#Warsaw Indiana
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Warsaw, Indiana
November, 2021
#photographers on tumblr#lensblr#original photographers#imiging#luxlit#photography#warsaw indiana#indiana#midwest
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"July 23 - 14 Warsaw certainly is a beautiful place. We expect to stay and see this scence by moonlight. Had a hard rain just as we arrived here. Belle"
Ansichtskarte / Vintage Postcard
MOON BLOCK BY MOONLIGHT. WARSAW. IND.
Warsaw Ind.: W.R. Thomas 5 & 10 Cent Store.
C.T. PHOTOCHROME
#Warsaw Indiana#USA#1910er#1914#Philokartie#USAPhilokartie#Indiana#deltiology#Postgeschichte#Ansichtskartendesign#KosciuskoCounty#Vintage Postcard#Kulturgeschichte
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Indiana became the 19th U.S. state on December 11, 1816.
#Wolf Lake#Indiana#19th US state#11 December 1816#anniversary#travel#US history#USA#summer 2019#2016#vacation#landscape#cityscape#Munster#Community Veterans Memorial#Chinworth Bridge#Warsaw#Van Wert#Soldiers' and Sailors' Monument by Bruno Schmitz#Indianapolis#Indy#Indiana State House#Ohio River#original photography#Lincoln Highway#tourist attraction#architecture#landmark
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having a trip to warsaw in Indiana is amazing!!
aboslutely beautiful.
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Population: 15,804
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water filtration service in Warsaw, IN
The best water filtration service in Warsaw, Indiana. We offer a large range water filtration solutions throughout Indiana. Our services are efficient, affordable, and customized to meet your needs. Purchase healthy water for your house or place of business right away.
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Warsaw, Indiana
built in 1880
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direct ticket links
(because danandphiltour.com inconveniently doesn't open each link in a separate tab and removes links from "sold out" shows that can and still do have tickets available)
Europe (September 2024):
Antwerp, Belgium
Copenhagen, Denmark
Berlin, Germany
Warsaw, Poland
Frankfurt, Germany (Eventim and venue. venue has better seats available)
Stockholm, Sweden
Oslo, Norway (refresh or switch languages at the bottom of the page if it shows error)
Helsinki, Finland
USA/Canada (October-November 2024):
Seattle, Washington
Seattle, Washington
Portland, Oregon
Vancouver, Canada
Oakland, California
Phoenix, Arizona
San Diego, California
Los Angeles, California
Salt Lake City, Utah
Denver, Colorado
Kansas City, Missouri
Grand Prairie, Texas*
Austin, Texas
St. Louis, Missouri*
Detroit, Michigan
Akron, Ohio
Indianapolis, Indiana
Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Minneapolis, Minnesota
Chicago, Illinois
Toronto, Canada
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
New York City, New York
Tysons, Virginia*
Tysons, Virginia*
Atlanta, Georgia
Tampa, Florida
Orlando, Florida
Fort Lauderdale, Florida
Durham, North Carolina
Nashville, Tennessee
Boston, Massachusetts
Reading, Pennsylvania
Red Bank, New Jersey
*Grand Prairie - near Dallas, Tysons - near Washington DC, St. Louis - near Chesterfield
Australia/New Zealand (December 2024):
Brisbane, Australia
Sydney, Australia
Sydney, Australia
Perth, Australia
Melbourne, Australia
Adelaide, Australia
Auckland, New Zealand
UK + Europe (January-February 2025):
Birmingham, UK
Cardiff, UK
Cardiff, UK
Plymouth, UK
Brighton, UK
Brighton, UK
Birmingham, UK
London, UK
London, UK
London, UK (matinee)
London, UK
Newcastle, UK
Manchester, UK
Manchester, UK
Dublin, Ireland
Belfast, UK (venue and ticketmaster)
Glasgow, UK
Glasgow, UK
Amsterdam, Netherlands
Reykjavík, Iceland
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Urge Prosecutor to Uphold Indiana’s Cruelty Statute and Charge Hoarder Who Left Animals to Die | PETA
A recent PETA undercover investigation into Isaiah 11 Ministry—a self-proclaimed “rescue” near Warsaw, Indiana—found that its owner, Linda Ozier, deprived animals of veterinary care for infections, open wounds, and other ailments, even when they were dying.
