche
124…Cheryl Kardish-Levitan
125…Cheryl McIntyre
126…Cheryl Shore
127…Chris Bowen
128…Chris Bright
129…Chris Brown
130…Chris Dannehl
131…Chris Durham-Valentino
132…Chris Morris
133…Chris Rath
134…Chris Spiteri
135…Chris Weicker
136…Chris Woodcock
137…Christian Cattan
138…Christie Bitar
139…Christina Jensen
140…Christina Mullally
141…Christine Geraghty
142…Christine Hodge
143…Christine Meldrum
144…Christine Pratley-Moore
145…Christine Rath
146…Christine Smith
147…Christine Vaillancourt
148…Christopher Kelly
149…Christopher Mallette
150…Cindy Lim
151…Cindy Robinson
152…Clare MacRae
153…Claude Béland
154…Claude Papineau
155…Claudia Brown
156…Claudia Veas
157…Clyde MacLellan
158…Colette Nault
159…Colin Daniel
160…Colleen Bigelow
161…Colleen Crane
162…Connie Acelvari
163…Constance Craig
164…Coreen Corcoran
165…Corri Barr
166…Cory Kwasny
167…Courtenay Beauregard
168…Craig Blair
169…Curtis McGrath
170…Cynthia Elliott
171…Dan Moore
172…Dana Derousie
173…Dana Wall
174…Danene Whiting
175…Daniel Barnes
176…Daniel Munro
177…Daniel Pharand
178…Daniel Pohl
179…Danielle Leguard-White
180…Dara Hakimzadeh
181…Daria Strachan
182…Darlene Joyce
183…Darlene Whiting
184…Darrell Bridge
185…Dave Goods
186…Dave Johnston
187…Dave Marcotte
188…Dave Poff
189…Dave Silvester
190…Dave Yurach
191…David Aaltonen
192…David Delaney
193…David Fobert
194…David Gerrard
195…David Gregory
196…David Kirk
197…David Lemieux
198…David Liimatainen
199…David Murray
200…David Stewart
201…David Tischhauser
202…David Wright
203…Dawn Bruyere
204…Dawn Fallis
205…Dawn Montgomery
206…Dawn More
207…Dean Justus
208…Deanna Murray
209…Deb Hogan
210…Debby Duford
211…Deborah Kacew
212…Deborah Newhook
213…Denis Carriere
214…Denise Senecal
215…Denise Thibault
216…Dennis Bulman
217…Derek Love
218…Derek Spriet
219…Derrick Ward
220…Diana Harrison
221…Diane Boisvert
222…DJ Butcher
223…Djordje Zutkovic
224…Dominique Au-Yeung
225…Don Andersen
226…Don Cooper
227…Don Orr
228…Dona Hill
229…Dona Pino
230…Donald Waldock
231…Donna Justus
232…Donna Manweiler
233…Donna Moffatt
234…Doreen Lipovski
235…Doris McLean
236…Dorothy Kitchen
237…Dot Harvey
238…Douglas Cooper
239…Duaine Simms
240…Dung Bui
241…Edie Knight
242…Edith Anderson
243…Edith Bostwick
244…Edith Duarte
245…Edith Grienti
246…Edmund Thomas
247…Eileen Tosky-McKinnon
248…Eira Macdonell
249…Elaine Rufiange
250…Eleanor Thomas
251…Eleonora Karabatic
252…Elisabeth Fowler
253…Elizabeth Jones
254…Elizabeth Millaire
255…Elle Bouliane
256…Ellen Carter
257…Ellen O'Halloran
258…Emilee Lloyd-Krusky
259…Emilie Brouzes
260…Émilie Comtois-Rousseau
261…Emily Gusba
262…Emily MacLean
263…Emily Mantha
264…Emmanuelle Arnould-Lalonde
265…Ena Malvern
266…Enya Hamel
267…Eric Arnold
268…Erin Wall
269…Erin White
270…Esther Seto
271…Eva Burnett
272…Evamarie Weicker
273…Evan May
274…Evelyne Gionet
275…Fannie Gouault
276…Felice Pleet
277…Fiona Grant
278…Frances Furmankiewicz
279…Francine Millen
280…Francois Dumaine
281…Francois Pineau
282…Francoise Mulligan
283…Frank D'Angelo
284…Franz Kropp
285…Fuen Leal-Santiago
286…Gabe Batstone
287…Gabriel Castro
288…Gabriela Balajova
289…Gabriela Fonseca
290…Gail Baker-Gregory
291…Gary Bazdell
292…Gary Guymer
293…Gary Wilkes
294…Gavin Lemoine
295…Geb Marett
296…Geneva Collier
297…Gennifer Stainforth
298…Geof Dudding
299…Geoff Cooper
300…Geoff Dunkley
301…George Ferrier
302…Gerald Nigra
303…Gerry Doucette
304…Gilles St-Pierre
305…Gillian Andersen
306…Ginette Lalonde-Kontio
307…Ginny Strachan
308…Glen Chiasson
309…Golmain Percy
310…Gord Baldwin
311…Gord Coulson
312…Graham Thatcher
313…Graig Halpin
314…Grant Stewart
315…Graziella Panuccio
316…Greg Godsell
317…Greg Morris
318…Greta Chase
319…Greta Smith
320…Gurminder Singh
321…Guy Giguere
322…Hali Smith
323…Harold Geller
324…Heather Baker
325…Heather Bigelow
326…Heather Hopkins
327…Heather Paulusse
328…Heather Phillips
329…Heather Watts
330…Heather Williams
331…Heidi Schissel
332…Helen Yemensky
333…Héléne Lepine
334…Holly Johnson
335…Hong Pang
336…Ian Beausoleil-Morrison
337…Ian Graham
338…Ian MacVicar
339…Ian McNaughton
340…Ingrid Koenig
341…Irène Dionne
342…Irv Marucelj
343…Irvin Hill
344…Isabelle Deschenes
345…Jack Jensen
346…Jackie Kachuik
347…Jacqueline Thorne
348…Jade Sillick
349…Jaime Girard
350…James Fraser
351…James Godefroy
352…Jamie Hurst
353…Jane Gibson
354…Jane Maxwell
355…Jane Rooney
356…Jane Scott
357…Jane Spiteri
358…Jane Waterfall
359…Jane Weldon
360…Janet Cooper
361…Janet Curran
362…Janet Huffman
363…Janice Richard
364…Jared Broughton
365…Jasmine Brown
366…Jason Chouinard
367…Jason Frew
368…Jason Stewart
369…Jay Rached
370…Jay Shaw
371…Jayne Barlow
372…Jeff Hausmann
373…Jeff Waterfall
374…Jeffery Vanderploeg
375…Jeffrey Green
376…Jeffrey Muller
377…Jeffrey Reid
378…Jen Peirce
379…Jenelle Power
380…Jennea Grison
381…Jennifer Ajersch
382…Jennifer Baudin
383…Jennifer Bucknall
384…Jennifer Elliott
385…Jennifer Fraser
386…Jennifer Kaufman
387…Jennifer Leblanc
388…Jennifer Morris
389…Jessalynn Miller
390…Jessica Brown
391…Jessica Evans
392…Jessica Lanouette
393…Jessica McKittrick
394…Jessica Ouvrard
395…Jill Ainsworth
396…Jill Baker
397…Jill Dickinson
398…Jill Frook
399…Jim Carter
400…Jim Walsh
401…Jimmy Novak
402…Joann Garbig
403…Joanne Collins
404…Joanne Foley-Grimes
405…Joanne Fox
406…Joanne Merrett
407…JoAnne Schmid
408…Jocelyne Grandlouis
409…Jodi Ashton
410…Jody McKinnon
411…Joel Proulx
412…Joelle D'Aoust
413…Johanna Jennings
414…Johanne Bertrand
415…John Emard
416…John Manwaring
417…John Oliver
418…John Welsh
419…John-Paul Yaraskavitch
420…Jolene Harvey
421…Jolene Savoie
422…Jonathan Charbonneau
423…Jonathan Freedman
424…Jonathan Lemieux
425…Jonathan Woodman
426…Joni Ogawa
427…Josee Surprenant
428…Josette Day
429…Josh Bowen
430…Josh McKinnon
431…Joy Halverson
432…Julia Brothers
433…Julia De Ste Croix
434…Julia Johnston
435…Juliann Castell
436…Julie Burke
437…Julie Dale
438…Julie Farmer
439…Julie Laplante
440…Julie Lefebvre
441…Julie Rutberg
442…Justin Maheux
443…Justin McAtamney
444…Justin McKinnon
445…Kara Wheatley
446…Karen Burns
447…Karen Cook
448…Karen Dillon
449…Karen Genge
450…Karen Sauve
451…Karina Tuyen Hua
452…Karl St-Hilaire
453…Kate Corsten
454…Kate Kurys
455…Kate Sherwood
456…Kate Truglia
457…Katherine Ann Aldred
458…Katherine MacDonald
459…Katherine Richardson
460…Katherine Ryan
461…Kathleen Gifford
462…Kathleen Talarico
463…Kathryn Laflamme
464…Kathy Heney
465…Kathy Lewis
466…Kathy McGilvray
467…Kathy Rutledge
468…Katie Rutledge-Taylor
469…Kazutoshi NISHIZAWA
470…Keith Holman
471…Keith Johnson
472…Keith Mulligan
473…Keith Savage
474…Kelly Bell
475…Kelly Harrington
476…Kelly St-Jacques
477…Ken Hardage
478…Ken McNair
479…Ken Whiting
480…Kendall Miller
481…Kendra Kehoe
482…Kerri Cook
483…Kevin Hubich
484…Kevin Mercer
485…Kevin O'Brien
486…Kiley Thompson
487…Kim Benjamin
488…Kim Moir
489…Kim Shelp
490…Kimberley Low
491…Kimberley Salisbury
492…Krista MacDonald
493…Kristin Harrison
494…Kristina Jensen
495…Kristine Dempster
496…Kristine Simpson
497…Krysten Chase
498…Kyla Kelly
499…Kyle Miersma
500…Lalonde Martine
501…Lambros Pezoulas
502…Laura Cluney
503…Laura Smith
504…Laura Walker-Ng
505…Lauren Gamble
506…Laurent Roy
507…Laurie Gorman
508…Laurie Hardage
509…Lawrence Wong
510…Leah Beaudette
511…Lee Blue
512…Leigh Howe
513…Leona Emberson
514…Leslie McLean
515…Leslie-Anne Bailliu
516…Lia Eichele
517…Lian Bleckmann
518…Liliane Langevin
519…Linda Doyle
520…Lindsay Grace
521…Lindsay Wilson
522…Lisa Francis
523…Lisa Gibson
524…Lisa Grison
525…Lisa Hans
526…Lisa Headley
527…Lisa Hogan
528…Lisa Kawaguchi
529…Lise Perrier
530…Liz Van Dijk
531…Lori Blais
532…Lori Howell
533…Lorina Herbert
534…Lorna MCCREA
535…Lorretta Pinder
536…Louise Morin
537…Lucas Smith
538…Luis Ramirez
539…Luis Villegas
540…Lyndsey Hill
541…Lynn Diggins
542…Lynn McLewin
543…Lynn Nightingale
544…Lynn Sewell
545…Lynn Stewart
546…Lyse Langevin
547…Madeleine Gravel
548…Magali Johnson
549…Malcolm Williams
550…Mandy Smith
551…Maple Yap
552…marc cholette
553…Marc Patry
554…Marcel Mathurin
555…Marcella Ost
556…Marci Dearing
557…Margaret Davidson
558…Margaret Michalski
559…Marian McMahon
560…Marilyn Warren
561…Mario Villemaire
562…Mark Boyle
563…Mark Burchell
564…Mark McGill
565…Mark Whiting
566…Martin Dinan
567…Martin Sullivan
568…Mary Jean Price
569…Mary Kate Williamson
570…Mary Murphy
571…Mathew Pearson
572…Matt Parenteau
573…Matthew Chan
574…Matthew Eglin
575…Matthew Payne
576…Maureen Feagan
577…Mauricio Salgado
578…Meagan Morris
579…Meaghan Curran
580…Melanie Caulfield
581…Melinda Newman
582…Melissa Hammell
583…Melissa Hyde
584…Melissa Madill
585…Melissa White
586…Meredith Rocchi
587…Michael Arts
588…Michael Blois
589…Michael Corneau
590…Michael D'Asti
591…Michael Gilligan
592…Michael Hogan
593…Michael Lang
594…Michael Maranto
595…Michael McAuley
596…Michael McNeill
597…Michael Yetman
598…Michel Bouchard
599…Micheline Lalonde
600…Michelle Cicalo
601…Michelle Keough
602…Michelle McAuliffe
603…Michelle Saunders
604…Mike Chambers
605…Mike Cummings
606…Mike Elston
607…Mike Henry
608…Mike Hopper
609…Mike Kowal
610…Mike Lavery
611…Mike Mazerolle
612…Mike Peralta
613…Mike White
614…Monica Martinez
615…M-Rosa Mangone-Laboccetta
616…Murielle Cassidy
617…Nada Milosevic
618…Nadine Tischhauser
619…Nancy Amos
620…Nancy C Green
621…Nancy Colton
622…Nancy Dlouhy
623…Nancy Ferguson
624…Nancy Fowler
625…Nancy Green
626…Nancy Lau
627…Nardine Kwasny
628…Natalie Quimper
629…Natasha Carraro
630…Nathan Rotman
631…Nelson Lewis
632…
633…Nick Brunette-D'Souza
634…Nick Leswick
635…Nicky Saldanha
636…Nicole Byrne
637…Nicole Duguay
638…Nicole Mikhael
639…Nicole Slunder
640…Nina Franchina
641…Ondina Buttle
642…Paige Waldock
643…Pamela Biron
644…Pamela Ellison
645…Pascal Michaux
646…Pat Farley
647…Patricia Hachey
648…Patricia Wait
649…Patrick Byrne
650…Patrick Finn
651…Patrick Hebert
652…Patrick Marion
653…Patrick Miron
654…Patti Gamble
655…Paul dalgleish
656…Paul Denys
657…Paul MacNeil
658…Paul Malvern
659…Paul Masson
660…Paul Rosenberg
661…Paul Steeves
662…Paul Tessier
663…Paula Gherasim
664…Paula Piilonen
665…Peter Bayne
666…Peter Green
667…Peter Hammond
668…Peter Linkletter
669…Peter Mason
670…Peter Morel
671…Peter Winfield
672…Phillip Edwards
673…Prichya Sethchindapong
674…Quinn Murphy
675…Rachelle LeBlanc
676…Rajkumar Nagarajan
677…Ramy Abaskharoun
678…Rand Freeman
679…Randy Biberdorf
680…Randy McElligott
681…Ratnesh Singh
682…Raymond Boucher
683…Raymonde Langevin
684…Rebecca Dorval
685…Rebekah Swatton
686…Regan Mathurin
687…Remi Bourlon
688…Renata Manchak
689…Rene van Diepen
690…Renee Lamoureux
691…Rene-Louis Bourgeau
692…Reza Mashkoori
693…Rhiannon Andersen
694…Rhiannon Vogl
695…Rich Manery
696…Richard Bourassa
697…Richard Cheng
698…Richard Hanson
699…Richard Lewis
700…Richard Wall
701…Rick Dobson
702…Rick Emond
703…Rick O'Shaughnessy
704…Rob Criger
705…Rob Joseph
706…Robert Brown
707…Robert Christie
708…Robert Lee
709…Robert McGrath
710…Robert Moulie
711…Robin Sheedy
712…Rodney Ryan
713…Roger Langevin
714…Roger Pankhurst
715…Roger Zemek
716…Romeo Monette
717…Ron Armstrong
718…Ron Jande
719…Ron Mierau
720…Rose Parent
721…Russ Mirasty
722…Ruth Farey
723…RuthAnne Corley
724…Ryan Gillies
725…Ryan Kidman
726…S. Jack
727…Samantha 'Fatty' Hunter
728…Sandra Boyko
729…Sandra Chong
730…Sandra Moorman
731…Sanja Denic
732…Sara Mohr
733…Sara Tubman
734…Sarah Chalk
735…Sarah Dooley
736…Sarah Scott
737…Scott Beauchamp
738…Scott Colvin
739…Scott Doran
740…Scott Felman
741…Scott Gibson
742…Scott Townley
743…Sean Conrad
744…Sean McGrath
745…Sean O'Brien
746…Sébastien Taillefer
747…Sera Chiuchiarelli
748…Serge Richard
749…Shannon Renaud
750…Shari Goodfellow
751…Shari Nurse
752…Sharleen Conrad-Beatty
753…Sharon Chomyn
754…Sharon Ferdinand
755…Sharon Tobin
756…Shauna Graham
757…Shawn Murray
758…Shawn Rycroft
759…Sheila Barth
760…Sheila McIsaac
761…Shelley Chambers
762…She-Yang Lau-Chapdelaine
763…Simon Roussin
764…Sondra MacDonald
765…Sonia Gilroy
766…Sonia Granzer
767…Sophie Gravel
768…Soraya Moghadam
769…Stacey Brennan
770…Stèfan Tobin
771…Stephane Castonguay
772…Stephanie Brodeur
773…Stephanie Crisford
774…Stephanie Gauthier
775…Stephanie Gordon
776…Stephen LaPlante
777…Stephen Woroszczuk
778…Steve Astels
779…Steve Forrest
780…Steven Craft
781…Steven Turner
782…Stuart Laubstein
783…Susan Durrell
784…Susan Farrell
785…Susan Johnston
786…Susan Lacosta
787…Susan Mak Chin
788…Susan Richards
789…Suzanne Belzile
790…Suzanne MacLean
791…Sylvain Huard
792…Sylvie Rochon
793…Takuya Tazawa
794…Tammey Degrandpre
795…Tammy Frye
796…Tanya Frye
797…Tara Benjamin
798…Tarjinder Kainth
799…Terri Bolster
800…Terri-Lee Lefebvre
801…Terry Monger
802…Terry Muldoon
803…Terry Porter
804…Theresa Tam
805…Thomas Robinson
806…Tim Irwin
807…Timon LeDain
808…Tina Fallis
809…Tina Head
810…Tom Boudreau
811…Tom Brown
812…Tong Pang
813…Tonja Leach
814…Tony Kittridge
815…Tracie Royal
816…Tracy Corneau
817…Travis Smith
818…Trevor Johnson
819…Tricia Brown
820…Trina Bender
821…Tyler Dickerson
822…Val Lafranchise
823…Vanessa Brochet
824…Vanessa Buchanan
825…Vello Mijal
826…Vernon White
827…Veronique Boily
828…Vic Baker
829…Viola Caissy
830…Wade Smith
831…Walter Pamic
832…Walter Wood
833…Wayne Williams
834…Wendy Low
835…Will Simmering
836…Will Summers
837…Will Youngson
838…Willem Stevens
