Archibald Alexander – Vital Piety (Part 2 of 3)

Archibald Alexander – Vital Piety (Part 2 of 3) Archibald Alexander – (1722-1851), American Presbyterian minister and educator Archibald Alexander was born in Rockbridge County, Virginia, 17 April 1772, and died in Princeton, New Jersey, 22 October 1851. His grandfather, of Scottish descent, came from Ireland to Pennsylvania in 1736, and after a residence of two years removed to Virginia. William, father of Archibald, was a farmer and trader. At the age of ten Archibald was sent to the academy of Rev.William Graham at Timber Ridge meetinghouse (since developed into Washington and Lee University), at Lexington. At the age of seventeen he became a tutor in the family of General John Posey, of The Wilderness, twelve miles west of Fredericksburg, but after a few months resumed his studies with his former teacher. At this time a remarkable movement, still spoken of as “the great revival,” influenced his mind and he turned his attention to the study of divinity. He was licensed to preach 1 October 1791, ordained by the presbytery of Hanover 9 June 1794, and for seven years was an itinerant pastor in Charlotte and Prince Edward cos. In 1796 he became president of Hampden Sydney College, Virginia, but in 1801 resigned, and visited New York and New England. During his tour he went to see the Rev. Dr. Waddel, the celebrated blind preacher mentioned by Wirt in his “British Spy.” The result of this visit was his marriage to Dr. Waddel’s daughter Janetta. Immediately after he resumed
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Ultimate Maryland Delaware Goose Hunting (HD)

Maryland – Goose Hunting DEC. 2008 True High Definition Special Thanks: www.DOAoutfitters.com http More About DOA Outfitters: WE SPECIALIZE IN GUIDED HUNTS FOR GIANT CANADA GEESE, GREATER SNOW GEESE, PUDDLE DUCKS IN MARYLAND, NEW YORK, DELAWARE & VIRGINIA. – Greater & Lesser Snow Goose Hunting – Ross Geese and Speckle Bellied or White Fronted Geese – Wild Russian and European Boar Hunting North Carolina – Canada Goose Hunting New York, Delaware, & Maryland – Turkey Hunting Maryland, New York, Delaware, & Virginia – Exotic Sika Deer Hunting (Free Roaming) In Maryland – Whitetail Deer Hunting Maryland, New York, Virginia, and North Carolina – Black Bear – Wild Boar – Bobcat – Fox – Coyote Hunting North Carolina, Virginia and Maryland -Sea, Diver, & Puddle Duck Hunting Maryland, New York & Virginia – Mourning Dove Hunting – Sea Duck Hunting – Other types of waterfowl hunting DOA Outfitters Inc. – Joe Austin – President Phone Number: 410-883-2027 Email: joe@doaoutfitters.com Physical Address: 10206 Sharptown Rd. Mardela Springs, Maryland 21837
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Hotels near Beckley, West Virginia that aren’t too expensive but that have a great view?

Question by Michael S: Hotels near Beckley, West Virginia that aren’t too expensive but that have a great view?
I’m taking a four-day working vacation next week and wanted to escape to the mountains, and I’d been considering somewhere around Beckley, WV, where I’ve been through a couple times and absolutely loved the view. I’m going to be working on some projects that will keep me more or less tethered to an electrical outlet somewhere, but if I’m going to be in a hotel, I’d really like one with a balcony that would give me a great view of the mountains around Beckley and that wouldn’t cost an arm and a leg. I’d like to pay no more than $ 50 a night, if possible. Any suggestions on any places with a view around Beckley that are still near “civilization” would be appreciated.

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Answer by GRANDDAD POPS
hi there,heres a few for you to browse through..

Categories: Motels & Hotels, Travel
Country Inn – more info » countryinns.com
2120 Harper Rd, Beckley, WV
(304) 252-5100 –
Category: Hotels & Motels

Fairfield Inn by Marriott – more info » marriott.com
125 Hylton Ln, Beckley, WV
(304) 252-8661 –
Category: Motels & Hotels

Quality Inn – more info »choicehotels.com
1924 Harper Road, Beckley, WV
(304) 255-1511 –
Category: Motels & Hotels

Comfort Inn – more info »choicehotels.com
1909 Harper Rd., Beckley, WV
(304) 255-2161 –
Category: Motels & Hotels

Microtel Inn – more info » microtelinn.com
2130 Harper Rd, Beckley, WV
(304) 256-2000 –
Category: Hotels & Motels