#animalrights#animal rights activist#animal welfare#animal advocacy#activist#activism#animal cruelty#animal abuse#hoarding#hoarder#take action
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If you are planning on fleeing a red state, here is my pitch for moving to Chicago
I am a lesbian and a lifelong Chicagoan and I fuckin love it here. I grew up here, went to college here, and now live here as an adult, and I have no plans to leave. Despite being the 3rd biggest city in America, Chicago gets weirdly overlooked a lot and many people have never even been here.
If you are fleeing a red state because you're LGBTQ+, a woman, or an immigrant, here are the reasons I think you should move to Chicago:
We're a super queer-friendly city with several historically queer neighborhoods (that are actually affordable enough to live in).
Illinois has literally never voted red in my entire lifetime. That's the entire 21st century so far, btw.
We have a looooong history of fighting for abortion rights, even helping women get care before it was legal (google the Jane Collective).
Although there are red counties in the more rural part of the states, the blue influence of Chicago spreads far beyond the city's official borders. Chicago has such a large network of sprawling towns around it that still feel like a part of the city that we have a name for it: Chicagoland! So even if you're not a city person, you can find lots of more rural spaces within Chicagoland.
If you can't stand the idea of living too far from nature, never fear: there are tons of gorgeous nature preserves around Chicago! I grew up in a suburb where both the city border AND a forest preserve were a bike ride away.
Illinois has a great governor, J. B. Pritzker, whose response after the recent election was "To anyone who intends to come take away the freedom, opportunity, and dignity of Illinoisans, I would remind you that a happy warrior is still a warrior. You come for my people – you come through me."
We're a very diverse city with a large immigrant population. (Fun fact: the only city with a larger population of Polish people is Warsaw.) We have many localized ethnic neighborhoods all over the city. Which ties into my next point...
We have amazing food! Seriously, Chicago is super overlooked as one of the best eating cities in the country. I can find literally any cuisine from any country somewhere in Chicagoland, and we have everything from 3 Michelin star restaurants to hidden gem counter service spots with the best tacos al pastor you've ever had.
We have very strict gun control laws. Unfortunately, people get around these laws by going to Indiana to buy guns (thanks a LOT, Indiana), but the extra hassle means that there are actually fewer guns here than in red states and no one can open carry.
Chicago has a $15 citywide minimum wage and has plans to phase out tipping in restaurants (replaced with higher salaries).
We have really amazing museums like the Art Institute of Chicago (widely considered to be one of the best museums IN THE WORLD), the Field Museum (home to the most complete T-Rex ever, our beautiful mascot Sue), as well as a great aquarium, modern art museum, planetarium, and so many more I can't list them all. And they all have free days for Illinois residents!
We have great public transit. I don't own a car, most of my friends don't own a car, and we can get around just fine.
We never have hurricanes because we're a LAKE city, baby. We do have tornados but they rarely hit the actual city, they tend to stay out where there's more open space.
Cost of living is lower than other major blue cities like San Francisco and NYC
We have two baseball teams so that's double the baseball
Broadway shows frequently do a premier in Chicago before they open in NYC so we get a lot of huge musicals here. I've gotten free tickets to shows that later went on to tour the country.
Unlike SOME other large blue cities I could mention, we know how to put our trash in DUMPSTERS instead of IN THE STREET.
Giant bean
Your life will change after you've had a juicy Italian beef sandwich with hot giardiniera.