839…William Chisholm
840…William Morley
841…Winter Fedyk
842…Yan Zawisza
843…Yandu Oppacher
844…Yolande Simoneau
845…Zach McKeown
B. Other Communities
846…Terry Koronewski……..Alexandria
847…Ashley Page……..Almonte
848…Christina Kealey……..Almonte
849…Jenny Sheffield……..Almonte
850…Judi Sutherland……..Almonte
851…Linda Berkloo……..almonte
852…Tanya Yuill……..Almonte
853…Bette-Anne Dodge……..Arnprior
854…Constance Palubiskie……..Arnprior
855…Erin Tighe……..Ashton
856…Angela Hartley……..Athens
857…Christina Ward……..Athens
858…Heather Johnston……..Athens
859…Kevin Hartley……..Athens
860…Barbara Sweeney……..Aylmer
861…Chelsea Honeyman……..Aylmer
862…David Michaud……..Aylmer
863…Natalie Frodsham……..Beachburg
864…Carol-Anne McInnes……..Belleville
865…Craig McInnes……..Belleville
866…Edward Kooistra……..Belleville
867…Norma Barrett……..Belleville
868…Rhonda Cassibo……..Belleville
869…Christine Lalonde……..Bourget
870…Luc Lalonde……..Bourget
871…Pierre Lacasse……..Bourget
872…Kylie Howison……..Brockville
873…Tim Audet……..Brockville
874…Richard Bisson……..Cantley
875…Bonnie Levesque……..Carleton Place
876…Jennifer Blackburn……..Carleton Place
877…John Graham……..Carleton Place
878…Leanna Knox……..Carleton Place
879…Roger Kinsman……..Carleton Place
880…Ron Romain……..Carleton Place
881…Tom Kemp……..Carleton Place
882…Anna Li……..Carp
883…Elysa Esposito……..Carp
884…Gerard Rumleskie……..Carp
885…Hans Buser……..Carp
886…Ileana Tierney……..Carp
887…Lana Reid……..Carp
888…Peter Parkhill……..Carp
889…Raina Ho……..Carp
890…Rob Gaudet……..Carp
891…Shona Daniels……..Carp
892…Bob Sweetlove……..casselman
893…Mary Sweetlove……..casselman
894…Andy Best……..Chalk River
895…Angela Nuelle……..Chelsea
896…Ariane Brunet……..Chelsea
897…Benoit Perry……..Chelsea
898…Guillaume D'aoust……..Chelsea
899…Ian Hunter……..Chelsea
900…Jeff Bardsley……..Chelsea
901…Murielle Brazeau……..Chelsea
902…Raymond Brunet……..Chelsea
903…Sophie Brunet……..Chelsea
904…Yvan Dion……..Chelsea
905…Cathleen Bourret……..Chesterville
906…Bruce Oattes……..Cobden
907…Carole Buxcey……..Cobden
908…Chris Hornell……..Cobourg
909…Abigail Fontaine……..Cornwall
910…Cathy Richer……..Cornwall
911…Garth Wigle……..Cornwall
912…Joanne Filliol……..Cornwall
913…John St. Marseille……..Cornwall
914…Kathleen Hay……..Cornwall
915…Laurie Parisien……..Cornwall
916…Marc Besner……..Cornwall
917…Nancy Kelly……..Cornwall
918…Norman Marcotte……..Cornwall
919…Scott Heath……..cornwall
920…Stacie King……..Cornwall
921…Terry Quenneville……..Cornwall
922…Jane McLaren……..Cornwall,
923…John Speirs……..Deep River
924…Robin Engel……..Dundas
925…Timothy Engel……..Dundas
926…Christine Andrus……..Dunrobin
927…Gordon Colquhoun……..Dunrobin
928…Janet Campbell……..Dunrobin
929…Pamela Colquhoun……..Dunrobin
930…Alexandrea Watters……..Elgin
931…David McCulloch……..Embrun
932…Eric Deschamps……..Embrun
933…Robert Lindsay……..Embrun
934…Stéphane Gougeon……..Embrun
935…Sylvie Beauchamp……..Embrun
936…Richard Kellett……..Farnham
937…Jay Buhr……..Finch
938…Glenda O'Rourke……..Fitzroy Harbour
939…Jessica Craig……..Fitzroy Harbour
940…Denise Roy……..Fournier
941…Pierre Doucette……..Gananoque
942…Steacy Kavaner……..Gananoque
943…Alexandre Boudreault……..Gatineau
944…Alexandria Wilson……..Gatineau
945…Allan Wilson……..Gatineau
946…Anne-Marie Chapman……..Gatineau
947…Anne-Marie Regimbal……..Gatineau
948…Augusto Gamero……..Gatineau
949…Benoit Gagnon……..Gatineau
950…Bernard Audy……..Gatineau
951…Brenda Cox……..Gatineau
952…Carolyne Dube……..Gatineau
953…Céline Couture……..Gatineau
954…Chad Levac……..Gatineau
955…Chantale Lussier-Ley……..Gatineau
956…Christian Bourgeois……..Gatineau
957…Cristiano Rezende……..Gatineau
958…Dani Grandmaître……..Gatineau
959…Darya Shapka……..Gatineau
960…Dominique Kane……..Gatineau
961…Eric Silins……..Gatineau
962…François Laferrière……..Gatineau
963…Frédéric Thibault-Chabot……..Gatineau
964…Gilly Griffin……..Gatineau
965…Graham Wilson……..Gatineau
966…Greg Stainton……..Gatineau
967…Guy Corneau……..Gatineau
968…Guy Desjardins……..Gatineau
969…Hannah Juneau……..Gatineau
970…Hélène Belleau……..Gatineau
971…Isabelle Moses……..Gatineau
972…Isabelle Teolis……..Gatineau
973…Jean-Francois Pouliotte……..Gatineau
974…Jean-Philippe Dumont……..Gatineau
975…Jinny Williamson……..Gatineau
976…Jonathan Gilbert……..Gatineau
977…Josee Labonte……..Gatineau
978…Julie Demers……..Gatineau
979…Julie Piche……..Gatineau
980…Karine Leblond……..Gatineau
981…Katie Webster……..Gatineau
982…Kyle Hunter……..Gatineau
983…Lalonde Lucie……..Gatineau
984…Leisa McGillivray……..Gatineau
985…Lissa Comtois-Silins……..Gatineau
986…Louis Christophe Laurence……..Gatineau
987…Louis Simon……..Gatineau
988…Louise Boudreault……..Gatineau
989…Louise Fortier……..Gatineau
990…Mabel Wapachee……..Gatineau
991…Magali Couture……..Gatineau
992…Manon Damboise……..Gatineau
993…Manon Laliberté……..Gatineau
994…Marc André Nault……..Gatineau
995…Marc-Etienne Lesieur……..Gatineau
996…Mark Ellison……..Gatineau
997…Martin Labelle……..Gatineau
998…Martin Larose……..Gatineau
999…Michel Mercier……..Gatineau
1000…Michele Simpson……..Gatineau
1001…Mika Raja……..Gatineau
1002…Mikaly Gagnon……..Gatineau
1003…Nancy Jean……..Gatineau
1004…Natalie Brun del Re……..Gatineau
1005…Nathalie Brunet……..Gatineau
1006…Noel Paine……..Gatineau
1007…Pascal Tremblay……..Gatineau
1008…Patty Soles……..Gatineau
1009…Paul Gould……..Gatineau
1010…Philippe Houle……..Gatineau
1011…Pierre Villeneuve……..Gatineau
1012…Ray Burke……..Gatineau
1013…Raymond Desjardins……..Gatineau
1014…Réjean Lacroix……..Gatineau
1015…Robert Chassé……..Gatineau
1016…Sandra Roberts……..Gatineau
1017…Sanjay Vachali……..Gatineau
1018…Shelley Milton……..Gatineau
1019…Somphane Souksanh……..Gatineau
1020…Sonja Adcock……..Gatineau
1021…Sophie Caron……..Gatineau
1022…Stephane Boudrias……..Gatineau
1023…Stéphane Siegrist……..Gatineau
1024…Stéphanie Séguin……..Gatineau
1025…Steves Tousignant……..Gatineau
1026…Susie Simard……..Gatineau
1027…Suzanne Ramsay……..Gatineau
1028…Tanya O'Callaghan……..Gatineau
1029…Tayeb Mesbah……..Gatineau
1030…Terry SanCartier……..Gatineau
1031…Todd Keesey……..Gatineau
1032…Wayne Saunders……..Gatineau
1033…Zachary Healy……..Gatineau
1034…Belinda Coballe……..Gloucester
1035…Cam Wilson……..Gloucester
1036…Catherine Clifford……..Gloucester
1037…Cathy Gould……..Gloucester
1038…Danielle Thibeault……..Gloucester
1039…Dave Currie……..Gloucester
1040…David Clement……..Gloucester
1041…Gillian Todd-Messinger……..Gloucester
1042…Ingrid Brosseau……..Gloucester
1043…Jackie Millette……..Gloucester
1044…John Frappier……..Gloucester
1045…John Girard……..Gloucester
1046…Joseph Rios……..Gloucester
1047…Karen Beattie……..Gloucester
1048…Ken McFarlane……..Gloucester
1049…Keri Burgess……..Gloucester
1050…Lee Dixon……..Gloucester
1051…Lucie Villeneuve……..Gloucester
1052…Michele Boyer……..Gloucester
1053…Nicole Labelle……..Gloucester
1054…Sonja Renz……..Gloucester
1055…Tiffany Belair……..Gloucester
1056…Tom Fottinger……..Gloucester
1057…Virginia Mofford……..Gloucester
1058…Ann Westell……..Greely
1059…Carol Boucher……..Greely
1060…Claire Johnstone……..Greely
1061…Claire Maxwell……..Greely
1062…David Benyon……..Greely
1063…Jennifer Frechette……..Greely
1064…Randall Holmes……..Greely
1065…Scott Evans……..Greely
1066…Stephanie Courcelles……..greely
1067…Louise Galipeau……..Hammond
1068…Adam Boyle……..Kanata
1069…Adam Pelham……..Kanata
1070…Adrian Salt……..Kanata
1071…Afshan Thakkar……..Kanata
1072…Alistair Edwards……..Kanata
1073…Allen Piddington……..Kanata
1074…Amanda Archibald……..Kanata
1075…Anand Srinivasan……..Kanata
1076…Andrea Carisse……..Kanata
1077…Andrew Fewtrell……..Kanata
1078…Anne Collis……..Kanata
1079…Bernie Armour……..Kanata
1080…Bill Gilchrist……..Kanata
1081…Brenda Pavlovic……..Kanata
1082…Brian Archibald……..Kanata
1083…Brittney Pavlovic……..Kanata
1084…Carmen Davidson……..Kanata
1085…Cecilia Jorgenson……..Kanata
1086…Chandan Banerjee……..Kanata
1087…Cherie Koshman……..Kanata
1088…Cheryl Levi……..Kanata
1089…Chris Cowie……..Kanata
1090…Christine Pollex……..Kanata
1091…Cindy Molaski……..Kanata
1092…Colleen Gilchrist……..Kanata
1093…Colleen Kilty……..Kanata
1094…Crystal Thompson……..Kanata
1095…Dan Kelly……..Kanata
1096…Daniel Farrell……..Kanata
1097…Danny Schwager……..Kanata
1098…Deanne Van Rooyen……..Kanata
1099…Debbie Olive……..Kanata
1100…Deirdre Luesby……..Kanata
1101…Dhanya Thakkar……..Kanata
1102…Diane Boyle……..Kanata
1103…Fiona Valliere……..Kanata
1104…Francine Giannotti……..Kanata
1105…Gina Rossi……..Kanata
1106…Ginette Ford……..Kanata
1107…Greg Dow……..Kanata
1108…Greg Layhew……..Kanata
1109…Greg McNeill……..Kanata
1110…Jan Donak……..Kanata
1111…Janet Chadwick……..Kanata
1112…Janice Tughan……..Kanata
1113…Jeff Goold……..Kanata
1114…Jeff Zhao……..Kanata
1115…Jeffrey O'Connor……..Kanata
1116…Jennifer Delorme……..Kanata
1117…Jennifer Donohue……..Kanata
1118…Jennifer Nason……..Kanata
1119…Jennifer Prieur……..Kanata
1120…Jody Vallati……..Kanata
1121…John Cooper……..Kanata
1122…John Sullivan……..Kanata
1123…Karen Piddington……..Kanata
1124…Katalijn MacAfee……..Kanata
1125…Kathleen Westbury……..Kanata
1126…Kelly Ann Davis……..Kanata
1127…Kelly Livingstone……..Kanata
1128…Kelly Ross……..Kanata
1129…Kennerth Klassen……..Kanata
1130…Keri Hillier……..Kanata
1131…Kevin Boyd……..Kanata
1132…kevin rankin……..Kanata
1133…Kimberley Bohn……..Kanata
1134…Krista Ferguson……..Kanata
1135…Kristin Eagan……..Kanata
1136…Lauren Eyre……..Kanata
1137…Laurie Davis……..Kanata
1138…Lesley Dewsnap……..Kanata
1139…Lida Koronewskij……..Kanata
1140…Lillian Ng……..Kanata
1141…Lise Gray……..Kanata
1142…Lois Kirkup……..Kanata
1143…Louise King……..Kanata
1144…Luisa De Amicis……..Kanata
1145…Lynda Ciavaglia……..Kanata
1146…Lyne Denis……..Kanata
1147…Mark Brownhill……..Kanata
1148…Mark Jorgenson……..Kanata
1149…Mark Ruddock……..Kanata
1150…Marlene Alt……..Kanata
1151…Mary Anne Jackson-Hughes……..Kanata
1152…Melanie Coulson……..Kanata
1153…Melissa Hall……..Kanata
1154…Michael Brennan……..Kanata
1155…Michael Sutherland……..Kanata
1156…Michele LeMay……..Kanata
1157…Michelle Calder……..Kanata
1158…Mikkyal Koshman……..Kanata
1159…Nancy McGuire……..Kanata
1160…Neil Maxwell……..Kanata
1161…Neil Thomson……..Kanata
1162…Nolan MacAfee……..Kanata
1163…Pamela Ford……..Kanata
1164…Patricia Brown……..Kanata
1165…Peter Clark……..Kanata
1166…Peter Zimmerman……..Kanata
1167…Philip Tughan……..Kanata
1168…Rhonda Boudreau……..Kanata
1169…Robyn Hardage……..Kanata
1170…Sandra Plourde……..Kanata
1171…Sandy Brennan……..Kanata
1172…Scott Jewer……..Kanata
1173…Sharon Lee……..Kanata
1174…Sharon Skerritt……..Kanata
1175…Shelly Nesbitt……..Kanata
1176…Sheri Cayouette……..Kanata
1177…Shirley Ivan……..Kanata
1178…Sindy Dobson……..Kanata
1179…Smitha Srinivasan……..Kanata
1180…Sridhar Erukulla……..Kanata
1181…Steven Cowie……..Kanata
1182…Stuart Swanson……..Kanata
1183…Terry Koss……..Kanata
1184…Thomas Cain……..Kanata
1185…Tiffany Boire……..Kanata
1186…Tim Moses……..Kanata
1187…Tom Auger……..Kanata
1188…Tom Winter……..Kanata
1189…Vicky Neufeld……..Kanata
1190…Vincent_Andy Fong……..Kanata
1191…Wei Zhou……..Kanata
1192…Wendy Patton……..Kanata
1193…Guy Laliberte……..Kars
1194…Carole Perkins……..Kemptville
1195…Cheryl Brennan……..Kemptville
1196…Dave Springer……..Kemptville
1197…David Brennan……..Kemptville
1198…Karen Nickleson……..Kemptville
1199…Paul Bedard……..Kemptville
1200…Roxanne Harrington……..Kemptville
1201…Stephanie Mombourquette……..Kemptville
1202…Teena Dacey……..Kemptville
1203…Jackie Stadnyk……..Kinburn
1204…Kathy Twardek……..Kinburn
1205…Ronald Stadnyk……..Kinburn
1206…Joey Beaudin……..Limoges
1207…Judy Gagne……..Limoges
1208…Susan Draper……..Low
1209…Jennifer Duffy……..Maitland
1210…Penny Duffy……..Maitland
1211…Jennifer Kellar……..Mallorytown
1212…Robert Browne……..Mallorytown
1213…Andrew Colautti……..Manotick
1214…Chris Bourne……..Manotick
1215…Guy Beaudoin……..Manotick
1216…Robert Fabes……..Manotick
1217…Robert Lange……..Manotick
1218…Shirley MacGregor Ford……..Manotick
1219…Theresa Roberts……..Manotick
1220…Yvonne Brandreth……..Manotick
1221…Julianna Choi……..Markham
1222…Heather Purdy……..Martintown
1223…Michele Steeves……..Maxville
1224…Jodi Brennan……..Merrickville
1225…Michael Barkhouse……..Merrickville
1226…Andre Lasalle……..Metcalfe
1227…Kazimierz Krzyzanowski……..Metcalfe
1228…Michelle Crook……..Metcalfe
1229…Sylvie J Lapointe……..Metcalfe
1230…Isabella Jordan……..Morrisburg
1231…Allan Smith……..Munster
1232…Nancy Ann Smith……..Munster
1233…Carole Charlebois……..Navan
1234…Marcella MacDonald……..Navan
1235…Marie-France Lévesque……..Navan
1236…Mychele Malette……..navan
1237…Paul de Grandpré……..Navan
1238…Rosemary Barber……..Navan
1239…Veronique Bergeron……..Navan
1240…Wally Burns……..Navan
1241…Alain Phaneuf……..Nepean
1242…Alan Rushforth……..Nepean
1243…Alison Hill……..Nepean
1244…Allen Mackinder……..Nepean
1245…Andrew Johnston……..Nepean
1246…Angela MacNeil……..Nepean
1247…Angie MacDonald……..Nepean
1248…Anne-Josée Marion……..Nepean
1249…Caroline Bachynski……..Nepean
1250…Carolyn Frank……..Nepean
1251…Carolyn Perkins……..Nepean
1252…Cassandra Williams……..Nepean
1253…Chris Fitzgerald……..Nepean
1254…Chris Van Norman……..Nepean
1255…Christopher Hill……..Nepean
1256…Corey Wilson……..Nepean
1257…Dan Lacasse……..Nepean
1258…Dana Lee……..Nepean
1259…Dave Summerbell……..Nepean
1260…David Holmes……..Nepean
1261…David Mersereau……..Nepean
1262…Debbie Van Norman……..Nepean
1263…Denis Therrien……..Nepean
1264…Donna McKibbon……..Nepean
1265…Doug Simpson……..Nepean
1266…Erik Kristjansson……..Nepean
1267…Exequiel Alcober……..Nepean
1268…Face Wallace……..Nepean
1269…Gary Vrckovnik……..Nepean
