It is SITKA. Here's more from Wikipedia "The City and District of Sitka is an association the city district on the west side of Baranof Island in the Alexander Archipelago in the Pacific Ocean (part of the Alaska Panhandle), in the U.S. state of Alaska. Sitka is the state's fourth largest City in terms of population and the largest city in the country in terms of area. "For much information, visit these links http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sitka, _Alaska Http:// www.cityofsitka.com/ http://www.sitka.com/ http://www.alaskaontheweb.com/visitorsinformation/where.htm
Al-Qaeda Calls Off Attack On Nation’s Capitol To Spare Life Of ‘Twilight’ Author
Disc 1:PrologueO VeronaMontague Boys, The – Justin WarfieldGas Station SceneO Verona (Reprise)Introduction to RomeoQueen Mab InterludeYoung Hearts Run Free – Harold Perrineau/Kym Mazelle/Paul Sorvi…
Disc 0:No track list availableDisc 1:DISC 1: STAND UP ORIGINAL ALBUM [2001 REMASTER] & BONUS TRACKS:New Day Yesterday, AJeffrey Goes to Leicester SquareBoureeBack to the FamilyLoo…
Disc 1:DISC 1: ORIGINAL ALBUM:Super Disco Breakin`Move, TheRemote ControlSong For the ManJust a TestBody Movin`IntergalacticSneakin` Out the HospitalPutting Shame in Your GameFlowin`…
All four BILLY JACK films in a collector`s box. Includes: BORN LOSERS, BILLY JACK, THE TRIAL OF BILLY JACK, and BILLY JACK GOES TO WASHINGTON.BORN LOSERS: The original Billy Jack film, featuring the adventures of a young half-Indian man who heroica…
Disc 0:No track list availableDisc 1:Original, ElGolpe Sobre GolpeTragedia de AmorCrudo, ElTroca del Moo Negro, LaContrato Con La MuerteBarco Ligero, ElPachanga, La…
Disc 1:From Russia With Love, film score: Opening Titles: James Bond is Back / From Russia With Love (Bart) / James Bond Theme (Norman)From Russia With Love, film score: Tania meets KlebbFrom Russia With Love, film score: …
For children on school trips or traveling with their families, a kid-friendly travelog provides information about popular monuments, museums, exhibits, shopping, and sporting events in and around the Washington, D.C. metro area. Original. 20,000 first …
With more than one hundred black-and-white illustrations, the father of our country, George Washington`s fascinating story comes to life–revealing the real man, not just the face on the dollar bill. Original.
Disc 1:Live and Let Die (Main Title)Just A Closer Walk With Thee / New Second LineBond Meets SolitaireWhisper Who DaresSnakes AliveBaron Samedi`s Dance of DeathSan MoniqueFillet Of Soul-New Orleans…
In 1942, the United States War Department distributed a handbook to American servicemen that advised them on the peculiarities of the “British, their country, and their ways.” Over sixty years later, this newly published reproduction from the rich…
Disc 1:Living Daylights, film score: The Living Daylights, The – (with a-ha)Living Daylights, film score: Necros Attacks, TheLiving Daylights, film score: The Sniper was a Woman, TheLiving Daylights, film score: Ice C…
Located in the heart of Eastern North Carolina, Washington is a city marked by its rich industrial heritage and the surrounding beauty of the Pamlico River and the fertile farmlands of Beaufort County. Washington, the county seat and original namesake …
Upper Dublin and Fort Washington, located to the northwest of Philadelphia, were part of William Penn`s original land grant of 1681. The villages of Fitzwatertown, Jarrettown, Three Tuns, and Dreshertown developed to serve early settlers who worked as …
Disc 1:PoppiesSex and CandyAncient Walls of FlowersSaint Joe on the School BusCloak of Elvenkind, ASherry FraserGone CrazyOpiumOne More SuicideDog and His MasterShadow of Seattle, Th…
This sacred work is a rousing and expansive mass written by English Elizabethan musician William Byrd. This is the definitive score for this masterpiece of Tudor polyphony has been edited by Henry Washington, with reference to the original part-books i…
Utilizing new primary source material from the Papers of George Washington, a documentary editing project dedicated to the transcription and publication of original documents, A Companion to George Washington features a collection of original re…
In the 1990s, four black men, seeking money, power, and respect, discover the ultimate price of making fast cash in the harsh inner city of Washington, D.C. Original.