And finally, to address all the stories about Chicago being a crime-ridden warzone, here's the deal: they are simply not true. Where do those stories come from? It's simple: Chicago has a historically large black population and we're a liberal city. Racist republicans have convinced themselves that this means we must be a haven for crime. We have the same amount of crime as any large city, which is to say: far less crime per capita than in rural red areas. Seriously, look it up.
Not only is Chicago not the most dangerous city in America, we don't even make the list of the top 25.
But the thing is, those lies about Chicago actually kind of work in our favor, because it means that Republicans are too scared to come here. My own grandparents haven't visited in 10 years because they're convinced that if they do they'll get shot or something.
Anyway, move to Chicago, it's great here. And it'll probably be one of the safest strongholds for whatever comes in the next 4 years. If you're also from Chicago and have any other points I missed, please add them!
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Warsaw, Indiana
October, 2021
#photographers on tumblr#lensblr#original photographers#imiging#luxlit#photography#indiana#midwest#flower#radarplz
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Art, Culture, Censorship, and Palestine
I'm late in posting this, but from Democracy Now, interviews with three important cultural workers, an artist and two writers, who are being censored. Samia Halaby, Marione Ingram, and Masha Gessen.
youtube
"We spend the hour looking at how artists, writers and other cultural workers in the United States and Europe are facing a growing backlash after expressing solidarity for Palestine. We begin with one of these "canceled" cultural workers: renowned Palestinian American artist Samia Halaby, whose first U.S. retrospective was canceled by her graduate alma mater, Indiana University, after she criticized Israel's bombardment of Gaza. The school’s provost said this week the show would have been a "lightning rod" that carried a "risk of violence." Halaby expresses her shock and disappointment at the betrayal of "academic freedom" evidenced by the decision. "The administration has lost sight of their responsibility to the community, to the students that are there," she says, and adds, "This is much larger than I am," citing the suppression of pro-Palestine student activism around the country and calling it "a kind of attempt at mind control.""
youtube
"We are joined by 88-year-old Jewish German American Marione Ingram, who describes how her scheduled speaking tour in Hamburg -- the city she fled in the Holocaust -- was "postponed" this month amid a wider backlash against those speaking out against Israel's assault on Gaza. Ingram has been protesting for months outside the White House calling for a ceasefire, and characterizes U.S. and German pro-Israel policy as "disturbing" and "frightening." As a survivor of the Holocaust, Ingram says, "My childhood was spent in the first 10 years much the same way as the children of Gaza. I know exactly what they're going through. I know exactly how they're feeling." She argues "it should be an absolute standstill of all governments that you are told over 10,000 children are being murdered. There is no excuse for that.""
youtube
"We speak with the acclaimed Russian American writer Masha Gessen, whose latest article for The New Yorker looks at the politics of Holocaust commemoration in Europe. Gessen was scheduled to receive the prestigious Hannah Arendt Prize in Germany on December 15, but the ceremony was postponed after some award sponsors withdrew support over Gessen's comparison in the article of Gaza to the Warsaw Ghetto. A smaller award ceremony is set for Saturday. Gessen says Germany's culture of learning about and atoning for the sins of the Nazi regime has morphed into steadfast support for the state of Israel despite its actions, while banning most forms of pro-Palestinian solidarity as part of a flawed effort to fight antisemitism. The cornerstone of this form of "memory politics" is that "you can't compare the Holocaust to anything," says Gessen. "My argument is that in order to learn from history, we have to compare.""
#Youtube#palestine#ceasefire#strike for palestine#censorship#samia halaby#marione ingram#masha gessen#never again#gaza#holocaust remembrance#art#writing#culture#history
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Doors, Gates and Windows (No. 73)
Rookery Building, Chicago
Field Building, Chicago
Chicago Athletic Association
Warsaw, IN (two pics)
Van Wert, OH
PPG Place, Pittsburgh
The Duquesne Incline, Pittsburgh
Gettysburg, PA (two pics)
#Field Building#travel#original photography#vacation#tourist attraction#landmark#cityscape#architecture#detail#façade#door#window#exterior#balcony#flora#summer 2019#USA#Chicago#Illinois#Burnham & Root#Rookery Building#Chicago Athletic Association#Warsaw#Indiana#Van Wert#PPG Place#Pittsburgh#Pennsylvania#The Duquesne Incline#Gettysburg
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You're not listening ears Warsaw Indiana weather forecast radar Hmaper announcement 📢 Chsp decipherably go go clutch cable
Listen closely
I'm listening but I can't make heads or tails of it.