1270…Helen Lum Young……..Nepean
1271…Ian MacLean……..Nepean
1272…Jack Kwan……..Nepean
1273…Jamie Hayami……..Nepean
1274…Jane Hext……..Nepean
1275…Jason Pantalone……..Nepean
1276…Jeff Slavin……..Nepean
1277…Jennifer McDonell……..Nepean
1278…Jeremy Garbas-Tyrrell……..Nepean
1279…John Cooke……..Nepean
1280…John Tegano……..Nepean
1281…Jon Schmeler……..Nepean
1282…Joseph Emas……..Nepean
1283…Karleen Heer……..Nepean
1284…Kathleen O'Leary……..Nepean
1285…Kathleen Stringer……..Nepean
1286…Katya Duhamel……..Nepean
1287…Kelly MacGregor……..Nepean
1288…Kerry Nolan……..Nepean
1289…Marie-Andree Dubreuil……..Nepean
1290…Marika Holmes……..Nepean
1291…Mark White……..Nepean
1292…Martyn Hodgson……..Nepean
1293…Mary Cooke……..Nepean
1294…Miranda Cole……..Nepean
1295…Moiz Syed……..Nepean
1296…Nicole Steinert……..Nepean
1297…Norm Duhamel……..Nepean
1298…Patti-Lynn Dougan……..Nepean
1299…Peter Dinsdale……..Nepean
1300…Rena Fulton……..Nepean
1301…Richard Thomas……..Nepean
1302…Ruth Glenwright……..Nepean
1303…Sandra Lett……..Nepean
1304…Sarah Hudson……..Nepean
1305…Sarah Matthews……..Nepean
1306…Scott Hems……..Nepean
1307…Scott MacMillan……..Nepean
1308…Shannon Matheson……..Nepean
1309…Sharye Marcus……..Nepean
1310…Shawna Thornhill……..Nepean
1311…Stephanie Dunne……..Nepean
1312…Steve Zinck……..Nepean
1313…Tanya Mykytyshyn……..Nepean
1314…Tim McNaughton……..Nepean
1315…Tony Blake……..Nepean
1316…Yusu Guo……..Nepean
1317…Christopher Sylvestre……..North Dundas Township
1318…Natalie Smith……..North Gower
1319…Alain Brulé……..Orleans
1320…André Larouche……..Orleans
1321…Andria George-Worth……..Orleans
1322…Andy Coughlin……..Orleans
1323…Anik Adam……..Orleans
1324…Anke Berndt……..Orleans
1325…Ann Marie David……..Orleans
1326…Anne McCarthy……..Orleans
1327…Arlene O'Brien……..Orleans
1328…Bonnie Ferguson……..Orleans
1329…Brad Hart……..Orleans
1330…Brenda Paquet……..Orleans
1331…Brian Wiens……..Orleans
1332…Carl Hume……..Orleans
1333…Carmen Saumure……..Orleans
1334…Carol Cameron……..Orleans
1335…Chantal Delangy……..Orleans
1336…Charles Momy……..Orleans
1337…Charles Sincennes……..Orleans
1338…Chris Henderson……..Orleans
1339…Chris Morrison……..Orleans
1340…Christina Michaud……..Orleans
1341…CIndy Ettinger……..Orleans
1342…Claire Chretien……..Orleans
1343…Claude Desgagne……..Orleans
1344…Coco Comtois……..Orleans
1345…Cynthia Taylor……..Orleans
1346…Dan Matthews……..Orleans
1347…Dana Nalley……..Orleans
1348…Daniel Caron……..Orleans
1349…Dave Trumpower……..Orleans
1350…Dean Durnford……..Orleans
1351…Deborah Baldwin……..Orleans
1352…Denis Hogan……..Orleans
1353…Donna Johnston……..Orleans
1354…Eann Hodges……..Orleans
1355…Elise Grenier……..Orleans
1356…Eric Fortier……..Orleans
1357…Frédéric-Francois Desmarais……..Orleans
1358…Ginette Jolin……..Orleans
1359…Jacqueline Barry……..Orleans
1360…Jacqueline Evans……..Orleans
1361…James Carere……..Orleans
1362…Jane Schofield……..Orleans
1363…JaneAnn Swim……..Orleans
1364…Jason Roberts……..Orleans
1365…Jean Magne……..Orleans
1366…Jean Stewart……..Orleans
1367…Jeff Danforth……..Orleans
1368…Jennifer Aaltonen……..Orleans
1369…Jennifer Caldbick……..Orleans
1370…Jillian Stow……..Orleans
1371…Jocelyne Boivin……..Orleans
1372…John Potter……..Orleans
1373…John Roach……..Orleans
1374…Judith Finn……..Orleans
1375…Judy Thomson……..Orleans
1376…Julie Bossé……..Orleans
1377…Julie Dregas……..Orleans
1378…Karen Bowers……..Orleans
1379…Kathleen Gould Morin……..Orleans
1380…Kathryn McNicoll……..Orleans
1381…Kathy Wiens……..Orleans
1382…Keith David……..Orleans
1383…Ken Bernard……..Orleans
1384…Ken Cavanagh……..Orleans
1385…Kevin Piccott……..Orleans
1386…Kim Tremblay……..Orleans
1387…Kimberly Croft……..Orleans
1388…Kristy Singleton……..Orleans
1389…Laura Regnier……..Orleans
1390…Linda LeBlanc……..Orleans
1391…Line Richard……..Orleans
1392…Lise King……..Orleans
1393…Louise Smith……..Orleans
1394…Luc St-Jean……..Orleans
1395…Lyne Orser……..Orleans
1396…Marie-Josee Homsy……..Orleans
1397…Marieve Lavigne……..Orleans
1398…Marshall Clark……..Orleans
1399…Marthe Bergevin……..Orleans
1400…Max LeBreton……..Orleans
1401…Megan Thomson……..Orleans
1402…Melanie Trumpower……..Orleans
1403…Melissa Vroom……..Orleans
1404…Na Lin……..Orleans
1405…Nadine Mattingly……..Orleans
1406…Nancy Camacho……..Orleans
1407…Nancy Neilson……..Orleans
1408…Natacha Kenney……..Orleans
1409…Nick Tang……..Orleans
1410…Nicole Clark……..Orleans
1411…Nicole Flanagan……..Orleans
1412…Nicolle Saulnier……..Orleans
1413…Ninon Parent……..Orleans
1414…Pamela Wilson……..Orleans
1415…Patricia Coons……..Orleans
1416…Patti Craven……..Orleans
1417…Peter Belair……..Orleans
1418…Pierrette Caron……..Orleans
1419…Randy Boucher……..Orleans
1420…Rob Dinardo……..Orleans
1421…Robert Sauve……..Orleans
1422…Ronald Fitzgerald……..Orleans
1423…Sandra Craig-Browne……..Orleans
1424…Sandra Faubert……..Orleans
1425…Sandy Clark……..Orleans
1426…Sandy Moger……..Orleans
1427…Scot Bryant……..Orleans
1428…Shanna Bancroft……..Orleans
1429…Shari DeJong……..Orleans
1430…Sonia Laneuville……..Orleans
1431…Stan Baldwin……..Orleans
1432…Stella Gaerke……..Orleans
1433…Stephan Cronier……..Orleans
1434…Stephane Burelle……..Orleans
1435…Stephane Parent……..Orleans
1436…Stephanie Currie-McCarragher……..Orleans
1437…Stéphanie Ducharme……..Orleans
1438…Stephen Boyd……..Orleans
1439…Susan Poisson……..Orleans
1440…Suzanne Daleman……..Orleans
1441…Tammy Peters……..Orleans
1442…Tanja Scharf……..Orleans
1443…Tara Redmond……..Orleans
1444…Terri-Lynn Kennedy……..Orleans
1445…Terry Flynn……..Orleans
1446…Todd Overtveld……..Orleans
1447…Tony Thatcher……..Orleans
1448…Trevor Gillis……..Orleans
1449…Trevor Kirkland……..Orleans
1450…Trina Perras……..Orleans
1451…Yves Ducharme……..Orleans
1452…Jane Holski……..Oxford Mills
1453…Shaun Dunne……..Oxford Mills
1454…Steve Thompson……..Oxford Mills
1455…Anitra Bennett……..Pembroke
1456…Carole Groleau……..Pembroke
1457…Cheryl-Lynn Luffman……..Pembroke
1458…Douglas Thorlakson……..Pembroke
1459…Edward Alexander……..Pembroke
1460…Frank Grattan……..Pembroke
1461…Garry Hartlin……..Pembroke
1462…George Garrard……..Pembroke
1463…Laurie Thorlakson……..Pembroke
1464…Leanne Van Bavel……..Pembroke
1465…Michelle Rousselle……..Pembroke
1466…Mike Desjardins……..Pembroke
1467…Nevin Gaudon……..Pembroke
1468…Shawn Dickie……..Pembroke
1469…Cairyn Spence……..Perth
1470…Dana Lennox……..Perth
1471…Francis Gillespie……..Perth
1472…Lynn Marsh……..Perth
1473…Sue Matte……..Perth
1474…Tania Ireton……..Perth
1475…Brodie Doyle……..Petawawa
1476…Dave Macmillan……..Petawawa
1477…Dennene Huntley……..Petawawa
1478…Dwayne Lushman……..Petawawa
1479…Hector Clouthier……..Petawawa
1480…Joanne Mallet……..Petawawa
1481…Josh Bruinsma……..Petawawa
1482…Leah MacArthur……..Petawawa
1483…Mary Jensen……..Petawawa
1484…Meaghan Purdy……..Petawawa
1485…Robert Jensen……..Petawawa
1486…Selena Neily……..Petawawa
1487…Tracy Gorman……..Petawawa
1488…Vivian Overton……..Petawawa
1489…Jeanne D'Arc Lapointe……..Plantagenet
1490…Johanne Larabie……..Plantagenet
1491…Robert Lapointe……..Plantagenet
1492…Tony Larabie……..Plantagenet
1493…Amanda Lamoureux……..Pontiac
1494…Stephanie McKinnon……..Port Elgin
1495…Claudine Dirksen-Fenard……..Prescott
1496…Joe Noonan……..Prescott
1497…Mark Dirksen……..Prescott
1498…Richard Hart……..Prescott
1499…Alan Orton……..Pte-Claire
1500…Jeanne Rowan……..Renfrew
1501…John Jr. Fuller……..Renfrew
1502…Nina De Bos……..Renfrew
1503…Paul Rowan……..Renfrew
1504…Catherine McKenna……..Richmond
1505…Cheryl Gillies……..Richmond
1506…Colleen Piercey……..Richmond
1507…Dan Todd……..Richmond
1508…Gabby Doiron……..Richmond
1509…Joanne Kadoski……..Richmond
1510…Kristina Pistor……..Richmond
1511…Lea Sutherland……..Richmond
1512…Michael McKenna……..Richmond
1513…Robin Annas……..Richmond
1514…Matthew Churchill……..Rideau Ferry
1515…Ana Pereira……..Rockland
1516…Charles Carriere……..Rockland
1517…Frank Lalonde……..Rockland
1518…Julie MacDonald……..Rockland
1519…Nathalie J. Arseneault……..Rockland
1520…Therese Contant……..Rockland
1521…Brett Kendall……..Rosemere
1522…Peter Cicalo……..Russell
1523…Laura James……..Smiths Falls
1524…Rebecca Holmes……..South Mountain
1525…Amanda Smith……..Spencerville
1526…Cheryl Smith……..ST Pascal Baylon
1527…Leo Riendeau……..St.Albert
1528…Alexander Loslo……..Stittsville
1529…Angus MacDonald……..Stittsville
1530…Ben Legault……..Stittsville
1531…Brent Hodgson……..Stittsville
1532…Carole Hargrave……..Stittsville
1533…Catherine Postma……..Stittsville
1534…Cathy Pomeroy……..Stittsville
1535…Cheryl Lathrope……..Stittsville
1536…Chris Stacey……..Stittsville
1537…Corey Cole……..Stittsville
1538…Danielle Comeau-MacMillan……..Stittsville
1539…Darlene Nielsen……..Stittsville
1540…Dave McLean……..Stittsville
1541…Debbie Brown……..Stittsville
1542…Debbie Seltitz……..Stittsville
1543…Denis Boucher……..Stittsville
1544…Don Fletcher……..Stittsville
1545…Doug Nielsen……..Stittsville
1546…Elaine Sicoli……..Stittsville
1547…Elizabeth McHugh……..Stittsville
1548…Elizabeth Rhodenizer……..Stittsville
1549…Fred Owen……..Stittsville
1550…Garth Loslo……..Stittsville
1551…Greg Rusch……..Stittsville
1552…Jane Martin……..Stittsville
1553…Janet MacDonald……..Stittsville
1554…Jeff Conrad……..Stittsville
1555…Jennifer Anderson……..Stittsville
1556…Joaquin Fernandez……..Stittsville
1557…Joe MacMillan……..Stittsville
1558…Kirsten Maludzinski……..Stittsville
1559…Kyle MacKay……..Stittsville
1560…Laurel Rosene……..Stittsville
1561…Linda Corriveau……..Stittsville
1562…Louise MacKay……..Stittsville
1563…Lynn Messager……..Stittsville
1564…Marie-Elyse Boucher……..Stittsville
1565…Mark Rhodenizer……..Stittsville
1566…Mary Young……..Stittsville
1567…Matthew McKinnell……..Stittsville
1568…Mike McDonald……..Stittsville
1569…Ralph Richardson……..Stittsville
1570…Rebecca Richardson……..Stittsville
1571…René Lessard……..Stittsville
1572…Robert Canthal……..Stittsville
1573…Robert Postma……..Stittsville
1574…Roger Egan……..Stittsville
1575…Sean Gagnon……..Stittsville
1576…Shelley Baran……..Stittsville
1577…Steve Cashman……..Stittsville
1578…Stuart MacKay……..Stittsville
1579…Suzanne Savoie……..Stittsville
1580…Walter Hawes……..Stittsville
1581…Ed Overton……..Val-des-Monts
1582…Meaghan Henry……..Val-des-Monts
1583…Richard Blanchette……..Val-des-Monts
1584…Arlene Dupuis……..Vars
1585…Aimee Lemieux……..Wakefield
1586…Archie Smith……..Wakefield
1587…Julie Payette……..Wakefield
1588…Shirley Curran……..Wakefield
1589…Bob Reddick……..Westport
1590…Diane Graham-Lynn……..Westport
1591…John Fuoco……..Westport
1592…Pat Reddick……..Westport
1593…Richard Simard……..White Lake
1594…Chantal Lajoie……..Williamstown
1595…Amy Collins……..Winchester
1596…Chris Phillips……..Winchester
1597…Gillian Erickson……..Winchester
1598…Gina Porteous……..Winchester
1599…Kelly Geddis……..Woodlawn
1600…Renee Crompton……..Woodlawn
1601…Richard Crompton……..Woodlawn
KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, FLA. -- The Space Shuttle orbiter Atlantis makes a smooth touchdown on Runway 15 of the Shuttle Landing Facility, bringing an end to the historic STS-71 mission which featured the first docking between the Space Shuttle and the Russian Mir space station. The chase plane, the Shuttle Training Aircraft flown by Robert D. Cabana, head of the Astronaut Office, is in the upper left of photo. Main gear touchdown of Atlantis was at 10:54:34 a.m. EDT, on July 7, 1995. This was the first of seven scheduled Shuttle/Mir docking missions. The 10-day mission also set the record for having the most people who have flown in an orbiter during a mission: the five U.S. astronauts and two cosmonauts who were launched on Atlantis on June 27, and three space flyers who have been aboard Mir since March 16 and were returned to Earth in Atlantis. The STS-71 crew included Mission Commander Robert L. "Hoot" Gibson, Pilot Charles J. Precourt, Payload Commander Dr. Ellen S. Baker, and Mission Specialists Bonnie J. Dunbar and Gregory J. Harbaugh. Also part of the STS-71 crew were two cosmonauts who comprise the Mir 19 crew -- Mission Commander Anatoly Y. Solovyev and Flight Engineer Nikolai M. Budarin. They transfered to Mir during the four days of docking operations, and remain there. They replaced the Mir 18 crew of U.S. astronaut and cosmonaut researcher Dr. Norman E. Thagard, and cosmonauts Vladimir N. Dezhurov, who served as mission commander, and Gennadiy M. Strekalov, who served as flight engineer. The Mir crew joined the American STS-71 crew members for the return to Earth on Atlantis.
Image from NASA, originally appeared on this site: science.ksc.nasa.gov/gallery/photos/
Reposted by San Diego Air and Space Museum
Information From:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/East_Village,_Manhattan
East Village, Manhattan
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East Village, Manhattan
New York City Neighborhood
Location in Lower Manhattan
Named: 1960s[1]
Streets: 2nd Avenue, 1st Avenue, Avenue A, The Bowery, St. Mark's Place
Subway: F, V, 6 and L
Zip code: 10009, 10003 and 10002
Government
Federal: Congressional Districts 8, 12 and 14
State: New York State Assembly Districts 64, 66 and 74, New York State Senate Districts 25 and 29
City: New York City Council District 2
Local Manhattan Community Board 3
Neighborhood map
The East Village is a neighborhood in the borough of Manhattan in New York City. It lies east of Greenwich Village, south of Gramercy and Stuyvesant Town, and north of the Lower East Side. Within the East Village there are several smaller neighborhoods, including Alphabet City and The Bowery.