The Glen Campbell Platinum collection highlights 12 tracks recorded during his tenure with Capitol Records in the ’60s and ’70s, including the original versions of “By the Time I Get to Phoenix,” “Gentle on My Mind,” “Rhinestone Cowboy,” and “Country Boy (You Got Your Feet in L.A.).” ~ Al Campbell, Rovi
Until 1999′s {^Free Soul} ({@Capitol}) and 2001′s exhaustive but more excellent overall {^Petals} ({@The Right Stuff}) came along, {^Capitol Gold} offered the best summation of this true original’s horribly undervalued solo career. As with {^Free Soul}, {
Until 1999′s Free Soul (Capitol) and 2001′s exhaustive but more excellent overall Petals (The Right Stuff) came along, Capitol Gold offered the best summation of this true original’s horribly undervalued solo career. As with Free Soul, Capitol Gold leaves a significant gap by excluding the best moments from Minnie Riperton’s debut (Come to My Garden), an album that was released on GTR. This issue would be rectified by The Right Stuff, a subsidiary of Capitol, for Petals. Still, Capitol Gold makes for a fine substitute introduction to Riperton; it includes all of her significant singles and a good survey of album tracks that didn’t receive the notice they deserved when they were originally released. ~ Andy Kellman, Rovi Performers: Minnie Riperton – Vocals
Released to coincide with Frank Sinatra’s 75th birthday, the three-disc set The Capitol Years has an abundance of classic Sinatra performances. There is plenty of wonderful music here, and the box is somewhat of an effective sampler, but to really appreciate what the singer achieved during the ’50s, it is necessary to listen to the original albums. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, Rovi Performers: Frank Sinatra – Vocals
#1 Country Hits is a fairly entertaining sampler of familiar hits released on Capitol/Liberty in the ’80s. The skimpy ten-track compilation contains the original versions of such country-pop tracks as “Love Will Turn You Around” (Kenny Rogers), “The Sweetest Thing (I’ve Ever Known)” (Juice Newton), “Now and Forever (You and Me)” (Anne Murray), and “Three Time Loser” (Dan Seals). There’s no particular reason why this compilation exists, but it’s cheap and the end result is an enjoyable listen. ~ Al Campbell, Rovi
This two-CD set packages the Aladdin and Capitol tracks of the warblers from Newport News, VA. The 45 tracks released from 1951 to 1958 encompass all their hits and misses. The songs are not in chronological order, which is a real bummer; instead, they’re compiled according to popularity. “Ling Ting Tong” (Capitol, September 1954), their must successful recording (number five on the R&B chart and number 28 pop) is the first track, while their first single, “With a Broken Heart” (Aladdin, April 1951), doesn’t appear until the 21st track. The collection features their original rendition of Chuck Willis’ “Close Your Eyes” and the Ink Spots-ish “The Verdict,” along with “Out of Sight, Out of Mind,” “Let There Be You,” “I Wish I’d Never Learned to Read,” and many more. Some later recordings on King and other small labels are not included. ~ Andrew Hamilton, Rovi
Tall, blonde drink-of-water Dolores Gray starred in films and musicals throughout the ’40s and ’50s and made a respectable armful of minor charting songs for Columbia, Decca, RCA Victor and Capitol during her career. A dedicated B-lister, Gray never crossed over to the big time, but did find an audience for her theatrical and sultry interpretations of standards and late-night missives. The Capitol reissue of her aptly titled 1957 album Warm Brandy serves up the smoldering, come-hither vibe in high style — with deluxe packaging, a ten-page booklet of information and photos, and four bonus tracks. The original selections presented all have the fireside couch in mind (with an eye on the bedroom) and, for sheer cocktail romanticism, this set has few peers. Gray’s voice might not have been on par with the likes of contemporaries such as Ethel Merman, Mary Martin or June Christy, but her stunning looks and acting talent sure gave her an advantage in the boudoir department. ~ J. Scott McClintock, Rovi
Gene Vincent may have been one of rock & roll’s first great Dixie-fried wild men, but consistency was not his strong suit, and for every work of lunatic genius in his catalog (such as “B-I-Bickey-Bi, Bo-Bo-Go” and “Woman Love”), there are a few failed ballads and novelty tunes foisted upon him by clueless A&R men back in the day. This compilation from Capitol Records’ fine Collectors Series line represents a noble and largely successful attempt to skim off the cream from his Capitol masters; while the material has been remixed for compact disc release, the new versions honor the sound and spirit of the original (though the mono versions have a shade more punch), and the track listing offers plenty of meat with little filler. While Razor & Tie’s later collection The Screaming End: The Best of Gene Vincent rocks harder, Capitol Collectors Series in many ways offers a more accurate look at Vincent’s career, with the wildness starting to seriously fade near the end of the disc without skidding into his really dire material. Even on the lesser tunes, Vincent’s gloriously prurient vocals are upfront throughout, and the superb fretwork of Cliff Gallup, Paul Peek, and John Meeks prove the guy had great taste in guitar players. Added bonus: an instrumental take of “Rocky Road Blues” that will help make you the coolest person at karaoke night. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi Performers: Gene Vincent – Vocals