Days Inn Beckley – more info » daysinn.com
300 Harper Park Drive, Beckley, WV
(304) 255-5291 –
Category: Motels & Hotels

Howard Johnson – more info » hojo.com
1907 Harper Rd., Beckley, WV
(304) 255-5900 –
Category: Hotels & Motels

Best Western-Four Seasons – more info » bestwesternwvirginia.com
1939 Harper Rd, Beckley, WV
(304) 252-0671 –
Category: Hotels & Motels

Hampton Inn – more info » hamptoninn.com
110 Harper Park Drive, Beckley, WV
(304) 252-2121 –
Category: Hotels & Motels

Park Inn – more info » parkinn.com
134 Harper Park Dr, Beckley, WV
(304) 255-9091 –
Category: Hotels & Motels

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there you go sir,just check out the links some beuties!!…good luck and enjoy your vacation..

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Ben’s Chili Bowl, U St NW

Ben’s Chili Bowl, U St NW
Virginia Homes For Sale

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French President Nicolas Sarkosy and wife, Carla Bruni-Sarkosy dine at Ben’s while in DC to visit President Obama
voices.washingtonpost.com/reliable-source/2010/03/hey_isn…

Death of Ben Ali, Founder of Ben’s Chili Bowl
voices.washingtonpost.com/postmortem/2009/10/ben_ali_of_b…

President Elect Obama Dining at Ben’s Chili Bowl
dcist.com/2009/01/obama_and_fenty_have_lunch_at_bens.php
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Ben’s Celebrates Chili Power
Big Stars and Just Plain Folks Mark Eatery’s 50-Year Run on U Street

By Keith L. Alexander
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, August 21, 2008

It was 1996, and Nizam Ali had just gotten his law degree. Instead of heading to the courtroom, he had another idea: He wanted to help run the family business.

Ali told his father, Ben, that if he couldn’t double the revenue at Ben’s Chili Bowl within a year, he’d fall back on that legal career. To meet his goal, he went well beyond the walls of the landmark restaurant on U Street NW. He became a promoter, visiting radio stations with free hot dogs, hamburgers and half-smokes — all covered in Ben’s trademark spicy chili. Radio personalities talked up the food, and the legend of the Chili Bowl grew.

Sales surged during that year as Nizam and his older brother, Kamal, oversaw the restaurant’s operations — so much so that Ben and his wife, Virginia, decided to step back and leave the restaurant they had founded in the hands of their sons.

This week, the District’s most famous neighborhood diner turns 50. The family is hosting a free gala tonight at the Lincoln Theatre, with celebrities including Bill Cosby and Roberta Flack. That will be followed by a street festival tomorrow in front of the restaurant, at 1213 U St. NW, and a musical tribute Sunday down the street at the 9:30 club.

When they aren’t behind the counter flipping burgers or scooping chili, the Ali brothers are figuring out ways to capitalize on the Ben’s brand. They launched a line of souvenir baseball caps, key chains and tote bags. The Alis also helped with a book on the place’s history and set up a Web site, benschilibowl.com. And they struck a deal to sell Ben’s fare at the Washington Nationals’ new ballpark.

In October, the brothers will take over the building next door and turn it into a full bar, so patrons can enjoy Ben’s chili and dogs with a beer or mixed drink, big screen TVs and possibly live bands.

"We’re stepping up the game," said Kamal Ali, 46. Last year, Ben’s took in about .6 million in revenue, up from less than million about 10 years ago.

The brothers credit generations of loyal patrons and their employees for their success. "It took a village to raise this place. Everyone in this community had a hand in this place," said Nizam Ali, 38.

A third brother, Haidar, 48, is a musician and lives in California.

The walls at Ben’s are covered with photos of famous customers, including actors Denzel Washington and Danny Glover, tennis star Serena Williams and musicians Bono and Chuck Brown. The restaurant has been featured on Oprah Winfrey’s show (twice), CNN, the Travel Channel and the Food Network, as well as in travel publications across the country.

Virginia Ali can recall the day she got a phone call from a woman in Texas who wanted to make a reservation for her vacation in Washington — three months away. "I laughed and told her: ‘Honey, come on in. It’s just a greasy spoon,’ " she recounted through a hint of Virginia accent.