The neighborhood was once considered part of the Lower East Side, but in the 1960s it began to develop its own culture and became known as the East Village. Scores of artists and hippies began to move into the area, attracted by the base of Beatniks that had lived there since the 1950s. It has been the site of counterculture, protests and riots. The neighborhood is known as the birthplace and historical home of many artistic movements, including punk rock[2] and the Nuyorican literary movement.[3]
It is still known for a diverse community, vibrant nightlife and artistic sensibility, although in recent decades gentrification has changed the character of the neighborhood
History
Tompkins Square Park is the recreational and geographic heart of the East Village. It has historically been a part of counterculture, protest and riots.
New York City's Fourth of July fireworks over the neighborhood. The East Village's East River Park is a popular viewing destination.[edit] Formation of the neighborhood
Today's East Village was originally a farm owned by Dutch Governor Wouter van Twiller. Petrus Stuyvesant received the deed to this farm in 1651, and his family held on to the land for over seven generations, until a descendant began selling off parcels of the property in the early 1800s. Wealthy townhouses dotted the dirt roads for a few decades until the great Irish and German immigration of the 1840s and 1850s.
Speculative land owners began building multi unit dwellings on lots meant for single family homes, and began renting out rooms and apartments to the growing working class. The "East Village" was formerly known as Klein Deutschland ("Little Germany, Manhattan"); however, Little Germany dissolved after the SS General Slocum burned into the water in New York's East River on June 15, 1904. From the years roughly between the 1850s and the first decade of the 20th century, the "East Village" hosted the largest urban populations of Germans outside of Vienna and Berlin. It was America's first foreign language neighborhood; hundreds of political, social, sports and recreational clubs were set up during this period, some of these buildings still exist.
What is now the East Village once ended at the East River where Avenue C is now located. A large portion of the neighborhood was formed by landfill, including World War II debris and rubble from London, which was shipped across the Atlantic to provide foundation for the Franklin D. Roosevelt Drive.[5]
[edit] The 'East Village' separates from the Lower East Side
Definitions vary, but the boundaries are roughly defined as east of Broadway and the Bowery from 14th Street down to Houston Street.[1]
Looking south from 6th Street down Second Avenue, one of the main thoroughfares through the East Village.Until the mid-1960s, this area was simply the northern part of the Lower East Side, with a similar culture of immigrant, working class life. In the 1950s the migration of Beatniks into the neighborhood later attracted hippies, musicians and artists well into 1960s.[1] The area was dubbed the "East Village", to dissociate it from the image of slums evoked by the Lower East Side. According to the New York Times, a 1964 guide called, "Earl Wilson's New York," wrote that "artists, poets and promoters of coffeehouses from Greenwich Village are trying to remelt the neighborhood under the high-sounding name of 'East Village.'"[1]
Newcomers and real estate brokers popularized the East Village name, and the term was adopted by the popular media by the mid-1960s.[6][7] In 1966 a psychedelic weekly newspaper, The East Village Other, appeared and The New York Times declared that the neighborhood "had come to be known" as the East Village in the June 5, 1967 edition.[1]
[edit] The music scene develops
In 1966 Andy Warhol promoted a series of shows, entitled The Exploding Plastic Inevitable, and featuring the music of the Velvet Underground, in a Polish ballroom on St Marks Place. On June 27, 1967, the Electric Circus opened in the same space with a benefit for the Children's Recreation Foundation (Chairman: Bobby Kennedy). The Grateful Dead, The Chambers Brothers, Sly & the Family Stone, the Allman Brothers were among the many rock bands that performed there before it closed in 1971.
Punk rock icon and writer Richard Hell still lives in the same apartment in Alphabet City that he has had since the 1970s.On March 8, 1968 Bill Graham opened the Fillmore East in a Yiddish Theatre on 2nd Avenue. The venue quickly became known as "The Church of Rock and Roll," with two-show concerts several nights a week. While booking many of the same bands that had played the Electric Circus, Graham particularly used the venue – and its West Coast counterpart, to establish new British bands like The Who, Pink Floyd, The Jimi Hendrix Experience, Cream, and Led Zeppelin. It, too, closed in 1971.
CBGB, the nightclub considered by some to be the birthplace of punk music, was located in the neighborhood, as was the early punk standby A7. No Wave and New York hardcore also emerged in the area’s clubs. Among the many important bands and singers who got their start at these clubs and other venues in downtown Manhattan were: Patti Smith, Arto Lindsay, the Ramones, Blondie, Madonna, Talking Heads, the Plasmatics, Glenn Danzig, Sonic Youth, the Beastie Boys, Anthrax, and The Strokes. From 1983–1993, much of the more radical audio work was preserved as part of the Tellus Audio Cassette Magazine recording project, which was based in the nearby Lower East Side.
[edit] Rise in artistic prominence
Allen Ginsberg, a long-time resident, with poet Peter Orlovsky.Over the last 100 years, the East Village/Lower East Side neighborhood has been considered one of the strongest contributors to American arts and culture in New York.[8] During the great wave of immigration (Germans, Ukrainians, Polish) in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, countless families found their new homes in this area.
The East Village has been the birthplace of cultural icons and movements from the American gangster to the Warhol Superstars, folk music to punk rock, anti-folk to hip-hop, advanced education to organized activism, experimental theater to the Beat Generation and the community of experimental musicians, composers and improvisers now loosely known as the Downtown Scene.
Club 57, on St. Mark's Place, was an important incubator for performance art and visual art in the late 1970s and early 1980s; followed by Now Gallery, 8BC and ABC No Rio.
During the 1980s the East Village art gallery scene helped to galvanize a new post-modern art in America; showing such artists as Kiki Smith, Peter Halley, Keith Haring, Stephen Lack, Greer Lankton, Joseph Nechvatal, Nan Goldin, Jean-Michel Basquiat, David Wojnarowicz, Rick Prol, and Jeff Koons.[9]
[edit] The musical 'Rent'
The East Village is the setting for Jonathan Larson's musical Rent; set in the early 1990s, the story chronicles a group of friends over a year in their struggles against poverty, drug abuse and AIDS.
The musical Rent chronicled a period in the neighborhood's history that is bygone. It opened at the New York Theater Workshop in February 1996.[10] It described a New York City devastated by the AIDS epidemic, drugs and high crime, and followed several characters in the backdrop of their effort to make livings as artists.[11]
[edit] Decline of the art scene
The "Downtown Legends" wall at Mo Pitkins House of Satisfaction featured artists known in the East Village performance scene. A few featured in this photo include the Reverend Jen, Nick Zedd, Allen Ginsberg, Reverend Billy and Murray Hill (pictured).The East Village's performance and art scene has declined since its hey-day of the 1970s and 1980s.[12] One club that had opened to try to resurrect the neighborhood's past artistic prominence was Mo Pitkins' House of Satisfaction, part-owned by Jimmy Fallon of Saturday Night Live. It closed its doors in 2007, and was seen by many as another sign of the continued decline of the East Village performance and art scene, which has mostly moved to Williamsburg, Brooklyn.[13] Rapture Cafe also shut down in April 2008, and the neighborhood lost an important performance space and gathering ground for the gay community. There are still some performance spaces, such as Sidewalk Cafe on Avenue A, where downtown acts find space to exhibit their talent, and the poetry clubs.[14]
Punk scene icons stayed in the neighborhood as it changed. Richard Hell lives in the same apartment he has lived in since the 1970s, and Handsome Dick Manitoba of The Dictators owns and reigns over Manitoba's bar on Avenue B.
[edit] Internal neighborhoods
The East Village contains several hamlets of vibrant communities within itself.
[edit] Alphabet City
Main article: Alphabet City, Manhattan
The Nuyorican Poets Cafe has been located off Avenue C and East 3rd Street since its founding in 1973.Alphabet City comprises nearly two-thirds of the East Village. It also once was the archetype of a dangerous New York City neighborhood. Its turn-around was cause for The New York Times to observe in 2005 that Alphabet City went "from a drug-infested no man's land to the epicenter of downtown cool."[15] Its name comes from Avenues A, B, C, and D, the only avenues in Manhattan to have single-letter names. It is bordered by Houston Street to the south and 14th Street to the north where Avenue C ends. Some famous landmarks include Tompkins Square Park, the Nuyorican Poets Cafe and the Stuyvesant Town private residential community.
[edit] Loisaida
Main article: Loisaida
A Loisaida street fair in the Summer of 2008.Loisaida is a term derived from the Latino (and especially Nuyorican) pronunciation of "Lower East Side", a neighborhood in Manhattan, New York City. The term was originally coined by poet/activist, Bittman "Bimbo" Rivas in his 1974 poem "Loisaida". Loisaida Avenue is now an alternative name for Avenue C in the Alphabet City neighborhood of New York City, whose population has largely been Hispanic (mainly Nuyorican) since the late 1960s.
[edit] St. Mark's Place
Main article: St. Mark's Place
Artist Jim Power, known as the "Mosaic Man" for his public art tiling the neighborhood[16], at the 2009 St. Mark's Place Block Party.Eighth Street becomes St. Mark's place east of Third Avenue. It once had the cachet of Sutton Place, known as a secluded rich enclave in Manhattan, but which by the 1850s had become a place for boarding houses and a German immigrant community.[17] It is named after St Mark's Church in-the-Bowery, which was built on Stuyvesant Street but is now on 10th Street. St. Mark's Place once began at the intersection of the Bowery and Stuyvesant Street, but today the street runs from Third Avenue to Avenue A. Japanese street culture and a Japanese expatriate scene forms in the noodle shops and bars that line St. Mark's Place, also home to an aged punk culture and CBGB's new store. It is home to one of the only Automats in New York City (it has since closed).[18]
St. Mark's is along the “Mosaic Trail”, a trail of 80 mosaic-encrusted lampposts that runs from Broadway down Eighth Street to Avenue A, to Fourth Street and then back to Eighth Street. The project was undertaken by East Village public artist Jim Power, known as the "Mosaic Man".[16]
[edit] The Bowery
Main article: The Bowery
Once synonymous with 'Bowery Bums', the avenue has become a magnet for luxury condominiums as the neighborhood's rapid gentrification continues.The Bowery, former home to the punk-rock nightclub CBGB, was once known for its many homeless shelters, drug rehabilitation centers and bars. The phrase "On The Bowery", which has since fallen into disuse, was a generic way to say one was down-and-out.[19]
The Bow’ry, The Bow’ry!
They say such things,
and they do strange things
on the Bow’ry —From the musical A Trip to Chinatown, 1891
Today, the Bowery has become a boulevard of new luxury condominiums. It also is home to the Amato Opera and the Bowery Poetry Club, contributing to the neighborhood's reputation as a place for artistic pursuit. Artists Amiri Baraka and Taylor Mead hold regular readings and performances in the space.
The redevelopment of the avenue from flophouses to luxury condominiums has met with resistance from long-term residents, who agree the neighborhood has improved, but that its unique, gritty character is also disappearing.[20]
[edit] Parks and green space
[edit] Tompkins Square Park
Main article: Tompkins Square Park
The Tompkins Square dog run was the first in New York City, and is a social scene unto itself.[5]Tompkins Square Park is a 10.5 acre (42,000 m²) public park in the Alphabet City section of the East Village neighborhood in the borough of Manhattan in New York City. It is square in shape, and is bounded on the north by East 10th Street, on the east by Avenue B, on the south by East 7th Street, and on the west by Avenue A. St. Marks Place abuts the park to the west.
[edit] Tompkins Square Park Police Riot
Main article: Tompkins Square Park Police Riot (1988)
The Tompkins Square Park Police Riot was a defining moment for the neighborhood. In the late hours of August 6 into the morning hours of August 7, 1988 a riot broke out in Alphabet City's Tompkins Square Park. Groups of "drug pushers, homeless people and young people known as 'skinheads'" had largely taken over the East Village park, but the neighborhood was divided about what, if anything, should be done about it.[21] The local governing body, Manhattan Community Board 3, adopted a 1 am curfew for the previously 24-hour park, in an attempt to bring it under control.[22] On July 31, a rally against the curfew resulted in several clashes between protesters and police.[23]
[edit] East River Park
Main article: East River Park
East River Park below the Williamsburg Bridge.The park is 57 acres (230,000 m2) that runs along the Franklin D. Roosevelt Drive from Montgomery Street to East 12th Street.[24] It was designed in the 1930s by Robert Moses, who wanted to ensure there was parkland on the Lower East Side.[24]
[edit] Community gardens
There are reportedly over 640 community gardens in New York City—gardens run by local collectives within the neighborhood who are responsible for the gardens' upkeep—and an estimated 10 percent of those are located on the Lower East Side and East Village alone.[25]
[edit] Tower of Toys on Avenue B
The Avenue B and 6th Street Community Garden is one of the neighborhood's more notable for a now removed outdoor sculpture, the Tower of Toys, designed by artist and long-time garden gate-keeper, Eddie Boros. Boros died April 27, 2007.[26] The Tower was controversial in the neighborhood; some viewed it as a masterpiece, others as an eyesore.[26][27] The tower appeared in the opening credits for the television show NYPD Blue and also appears in the musical Rent.[26] In May 2008, it was dismantled. According to NYC Parks Commissioner Adrian Benepe, the tower was rotting in sections that made it a safety hazard.[28] Its removal was seen as another symbol of the fading past of the neighborhood.[28]
[edit] Toyota Children’s Learning Garden
Located at 603 East 11th Street, the Toyota Children's Learning Garden is not technically a community garden, but it also fails to fit in the park category. Designed by landscape architect Michael Van Valkenburgh, the garden opened in May 2008 as part of the New York Restoration Project and is designed to teach children about plants.[29]
[edit] New York City Marble Cemetery
A production of John Reed's All the World's a Grave in the Marble Cemetery, which does not contain headstones.The cemetery is actually two, which sit on 2nd Street between 1st Avenue and 2nd Avenue. They are open the fourth Sunday of every month.[30] The first and more prominent is the City cemetery, which is second oldest non-sectarian cemetery in New York City. It sits next to the oldest public cemetery in New York City not affiliated with any religion, the "New York Marble Cemetery."[31] The cemetery was opened in 1831 and at one point contained ex-U.S. President James Monroe.[32]
[edit] Culture and events
Longtime Mistress of Ceremonies at eatery Lucky Cheng's, Miss Understood stops a bus in front of the restaurant on First Avenue.Other than geography, the East Village's most notable commonalities with Greenwich Village are a colorful history, vibrant social and cultural outlets, and street names that often diverge from the norm.
The Bowery is a north-south avenue which also lends its name to the somewhat overlapping neighborhood of the Bowery; St. Mark's Place, a crosstown street well-known for counterculture businesses; and Astor Place/Cooper Square, home of the Public Theater and the Cooper Union. Nearby universities like New York University (NYU), The New School, and The Cooper Union have dormitories in the neighborhood.
[edit] Ethnicity and religion
Photograph of St. Nicholas with parts of Second Street visible. The church and almost all buildings on the street were demolished in the 1960's and replaced with parking lots.
Former parishioners of St. Mary's Help of Christians pray outside the shuttered church in August 2008.According to 2000 census figures provided by the New York City Department of City Planning, which includes the Lower East Side in its calculation, the neighborhood was 35% Asian, 28% non-Hispanic white, 27% Hispanic and 7% black.[33]
On October 9, 1966, A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada, founder of the International Society for Krishna Consciousness, held the first recorded outdoor chanting session of the Hare Krishna mantra outside of the Indian subcontinent at Tompkins Square Park.[34] This is considered the founding of the Hare Krishna religion in the United States, and the large tree close to the center of the Park is demarcated as a special religious site for Krishna adherents.[34] The late poet Allen Ginsberg, who lived and died in the East Village, attended the ceremony.
There are several Roman Catholic churches in the East Village which have fallen victim to financial hardship particularly in the past decade. Unable to maintain their properties, the Roman Catholic Church has shuttered many of them - including St. Mary's Help of Christians on East 12th Street, as well as St. Ann's. There has recently been much controversy over St. Brigid's, the historical parish on Tompkins Square Park.
[edit] Ukrainian history
Since the 1890s there has been a large Ukrainian concentration roughly from 10th Street to 5th Street, between 3rd Avenue and Avenue A. The post-World War II diaspora, consisting primarily of Western Ukrainian intelligentsia, also settled down in the area. Several churches, including St. George's Catholic Church; Ukrainian restaurants and butcher shops; The Ukrainian Museum; the Shevchenko Scientific Society; and the Ukrainian Cultural Center are evidence of the impact of this culture on the area.
[edit] Gentrification
[edit] New York University, a controversial resident
Residents of the East Village have a love-hate relationship with New York University, which owns and maintains many buildings, particularly in much of downtown Manhattan and in the neighborhoods surrounding its main campus in Greenwich Village (a distinct neighborhood from the East Village).[35]
St. Ann's Church, a rusticated-stone structure on East 12th Street with a Romanesque tower that dated to 1847 was sold to the University to make way for a monolithic 26-story, 700 bed dormitory for students. The University did protect and maintain St. Ann's original facade and small plaza immediately fronting the 12th Street sidewalk. The result is a blended, softer abutment of the new dorm building (which does rise dramatically above the facade) up behind the old St. Ann's entry way. New York University has built many dorms, and this one in particular is now the tallest structure in the area. "There are larger changes going on here," said Lynne Brown, vice president of university relations and public affairs. "I fear this tendency to blame any trend residents don't like happening at the doorstep of NYU," said Brown, mentioning that the university has been one of the longest inhabitants of the East Village. But Nancy Cosie, a 20 year resident and former St. Ann's parishioner, does not buy that argument. "Enough is enough," Cosie exclaimed to The Village Voice, "This is not a campus. This is a neighborhood, and this is my home."[35] NYU's destruction or purchasing of many historic buildings (such as the Peter Cooper post office) have made it symbolic of change that many long-time residents fear is destroying what made the neighborhood interesting and attractive.[36] "I live on Avenue B and 9th Street," an NYU student said. "I know I'm part of the problem - gentrification that is. But where am I supposed to live?"[36]
NYU has often been at odds with residents of both the East and West Villages, as legendary urban preservationist Jane Jacobs battled the school in the 1960s.[37] "She spoke of how universities and hospitals often had a special kind of hubris reflected in the fact that they often thought it was OK to destroy a neighborhood to suit their needs,” said Andrew Berman of the Greenwich Village Society for Historic Preservation.[38]
[edit] Museums, libraries, performance and art spaces
The Bowery Poetry Club.
