#gary oglesby
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
tuppencetrinkets · 5 months ago
Text
Sorted caps from S1 of Star Trek Enterprise
Archer - 57000 - Scott Bakula
T'Pol - 36000 - Jolene Blalock
Trip - 29000 - Connor Trinneer
Malcolm - 16000 - Dominic Keating
Hoshi - 16000 - Linda Park
Travis - 11000 - Anthony Montgomery
Phlox - 10000 -John Billingsley
V'Lar - 2500 - Fionnula Flanagan
Elizabeth - 2300 - Kellie Waymire
Daniels - 1300 - Matt WInston
Maxwell - 1300 - Vaughn Armstrong
Soval - 480 - Gary Oglesby
This content is free for anyone to use or edit however you like; if you care to throw a dollar or two my way for time, effort, storage fees etc you are more than welcome to do so via my PAYPAL.  Please like or reblog this post if you have found it useful or are downloading the content within.  If you have any questions or you have any problems with the links or find any inconsistencies in the content, etc. please feel free to drop me a politely worded message via my ASKBOX (second icon from the top on my theme!
22 notes · View notes
societyofaustralianpunk · 5 years ago
Text
Punk Fanzine Archives from around the world.
A punk fanzine or ‘zine’ is a DIY publication related to the punk subculture and hardcore punk music genre. Often primitively or casually produced, a fanzine can feature punk literature, such as social commentary, poetry, news, gossip, music reviews and articles about punk rock bands or regional punk scenes.
Below is a list of punk fanzine websites and archives from around the world, as well as related publications, papers, articles and books.
Archive.org - Zines
Bacteria Netherlands - 70s and 80s Dutch zine archive and International Zine Archive
Bored Teenagers - A collection of UK punk fanzines (covers) from the late 1970
Brob Tilt's zine-world -  (fan)zines that are interesting, historical, meaningful, influential, funny, intelligent, surprising, peculiar and inspiring
Circulation Zero -  West Coast Punk Music Zines from the 1970-80s: Damage, Slash & No Mag.
Contextual Dissemination - Punk fanzine archive, 1977 onwards - The sole purpose of this website is to make underground, out-of-print, punk zines accessible to anyone doing research. 
Digital Fanzine Preservation Society (DFPS). A collection of hardcore and punk music fanzines remastered and collected on the DFPS blogspot by Nagus from 2009-2011.
Essential Ephemera - UK Punk Literature & Images 1976-1984
Florida Punk, Indie, and Hardcore Archive -  Florida Punk Flyers, Posters, Fanzines, and Photographs sponsored by Visual Vitriol.
Gary Storm Songs -  Punk and New Music Fanzines – Late 1970s to Early 1980s
Grrrlzine Network -  Here you can find rebellious feminist zines: grrrl and lady zines, riot grrrl zines, transgender zines, zines by grrrls of color, lesbian/queer zines and many others!
HeartattaCk -  An internationally distributed punk zine with a strong bent towards hardcore punk and anti-consumerism. It was published by Kent McClard and Lisa Oglesby from March 1994 through June 2006. In the final years of its publication it remained one of the most popular zines available. 
International Institute of Social History -  The world's leading institute in socio-economic history
Punk in the East -  Punk in the East is a digital collection of original punk photographs, gig ticket, posters, clothing and ephemera from Norwich, Norfolk and across East Anglia. As content continues to come in it is fast becoming the largest digital UK punk archive to be found anywhere on the internet.
Punk Journey: The History of the Melbourne Punk Scene (Australia) - punk fanzines from 1977 - 1987.
Punk Planet Archive -  Punk Planet was a punk zine, based in Chicago, Illinois, that focused most of its energy on looking at punk subculture rather than punk as simply another genre of music to which teenagers listen.
Punk Rocker Fanzines - Sites for Sore Eyes
Rockmine : The Fanzine Archive -  A Fanzine & Fan Club Magazine Archive.
Stitches in my Head Blog
Swedish Punk Fanzines - A site about collecting punk, hardcore and black metal records and Swedish punk zines.
Talkin’ Bout Fanzines - Fanzines from the Southend Area of the UK
UK Zine Library -  100s of(mostly)UK Zines from late 70s to early 90s, scanned and downloadable archive.
Weed - UK punk / post-punk fanzines 1980-1986.
Zineopolis - Art Zine Collection
Definition of a fanzine
Punk zine - Wikipedia
https://fanlore.org/wiki/Zine
Related Publications/Archives: 
Like Punk Never Happened - Brian McCloskey's Smash Hits archive from 1978, through to July 1985.
