La Farge Aggregates Plant (Republic Cement) in Bgy.
"You wouldn't assume that anything buried for hundreds of years would be viable," (https://www.washingtonpost.com/science/ancient-life-awakens-amid-thawing-ice-caps-and-permafrost/2019/07/05/335281f8-7108-11e9-9f06-5fc2ee80027a_story.html?utm_term=.f87f9195f3d0) said evolutionary biologist Catherine
La Farge, from the University of Alberta, of the centuries-old moss tufts she discovered.
For the chapter on The High Line, an elevated 13-mile line of railroad track in New York that eventually became an "urban oasis," Hyden and Sheckels include Annik
La Farge's On the High Line: Exploring Americas Most Original Urban Park.
His letters include one to Charles Hagberg Wright (7 May 1914), two to John
La Farge (20 June; 21 September 1869), one to Hendrik Christian Andersen (25 November 1906), and a printed letter of thanks to subscribers for the commission of Sargent's portrait (21 April 1913).
A display of John
La Farge's stained glass windows leads to the conference center.
This calming effect is precisely what drove architects George Heins and Christopher Grant
La Farge to cast the tile in its original breakout role.
It offers a fresh perspective on the master novelist and the significance of his friendships with American artists John
La Farge, John Singer Sargent, and James McNeill Whistler, as well as Gardner, an esteemed arts patron.
He had previously worked at
La Farge, Del Monte Philippines and GlaxoSmithKline Philippines.
Nicole Mydy, innovation manager for the
La Farge, Wis.-based Organic Valley co-op, says that retailers are transitioning away from coolers that feature only carbonated soft drinks to coolers that include products that offer higher value for retailers and a more nutritious profile for consumers.
Organic Valley,
La Farge, Wis., 888-444-6455, www.organicvalley.coop, IDDBA 2754
Arabella's stained-glass windows by John
La Farge, depicting allegorical female figures amid blazes of flowers, turned up at the American Academy of Arts and Letters in upper Manhattan, around the corner from the Hispanic Society of America, which Archer Huntington founded in 1904 and which owns the family's photos of the West 54th Street house.
La Farge describes the 1.45-mile long public park that New York City has created on an unused railroad trestle, primarily in captions of the color photographs that comprise most of the book.