Sherry Vine and Joey Arias during the 2009 HOWL! Festival.New York Public Library Tompkins Square branch [3]
The Fales Library of NYU
East Village Visitors Center - 308 Bowery
The Ukrainian Museum
New Museum of Contemporary Art
Museum of Jewish Heritage
Performance Space 122
Anthology Film Archives
The Stone
Bouwerie Lane Theatre
Amato Opera
Danspace Project
The Ontological-Hysteric Theater
The Pearl Theatre Company [4]
Stomp! (Theatrical show)
Metropolitan Playhouse[5]
Mercury Lounge (live music)
Sidewalk Cafe (performance and live music)
Bowery Ballroom (concerts and shows)
Nuyorican Poets Cafe (music, poetry, readings, slams)
Bowery Poetry Club (music, poetry, readings, slams)
La MaMa E.T.C. (performance theater)
Cooper Union (speeches, presentations, public lectures and readings)
[edit] Neighborhood festivals
Mayday Festival - May 1; yearly.
Charlie Parker Jazz Festival - August; yearly.[6]
HOWL! Festival - September; yearly.[7][8]
East Village Radio Festival - September 6, 2008 [9]
Tompkins Square Halloween Dog Parade - October; yearly.[10]
East Village Theater Festival - August 3–23, 2009.[11]
FAB! Festival & Block Party - Last weekend in September annually, Sept 25, 2010 [12]
[edit] Media
Many film shoots take place in the East Village; here a period movie with antique police cars is filmed on East 4th Street.[edit] Radio
East Village Radio
[edit] Local news
The Village Voice
The Villager
East-Village.com
EastVillageFeed.com
[edit] Cinemas
Anthology Film Archives
Landmark's Sunshine Theater
Village East Cinema
City Cinema Village East
Two Boots Pioneer Theater
[edit] Notable residents past and present
Handsome Dick Manitoba of The Dictators.
Madonna lived in the neighborhood when she was just starting out in her career.[39]Handsome Dick Manitoba, who owns Manitoba's bar on Avenue B off Tompkins Square Park.
Darren Aronofsky and his wife, Rachel Weisz
Chris Cain, Bassist for the Indie-Rock band We Are Scientists
Barbara Feinman
John Leguizamo
Daniel Radcliffe
Agim Kaba
Rosario Dawson
Tom Kalin
Vashtie Kola director
W. H. Auden[40]
Greer Lankton, Artist/Doll maker
Ellen Stewart founder of La MaMa, E.T.C. (Experimental Theatre Club) in 1961.
Madonna lived there in the 1980s.
John Lurie,musician, painter, actor, producer.
Jean-Michel Basquiat, graffiti artist
David Bowes, painter
Allen Ginsberg (1926–1997), Beat Generation poet and author of Howl.[41]
Keith Haring, neo-pop artist
Claes Oldenburg (1929-), sculptor, had a studio at 46 East 3rd Street in the late 1950s.[42]
Candy Darling, actress/Warhol superstar
Bill Raymond, actor
Ryan Adams, alt-country musician
David Cross, actor, comedian
Negin Farsad, writer, director, comedian
Nan Goldin, photographer
Stephen Lack, actor, painter
Ronnie Landfield, (1947-), painter, lived on E. 11th street, mid-1960s[43]
Kiki Smith sculptor
John Zorn composer, musician
Richard Hell, musician, author
Abbie Hoffman (1936–1989), 1960s political activist[44]
Ayun Halliday, actress and writer, and wife of playwright Greg Kotis
Greg Kotis, playwright, and husband of actress and writer Ayun Halliday
Jerry Rubin (1938–1994), 1960s political activist - with Hoffman founded the Yippies in a basement apartment at 30 St. Marks Place[44]
Cookie Mueller, actress, model
Paul Krassner (1932-), publisher of The Realist
Walter Bowart (1939–2007), co-founder editor/ of The East Village Other
Allan Katzman, co-founder/editor of The East Village Other
Tuli Kupferberg, (1923-), Beat Generation poet, and one of the original Fugs
Ed Sanders, (1939-), New York School poet and one of the original Fugs
Joseph Nechvatal (1951-) early digital artist and founder of the Tellus Audio Cassette Magazine
Randy Harrison, actor
Joel Resnicoff, artist and fashion illustrator.
Regina Spektor, (1980-) Singer-songwriter and pianist.
Rachel Trachtenburg (1993-) singer and musician
Tom Otterness sculptor
Steven Fishbach, runner-up of Survivor: Tocantins
Chloe Sevigny actress
Conor Oberst musician
Lou Reed, musician
Julian Casablancas, musician
Mark Ronson
Arthur Russell, musician[45]
Jack Smith filmmaker, artist
Iggy Pop, performer, musician
Launched: May 19, 2000, 6:11:10 a.m. EDT
Landing: May 29, 2000, 2:20:19 a.m. EDT, Kennedy Space Center, Florida
Space Shuttle: Atlantis
Crew: Commander James D. Halsell Jr., Pilot Scott J. "Doc" Horowitz, Mission Specialists Mary Ellen Weber, Jeffrey N. Williams, James S. Voss, Susan J. Helms and Yury Vladimirovich Usachev
STS-101 was the third International Space Station flight. On their 10-day mission, the astronauts completed one space walk (EVA), equipped the ISS with new or replacement gear and transferred more than a ton of supplies into the space station for use by future residents of the ISS.
Credit: NASA
Image Number: sts101-s-001
Date: March 2000
Information From:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/East_Village,_Manhattan
East Village, Manhattan
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
East Village, Manhattan
New York City Neighborhood
Location in Lower Manhattan
Named: 1960s[1]
Streets: 2nd Avenue, 1st Avenue, Avenue A, The Bowery, St. Mark's Place
Subway: F, V, 6 and L
Zip code: 10009, 10003 and 10002
Government
Federal: Congressional Districts 8, 12 and 14
State: New York State Assembly Districts 64, 66 and 74, New York State Senate Districts 25 and 29
City: New York City Council District 2
Local Manhattan Community Board 3
Neighborhood map
The East Village is a neighborhood in the borough of Manhattan in New York City. It lies east of Greenwich Village, south of Gramercy and Stuyvesant Town, and north of the Lower East Side. Within the East Village there are several smaller neighborhoods, including Alphabet City and The Bowery.
The neighborhood was once considered part of the Lower East Side, but in the 1960s it began to develop its own culture and became known as the East Village. Scores of artists and hippies began to move into the area, attracted by the base of Beatniks that had lived there since the 1950s. It has been the site of counterculture, protests and riots. The neighborhood is known as the birthplace and historical home of many artistic movements, including punk rock[2] and the Nuyorican literary movement.[3]
It is still known for a diverse community, vibrant nightlife and artistic sensibility, although in recent decades gentrification has changed the character of the neighborhood
History
Tompkins Square Park is the recreational and geographic heart of the East Village. It has historically been a part of counterculture, protest and riots.
New York City's Fourth of July fireworks over the neighborhood. The East Village's East River Park is a popular viewing destination.[edit] Formation of the neighborhood
Today's East Village was originally a farm owned by Dutch Governor Wouter van Twiller. Petrus Stuyvesant received the deed to this farm in 1651, and his family held on to the land for over seven generations, until a descendant began selling off parcels of the property in the early 1800s. Wealthy townhouses dotted the dirt roads for a few decades until the great Irish and German immigration of the 1840s and 1850s.
Speculative land owners began building multi unit dwellings on lots meant for single family homes, and began renting out rooms and apartments to the growing working class. The "East Village" was formerly known as Klein Deutschland ("Little Germany, Manhattan"); however, Little Germany dissolved after the SS General Slocum burned into the water in New York's East River on June 15, 1904. From the years roughly between the 1850s and the first decade of the 20th century, the "East Village" hosted the largest urban populations of Germans outside of Vienna and Berlin. It was America's first foreign language neighborhood; hundreds of political, social, sports and recreational clubs were set up during this period, some of these buildings still exist.
What is now the East Village once ended at the East River where Avenue C is now located. A large portion of the neighborhood was formed by landfill, including World War II debris and rubble from London, which was shipped across the Atlantic to provide foundation for the Franklin D. Roosevelt Drive.[5]
[edit] The 'East Village' separates from the Lower East Side
Definitions vary, but the boundaries are roughly defined as east of Broadway and the Bowery from 14th Street down to Houston Street.[1]
Looking south from 6th Street down Second Avenue, one of the main thoroughfares through the East Village.Until the mid-1960s, this area was simply the northern part of the Lower East Side, with a similar culture of immigrant, working class life. In the 1950s the migration of Beatniks into the neighborhood later attracted hippies, musicians and artists well into 1960s.[1] The area was dubbed the "East Village", to dissociate it from the image of slums evoked by the Lower East Side. According to the New York Times, a 1964 guide called, "Earl Wilson's New York," wrote that "artists, poets and promoters of coffeehouses from Greenwich Village are trying to remelt the neighborhood under the high-sounding name of 'East Village.'"[1]
Newcomers and real estate brokers popularized the East Village name, and the term was adopted by the popular media by the mid-1960s.[6][7] In 1966 a psychedelic weekly newspaper, The East Village Other, appeared and The New York Times declared that the neighborhood "had come to be known" as the East Village in the June 5, 1967 edition.[1]
[edit] The music scene develops
In 1966 Andy Warhol promoted a series of shows, entitled The Exploding Plastic Inevitable, and featuring the music of the Velvet Underground, in a Polish ballroom on St Marks Place. On June 27, 1967, the Electric Circus opened in the same space with a benefit for the Children's Recreation Foundation (Chairman: Bobby Kennedy). The Grateful Dead, The Chambers Brothers, Sly & the Family Stone, the Allman Brothers were among the many rock bands that performed there before it closed in 1971.
Punk rock icon and writer Richard Hell still lives in the same apartment in Alphabet City that he has had since the 1970s.On March 8, 1968 Bill Graham opened the Fillmore East in a Yiddish Theatre on 2nd Avenue. The venue quickly became known as "The Church of Rock and Roll," with two-show concerts several nights a week. While booking many of the same bands that had played the Electric Circus, Graham particularly used the venue – and its West Coast counterpart, to establish new British bands like The Who, Pink Floyd, The Jimi Hendrix Experience, Cream, and Led Zeppelin. It, too, closed in 1971.
CBGB, the nightclub considered by some to be the birthplace of punk music, was located in the neighborhood, as was the early punk standby A7. No Wave and New York hardcore also emerged in the area’s clubs. Among the many important bands and singers who got their start at these clubs and other venues in downtown Manhattan were: Patti Smith, Arto Lindsay, the Ramones, Blondie, Madonna, Talking Heads, the Plasmatics, Glenn Danzig, Sonic Youth, the Beastie Boys, Anthrax, and The Strokes. From 1983–1993, much of the more radical audio work was preserved as part of the Tellus Audio Cassette Magazine recording project, which was based in the nearby Lower East Side.
[edit] Rise in artistic prominence
Allen Ginsberg, a long-time resident, with poet Peter Orlovsky.Over the last 100 years, the East Village/Lower East Side neighborhood has been considered one of the strongest contributors to American arts and culture in New York.[8] During the great wave of immigration (Germans, Ukrainians, Polish) in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, countless families found their new homes in this area.
The East Village has been the birthplace of cultural icons and movements from the American gangster to the Warhol Superstars, folk music to punk rock, anti-folk to hip-hop, advanced education to organized activism, experimental theater to the Beat Generation and the community of experimental musicians, composers and improvisers now loosely known as the Downtown Scene.
Club 57, on St. Mark's Place, was an important incubator for performance art and visual art in the late 1970s and early 1980s; followed by Now Gallery, 8BC and ABC No Rio.
During the 1980s the East Village art gallery scene helped to galvanize a new post-modern art in America; showing such artists as Kiki Smith, Peter Halley, Keith Haring, Stephen Lack, Greer Lankton, Joseph Nechvatal, Nan Goldin, Jean-Michel Basquiat, David Wojnarowicz, Rick Prol, and Jeff Koons.[9]
[edit] The musical 'Rent'
The East Village is the setting for Jonathan Larson's musical Rent; set in the early 1990s, the story chronicles a group of friends over a year in their struggles against poverty, drug abuse and AIDS.
The musical Rent chronicled a period in the neighborhood's history that is bygone. It opened at the New York Theater Workshop in February 1996.[10] It described a New York City devastated by the AIDS epidemic, drugs and high crime, and followed several characters in the backdrop of their effort to make livings as artists.[11]
[edit] Decline of the art scene
The "Downtown Legends" wall at Mo Pitkins House of Satisfaction featured artists known in the East Village performance scene. A few featured in this photo include the Reverend Jen, Nick Zedd, Allen Ginsberg, Reverend Billy and Murray Hill (pictured).The East Village's performance and art scene has declined since its hey-day of the 1970s and 1980s.[12] One club that had opened to try to resurrect the neighborhood's past artistic prominence was Mo Pitkins' House of Satisfaction, part-owned by Jimmy Fallon of Saturday Night Live. It closed its doors in 2007, and was seen by many as another sign of the continued decline of the East Village performance and art scene, which has mostly moved to Williamsburg, Brooklyn.[13] Rapture Cafe also shut down in April 2008, and the neighborhood lost an important performance space and gathering ground for the gay community. There are still some performance spaces, such as Sidewalk Cafe on Avenue A, where downtown acts find space to exhibit their talent, and the poetry clubs.[14]
Punk scene icons stayed in the neighborhood as it changed. Richard Hell lives in the same apartment he has lived in since the 1970s, and Handsome Dick Manitoba of The Dictators owns and reigns over Manitoba's bar on Avenue B.
[edit] Internal neighborhoods
The East Village contains several hamlets of vibrant communities within itself.
[edit] Alphabet City
Main article: Alphabet City, Manhattan
The Nuyorican Poets Cafe has been located off Avenue C and East 3rd Street since its founding in 1973.Alphabet City comprises nearly two-thirds of the East Village. It also once was the archetype of a dangerous New York City neighborhood. Its turn-around was cause for The New York Times to observe in 2005 that Alphabet City went "from a drug-infested no man's land to the epicenter of downtown cool."[15] Its name comes from Avenues A, B, C, and D, the only avenues in Manhattan to have single-letter names. It is bordered by Houston Street to the south and 14th Street to the north where Avenue C ends. Some famous landmarks include Tompkins Square Park, the Nuyorican Poets Cafe and the Stuyvesant Town private residential community.
[edit] Loisaida
Main article: Loisaida
A Loisaida street fair in the Summer of 2008.Loisaida is a term derived from the Latino (and especially Nuyorican) pronunciation of "Lower East Side", a neighborhood in Manhattan, New York City. The term was originally coined by poet/activist, Bittman "Bimbo" Rivas in his 1974 poem "Loisaida". Loisaida Avenue is now an alternative name for Avenue C in the Alphabet City neighborhood of New York City, whose population has largely been Hispanic (mainly Nuyorican) since the late 1960s.
[edit] St. Mark's Place
Main article: St. Mark's Place
Artist Jim Power, known as the "Mosaic Man" for his public art tiling the neighborhood[16], at the 2009 St. Mark's Place Block Party.Eighth Street becomes St. Mark's place east of Third Avenue. It once had the cachet of Sutton Place, known as a secluded rich enclave in Manhattan, but which by the 1850s had become a place for boarding houses and a German immigrant community.[17] It is named after St Mark's Church in-the-Bowery, which was built on Stuyvesant Street but is now on 10th Street. St. Mark's Place once began at the intersection of the Bowery and Stuyvesant Street, but today the street runs from Third Avenue to Avenue A. Japanese street culture and a Japanese expatriate scene forms in the noodle shops and bars that line St. Mark's Place, also home to an aged punk culture and CBGB's new store. It is home to one of the only Automats in New York City (it has since closed).[18]
St. Mark's is along the “Mosaic Trail”, a trail of 80 mosaic-encrusted lampposts that runs from Broadway down Eighth Street to Avenue A, to Fourth Street and then back to Eighth Street. The project was undertaken by East Village public artist Jim Power, known as the "Mosaic Man".[16]
[edit] The Bowery
Main article: The Bowery
Once synonymous with 'Bowery Bums', the avenue has become a magnet for luxury condominiums as the neighborhood's rapid gentrification continues.The Bowery, former home to the punk-rock nightclub CBGB, was once known for its many homeless shelters, drug rehabilitation centers and bars. The phrase "On The Bowery", which has since fallen into disuse, was a generic way to say one was down-and-out.[19]
The Bow’ry, The Bow’ry!
They say such things,
and they do strange things
on the Bow’ry —From the musical A Trip to Chinatown, 1891
Today, the Bowery has become a boulevard of new luxury condominiums. It also is home to the Amato Opera and the Bowery Poetry Club, contributing to the neighborhood's reputation as a place for artistic pursuit. Artists Amiri Baraka and Taylor Mead hold regular readings and performances in the space.
The redevelopment of the avenue from flophouses to luxury condominiums has met with resistance from long-term residents, who agree the neighborhood has improved, but that its unique, gritty character is also disappearing.[20]
[edit] Parks and green space
[edit] Tompkins Square Park
Main article: Tompkins Square Park
The Tompkins Square dog run was the first in New York City, and is a social scene unto itself.[5]Tompkins Square Park is a 10.5 acre (42,000 m²) public park in the Alphabet City section of the East Village neighborhood in the borough of Manhattan in New York City. It is square in shape, and is bounded on the north by East 10th Street, on the east by Avenue B, on the south by East 7th Street, and on the west by Avenue A. St. Marks Place abuts the park to the west.