By far, Ben’s biggest celebrity fan is Cosby, who will serve as master of ceremonies for tonight’s Lincoln Theatre event. The comic helped propel Ben’s to the national spotlight in 1985 when he held a news conference there to talk about his No. 1 television program, "The Cosby Show."

Cosby became a fan when he was in the Navy and stationed in Bethesda in 1958. During that time, he was a regular at jazz clubs on U Street. And he also took his soon-to-be wife, Camille, who was a student at the University of Maryland, to Ben’s on late-night dates, where he would eat as many as six half-smokes at a time. Cosby likens a Ben’s half-smoke, a plump beef and pork sausage, to a fine wine.

"You can describe it the same way a wine connoisseur would be able to tell difference between a pinot noir and a merlot," Cosby said in a telephone interview. "When you bite into a half-smoke, the skin and the way the texture and firmness and the toppings you can get on it . . . "

His voice trailed off, as if he was caught in the memory of the taste.

Aside from the food, what makes Ben’s stand out, Cosby and others say, is that it’s as if time stood still. Ben’s has the same layout as when it opened Aug. 22, 1958, aside from an expanded seating section in the back and a kitchen put in five years ago. It has its original counters, booths and stools.

Ben Ali, an immigrant from Trinidad, met his wife when she was a teller at nearby Industrial Bank. When Ali opened the restaurant, Virginia joined him in the venture. They were married that October.

Now 75, Virginia Ali finishes her husband’s sentences and fills in the holes in stories she has heard him tell so many times. Until recently, she served as a waitress and a greeter. Lately, she spends most of her time at home caring for Ben, who is 81. The two act like love-struck teens as Ben Ali pinches, teases and whispers in his wife’s ear and she giggles and lightly swats his arm.

Ben Ali came up with the idea for the restaurant when he saw how Americans loved to smother their french fries with ketchup. With his Caribbean taste buds, he thought that American foods were bland and that there was a market for spicy American dishes.

He tears up when he talks about his restaurant and his three sons, who all share the middle name Ben. "My whole life has been one happy life," Ali said, removing his glasses and wiping tears from his eyes.

For a restaurant to become such a landmark in the District is rare, and at times, it seemed that Ben’s wouldn’t survive. In 1968, many businesses were torched during the riots after the assassination of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. But Ben’s remained opened and untouched, thanks largely to Stokely Carmichael, head of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, which used the restaurant as a meeting place.

As the years passed, the area became riddled with crime and drugs. Faithful customers told Ali that they couldn’t go to the restaurant anymore because their cars kept getting broken into. The construction of Metro’s Green Line from 1986 to 1991 made it difficult for customers to venture into the area, which caused a lot of businesses to close. Then things began to turn around.

"We had the community support, and we survived. We didn’t want to go to any other part of the city," Virginia Ali said.

Ben’s is like a popular barbershop or beauty salon where regulars gather to gossip, laugh and joke. "It’s very much like that, where a janitor sits next to a judge, who is sitting next to a junkie. Just random people having random conversations," Nizam Ali said.

James Jackson of Seat Pleasant has been going to the restaurant for 15 years. "You never know who you’re going to run into," he said.

The morning crowd is dressed in business suits and uniforms, men and women sipping coffee and eating cheese grits or toast before heading to work. At lunch, it’s mostly workers or tourists jamming the booths and tables. The dinner crowd is made up of folks who want a quick burger.

Weekends at 2 or 3 a.m., partygoers from nearby bars and nightclubs congregate for a quick meal or a handmade milkshake as Prince, Aretha Franklin or the Isley Brothers blare from the jukebox. Through it all, the restaurant’s employees — now totaling 25 — joke, dance and pose for pictures with customers while taking orders and dishing out the food. They’re led by Bernadette "Peaches" Halton, 48, a 30-year employee, who is said to be the only one outside the family to know the recipe for Ben’s chili.

For about 40 years, most of Ben’s clients were African Americans, who patronized the U Street corridor for decades. In the late 1950s, U Street was known as the "Black Broadway," thanks to frequent performances by such stars as Pearl Bailey, Cab Calloway and Duke Ellington.

As the demographics shifted, so did Ben’s clientele. Within the past 10 years or so, it has become increasingly diverse and now includes more whites, Hispanics, Ethiopians and Asians. The customers include people from other countries who are visiting the District and want to get a taste of Ben’s. Virginia Ali said Ben’s is more of a "melting pot" now.

The changing demographics, along with higher property taxes, caused several black businesses on U Street to relocate or go out of business. Ben’s has not only remained; it has thrived.

