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Este livro apresenta um estudo sobre a contribuição do IF Baiano – campus Uruçuca para o desenvolvimento socioeconômico do município de sua inserção, na região Sul da Bahia, recomendando ideias, alternativas e trabalhos que possam proporcionar – sendo referência para os outros institutos federais – a atuação dessa instituição de forma mais efetiva no processo de desenvolvimento local.
O Centenário merecia uma História. Uma Nova História. História que trouxesse à luz novidades, muitas novidades que permaneciam escondidas no fundo dos arquivos. Novidades colhidas da boca de venerandos nonagenários, filhos ou netos dos fundadores de Lagoa Vermelha. Velhas histórias ameaçadas de desaparecer nas brumas do passado. História opulenta e apaixonante, verdadeira tentação, para os ficcionistas, que em cada capítulo, encontram assunto para grosso volume. A epopeia indianista, comandada pelo legendário Cacique Doble, nascido, criado e morto neste município, onde escreveu cantos de bravura e patriotismo, aguarda a pena de um poeta para imortalizá-la da Apresentação
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José Maria Escobar (born ca. 1751) was adopted by José Miguel Antonio Ramírez, and was brought to live in Mier, Tamaulipas, Mexico when he was nine years old. Maria Antonia Gertrudis Chapa was the daughter of Maria Rita López de Jaen, who was the second wife of Escobar's adoptive father. In 1770, Escobar married Maria Antonia Gertrudis Chapa. He inherited a portion of land called Porción 76 from Ramírez, and later purchased the remainder of Porción 76 from his mother in law and step-mother, Maria Rita López de Jaen. The property was in Mier, which later became part of Starr County, Texas. Escobar ancestors came from Spain to Mexico, some being soldiers with Cortez at Vera Cruz in 1519. Members of the Escobar family lived in Texas and northern Mexico, along the Rio Grande River. They settled mainly at Escobares, Los Sáenz, La Rosita, Roma (Roma-Los Sáenz), and Rio Grande City. Others moved to California, New York, Ohio, Washington D.C., and elsewhere.
"I look beyond solution; I look for an expression."--Eduardo Souto de Moura The architect Eduardo Souto de Moura (b. 1952) has won many accolades, including the 2011 Pritzker Architecture Prize. Based in Porto, Souto de Moura studied under Fernando Távora and worked under fellow Portuguese architect Álvaro Siza, with whom he continues to collaborate. Souto de Moura established his own practice in 1980, and his wide-ranging influences, including Mies van der Rohe and Donald Judd, can be seen in the stunning variety of his work, from his acclaimed private houses, to the striking Paula Rego Museum in Cascais and the Braga Municipal Stadium, to his work in historical contexts such as the Convento das Bernardas in Tavira. This beautifully illustrated retrospective provides the most comprehensive account of Souto de Moura's career to date. Drawings, notes and sketches from his archive, and newly commissioned photographs complement essays by scholars and prominent architects that trace Souto de Moura's career, contextualize his work within the larger trends of contemporary international architectural culture, and highlight the originality of his design strategy.