[edit] Tompkins Square Park Police Riot
Main article: Tompkins Square Park Police Riot (1988)
The Tompkins Square Park Police Riot was a defining moment for the neighborhood. In the late hours of August 6 into the morning hours of August 7, 1988 a riot broke out in Alphabet City's Tompkins Square Park. Groups of "drug pushers, homeless people and young people known as 'skinheads'" had largely taken over the East Village park, but the neighborhood was divided about what, if anything, should be done about it.[21] The local governing body, Manhattan Community Board 3, adopted a 1 am curfew for the previously 24-hour park, in an attempt to bring it under control.[22] On July 31, a rally against the curfew resulted in several clashes between protesters and police.[23]
[edit] East River Park
Main article: East River Park
East River Park below the Williamsburg Bridge.The park is 57 acres (230,000 m2) that runs along the Franklin D. Roosevelt Drive from Montgomery Street to East 12th Street.[24] It was designed in the 1930s by Robert Moses, who wanted to ensure there was parkland on the Lower East Side.[24]
[edit] Community gardens
There are reportedly over 640 community gardens in New York City—gardens run by local collectives within the neighborhood who are responsible for the gardens' upkeep—and an estimated 10 percent of those are located on the Lower East Side and East Village alone.[25]
[edit] Tower of Toys on Avenue B
The Avenue B and 6th Street Community Garden is one of the neighborhood's more notable for a now removed outdoor sculpture, the Tower of Toys, designed by artist and long-time garden gate-keeper, Eddie Boros. Boros died April 27, 2007.[26] The Tower was controversial in the neighborhood; some viewed it as a masterpiece, others as an eyesore.[26][27] The tower appeared in the opening credits for the television show NYPD Blue and also appears in the musical Rent.[26] In May 2008, it was dismantled. According to NYC Parks Commissioner Adrian Benepe, the tower was rotting in sections that made it a safety hazard.[28] Its removal was seen as another symbol of the fading past of the neighborhood.[28]
[edit] Toyota Children’s Learning Garden
Located at 603 East 11th Street, the Toyota Children's Learning Garden is not technically a community garden, but it also fails to fit in the park category. Designed by landscape architect Michael Van Valkenburgh, the garden opened in May 2008 as part of the New York Restoration Project and is designed to teach children about plants.[29]
[edit] New York City Marble Cemetery
A production of John Reed's All the World's a Grave in the Marble Cemetery, which does not contain headstones.The cemetery is actually two, which sit on 2nd Street between 1st Avenue and 2nd Avenue. They are open the fourth Sunday of every month.[30] The first and more prominent is the City cemetery, which is second oldest non-sectarian cemetery in New York City. It sits next to the oldest public cemetery in New York City not affiliated with any religion, the "New York Marble Cemetery."[31] The cemetery was opened in 1831 and at one point contained ex-U.S. President James Monroe.[32]
[edit] Culture and events
Longtime Mistress of Ceremonies at eatery Lucky Cheng's, Miss Understood stops a bus in front of the restaurant on First Avenue.Other than geography, the East Village's most notable commonalities with Greenwich Village are a colorful history, vibrant social and cultural outlets, and street names that often diverge from the norm.
The Bowery is a north-south avenue which also lends its name to the somewhat overlapping neighborhood of the Bowery; St. Mark's Place, a crosstown street well-known for counterculture businesses; and Astor Place/Cooper Square, home of the Public Theater and the Cooper Union. Nearby universities like New York University (NYU), The New School, and The Cooper Union have dormitories in the neighborhood.
[edit] Ethnicity and religion
Photograph of St. Nicholas with parts of Second Street visible. The church and almost all buildings on the street were demolished in the 1960's and replaced with parking lots.
Former parishioners of St. Mary's Help of Christians pray outside the shuttered church in August 2008.According to 2000 census figures provided by the New York City Department of City Planning, which includes the Lower East Side in its calculation, the neighborhood was 35% Asian, 28% non-Hispanic white, 27% Hispanic and 7% black.[33]
On October 9, 1966, A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada, founder of the International Society for Krishna Consciousness, held the first recorded outdoor chanting session of the Hare Krishna mantra outside of the Indian subcontinent at Tompkins Square Park.[34] This is considered the founding of the Hare Krishna religion in the United States, and the large tree close to the center of the Park is demarcated as a special religious site for Krishna adherents.[34] The late poet Allen Ginsberg, who lived and died in the East Village, attended the ceremony.
There are several Roman Catholic churches in the East Village which have fallen victim to financial hardship particularly in the past decade. Unable to maintain their properties, the Roman Catholic Church has shuttered many of them - including St. Mary's Help of Christians on East 12th Street, as well as St. Ann's. There has recently been much controversy over St. Brigid's, the historical parish on Tompkins Square Park.
[edit] Ukrainian history
Since the 1890s there has been a large Ukrainian concentration roughly from 10th Street to 5th Street, between 3rd Avenue and Avenue A. The post-World War II diaspora, consisting primarily of Western Ukrainian intelligentsia, also settled down in the area. Several churches, including St. George's Catholic Church; Ukrainian restaurants and butcher shops; The Ukrainian Museum; the Shevchenko Scientific Society; and the Ukrainian Cultural Center are evidence of the impact of this culture on the area.
[edit] Gentrification
[edit] New York University, a controversial resident
Residents of the East Village have a love-hate relationship with New York University, which owns and maintains many buildings, particularly in much of downtown Manhattan and in the neighborhoods surrounding its main campus in Greenwich Village (a distinct neighborhood from the East Village).[35]
St. Ann's Church, a rusticated-stone structure on East 12th Street with a Romanesque tower that dated to 1847 was sold to the University to make way for a monolithic 26-story, 700 bed dormitory for students. The University did protect and maintain St. Ann's original facade and small plaza immediately fronting the 12th Street sidewalk. The result is a blended, softer abutment of the new dorm building (which does rise dramatically above the facade) up behind the old St. Ann's entry way. New York University has built many dorms, and this one in particular is now the tallest structure in the area. "There are larger changes going on here," said Lynne Brown, vice president of university relations and public affairs. "I fear this tendency to blame any trend residents don't like happening at the doorstep of NYU," said Brown, mentioning that the university has been one of the longest inhabitants of the East Village. But Nancy Cosie, a 20 year resident and former St. Ann's parishioner, does not buy that argument. "Enough is enough," Cosie exclaimed to The Village Voice, "This is not a campus. This is a neighborhood, and this is my home."[35] NYU's destruction or purchasing of many historic buildings (such as the Peter Cooper post office) have made it symbolic of change that many long-time residents fear is destroying what made the neighborhood interesting and attractive.[36] "I live on Avenue B and 9th Street," an NYU student said. "I know I'm part of the problem - gentrification that is. But where am I supposed to live?"[36]
NYU has often been at odds with residents of both the East and West Villages, as legendary urban preservationist Jane Jacobs battled the school in the 1960s.[37] "She spoke of how universities and hospitals often had a special kind of hubris reflected in the fact that they often thought it was OK to destroy a neighborhood to suit their needs,” said Andrew Berman of the Greenwich Village Society for Historic Preservation.[38]
[edit] Museums, libraries, performance and art spaces
The Bowery Poetry Club.
Sherry Vine and Joey Arias during the 2009 HOWL! Festival.New York Public Library Tompkins Square branch [3]
The Fales Library of NYU
East Village Visitors Center - 308 Bowery
The Ukrainian Museum
New Museum of Contemporary Art
Museum of Jewish Heritage
Performance Space 122
Anthology Film Archives
The Stone
Bouwerie Lane Theatre
Amato Opera
Danspace Project
The Ontological-Hysteric Theater
The Pearl Theatre Company [4]
Stomp! (Theatrical show)
Metropolitan Playhouse[5]
Mercury Lounge (live music)
Sidewalk Cafe (performance and live music)
Bowery Ballroom (concerts and shows)
Nuyorican Poets Cafe (music, poetry, readings, slams)
Bowery Poetry Club (music, poetry, readings, slams)
La MaMa E.T.C. (performance theater)
Cooper Union (speeches, presentations, public lectures and readings)
[edit] Neighborhood festivals
Mayday Festival - May 1; yearly.
Charlie Parker Jazz Festival - August; yearly.[6]
HOWL! Festival - September; yearly.[7][8]
East Village Radio Festival - September 6, 2008 [9]
Tompkins Square Halloween Dog Parade - October; yearly.[10]
East Village Theater Festival - August 3–23, 2009.[11]
FAB! Festival & Block Party - Last weekend in September annually, Sept 25, 2010 [12]
[edit] Media
Many film shoots take place in the East Village; here a period movie with antique police cars is filmed on East 4th Street.[edit] Radio
East Village Radio
[edit] Local news
The Village Voice
The Villager
East-Village.com
EastVillageFeed.com
[edit] Cinemas
Anthology Film Archives
Landmark's Sunshine Theater
Village East Cinema
City Cinema Village East
Two Boots Pioneer Theater
[edit] Notable residents past and present
Handsome Dick Manitoba of The Dictators.
Madonna lived in the neighborhood when she was just starting out in her career.[39]Handsome Dick Manitoba, who owns Manitoba's bar on Avenue B off Tompkins Square Park.
Darren Aronofsky and his wife, Rachel Weisz
Chris Cain, Bassist for the Indie-Rock band We Are Scientists
Barbara Feinman
John Leguizamo
Daniel Radcliffe
Agim Kaba
Rosario Dawson
Tom Kalin
Vashtie Kola director
W. H. Auden[40]
Greer Lankton, Artist/Doll maker
Ellen Stewart founder of La MaMa, E.T.C. (Experimental Theatre Club) in 1961.
Madonna lived there in the 1980s.
John Lurie,musician, painter, actor, producer.
Jean-Michel Basquiat, graffiti artist
David Bowes, painter
Allen Ginsberg (1926–1997), Beat Generation poet and author of Howl.[41]
Keith Haring, neo-pop artist
Claes Oldenburg (1929-), sculptor, had a studio at 46 East 3rd Street in the late 1950s.[42]
Candy Darling, actress/Warhol superstar
Bill Raymond, actor
Ryan Adams, alt-country musician
David Cross, actor, comedian
Negin Farsad, writer, director, comedian
Nan Goldin, photographer
Stephen Lack, actor, painter
Ronnie Landfield, (1947-), painter, lived on E. 11th street, mid-1960s[43]
Kiki Smith sculptor
John Zorn composer, musician
Richard Hell, musician, author
Abbie Hoffman (1936–1989), 1960s political activist[44]
Ayun Halliday, actress and writer, and wife of playwright Greg Kotis
Greg Kotis, playwright, and husband of actress and writer Ayun Halliday
Jerry Rubin (1938–1994), 1960s political activist - with Hoffman founded the Yippies in a basement apartment at 30 St. Marks Place[44]
Cookie Mueller, actress, model
Paul Krassner (1932-), publisher of The Realist
Walter Bowart (1939–2007), co-founder editor/ of The East Village Other
Allan Katzman, co-founder/editor of The East Village Other
Tuli Kupferberg, (1923-), Beat Generation poet, and one of the original Fugs
Ed Sanders, (1939-), New York School poet and one of the original Fugs
Joseph Nechvatal (1951-) early digital artist and founder of the Tellus Audio Cassette Magazine
Randy Harrison, actor
Joel Resnicoff, artist and fashion illustrator.
Regina Spektor, (1980-) Singer-songwriter and pianist.
Rachel Trachtenburg (1993-) singer and musician
Tom Otterness sculptor
Steven Fishbach, runner-up of Survivor: Tocantins
Chloe Sevigny actress
Conor Oberst musician
Lou Reed, musician
Julian Casablancas, musician
Mark Ronson
Arthur Russell, musician[45]
Jack Smith filmmaker, artist
Iggy Pop, performer, musician
Page 1 of 2 (see below)
Page 2 of 2 (click here)
===================================================
Sept. 22, 2013 @ 9 a.m. (the half-marathon start time)
This year, about 22,000 runners are expected to participate in the 5 km or 21.1 km (half-marathon) Canada Army Run race events. The Canada Army Run, now in its sixth year, continues to be the fastest-growing race event in Canada.
The runners listed below are:
a) local (Ottawa-Gatineau and area) half-marathon participants, who
b) registered through the Running Room.
The lists are sorted by community and first name, as follows:
(page 1)
A. Ottawa, Ontario
B. Gatineau, Québec
C. Kanata, Ontario
D. Nepean, Ontario
E. Orleans, Ontario
(page 2)
F. Other Ontario, by community
G. Other Québec, by community
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
A. Ottawa Residents
1…….Adam Lyle
2…….Adam Martin
3…….Adam Stone
4…….Aili Ignacy
5…….Aisha Suhail
6…….Alain Auger
7…….Alan Chan
8…….Alastair Stewart
9…….Alec Campbell
10……Alex Hubbard
11……Alex Reeves
12……Alex Renwick
13……Alexandra Gaw
14……Alexandra Paslat
15……Alexandra Salo
16……Alexandre Prenoveau
17……Alexis Tulsiram
18……Algis Danaitis
19……Alisha Prater
20……Alison Jennings
21……Alison Young
22……Alix McLeod
23……Allan McKay
24……Allanna Turcotte
25……Alp Oran
26……Amanda Pruner
27……Amanda Troupe
28……Amber Mazanek
29……Amira Mohamed
30……Amy McSweeney
31……Amy Smith
32……Andre Cuillerier
33……Andre Dion
34……Andrea Evans
35……Andrea Merry
36……Andrea Winter
37……Andrew Archer
38……Andrew Chen
39……Andrew Gaiero
40……Andrew Ha
41……Andrew Ng
42……Andrew Porter
43……Andrew Rodrigue
44……Andrew Rose
45……Andrew Staples
46……Angela Koskie
47……Angela Lewis
48……Angela Romany
49……Angela Simpkin
50……Angela Walter
51……Angeline Law
52……Anick Piquette
53……Anita Choquette
54……Ann Gregory
55……Ann Lanthier
56……Anna Belanger
57……Anna Belanger
58……Anna Shannette
59……Anne Cumming
60……Anne MacDonald
61……Anne-Marie Fraser
62……Annie McEwen
63……Aparna Shanker
64……April Ferguson
65……Arleigh Romyn
66……Arlene Doucette
67……Art Gresham
68……Ashleigh Horricks
69……Ashley Andrews
70……Ashley Cowan
71……Audrey Taylor
72……Ayla Jacquard
73……Barbara Campbell
74……Barbara Carrera
75……Barbara Dundas
