Reconstructing the Garrick: Adler & Sullivan’s Lost Masterpiece, published by Alphawood Foundation in 2021, has been shortlisted for the 2022 Alice Award. Edited by John Vinci with Tim Samuelson, Eric Nordstrom, and Chris Ware, and designed by Studio Blue, Reconstructing the Garrick documents the enormous salvaging job undertaken to preserve elements of the Garrick Theater, Adler & Sullivan’s magnificent architectural masterpiece in Chicago’s theater district.
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ALPHAWOOD FOUNDATION CHICAGO
ANNOUNCES NEW EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR: CHIRAG G. BADLANI
October 19, 2021 (CHICAGO) Alphawood Foundation Chicago announces Chirag G. Badlani as its Executive Director, effective November 8, 2021. Badlani succeeds Jim McDonough, who retired as Executive Director this month after leading the Foundation since 2012 and who will remain as legal counsel to the Foundation until next year.
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August 10, 2021 (CHICAGO) Alphawood Foundation today announced the retirement of its Executive Director Jim McDonough, effective on October 1, 2021.
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Archaeologists say they've found the long-lost capital of an ancient Maya kingdom near the border between Mexico and Guatemala.
The Sak Tz'i' kingdom was home to between 5,000 and 10,000 people in what is now Chiapas, Mexico, from about 750 BCE to 900 AD, Brandeis University associate professor of anthropology Charles Golden told CNN.
The kingdom wasn't particularly powerful and was surrounded by some of the superpowers of the day, Golden said. He said the Sak Tz'i' kingdom was frequently mentioned in inscriptions found in other cities.
"The reason we know about the kingdom from the inscriptions is because they get beat up by all these superpowers, their rulers are taken captive, they're fighting wars, but they're also negotiating alliances with those superpowers at the same time," he said.
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For decades, archeologists have kept their eyes down to the ground as they slashed through jungles, attempting to spot traces left by lost civilizations like the Khmer Empire in Cambodia and the Maya in Mexico and Central America.
It's painstaking work that took entire careers to complete.
But now, archeologists -- or at least their tools -- are taking to the skies.
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