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"Haberman is a surname of Germanic origin. People with the name include: *Clyde Haberman (born 1945), American journalist *Daniel Haberman (1933-1991), American poet *Hardy Haberman (born 1950), American author, filmmaker, educator, designer *Maggie Haberman (born 1973), American journalist *Mandy Haberman (contemporary), English inventor and entrepreneur, inventor of the Haberman feeder *Martin Haberman (contemporary), American educator, university dean, and author; eponym of The Haberman Educational Foundation *Richard Haberman (contemporary), American mathematician *Robert Haberman (contemporary), Romanian-American socialist lawyer and left-wing activist; Mexican government minister *Seth Haberman (born 1960), American developer of viewer-customized television advertising *Steven Haberman (born 1951), English professor of actuarial science Haberman is also the name of a former Long Island Rail Road station located in Maspeth, Queens. The station closed in 1998. Category:Germanic-language surnames Category:Occupational surnames Category:Jewish surnames "
"O'Keefe House in 2005 O'Keefe House is the former mansion of businessman Eugene O'Keefe, which served as a residence for Ryerson University. It is located at 137 Bond Street in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.http://www.ryerson.ca/studentservices/housing/resaccommodations/okeefehouse/ The building was a student residence from 1964 to 2018, and had 33 residents on three floors. History The land at what is today 137 Bond Street was sold to a dry goods importer by the name of William Mathers on April 14, 1855. Along with the land, Mathers received the not yet completed, golden-bricked house. The building would host its most prominent proprietor in 1879 when it was purchased by Eugene O'Keefe. He was attracted to the house at the corner of Bond and Gould because he could keep tabs on his neighbouring brewery and reside within a block of St. Michael's Cathedral. To accommodate his growing family, O'Keefe had the third floor added in 1889. O'Keefe lived at 137 Bond Street until his death on the night of September 30, 1913, in his second-floor bedroom.http://www.okeefehouse.com/history/history.php The house eventually was purchased by Longman's Publishing and converted to administrative space. The layout that can be found today can trace its origin to these offices. The Canadian Congress of Labour, the United Mine Workers and the Canadian Railroad Employees all utilized the Bond Street building at one point or another. On March 6, 1963, S.E. Lyons and Son Realty Limited sent a letter to Ryerson principal Howard H. Kerr offering the premises at Bond and Gould for $85,000. Kerr struck a deal at $80,000, a stark contrast from its $6,000 value in 1880 or the $677,000 price-tag for a summer 2004 renovation.http://www.okeefehouse.com/history/history.php In time for the fall semester of 1964, Ryerson opened “The Bond Street Annex” along with other new residencies on Church Street and Oakham House, then known as Kerr Hall. Time saw the demolition of the Church Street residencies, and Oakham House was shut down as a residence for lack of fire code compliance. From 1963 through to the construction of Pitman Hall in 1991, O’Keefe was Ryerson’s only official residence space.http://www.okeefehouse.com/history/history.php 2013 marked the 50th anniversary of O'Keefe House as a Ryerson residence. In 2018, with the opening of the new HOEM residence on Jarvis Street, Ryerson announced that the building would no longer house students from the 2018-19 academic year. Instead, the building will be used by the university for non-residential purposes. Notable O'Keefers Ryerson grads Louis Gonsalves and Ted Brock were paired together as the first house supervisors. Gonsalves resided at Bond House with his wife Christine and house cat Heathcliff, marking the beginning of a long and sometimes tumultuous relationship between residents and the animal kingdom. Ted Brock Brock made innumerable contributions to Bond and O’Keefe House as Senior Don. He always demonstrated his care and concern for his resident students as their mentor, tutor, advocate, and occasionally as their disciplinarian. Brock also encouraged students to join him as volunteer philanthropists to raise money to help others in our community, whether selling tickets for Ernie’s Bursary Hot Dog Days or by seeking sponsorships for the Ronald MacDonald Snow-Shovel team. He led successful campaigns to thwart plans to demolish the house in the early 1990s. His legacy continues in the community stewardship, strong spirit and sense of identity held amongst Bond and O'Keefe House residents to this day. Ted Brock Memorial Award In 2004, the Ted Brock Memorial Award was established to honour Brock's contribution and dedication to Bond and O'Keefe House. Each year, this award recognizes an outstanding O'Keefe House resident at the year end formal who has made great contributions to the House during his or her time there. Originally named the Ted Brock Recognition Award to honour his retirement as Senior Don of O'Keefe House, the award was renamed the Ted Brock Memorial Award after his death in 2006. Erica Antonitti In 2018, Ryerson said goodbye to O'Keefe House as a residence. Leaving Antonitti as the last House President O'Keefe will ever see. Traditions There have been innumerable traditions at O'Keefe since its inception as a residence in 1964, however there have been a few prominent traditions that have lasted for many years. The Wine & Cheese Semi Formal, Food Olympics, Fort Building, End of the Year Formal, Alumni v. Frosh Football, Tour Du O'Keefe, Volunteering with the Ronald McDonald House, The Fred Victor Centre Dinner and many traditions. Legacy O'Keefe is known for being a tight-knit community of residents upholding decades old traditions. Additionally participation in intramural athletics has been a prominent part of O'Keefe's heritage, winning the Ryerson Athletics Centre, Residence Challenge award 10 consecutive years in a row since its creation. The O'Keefe House Alumni Association continues to grow, with the primary objective to preserve O'Keefe's heritage and strengthen the ties between O'Keefe Alumni. In 2008 the Alumni Association celebrated the 45th O'Keefe House Anniversary and in fall 2013 will celebrate the 50th O'Keefe House Anniversary. alt= O'Keefe House Logo. Leadership O'Keefe House is now run by Ryerson Student Housing Services. Typically there are two Dons (designated Residence Advisor and Academic Link) and five seniors who serve to run the house. The seniors are often first year residents selected to return to the house serving first as R.O.C. members (Ryerson Orientation Crew) and then continuing to assist with in-house events throughout the year. A Graduate Advisor (GA) also lives in the house, working to plan events in all of Ryerson's residences. Chants Got Your Barley > Got your barley, > Got your hops, > Got your yeasting salts, > O'Keefe House will eat your face, > IT IS NOT YOUR FAULT. > She's a Happy House > O'Keefe she's a happy house, > O'Keefe she's as good as mouse, > O'Keefe why don't you come, > and spend some time at... > (Repeat, increasing in volume x3) > O > KEEFE > O > KEEFE > O > KEEFE > Who are we? > O'KEEFE HOUSE > And how did we sleep last night? > SPOONING TOGETHER O'Keefe Gang > We are we are we are we are > We are the O'Keefe gang > We can we can we can we can > We can do anything > Play sports, drink beer, we have no fear, we're better than the rest > And we don't give a damn > For any old man > Who don't give a damn for us References External links * http://www.okeefehouse.com/index.php * http://www.ryerson.ca/studentservices/housing/resaccommodations/okeefehouse/ * http://www.ryersonstudenthousing.blogspot.com/ * https://twitter.com/okeefebrewers * http://www.ryerson.ca/news/news/General_Public/20121130_okeefe.html Category:Ryerson University buildings Category:University residences in Canada Category:Houses in Toronto Category:1855 establishments in Canada Category:Houses completed in 1855 "
"A Child of Sorrow is a 1921 novel by the Filipino author Zoilo Galang. It is considered the first Philippine novel written in English. Critics have suggested that the novel was heavily influenced by the sentimentalism of the Tagalog prose narratives of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. References Category:1921 novels Category:Sentimental novels Category:Philippine English-language novels "