76……Becky Lee-Mclean
77……Ben Tobali
78……Bernard Rousseau
79……Bill McEachern
80……Bill Ridley
81……Bingbing Cai
82……Blair Stacey
83……Blenda Jong
84……Bob McCulloch
85……Brad Koskie
86……Brad Lejeune
87……Brad Richard
88……Breann Ronquist
89……Brenda Gaitens
90……Brenda Troke
91……Brendan Hennigan
92……Brian Bax
93……Brian Hancock
94……Brian O'Higgins
95……Brian O'Higgins
96……Brigitte Charron
97……Brigitte Jackstien
98……Brittany Dawson
99……Brooke Couperus
100…..Bruce Snider
101…..Cal Mitchell
102…..Calvin Reid
103…..Cameron Beare
104…..Cameron Dunlop
105…..Carol O'Malley
106…..Carole Harrison
107…..Carole Hubbard
108…..Carole Plourde
109…..Carole-Anne Savard
110…..Caroline Bredeson
111…..Caroline Glynn
112…..Cassandra Tilson
113…..Catharine Cameron
114…..Catherine Andersson
115…..Catherine Beck
116…..Catherine Caron
117…..Catherine Hull
118…..Catherine Yarker
119…..Cathy Nolan
120…..Cecilia Ho
121…..Celeste Irvine-Jones
122…..Celina Gilligan
123…..Chandra Copeland
124…..Chandra von Teichman
125…..Chantal Cousineau
126…..Chantal Ripp
127…..Charla O'Connor
128…..Charlene Mathias
129…..Charles Bordeleau
130…..Charlotte Fraser
131…..Chelsea Macdonell
132…..Chelsey Burke
133…..Cheryl Giles
134…..Cheryl McIntyre
135…..Chloe Macdonell
136…..Chris Bright
137…..Chris Brown
138…..Chris Dilabio
139…..Chris McMahon
140…..Chris Nestor
141…..Chris Renwick
142…..Chris Salter
143…..Christelle Desgranges-Farquhar
144…..Christene White
145…..Christian Del Valle
146…..Christian Figueredo
147…..Christina Houle
148…..Christine Bucholtz
149…..Christine Connolly
150…..Christine Côté
151…..Christine Foley
152…..Christine Geraghty
153…..Christine Halliburton
154…..Christine Heal
155…..Christine Martinet
156…..Christine Newman
157…..Christine Polihronis
158…..Christine Power
159…..Christine Schulz
160…..Christoper Power
161…..Christopher Bredeson
162…..Christopher Jones
163…..Christopher Mcgregor
164…..Christy Brannen
165…..Cindy Macdonald
166…..Cindy McAlpine
167…..Claude Béland
168…..Claudie Larouche
169…..Colin Bendell
170…..Colin Burgess
171…..Colleen Bigelow
172…..Colleen Crane
173…..Connie Acelvari
174…..Connie Chan
175…..Connie Copeland
176…..Corey Costantini
177…..Cory Lohmann
178…..Cory Van Hoof
179…..Cotten Kevin
180…..Courtney McCrindle
181…..Courtney Watson
182…..Craig Madill
183…..Craig Stehr
184…..Cullen Bird
185…..Curtis Scharf
186…..Cynthia Brown
187…..Dale Gervais
188…..Damian Curley
189…..Dan Shea
190…..Daniel Bourget
191…..Daniel Careau
192…..Daniel Guerrette
193…..Daniel Levesque
194…..Daniel Munro
195…..Daniel Ngo
196…..Daniel Reifler
197…..Daniel Villeneuve
198…..Daniela Zidek
199…..Danielle Stehr
200…..Danny Dillon
201…..Dany Jacques
202…..Dara Burry
203…..Darcy Fraser
204…..Darcy Middleton
205…..Daria Strachan
206…..Darlene Bess
207…..Darlene Joyce
208…..Darrell Bridge
209…..Darrell Coughlin
210…..Darren Cates
211…..Darren Jerome
212…..Darryl Bilodeau
213…..Darryl Blais
214…..Darryl Hill
215…..Darryl Stal
216…..Darwin Ziprick
217…..Dave Bergeron
218…..Dave Goods
219…..Dave Kary
220…..Dave McFadden
221…..Dave Saville
222…..Dave Silvester
223…..Dave Yarker
224…..David Felix
225…..David Harding
226…..David Howell
227…..David Lemay
228…..David McCaw
229…..David Parke
230…..David Spiers
231…..Dawn Millions
232…..Dawn Styan
233…..Dean Justus
234…..Deb Quayle
235…..Deborah Newhook
236…..Debra Bowbrick
237…..Deidre Kelly
238…..Demetria Tsoutouras
239…..Denis Baudin
240…..Denise Deschenes
241…..Denise Gravel Tropper
242…..Denise Picard-Stencer
243…..Denise Saeki
244…..Denise Senecal
245…..Denise St. Jean
246…..Deshayne Fell
247…..Desirae Odjick
248…..Diedre Viljoen
249…..Diego Tremblay
250…..Don C. Cumming
251…..Donald Henry
252…..Donna Justus
253…..Donna Rainbow
254…..Donna Weston
255…..Doug Beirness
256…..Doug Braid
257…..Douglas Thiboutot
258…..Duane Leon
259…..Dung Bui
260…..Dvora Rotenberg
261…..Edward Vonk
262…..Elisabeth Baechlin
263…..Elissa Renaud
264…..Elizabeth Izaguirre
265…..Elizabeth Jones
266…..Elizabeth Krause
267…..Elizabeth Miller
268…..Elizabeth Taite
269…..Elizabeth White
270…..Elyse Pratt-Johnson
271…..Elysia Van Zeyl
272…..Emem Idiong
273…..Emika Marinacci
274…..Émilie Cécire
275…..Emilie Lavigne
276…..Emily Hewitt
277…..Emily Mackie
278…..Emily MacLean
279…..Emily Welch
280…..Ena Malvern
281…..Eric Anthony Burpee
282…..Eric Burpee
283…..Eric Charland
284…..Erica Bedard
285…..Erica Wong
286…..Erin Brunet
287…..Erin Lehman
288…..Erin Mackey
289…..Evan May
290…..Evelyne Cardinal
291…..Fabienne Glauser
292…..Fabio Gonzalez
293…..Fabio Vivas
294…..Fallon Bazdell
295…..Farida Kerrouche
296…..Fatemah Habib
297…..Faye Goldman
298…..Forrest Potter
299…..Francesca Macdonald
300…..Francois Baril
301…..François Cholette
302…..Francois Pineau
303…..Gabrielle Nadeau
304…..Gaby Moreau
305…..Gail Cummings
306…..Garth Rayburn
307…..Garvin Lee
308…..Gary Bazdell
309…..Genesis Juane
310…..Genevieve Bourget
311…..Genevieve Houle
312…..Genny Brims
313…..Geoffrey Delage
314…..George Hajecek
315…..Georgette Houle
316…..Geroge Heron
317…..Gina Charos
318…..Gina Gargaro
319…..Gisell Delgado
320…..Glen Paling
321…..Glenn Carroll
322…..Gord Baldwin
323…..Gosia Kozak
324…..Grace Fullerton
325…..Grace Langis
326…..Graham Edwards
327…..Graham Reid
328…..Grant MacLeod
329…..Greg Bryson
330…..Greg Howard
331…..Greg Layhew
332…..Greg Montgomery
333…..Greg Morris
334…..Greg Quinlan
335…..Greta Chase
336…..Guy Pelletier
337…..Haiyan Zhou
338…..Hannah Manning
339…..Hannah Wallace
340…..Harold Geller
341…..Heather Dye
342…..Heather McConkey
343…..Heather Squires
344…..Heather Williams
345…..Heeba Abdullah
346…..Helga Grodzinski
347…..Henri St-Martin
348…..Hilary May
349…..Hillary Rose
350…..Holly Johnson
351…..Iain Macdonald
352…..Ian Port
353…..Ida Liu
354…..Imroze Shaheen
355…..Irène Dionne
356…..Isabel Black
357…..Isabelle Gingrich
358…..Jacek Gorwa
359…..Jacinthe Charron
360…..Jacki Sachrajda
361…..Jacques Gobin
362…..James Fairlie
363…..James Turnbull
364…..Jamie Hurst
365…..Jane Maxwell
366…..Janelle Denton
367…..Janet Cooper
368…..Jason Bromstad
369…..Jason Lehman
370…..Jay Rached
371…..Jean Marie O'Brien
372…..Jean Stewart
373…..Jeff Morrison
374…..Jeff Ray
375…..Jeff Smart
376…..Jeffrey Bardell
377…..Jen Cimbron
378…..Jennifer Balcom
379…..Jennifer Baudin
380…..Jennifer Bookhout
381…..Jennifer Bucknall
382…..Jennifer Campbell
383…..Jennifer Ciolfi
384…..Jennifer Davies
385…..Jennifer Kennedy
386…..Jennifer Lim
387…..Jennifer Mills
388…..Jennifer Moores
389…..Jennifer Parr
390…..Jennifer Ramsay
391…..Jennifer Shortall
392…..Jennifer Wills
393…..Jennnifer Harris
394…..Jenny Kenmir
395…..Jenny Koumoutsidis
396…..Jesse Fleming
397…..Jessica Eamer
398…..Jessica Kight
399…..Jessica Meneray
400…..Jessica Morris
401…..Jessica St. John
402…..JF Fauteux
403…..Jian Wu
404…..Jill Frook
405…..Jim Hogan
406…..Jo-Ann Brault
407…..Joanna Bellamy
408…..Joanne Beattie
409…..Jo-Anne Beauchemin
410…..Joanne Bradley
411…..Joanne Hart
412…..Joanne Ritchie
413…..JoAnne Schmid
414…..Jocelyne Grandlouis
415…..Jocelyne Macmillan
416…..Jodi Cameron
417…..Jodi Turner
418…..Joe Paraskevas
419…..Joe Whitmore
420…..Joel Gascon
421…..Joelle Martin
422…..Joelyn Ragan
423…..John Beaudoin
424…..John Buckle
425…..John Gordon
426…..John Griffin
427…..John Mahoney
428…..John Oliver
429…..John Weston
430…..Jolene Harvey
431…..Jonathan Dawe
432…..Jonathan Toye
433…..Jonathon Mclean
434…..Joni Ogawa
435…..Josee Perreault
436…..Josee Surprenant
437…..Joseph Griffiths
438…..Josh Bruinsma
439…..Josh Henne
440…..Joyce Robertson
441…..Judith Price
442…..Julianne McKenzie
443…..Julie Bosse
444…..Julie Gourlay
445…..Julie Laplante
446…..Julie Mecke
447…..Julie Sabadash
448…..Julien Namiech
449…..Juniper Hayes
450…..Justin Pike
451…..Kadambi Sitaram
452…..Kaelyn MacGillivray
453…..Kaitie Jourdeuil
454…..Kalin McCluskey
455…..Karen Burns
456…..Karen Crookshank
457…..Karen Marshall
458…..Karen McElroy
459…..Karen Moon
460…..Karen Sauve
461…..Karen Yantha
462…..Karine Cousineau
463…..Kate Borowec
464…..Kate Corsten
465…..Kate Parry
466…..Kate Slean
467…..Katerina Belinson
468…..Katherine Allen
469…..Katherine Richardson
470…..Kathleen Buset
471…..Kathlene Allen
472…..Kathryn Makela
473…..Kathryn Scott
474…..Kathy Crowe
475…..Kathy Knight-Robinson
476…..Kathy O'Brien
477…..Katie Paribok
478…..Katya Pichugin
479…..Keith Burnage
480…..Keith Gallop
481…..Keith Savage
482…..Kellie Scrim
483…..Kelly Hewitt
484…..Ken Farquhar
485…..Ken Gibson
486…..Kendall Miller
487…..Kendra Atkins
488…..Kendra Ray
489…..Kerry Nolan
490…..Kerry Scott
491…..Kevin O'Brien
492…..Kevin Sampson
493…..Kiki French
494…..Kim McMillan
495…..Kim Moir
496…..Kim Sampson
497…..Kimberly Rennie
498…..Kirk Maddox
499…..Kiza Francis
500…..Kristi Murphy
501…..Kristie Kelly
502…..Kristie Smith
503…..Kristina Beauchesne
504…..Kristopher Kilgour
505…..Kyle Miersma
506…..Kym Martin
507…..Lalonde Martine
508…..Larry Chamney
509…..Lauren Gamble
510…..Lauren Higgins
511…..Laurent Roy
512…..Laurie Pinard
513…..Layla Prieur
514…..Leah Andrews
515…..Leigh Harris Fowell
516…..Leigh Perreault
517…..Lena Dikranian
518…..Leo Benvenuti
519…..Les Woolsey
520…..Lesley Holmes
521…..Leslie-Anne Bailliu
522…..Liam Kennedy
523…..Liang Chen
524…..Liette Greyeyes
525…..Lily Lemay
526…..Linda Beehler
527…..Linda Lewis
528…..Linda Yusak
529…..Lindsay Chomyn
530…..Lindsay Harrison
531…..Lisa Butler
532…..Lisa Gibson
533…..Lisa Kawaguchi
534…..Lisa Kayaga
535…..Lisa Power
536…..Lisa Rambout
537…..Lisa Zielinski
538…..Lise King
539…..Lise Perrier
540…..Lise Scott
541…..Lorenzo De Franco
542…..Lori Blais
543…..Lori Mitchell
544…..Lori Mockson
545…..Lori Stewart
546…..Lori-Lynn Sanduliak
547…..Lorne Murdock
548…..Lorne Watters
549…..Lorraine England
550…..Louis Comerton
551…..Louise Gresham
552…..Louise Lloyd
553…..Luc Chouinard
554…..Luc Gagnon
555…..Lucas Lokaj
556…..Luce Blouin
557…..Lucien Cattrysse
558…..Luc-Rock Paquin
559…..Luisa De Amicis
560…..Lynda Bordeleau
561…..Lynda Cronin
562…..Lynda Kalapati
563…..Lynda Robertson
564…..Lynette Pike
565…..Lyse Langevin
566…..Madeleine Bourget
567…..Mandy Smith
568…..Marc Patry
569…..Marc-Andre Blais
570…..Marcel Lacasse
571…..Margaret Meroni
572…..Maria Pooley
573…..Marian Eichel
574…..Marianne Vincent
575…..Mariarosa Fliss
576…..Marie Andree Bureau
577…..Marie Poulin
578…..Marie-Claude Robillard
579…..Marie-Elaine Morency
580…..Marilyn Johnston
581…..Marilyn Warren
582…..Marion May
583…..Mark Budd
584…..Mark Coates
585…..Mark Doyle
586…..Mark Karssing
587…..Marlene Louise Rippey Jones
588…..Marnie Campbell
589…..Martin Leahy
590…..Martin Primeau
591…..Martine Bolderheij
592…..Marty Lipcsey
593…..Mary Au
594…..Mathew Baril
595…..Mathieu Joly
596…..Matt Dooley
597…..Matthew Eglin
598…..Matthew Kelly
599…..Matthew Whyte
600…..Mauricio Salgado
601…..Maxine Morrison
602…..May Chow
603…..McGuinness Karen
604…..Megan Abraham
605…..Megan Davies-Ostrom
606…..Megan Hammel
607…..Megan McLeod
608…..Megan Scharf
609…..Megan Tomkinson
610…..Meghan Maack
611…..Mehmet Can Ciplak
612…..Mel MacDougall
613…..Melanie Adams
614…..Melanie Ferguson
615…..Melanie Rickard
616…..Melinda Newman
617…..Melissa Masson
618…..Melissa Mondor
619…..Melissa Olegario
620…..Meziane Zeroual
621…..Mia Dore
622…..Michael Arts
623…..Michael Corbett
624…..Michael Corneau
625…..Michael Gilligan
626…..Michael Hewett
627…..Michael Leahey
628…..Michael McAuley
629…..Michael McLean
630…..Michael Read
631…..Michel Collette
632…..Michelle Bustos
633…..Michelle Couture
634…..Michelle Davidson
635…..Michelle Keough
636…..Michelle Leigh Thompson
637…..Miguel Flores
638…..Mike Beauchesne
639…..Mike Horne
640…..Mike Madden
641…..Miles Grant
642…..Minh Nguyen
643…..Mohamed Mohamed
644…..Moira Johnson
645…..Mona Bates
646…..Monica Knowles
647…..Monica Martinez
648…..Monique Dillon
649…..Monique Salajka
650…..Mounir Sami
651…..Nadia Gibson
652…..Nancy Amos
653…..Nancy Fletcher
654…..Nancy Fowler
655…..Nancy Kalil
656…..Nancy Macdonell
657…..Nancy McMahon
658…..Naomi Loucks
659…..Natalie Fernandes
660…..Natalie Gajewski
661…..Natasha Carraro
662…..Natasha Clark
663…..Natasha McRae
664…..Natasha Salo
665…..Nathalie Douville
666…..Nathalie Fleming
667…..Nazish Saleem
668…..Negin Hatam
669…..Nelson Lewis
670…..Nicholas Hooper
671…..Nicholas MacDonald
672…..Nicholas McDonnell-Stewart
673…..Nick Fidler
674…..Nick Grondin
675…..Nicole Crowder
676…..Nicole Crutcher
677…..Nicole Duguay
678…..Nicole Gagnon
679…..Nicole LeBlanc
680…..Nicole Slanina
681…..Nicole Slunder
682…..Nicole Ward
683…..Nikki Eaton
684…..Noreen Towns
685…..Norma Lynn Pearson
686…..Oleksandr Zabara
687…..Olga Salgado
688…..Olivier Fichet
689…..Oren Howlett
690…..Paige Doyle
691…..Pamela Balder
692…..Pamela Ellison
693…..Pamela Hunter
694…..Pascal Ilboudo
695…..Pascale Evans-Paulen
696…..Pat Evans
697…..Patrice Desjardins
698…..Patricia Knobl
699…..Patricia McLarnon
700…..Patti Gamble
701…..Paul Allen
702…..Paul Dalgleish
703…..Paul Lawless
704…..Paul Malvern
705…..Paul Rolland
706…..Paul Rosenberg
707…..Paul Sorichetti
708…..Paul Wynnyk
709…..Paula Carty
710…..Paula ter Huurne
711…..Peggy Gibson
712…..Periander Carino
713…..Perry Graham
714…..Peter Gingrich
715…..Peter Green
716…..Peter Linkletter
717…..Peter Locke
718…..Phil Jourdeuil
719…..Philippe Bujold
720…..PK Leung
721…..Rachel Peters Samulack
722…..Rachel Slater
723…..Rafal Rohozinski
724…..Rafik Rezzik
725…..Rajiv Bhatia
726…..Ralf Dagher
727…..Randy Mansfield
728…..Randy McElligott
729…..Ranjit Bose
730…..Raven Cote
731…..Ray Dupuis
732…..Raymond Prenoveau
733…..Raymond Tropiano
734…..Rebecca Coates
735…..Rebecca Ng
736…..Reine Turland
737…..Renata Manchak
738…..Rene Yaraskavitch
739…..Renee McEwen
740…..Renu Pillay
741…..Rex Antony
742…..Rhiannon Vogl
743…..Rich Bonneau
744…..Richard Arbeiter
745…..Richard Bourassa
746…..Richard Cronin
747…..Richard Hussey
748…..Rick Dobson
749…..Rick O'Shaughnessy
750…..Riley Hennessey
751…..Rita Chasse
752…..Rob Brooks
753…..Robert Adolfson
754…..Robert Kalbfleisch
755…..Robert Leblanc
756…..Robert Reynolds
757…..Robert Rollwagen
758…..Robert Statham
759…..Robert Stewart-Williams
760…..Robert Young
761…..Roberta Blackburn
762…..Robyn Knott
763…..Roger Zemek
764…..Romano Panopio
765…..Ron Allenby
766…..Ron Lloyd
767…..Rosina Mauro
768…..Roxanne Harper
769…..Roxanne Mathias
770…..Roxanne VandenBeek
771…..Ruth Farey
772…..Ryan Torrie
773…..Sandra Gruescu
774…..Sandra Monaghan
775…..Sandra Rainbow
776…..Sandy MacLeod
777…..Sanjeev Bhanjana
778…..Sara Jefferson
779…..Sara Mohr
780…..Sarah Evans
781…..Sarah Gelbard
782…..Sarah Lozano
783…..Sarah Marchildon-White
784…..Sarah Palmer
785…..Sarah Patterson
786…..Sarah Sabourin
787…..Sarah Silvester
788…..Sarah Springate
789…..Scott Crawshaw
790…..Scott Greenaway
791…..Scott MacDonald