Monash University Library recently acquired a small collection of important punk zines, fanzines, and magazines to add to the Rare Books Collection. 
Punk Globe - not a fanzine but a long running magazine that offers a free DIY website for people to get the latest news, reviews, articles, interviews plus much more.
Punk Magazine - Punk was a music magazine and fanzine created by cartoonist John Holmstrom, publisher Ged Dunn, and "resident punk" Legs McNeil in 1975. Its use of the term "punk rock", coined by writers for Creem magazine a few years earlier to describe the simplistic and crude style of 60's Garage rock bands, further popularized the term.
Roadrunner -  Roadrunner was a rock magazine published in Adelaide between 1978-83. Its founding editors were Stuart Coupe and Donald Robertson, who worked together on the single-issue Punk zine Street Fever in December 1977. Though primarily focused on Australian and overseas rock music, it also covered areas of the burgeoning counterculture and issues such as punk. The final edition of December 1982 / January 1983 was published in Sydney. To accompany the release of this collection in May 2017, publisher Donald Robertson penned a history of the magazine. It is available here: The History of Roadrunner.
State Library of Victoria - The State Library of Victoria has the largest public collection of zines – independent, not-for-profit, and often hand-made publications – in Australia. 
Related Books:
Adventures in Reality: The Complete Collection book -  Put together by Alan Rider, Adventures in Reality, was a fanzine from Coventry in the early 1980s.
Mass Movement: The Digital Years, Volume 1 and 2 - A compilation of the best interviews and features from the second half of Mass Movement’s digital period.
Punk Faction BHP '91 to '95 -  A collection of BHP fanzines that cover a range of subjects that were important to the youth of the 1990s and are still relevant to the alternative scene of today. 
Ripped and Torn: 1976 - 79 The Loudest Punk Fanzine in the UK -  Ripped and Torn was one of the first punk fanzines, and continued long after others like Sniffing Glue had stopped.
Ripped, torn and cut - Pop, politics and punk fanzines from 1976 - A book that offers a collection of original essays exploring the motivations behind - and the politics within - the multitude of fanzines that emerged in the wake of British punk from 1976. 
Search & Destroy #1-6: The Complete Reprint -  Search & Destroy, a zine self-published from 1977-1979 by V. Vale, was a thorough anthropological survey of an emerging social-change movement: the San Francisco punk scene.
Sniffin' Glue The Bible -  An edited compendium of the first 10 issues of Mark Perry’s seminal Punkzine  Sniffin’ Glue.    
Sniffin' Glue: The Essential Punk Accessory - It was the most influential rock magazine of its time. It was called Sniffin' Glue and it's about to be recreated as a book
The Best of Punk Magazine -  A book that includes high-quality reprints of hard-to-find original issues, as well as rare and unseen photos,essays, interviews, and even handwritten contributions from the likes of AndyWarhol, Lou Reed, Debbie Harry, the Ramones, the Sex Pistols, Lester Bangs,Legs McNeil, Lenny Kaye, and many more.
Touch and Go: The Complete Hardcore Punk Zine '79-'83 - Touch and Go fanzine was the brainchild of Tesco Vee and Dave Stimson and was launched in Lansing, Michigan, in 1979.
We Owe You Nothing: Punk Planet: The Collected Interviews -  The first compilation of the riveting and provocative interviews of Punk Planet magazine, founded in 1994 and charging unbowed into the new millennium.
Related PDFs:
A Destabilising Pleasure: Representations of Alternative Music in Irish Fanzines
Art-Zines, The Self-Publishing Revolution: The Zineopolis Art-Zine Collection
Bay Area Dadazines and Punk Zines in 1970s San Francisco: Interactive, Ephemeral, Live
Before Blogs There Were Zines: Berman, Danky, and the Political Case for Zine Collecting in North American Academic Libraries
CATALOGING AND DESCRIPTION OF FANZINE AND ZINE COLLECTIONS IN AMERICAN ARCHIVES AND LIBRARIES
Doing it ourselves: Countercultural and alternative radical publishing in the decade before punk (2018)
Flood the market with alternative writing! – Fanzinesrepositories in Europe
FROM PROTEST TO RESISTANCE: British anarcho -punk 'zines (1980-1984) as sites of resistance and symbols of defiance
Global Network Zines - The Public Face of Mail Art
Hands-on Communication: Zine Circulation Rituals and the Interactive Limitations of Web Self-Publishing
In the Ruins of Zine Pedagogy: A Narrative Study of Teaching with Zines
London Punk Fanzines 1976-1984: The Celebration of the Every Person 
"Minor Threats" (Radical History Review)
Music fanzine collecting as capital accumulation
Punk, Politics and British (fan)zines, 1974­-84:'While the world was dying, did you wonder why?