As Kamal Ali put it: "We had to adjust and stay true to form, and everyone has really embraced us."
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August 2006 Scavenger Hunt
"local hangout"
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It was the summer of 1958. Eisenhower was president. Federal troops were ordered into Little Rock to integrate public schools. Explorer I was launched, as was NASA. The first-ever Grammy Awards were given, and Ella Fitzgerald won two of them. 1958 was also the year Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. published his first book, Stride Towards Freedom. Griffith Stadium was home to the Washington Senators, and 30% of DC’s black population owned homes. Nelson Mandela wed Winnie. And, in 1958, newlyweds Ben and Virginia Ali gave birth to a new enterprise.

Despite a national business failure rate of 55.9%, the Ali’s used ,000 to begin renovating a building at 1213 U Street. It had high-arched ceilings, character and plenty of history. Built in 1909, the building first housed a silent movie house, the Minnehaha Theater. Later, Harry Beckley, one of D.C.’s first Black police detectives, converted it into a pool hall. On Aug. 22, 1958, Ben’s Chili Bowl was born.

It was an exciting time on the U Street corridor, which was then known as “Black Broadway.” Top performers could be found playing sets in clubs along the corridor, as well as eating and just “hanging out” at Ben’s. It was not uncommon to see such luminaries as Duke Ellington, Miles Davis, Bessie Smith, Ella Fitzgerald, Cab Calloway, Nat King Cole, Redd Foxx, Dick Gregory, Martin Luther King Jr., or Bill Cosby at “The Bowl.”

In 1968, the assassination of Dr. King lit a fuse of rage. Riots ensued. Most of the city closed down; Ben’s remained open. Stokely Carmichael of the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), which was located across the street, obtained special police permission to let Ben’s stay open after curfew to provide food and shelter for activists, firefighters and public servants desperately trying to restore order.

After the riots, the area declined. Businesses closed. But there was some glimmer of hope in the neighborhood as the concept of “Black is Beautiful” emerged. Ben’s continued to serve an eclectic crowd of regulars. In the 1970’s, black films gained in popularity, and the Lincoln Theatre next door was often packed.

Still, the riots continued to take their toll. In the late 1970’s and 80’s, drug dealers began peddling heroin in open-air drug markets. The once vibrant street looked and felt whipped. Even so, the flame of hope could not be extinguished. Mayor Marion Barry, Jr. had the vision to build the Frank D. Reeves Municipal Center at 14th and U Streets. For the first time in years, hundreds of new jobs were created on U Street.

In September 1985, Bill Cosby held a national press conference at Ben’s Chili Bowl to celebrate his number one rated show, thrusting Ben’s into the national limelight. Business improved and things were looking up. But there were more problems ahead. In 1987, construction began for Metro’s Green Line. This section of U Street became nothing more than a 60-foot hole. Business came to a halt overnight. Very few new businesses opened. Ben’s made the decision to stay open with only two employees serving Metro workers and faithful regulars each day. Through more than five years of construction and upheaval, Ben’s managed to survive.

Despite all of the troubling times, Ben’s has had its share of blessings as well. Bill Cosby and hundreds of others attended its 45th anniversary in August 2003. Throughout the years, Ben’s has also been blessed with many awards and accolades: Councilmember Jim Graham named the alley adjacent to Ben’s ‘Ben Ali Way,’ Ben and Virginia were inducted into the D.C. Hall of Fame (May 2001), and in 2004, Ben’s won the prestigious Gallo of Sonoma ‘America’s Classics’ Restaurant Award from the James Beard Foundation. Add to these immense press coverage, including segments on CNN, Oprah, 60 Minutes, Good Morning America, PBS, BET, Food Network, and stories in Washingtonian, Gourmet, Southern Living, The New York Times and The Washington Post, and Ben’s is now recognized world-wide as a the place to eat in Washington to experience the real D.C.

At present, it seems as though the tough times are behind us, and that the sky is the limit for this Shaw neighborhood. As U Street once again redefines itself, Ben’s looks forward to maintaining its strong community presence. Since 1958, Ben’s has been blessed with the most loyal of customers, and we listened when you said, “whatever you do, never change this place.” After 47 years, Ben’s is the same place it always has been. The counter, booths and stools are all original; the fresh homemade chili is still made with love, using the same secret recipe. Ben’s has made small changes, like adding veggie burgers and veggie chili to the menu, and building a new dining room to better serve large groups, but the feel of Ben’s will never change.