792…..Scott Tomlinson
793…..Scott Windsor
794…..Sean McAlpine
795…..Sean O'Brien
796…..Sebastien Dufour
797…..Sebastien Taillefer
798…..Senecal Brian
799…..Serge Benvenuti
800…..Shainen Davidson
801…..Shane Brennan
802…..Shannon Bertels
803…..Shannon Kack
804…..Shannon Kunstadt
805…..Shannon Olson
806…..Shannon Parsons
807…..Shannon Poole
808…..Shannon Renaud
809…..Shannon Timpson
810…..Shari Cooper
811…..Shari Nurse
812…..Sharon Johnston
813…..Shauna Hanratty
814…..Sheila Reid
815…..Shelley Chambers
816…..Shelley Sourges
817…..Shelley True
818…..Sheri Buck
819…..Sheri McCready
820…..She-Yang Lau-Chapdelaine
821…..Simona Berbescu
822…..Solita Pacheco
823…..Stacey Brennan
824…..Stacey Woodruff
825…..Steeve Pratte
826…..Stefani Roy
827…..Steph Barteaux
828…..Stephane Parent
829…..Stephanie Earle
830…..Stephanie Justus
831…..Stephanie Parker
832…..Stephanie Revie
833…..Stephanie Schoen
834…..Stephanie Schultz
835…..Stephanie Williams
836…..Stephen Archibald
837…..Stephen Bugden
838…..Stephen Shew
839…..Stephen Swanson
840…..Stephen Whiteley
841…..Stephen Woroszczuk
842…..Steve Astels
843…..Steve Fauchon
844…..Steve McCready
845…..Steve Moritsugu
846…..Steven Hawken
847…..Steven Molnar
848…..Stuart David
849…..Stuart Palmer
850…..Stuart Thomas
851…..Sue C Baribeau
852…..Sue Mackey
853…..Su-Kim Roy
854…..Susan Brousseau
855…..Susan Farrell
856…..Susan Lentini
857…..Susan Mack
858…..Susan Mak Chin
859…..Susan Ostergaard
860…..Susan Robbins Parsons
861…..Susan Sami
862…..Suzanne Lafrance
863…..Sydney Hanratty
864…..Sylvain Huard
865…..Sylvia Lewis-Havard
866…..Sylvie Corbin
867…..Sylvie Scharf
868…..T.J. Mondoux
869…..Tammy Jeffery
870…..Tanya Brunet
871…..Tara Fitzpatrick
872…..Tara Tucker
873…..Taryn Manias
874…..Tasha McFarland
875…..Tavis Wiegand
876…..Taylor Bildstein
877…..Ted Edward
878…..Ted Edward
879…..Terry Cyr
880…..Terry Evans
881…..Terry McDermott
882…..Terry-Lynn Sigouin
883…..Thai Nguyen
884…..Thalie Leblanc
885…..Thanh Nha Huynh
886…..Theresa Deszpoth
887…..Theresa Flaherty
888…..Theresa Hendricks
889…..Tiffany Hodgin
890…..Tom Boudreau
891…..Toni Petter
892…..Tony Domina
893…..Tracey Tong
894…..Tracy O'Connor
895…..Tracy Young
896…..Valerie Bellemare
897…..Valerie Oickle
898…..Valerie Saunders
899…..Valery Brennan
900…..Van Dinh
901…..Vanessa Brochet
902…..Vanessa Meikle
903…..Veronik McFadden
904…..Véronique Albert
905…..Véronique Bélinge
906…..Vicky Demanche
907…..Vicky Eatrides
908…..Virgilio Disipio
909…..Vito Di Turi
910…..Walter Wayne
911…..Warren Mitchell
912…..Wendy Jermyn
913…..Wendy Mason
914…..Wendy Statham
915…..Wendy Taylor
916…..Wendy Trower
917…..Will Messervey
918…..Will Simmering
919…..William Chisholm
920…..Yahoska Petien
921…..Yannick Sirois
922…..Yasminka Kresic
923…..Yu Ting Jiang
924…..Zdenka Dvorak
925…..Ziad Geagea
B. Gatineau Residents
926…..Adam Norwick
927…..Alexia-Taylor Latter
928…..Alison Sorrell
929…..Amy Osborne
930…..André Brissette
931…..Andrea Richard
932…..Andree-Anne Richer-Lyrette
933…..Angie Manley
934…..Anick Pilotte
935…..Anick Potvin
936…..Anik Racine
937…..Anne-Marie Chapman
938…..Arianne Bergevin
939…..Benoit Carbonneau
940…..Benoit Tardivel
941…..Brigitte Levesque
942…..Brodie Larocque
943…..Carole Benoit
944…..Caroline Dallaire
945…..Caroline Fillion
946…..Caroline Knippenebrg
947…..Catherine Pelletier
948…..Cathy Ozimac
949…..Chantal Delachevrotiere
950…..Chizuko Matsufuji
951…..Chris Piercey
952…..Christian Jacques
953…..Christiane Drouin
954…..Christy Ogbuagu
955…..Claire Huet
956…..Claudia Ferland
957…..Claudie St-Onge
958…..Daniel Lagacé
959…..Debbie Harding
960…..Dominic Lavoie
961…..Dominique Lacroix
962…..Donald Turcotte
963…..Doug Winmill
964…..Elsa La Corte
965…..Elyse Crochetiere
966…..Émilie Charron
967…..Eric Gauthier
968…..Eric Giffard
969…..Eric Silins
970…..Eric Turgeon
971…..Estelle Marcoux
972…..Fannie Bisson
973…..Francois Bisson
974…..Frédéric Voyer
975…..Gabrielle Duhaime
976…..Gauri Nadkarni
977…..Geneviève Laflamme
978…..Gisele Royer
979…..Guy Desjardins
980…..Hélène Belleau
981…..Helene Courchesne
982…..Hélène Tessier
983…..Helene Tremblay-Allen
984…..Isabelle Daly
985…..Isabelle Gagnon
986…..Isabelle Legault
987…..Isabelle Lowe
988…..Ismaël Sy
989…..Janie Séguin
990…..Jay Rieger
991…..Jean Faullem
992…..Jean-Claude Ouellet
993…..Jean-François Benoît
994…..Jean-Francois Brassard
995…..Jean-Francois Gagne
996…..Jean-Philippe Dumont
997…..Jeffrey Muller
998…..Johanne Boucher
999…..Johanne Di Tomasso
1000….Jonathan Coulombe
1001….Josee Clement
1002….Josee Labonte
1003….Josee Taillefer
1004….Julie Chiasson
1005….Julie Cote
1006….Julie Lambert
1007….Kaitlin Bordeleau
1008….Karie Drouin
1009….Karine Lacasse
1010….Karine Roxburgh
1011….Karine Sauve
1012….Katherine Ruschiensky
1013….Keila Fontaine
1014….Ken Lagace
1015….Keri Lalande
1016….Kim Deslauriers-Parisé
1017….Kim Monaghan
1018….Kimberly Turner
1019….Kirstin Wood-Haley
1020….Lesya Stocki
1021….Line Dubois
1022….Louis Duchesne
1023….Louis Simon
1024….Luc Boucher
1025….Lucie Lalonde
1026….Lucie Prevost
1027….Lyne Pion
1028….Lynn Villeneuve
1029….Marc Dumouchel
1030….Marc Fortin
1031….Marc Ibrahim
1032….Marc Pérusse
1033….Marcel Beaudoin
1034….Marcel Croteau
1035….Marco Lacasse
1036….Maria Cloutier
1037….Marie-France Chatel
1038….Marie-Josée Brinck
1039….Marie-Pascal Berthelot
1040….Mario Charette
1041….Mario Dube
1042….Martin Jourdenais
1043….Martin Labine
1044….Martin St-Amour
1045….Martin Yshikawa
1046….Maryse Mercier
1047….Mathieu Gagné
1048….Mélanie Bélanger
1049….Melanie Bouchard
1050….Mélanie Brunet
1051….Melanie Gauthier
1052….Melanie Larocque
1053….Melanie Renaud
1054….Melanie Wallwork
1055….Michael Groh
1056….Michel Lefebvre
1057….Mihail Tofan
1058….Mikaly Gagnon
1059….Mike Leclair
1060….Myriam Houde
1061….Nadine Lavergne
1062….Nancy Jane Russell
1063….Nancy Moreau
1064….Nathalie Bigras
1065….Nathalie Brunet
1066….Nathalie Cyr
1067….Nathalie Leduc
1068….Neil Plohman
1069….Nesreen Ibrahim
1070….Nicole Lapointe
1071….Norman Bouchard
1072….Pascal Viau
1073….Paul Gould
1074….Philippe Chenier
1075….Philippe Chouinard
1076….Pierre Lavoie
1077….Rachelle Duval
1078….Raphael Brissette
1079….René Hatem
1080….Renee Venne
1081….Ricardo del Castillo
1082….Richard Massé
1083….Robert Chasse
1084….Robert Daoust
1085….Samuel Roy
1086….Sandra Roberts
1087….Serena Dalton
1088….Shayna Stawicki
1089….Slobodan Delev
1090….Stéphan Soucy
1091….Stéphane Gagné
1092….Stephanie Dufault
1093….Susie Simard
1094….Susi-Paula Gaudecnio
1095….Suzanne Ramsay
1096….Sylvie Ouellette
1097….Tania Paiement
1098….Tanya Joanis
1099….Tayeb Mesbah
1100….Valerie Lapointe
1101….Vicky Rossi-Beshir
1102….Victoria Hasbani
C. Kanata Residents
1103….Al Lyons
1104….Andree Blais-Stevens
1105….Andy Cowan
1106….Angela McAllister
1107….Ashley Williams
1108….Barbara Campbell
1109….Bernie Armour
1110….Beverly Hatfield
1111….Bill Gilchrist
1112….Billy Seaman
1113….Bruce Playfair
1114….Caitlen Howard
1115….Carl Pelletier
1116….Cathy Anderson
1117….Cathy Mahoney
1118….Cecilia Jorgenson
1119….Cheryl-Lynn Lavers
1120….Chris Baylis
1121….Christine Scharf
1122….Colleen Gilchrist
1123….Dan Kelly
1124….Danielle Leduc
1125….David Faubert
1126….Deanne Donohue
1127….Deby Knowlton
1128….Derrick Baldwin
1129….Donna Boileau
1130….Elizabeth Matz
1131….Emily Howard
1132….Gabi Castelnuovo
1133….Gabrielle Morin
1134….Gi Wu
1135….Gord Scharf
1136….Grant Wiesner
1137….Heather McCauley
1138….Jaimee Fleming
1139….Jasmine Baylis
1140….Jennifer Henderson
1141….Jennifer Russell
1142….Jennifer Samojlenko
1143….Jenny Etmanskie
1144….Jerome Lambourne
1145….Joanne Callow
1146….JoAnne Whittingham
1147….Jocelyne Leger
1148….Jody Vallati
1149….John Donak
1150….Kathleen Westbury
1151….Keith Bottrill
1152….Keri Hillier
1153….Krista Bugden
1154….Laura Vassal
1155….Laurie Boulet
1156….Leanne Pelley
1157….Lida Koronewskij
1158….Linda Donovan
1159….Linda Harding Devries
1160….Lisa Casselman
1161….Lisa Hogan
1162….Lisa Richardson
1163….Lynn Douglas
1164….Malcolm Wood
1165….Manon Desharnais
1166….Manuel Fernandez
1167….Mark Jorgenson
1168….Martine Dumas
1169….Matthew Lavers
1170….Meghan Stewart
1171….Melanie Clement
1172….Michel Fleury
1173….Mike Gibbons
1174….Mira vrbaski
1175….Natalie Gouthro
1176….Neil Maxwell
1177….Nevenka Bruic
1178….Nicole Myslivecek
1179….Nicole Truax
1180….Nolan MacAfee
1181….Patricia Brown
1182….Paul Kellar
1183….Paulette roberge
1184….Richard Michaud
1185….Rod Fage
1186….Rosa Pool
1187….Rosemary Deans
1188….Sara McMartin
1189….Sarah Green
1190….Sarah Larose
1191….Sarah Mills-McEwan
1192….Scott Moir
1193….Shannon Cheney
1194….Sriram Krishnamurthy
1195….Sue Ackerman
1196….Sue Lebrun
1197….Terry Koss
1198….Vincent_Andy Fong
1199….Wally Prater
1200….William Jorgenson
D. Nepean Residents
1201….Alexei Pogrebtsov
1202….Andrea Gorsky
1203….Andrew Fok
1204….Andrew Keir
1205….Andrew McCorquodale
1206….Angela Martin
1207….Bailey Reid
1208….Barbara Berry
1209….Bonnie MacDonald
1210….Carolyn Frank
1211….Carolyn Perkins
1212….Catherine Martens
1213….Chantal Assemi
1214….Christopher Liu
1215….Conrad Hutter
1216….Cynthia Field-Rose
1217….Dan Lacasse
1218….Darren McMann
1219….Darryl Gavard
1220….Dave Summerbell
1221….David Berry
1222….David Reid
1223….Denis Therrien
1224….Diana Bertosa
1225….Diane Ferguson
1226….Don Whiting
1227….Donna McKibbon
1228….Elaine Robertson
1229….Ellen Dickson
1230….Emily Sandwell
1231….Ericka Keranen
1232….Erik Kristjansson
1233….Erin Schmidt
1234….Gary Guymer
1235….George Ricketts
1236….Gerald Welsh
1237….Glenn Duncan
1238….Greg Rogers
1239….Heather Wall
1240….Helen Bolt
1241….Jack Kwan
1242….Jane Hext
1243….Janet Sullivan
1244….Janice Carroll
1245….Jeff Campagnola
1246….Jen Lahey
1247….Jessie Beavis
1248….Joanne Best-Roberts
1249….Jo-Anne DiFruscio
1250….Joseph Emas
1251….Judy Tubman-Reid
1252….Karleen Heer
1253….Kathleen O'Leary
1254….Kathryn Hill
1255….Katie Squires
1256….Ken Wilson
1257….Kimberley Leach
1258….Kyla Goyette
1259….Laura Clark
1260….Laura Johnston
1261….Lisa Hoople
1262….Lynn Galarneau
1263….Marc Rydzik
1264….Marty Truman
1265….Mary Boyle
1266….Megan Chapman
1267….Melanie Dompierre
1268….Melanie White
1269….Michael Eisen
1270….Nicole Frigault
1271….Niki Dignard
1272….Pam Thistle
1273….Paul Doerr
1274….Peggy Welsh
1275….Peter Page
1276….Renee Leahy
1277….Richard Thomas
1278….Rita Petrocco
1279….Robbie Muir
1280….Rod Macdonald
1281….Ron Dechambeau
1282….Roslyn Dacey
1283….Ryan Charbonneau
1284….Ryan Squires
1285….Sally Floyd
1286….Sandra Brancatelli
1287….Sara Berry
1288….Scott Cairney
1289….Shana van Rijt
1290….Shelley Murdock
1291….Sophie Schram
1292….Stephanie Dunne
1293….Steven Winters
1294….Tania Falls
1295….Tanya Snook
1296….Tim Sandwell
1297….Tina Ryan
1298….Tracey Ives
1299….Tracy Doran
1300….Trish Munro
1301….William Casey
1302….William Doran
E. Orleans Residents
1303….Alex Hadjisophocleous
1304….Alex Templeton
1305….Alexandra Gaudes
1306….Alfred Jacque
1307….Andrew Duggan
1308….Andrew Rose
1309….Angele Vanderlaan
1310….Anita Taylor
1311….Anke Berndt
1312….Arnold Riendeau
1313….Barb Holgate
1314….Bernie Hasselman
1315….Blair Paquet
1316….Brent Smyth
1317….Bruce Barteaux
1318….Carly Hasselman
1319….Carmen Saumure
1320….Carole Gaudes
1321….Christal Whittaker
1322….Christina Dube
1323….Christina Foster
1324….Claudia Nault
1325….Dallas Hall
1326….Daniel Caron
1327….Danny Saint-Fort
1328….David Leeder
1329….David Tischhauser
1330….Debra Powell
1331….Denyse Sencan
1332….Diane Bamford
1333….Dillon McCormick
1334….Dominique Cusson
1335….Don Gaudes
1336….Eann Hodges
1337….Eileen Bradley
1338….Emilie Lachance
1339….Francine Amyotte
1340….Francine Berry
1341….Francis Sommers
1342….Gary Whelan
1343….Geneviève Lapointe
1344….George Hammond
1345….Guylaine Bernard
1346….Harold Henderson
1347….Hinesh Chauhan
1348….Isabelle Ferguson
1349….Isabelle Patenaude
1350….Jane Schofield
1351….Jason Rama
1352….Jason Roberts
1353….Jean Lavictoire
1354….Jeff Barton
1355….Jennifer Caldbick
1356….Jennifer Gallant
1357….Jessica Lacroix
1358….Joyce Burghardt
1359….Jurgen Mack
1360….Katharine Powell
1361….Kathy Wiens
1362….Kevin Piccott
1363….Kristina Perrier
1364….Kyle Simpson
1365….Laura Regnier
1366….Leslie Day
1367….Lindsay Lefebvre
1368….Lisa Grison
1369….Lisa Strachan
1370….Lisa Whelan
1371….Lois Simms-Baldwin
1372….Lyne Rama
1373….Marie-Claude Lefrançois
1374….Marilyn White
1375….Mario Martel
1376….Mark Gibson
1377….Marshall Clark
1378….Matthew Leblanc
1379….Matthew Walthert
1380….Maxime Lamoureux
1381….Michael Brown
1382….Michael Morin
1383….Michelle Baird
1384….Mylène Leclerc
1385….Nadine Tischhauser
1386….Nancy Camacho
1387….Natalie Jolette
1388….Natalie Nadon
1389….Nicole Clark
1390….Nicole Pigeon
1391….Patrick Adams
1392….Patrick Murphy
1393….Paul Devlin
1394….Paul Menard
1395….Peter Belair
1396….Prasanth Tella
1397….Raleigh Young
1398….Ron Hanson
1399….Russ Kajganich
1400….Sandy Clark
1401….Scott Harding
1402….Serge Arseneault
1403….Shari De Jong
1404….Shayne Chamberlain
1405….Sonia Powell
1406….Stephane Montpetit
1407….Stephen Chisnall
1408….Steve Hall
1409….Steve Mitchell
1410….Stuart Taylor
1411….Susan Poisson
1412….Suzete Dos Santos
1413….Sylvie King
1414….Tammy Quinn
1415….Tara Redmond
1416….Terry Flynn
1417….Todd Collins
1418….Todd Sloan
1419….Tony Thatcher
1420….Tracy Baker-Gibson
1421….Trevor Kirkland
1422….Veronique Mousseau
1423….Vincent Young
1424….Vivianne Gaudet
1425….William Baldwin
1426….Yves Ducharme
F. Residents of other local Ontario communities
(see page 2)
Launched: May 27, 1999, 6:49:42 a.m. EDT
Landing: June 6, 1999, 2:02:43 a.m. EDT, Kennedy Space Center, Florida
Space Shuttle: Discovery
Crew: Commander Kent V. Rominger, Pilot Rick D. Husband, Mission Specialists Ellen Ochoa, Tamara E. Jernigan, Daniel T. Barry, Julie Payette and Valery Ivanovich Tokarev
STS-96 was the second International Space Station Flight. The 45th space walk in space shuttle history and the fourth of the ISS era lasted 7 hours and 55 minutes, making it the second-longest ever conducted. Jernigan and Barry transferred a U.S.-built crane called the orbital transfer device, and parts of the Russian crane Strela from the shuttle's payload bay and attached them to locations on the outside of the station. The astronauts also installed two new portable foot restraints that will fit both American and Russian space boots, and attached three bags filled with tools and handrails that will be used during future assembly operations. The cranes and tools fastened to the outside of the station totaled 662 pounds. The crew transferred 3,567 pounds of material – including clothing, sleeping bags, spare parts, medical equipment, supplies, hardware and about 84 gallons of water – to the interior of the station.
Credit: NASA
Image Number: sts096-s-001
Date: February 1999