Punk ‘zines – ‘symbols of defiance’ from the print to the digital age
Punk’s Not Dead: Resurrecting Punk Fanzines at Michigan State University Libraries
Print is Dead: The Promise and Peril of Digital Media for Subcultural Resistance
Riot Girl from Zine to Screen and the Commodification of Female Transgression
The D.C. Punk & Indie Fanzine collection
The Octapod Zine Collection: Developing a preservation and access strategy
Value and Validity of Art Zines as an Art Form
Zines Will Survive
Related Articles:
City Fun
Damage, Slash & No Mag - Download 50+ Issues of Legendary West Coast Punk Music Zines from the 1970-80s: Damage, Slash & No Mag
Fanzines - Clinton Walker (Australia)
Fanzine culture
Fanzines: the purest explosion of British punk
Self-made: zines & artist books (Exhibition)
Sniffin’ Glue: A fanzine that epitomized punk
Sniffin’ Glue: The Definitive Punk Zine
Tracing the beginnings of the punk fanzine
Up Yours: Anarchist Fanzines 
Related Video:
Guttersnipe Punk Fanzine Telford
PUNK ZINES : UK 1978 - 1984
50 notes · View notes
allthingshyper · 7 years ago
Photo
SOME INFO FOR THE UNINFORMED:
The Haymarket Riot
May 4, 1886 - a labor protest rally near Chicago’s Haymarket Square turned into a riot after someone threw a bomb at police, at least eight people died and eight radical labor activists were convicted in connection with the bombing, despite a lack of evidence
The Haymarket Riot was a setback for the organized labor movement in America, which was fighting for such rights as the eight-hour workday.
The Haymarket Riot set off a national wave of xenophobia
August 1886 -  The eight men that were arrested and labeled as anarchists were convicted in a sensational and controversial trial in which the jury was considered to be biased and no solid evidence was presented linking the defendants to the bombing. Judge Joseph E. Gary imposed the death sentence on seven of the men, and the eighth was sentenced to 15 years in prison.
November 11, 1887 -  four of the men were hanged.Of the additional three who were sentenced to death, one committed suicide on the eve of his execution and the other two had their death sentences commuted to life in prison by Illinois Governor Richard J. Oglesby. The governor was reacting to the widespread public questioning of their guilt, which later led his successor, Governor John P. Altgeld, to pardon the three activists still living in 1893.
In the aftermath of the Haymarket Riot and subsequent trial and executions, public opinion was divided. For some people, the events led to a heightened anti-labor sentiment, while others (including labor organizers around the world) believed the men had been convicted unfairly and viewed them as martyrs.
Who is Emma Goldman?
Emma Goldman dedicated her life to the creation of a radically new social order. Convinced that the political and economic organization of modern society was fundamentally unjust, she embraced anarchism for the vision it offered of liberty, harmony and true social justice.
For decades, she struggled tirelessly against widespread inequality, repression, and exploitation. Goldman's deep commitment to the ideal of absolute freedom led her to espouse a wide range of controversial causes.
A fiery orator and a gifted writer, she became a passionate advocate of freedom of expression, sexual freedom and birth control, equality and independence for women, radical education, union organization and workers' rights.
Support for these ideas — many of which were unpopular with mainstream America — earned Goldman the enmity of powerful political and economic authorities. Known as "exceedingly dangerous" and one of the two most dangerous anarchists in America, she was often harassed or arrested while lecturing, and sometimes banned outright from speaking.
Insisting on the right to express herself in the face of overwhelming odds, Goldman became a prominent figure in the establishment of the right to freedom of speech in America.
Although Goldman was hostile to religion in general, her core beliefs emerged in part from a Jewish tradition that championed the pursuit of universal justice. Her early experiences in Russia and as an immigrant to the United States laid the groundwork for her later analyses of political and economic problems, and she understood that her own ideals had their roots in a Jewish historical experience shaped by longstanding oppression. Goldman's career stands as an important chapter in the history of Jewish activism in America.
Tumblr media
Happy May Day! Remember Haymarket!