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1979.
Lunatic senior citizens in Warsaw, Indiana.
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Petition for divorce for Henry B. Walthall, "Little Colonel" of the movies, from his wife was on file here today. The charge is desertion. Walthall is understood to be in Los Angeles. Papers were filed by his attorney.
-"'Little Colonel' of Movies Asks Divorce From Wife," Eugene Register-Guard, September 11, 1918
Less than two minutes after he entered the courtroom yesterday Henry B. Walthall, moving picture actor, was granted a divorce from Mrs. Isabelle Harrington Walthall in the circuit court. Walthall charged his wife with desertion, stating she left him March 18, 1916. Mrs. Walthall is said to be living in New Jersey.
-"Divorce for Henry Walthall," Warsaw Daily Times, November 16, 1918
Henry Walthall married Miss Mary Charleston five days after he had been granted a divorce from Mrs. Isabelle Harrington in 1918. They were married at Crown Point. Judge H.H. Loring, Valparaiso, Ind., pronounced Walthall's second marriage illegal.
-"Three Movie Weddings Probed; Search For Bride Is Recalled.," St. Petersburg Times, May 26, 1922
He married his leading woman, Mary Charleston, in Indiana, ten days after he was divorced from Irene Fenton. He says:
"There are absolutely no grounds for investigation into my second marriage. I married my first wife, Isabelle Fenton, fifteen years ago. We couldn't get along, and separated. I obtained a divorce at Chicago five years ago. I was given a final decree with the provision that I would not marry again in that state. The Indiana judiciary decided that my second marriage is entirely legal."
-"The Love Troubles of a Perfect Lover," The Norwalk Hour, July 10, 1922
※ Here's Walthall lied that he had a divorce from his wife Isabelle Fenton 5 years ago but actually it was 4 years ago. It seems like he was trying to deceive his daughter's age.
Marguerite Clark, once as noted in the film world as Mary Pickford, and Mary Charleston, star of the old Vitagraph company, now are happily married. The former is the wife of Harry Williams of New Orleans, and the latter married Henry B. Walthall, the actor.
"I have found more happiness in my home than I ever could have found in the vain glory of seeking personal fame," says Mrs. Walthall.
-"Many Stars, Once Famous, Now Are In Poverty And Obscurity," The Southeast Missourian, September 15, 1925
Henry Walthall's daughter Mary Patricia was born on her father's 40 year old birthday. (March 16, 1918) But the baby's mother wasn't Walthall's wife. Her mother was Mary Charleson.
When Henry Walthall divorced his wife Isabelle Fenton in Chicago, he received an order from the judge prohibiting him from remarrying within the state for one year. So he went to Indiana and remarried Mary Charleson in November 20, 1918. It was five to ten days after divorcing his wife, Isabelle Fenton.
In other words, Henry Walthall already had an illegitimate child. That was a reason why Walthall had to divorce Isabelle Fenton and why he had to remarry Mary Charleson so quickly after the divorce.
gifs: Blanche Sweet and Henry Walthall in Death's Marathon (1913, D.W. Griffith) / Claire McDowell and Henry Walthall in Two Daughters of Eve (1912, D.W. Griffith)
#henry b. walthall#henry walthall#death's marathon 1913#two daughters of eve 1912#isabelle fenton#mary charleson#mary patricia walthall#i adore you very much mr. walthall but you were the worst man i've ever loved#기사 인용
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