So where are Ben & Virginia Ali these days? They are both retired (although Virginia has redefined “retirement” – she can be found behind the counter at Ben’s on most days), but their sons, Kamal and Nizam, are carrying on the family business. Please stop in and say hello – you will be greeted with a smile!

Additionally a scene from the film "Pelican Brief" was shot on location inside of Ben’s

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LAKEFRONT PROPERTY Lake Gaston, NC or VA 27850 FOR SALE WATERFRONT LAND

CONTACT: Roanoke Reserve LLC, 252-578-2628 Website: www.roanokereserve.com Email: info@roanokereserve.com — LUXURY LAKEFRONT LIFESTYLE on LAKE GASTON (NC-VA). Be ONE OF ONLY SIX to design your CUSTOM LAKE HOME AND AMENITIES on a BEAUTIFUL AND SPACIOUS ROANOKE RESERVE lakefront property – located on one of the best recreational lakes in the US. Ample room for amenities of choice on the water and offshore. Private road system; county water access in process; onsite septic required; preliminary perk for 4 – 5 BR home on file – more should not be a problem but will require a perk test to confirm. Shoreline accommodates a DOUBLE BOATHOUSE – permitting required. HIGH-SPEED INTERNET available at buyer’s discretion. VISIT OUR WEBSITE to learn more about Roanoke Reserve and Lake Gaston. CALL TO ARRANGE A PRIVATE TOUR — THE ONLY WAY TO SEE HOW SPECIAL THIS OFFERING REALLY IS.Luxury Homes & Luxury Real Estate. Castles and Mansions for Sale. Luxury Home & Mansion for Sale in North Carolina, Virginia, Georgia. www.TheLuxuryBrokers.com All Rights Reserved. Information Deemed Reliable But Not Guaranteed. Neither The Luxury Brokers, LLC. nor the service providers for The Luxury Brokers, LLC. are liable for any errors or inaccuracies in the information provided through this website. © 2008 The Luxury Brokers, LLC.

Route 29 Diner, Fairfax, Virginia

Route 29 Diner, Fairfax, Virginia
Virginia Homes For Sale

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Born in 1909,, Delmas T. ("Bill") Glascock came from humble beginnings in Loudoun County’s Popular local legend has it that he left home with only eighteen cents in his pocket and the clothing on his back. With hard work and clever investment, and a Horatio Alger work ethic, he achieved the American dream. On 12 August 1941 he bought an acre lot on Lee Highway from William Hobart Beistel. Included on the lot was a popular restaurant business called the Blue Boar Inn. The Inn building, circa 1925, still stands about fifty yards east of the Tastee 29 Diner, and is now vacant. Beistel owned the Blue Boar, where at one point Glascock installed and operated slot machines. After purchasing the property, Glancock decided to construct the 29 Diner next to the older well-established restaurant, knowing full well that this was a highly visible site near an important intersection that led into town. During 1947, he made arrangements with the Mountain View Diner Company for the purchase and delivery of a diner to the present site, where foundations were prepared for the prefabricated structure. Mr. Glascock and his wife Elvira constructed the rear kitchen area with help from friends.

The Tastee 29 Diner. was delivered to its foundation on 20 July, 1947. Originally known as the 29 Diner, Leonard Milliken, the current business owner, changed the name to Tastee 29 Diner in 1973. There have been numerous businesses in the 29 Diner since 1942, but the owner has always remained Delmas T. Glascock. Officially listed as a bondsman, Glascock has built other buildings and businesses next to the Diner, including Indian Trailer sales (the Airstreams shone in harmony with the diner), and a Texaco Station.

Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, Louisiana (3)

Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, Louisiana (3)
Virginia Union University

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Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College, most often referred to as Louisiana State University or LSU, is a public coeducational Level l Research university located in Baton Rouge, Louisiana.[6] The University was originally founded in 1853 near Pineville, Louisiana, under the name Louisiana State Seminary of Learning & Military Academy. LSU is the flagship institution of the Louisiana State University System, and the largest institution of higher education in Louisiana in terms of student enrollment.[7] The LSU main campus occupies a 650-acre (2.6 km²) plateau on the banks of the Mississippi River, and boasts more than 250 buildings constructed in the style of Italian Renaissance architect Andrea Palladio.