When the Beatles’ albums were reissued on CD in 1987, the group seized the opportunity to standardize their catalog internationally, choosing to release the British version of their LPs on CD in every territory throughout the world. From their standpoint, it made sense creatively, since these were the albums they intended to make, and it also made sense from a consumer standpoint, since these British LPs were longer than their foreign counterparts, particularly the American LPs released between 1964 and 1965. While the reasoning behind the move was sound, it was controversial in America, since the vast majority of their audience there not only grew up on the U.S. versions, they may not have even been aware that there were great differences in how the music was issued in both the U.S. and U.K. up until Sgt. Pepper in 1967. To make matters even more complicated, the first four albums — 1963′s Please Please Me through 1964′s Beatles for Sale — were released in mono on CD, which was like pouring salt into the wounds for American fans: not only could they not get the versions they grew up with, they didn’t even sound the same. The Beatles were hardly the only British rock & roll band to have its LPs released in different incarnations in the U.S. During the height of the British Invasion in the mid-’60s, it was standard practice for U.S. record labels to shuffle songs between records, either to help promote singles or squeeze out as much product as they could out of a limited number of songs, and since LPs were released in both mono and stereo mixes, there several different variations of the basic album on the marketplace. This was done without the artist’s consent, and the Beatles protested the issue with the notorious “butcher” cover of the U.S. album Yesterday…and Today, where the Fab Four dressed up in butchers coats surrounded by decapitated baby dolls and raw meat — not a subtle criticism, but not an inaccurate one, either. After Sgt. Pepper ushered in the album rock era, this practice faded away. Years later, in the thick of the CD reissue boom, there was heavy nostalgia among record collectors for these American and British and stereo and mono variants, which led to ’90s reissues of classic ’60s rock albums containing both the stereo and mono mixes, or individual reissues of the U.S. and U.K. versions of particular albums. The Rolling Stones, Kinks, Animals, and many other peers of the Beatles were given reissues of these variants, but not the Beatles themselves, even though these were among the most requested reissues and were among the most interesting of these variations. Interesting is a word that cuts both ways — they were interesting because they were popular, the records that brought Beatlemania to America, but interesting because they were wrong-headed, sometimes in their sequencing but often in their mixes. Under the supervision of Capitol executive Dave Dexter — who initially rejected the Beatles for Capitol — the original mix
A good single-disc distillation of the highlights of Les Paul’s epic four-disc box set, The Legend and the Legacy, The Best of the Capitol Masters is all most casual fans will need to own. [Best of the Capitol Masters: 90th Birthday Edition, which includes "Dialog/In the Mood," "Brazil" and "Excerpt from the Les Paul Show: "The Case of the Missing Les ...," as well as the original twenty tracks is also available. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, Rovi
Collectables Best of Tex Ritter is a good budget-priced, 12-track collection containing original hit recordings on Capitol including “There’s a New Moon Over My Shoulder,” “You Two-Timed Me One Time Too Often,” and “You Will Have to Pay (For Your Yesterday).” Please note that this edition includes the exact same track listing as the 2003 EMI-Capitol Special Markets release also titled Best of Tex Ritter, Rovi
Presents little-known details and statistics about the role of blacks in the creation of the White House, the Lincoln Memorial, and other historic sites in and around Washington, D.C., and provides information on special monuments dedicated to the contributions of African Americans, including the African American Civil War Memorial and the Frederick Douglass Museum. Original.
Thanksgiving Day comes once a year in the U.S., but every day there are people in our lives who deserve our thanks. Sometimes a simple “Thank you” is appropriate. At other times, it is more thoughtful to be creative in expressing appreciation. It’s just good business.
Here are some suggestions for thanking people at work, at home, and in the community.
1. When you say “Thank you” tell the person specifically what it is you appreciate and why you appreciate it. “Thank you for going to the Post Office for me. It saved me a lot of time.”
2. Send an e-mail note. When I sent a thank you note to my staff in the Pentagon, the energy level shot up.
3. Send a hand-written thank you note. These are noteworthy because so few of us take time to write and mail them.
4. Place an unexpected phone call just to say “Thank you.” Connecting verbally adds warmth to your appreciation even if you reach voice mail.
5. Present a small certificate. Half-page certificates take up less space if displayed and are as meaningful as full sized certificates. They tend to draw attention because they are different.
6. Give a single flower from your garden, flowerpot, or florist, with a verbal “Thank you” or a note.
7. Put a candy bar or piece of fruit on the desk of the person to be thanked, with or without a note. (Be sure the person is not on vacation!)
8. Bake some cookies. This is especially effective when men bake and present a few cookies in thanksgiving.
9. Say something nice about the recipient of your thanks to someone else when the person you appreciate can overhear you. This is especially powerful in a business setting.
10. For special occasions, present a US flag that has flown over the Capitol. It is a unique, reasonably priced item which few people own. A certificate of authenticity is provided in honor of any special occasion you designate. Call your congressman’s office and ask for it. If you don’t have a local contact, call 202 224-3121 and ask for your congressman or congresswoman by name. When you reach that person’s office, ask to purchase a flag. They’ll know what to do!