LSU consists of ten senior colleges and schools, and is one of only twenty-one American universities designated as a land-grant, sea-grant and space-grant research center.[8] In 2009, the University enrolled 21,000 undergraduate and 4,000 graduate and professional students. LSU is classified as a Tier 1 institution by U.S. News & World Report, placing it among the top 130 universities in the United States.[9] The University’s athletic department fields teams in 20 varsity sports (9 men’s, 11 women’s), and is a member of the NCAA (National Collegiate Athletic Association) and the SEC (Southeastern Conference). LSU Tigers football began in 1893, with national championship wins in the 1958, 2003 and 2007 seasons. The University is represented on the field by it’s mascot, Mike the Tiger.

The current LSU campus is located on 2,000 acres (8.1 km²) just south of downtown Baton Rouge. A majority of the universities 250 buildings, most of which were built between 1925 and 1940, occupy a 650-acre (2.6 km²) plateau on the banks of the Mississippi River. Other campuses in the LSU system include the LSU Agricultural Center, Pennington Biomedical Research Center, University of New Orleans, LSU Shreveport, LSU at Eunice, LSU Alexandria, and the Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center New Orleans. In addition, LSU owns and operates the J. Bennett Johnston, Sr. Center for Advanced Microstructures and Devices (CAMD), which is a 1.3 GeV synchrotron radiation facility [17].

The Olmsted Brothers Firm of Brookline, Massachusetts, designed the current campus around 1921 when LSU was planning to move it’s campus from downtown Baton Rouge. The Olmsted firm originally designed the campus for up to 3,000 students, but state officials asked the firm to scale the plan back due to budgetary constraints; subsequently, the new plan presented to the state by the Olmsted Brothers centered the campus around a cruciform-shaped quadrangle similar to the one that exists on campus today.

For reasons unknown, the Olmsted Brothers firm was dropped from the project, and an architect named Theodore Link, who was well-known for designing Union Station in St. Louis, Missouri, took over the campus master plan. Link collaborated with Wilbur Tyson Trueblood on the project, but remained faithful to the campus that the Olmsted firm had designed. Unfortunately, Link died in 1923 before the plan was completed. New Orleans architects Wogan and Bernard completed Link’s work and the campus was dedicated on April 30, 1926.

The first building actually constructed on the present campus was the Swine Palace, the former livestock barn that is now the Reilly Theater. Most of the current buildings that occupy the universities Quad where completed between 1922 and 1925. Because the original campus was designed to accommodate 1,500 students, space is now at a premium at LSU. During the 1990s, LSU officials created a set of design guidelines that call for all newly constructed buildings to have an Italian Renaissance flavor.

Although the Olmsted firm had originally envisioned a Spanish or Mexican style design for the University, Link designed the campus with tan stucco walls, red-tiled rooftops, and extensive porticoes in an attempt to emulate the architecture of Italian Renaissance architect Andrea Palladio. The design of Hill Memorial Library was loosely based on that of the Boston Public Library, which was the first public library in the U.S. The flanking academic buildings that formed the rest of the Quad represented the major disciplines at the university, and their placement was modeled after that of buildings on the University of Virginia’s campus, which was designed by Thomas Jefferson.

LSU’s campus is also known for the 1,200 live oak trees that shade the ground of the university. During the 1930’s, landscape artist Steele Burden planted many of LSU’s live oaks and magnolia trees, which are now valued at over million. Many of the azaleas, crepe myrtles, ligustrum, and camellias planted in the quadrangle were added to the campus in the 1970’s. Through the LSU Foundation’s “Endow an Oak” program, individuals and groups are able to endow live oaks across the universities campus. Thomas Gaines, author of The Campus as a Work of Art, praises LSU’s landscaping as "a botanical joy" and lists it among the 20 best campuses in the United States.[3]

Fifty-seven buildings on the LSU campus are listed on the National Register of Historic Places, and the campus is protected by the State Capital Historic District Legislation.[19] The LSU Indian Mounds, which are part of a larger mound group spread throughout the state, are located near the northwestern corner of the campus and where built an estimated 5,000 years ago. Originally serving as territorial markers, or possible symbols of group identity, the mounds are older than any other man-made structure in the Americas, and predate the construction of the Great Pyramid of Giza. The mounds were placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1999.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louisiana_State_University

Complete Idiots Guide to Social Media Marketing Launch party

Complete Idiots Guide to Social Media Marketing Launch party
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USA today

USA today
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