1K notes · View notes
Text
Illinois Bulletin Board | News - Agri News
Illinois Bulletin Board | News – Agri News
Illinois Bulletin Board | News  Agri News
OGLESBY, Ill. – Gary Schnitkey, University of Illinois Extension farm management specialist, will cover ag leases and marketing opportunities at the 2019 Ag …
View On WordPress
0 notes
djricothenoisemaker · 8 years ago
Video
#NMN1 #NMNisReal #LadiesOfTheNMN #MenOfTheNMN #FollowTheNoise #4DaysTheGameChanges 🐾🐾🐾 ON 🌑🌑🌑🌑#RepostLoveFrom @crossrhodes368 (@get_repost) ・・・ Click on the link in my bio & also The CrossRhodes: Wes Felton & Raheem Devaughn Would like to thank! Chris Scholar Raquel Brown Kimberly Douglas Chekesha Rashad Anthony Morton Ayanna Williams Gabriel Benn Aaron Bland Kymone Freeman We Act Radio Dept of Park & Rec Malcolm X Rec Youth iCan Program Youth THEARC Staff Dept of Employee Services Lafeyette Smith Brenda Jones Clyde Davis Dwayne Telesford Deshawn Laws Thornell Jones Lance Reynolds Munch Joseph DJ Face Armstrong OCTFME OAA S J Oglesby PR CassiusLife.com Michele White Dante Pope Micah Robinson DeAndre Shaifer Jerel Abrahams Gary Drew Denise Rose "Pheezy" BenchmarkLA Tone Walters
0 notes
godermag · 8 years ago
Text
P-Lo - Put Me On Somethin' (feat. E-40) #GODER
P-Lo – Put Me On Somethin’ (feat. E-40) #GODER
Published on Apr 19, 2017 Get ‘More Than Anything’ here:https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/more-than-anything/id1227550577?ls=1&app=itunes Director – Pmac Producer – Adrian Per DP – Vinny Minton 1st AC – Cressanne Credo Gaffer – Jake Crumley Grip – Devin Art Director – Amanda Beane Art PA – Matthew G Oglesby Art PA – Gary Fabian BTS Filmmaker – Kane Garcia Production Assistant – Matthew Miguel…
View On WordPress
0 notes
nicholasrossis · 8 years ago
Text
Greek May Day wreath. Photo: Greek Reporter
May Day is an official holiday in 66 countries and unofficially celebrated in many more. In Greece, it is celebrated as a workers’ strike. So, naturally, everyone goes to the countryside and… erm… makes themselves a May wreath to hang on their doors.
It is just as confusing a holiday in the States, as Natalie Zarrelli of Atlas Obscura reminds us. For many, it celebrates the ancient Celtic day of flowers and rebirth, with laughing children dancing around the maypole. But May Day also has a revolutionary past. The International Workers’ Day of May Day, the holiday’s full name, originated in the United States in 1886 as a radical response to abusive employers, for something many people take for granted today: the eight-hour workday.
A Nineteenth-Century Affair
Nineteenth-century employment conditions were harsh: workers often performed dangerous tasks while under-fed and under-slept, working from 10-16 hours per day, seven days a week. Many died due to accidents. The working class, disenchanted by a capitalist system that only benefited their bosses, flirted with socialism. Socialist groups formed; anarchist groups followed in response to socialists’ bureaucracy, calling for the end of all hierarchal structures so workers could fully control their own conditions. Socialist and anarchist workers, with their intense involvement, swelled the worker’s unions.
In 1886, one anarchist paper printed:
Workingmen to Arms! War to the Palace, Peace to the Cottage, and Death to LUXURIOUS IDLENESS. The wage system is the only cause of the World’s misery. It is supported by the rich classes, and to destroy it, they must be either made to work or DIE. One pound of DYNAMITE is better than a bushel of BALLOTS! MAKE YOUR DEMAND FOR EIGHT HOURS with weapons in your hands to meet the capitalistic bloodhounds, police, and militia in proper manner.
The Haymarket Affair
It is in this volatile political climate that workers planned to organize a strike; what wasn’t planned was how many people would join. In 1886 on the first May Day, 300,000 workers left their jobs across the country—and the demonstrations became violent. Around 40,000 people in Chicago gathered to make speeches. As the picketing continued, so did the tension. Families and children gathered at Haymarket Square for a smaller, 3,000-person talk on May 3rd, to address police brutality and the eight-hour-day. The crowd dwindled, according to Time, to only a few hundred—the Mayor even left and “went to bed”.
At about 10:30 pm, the British socialist Samuel Fielden, delivered a final ten-minute address. Just as he was finishing his speech, police arrived en masse, marching in formation towards the speakers’ wagon, and ordered the rally to disperse. Fielden insisted that the meeting was peaceful.
Suddenly, someone threw a bomb, killing policeman Mathias J. Degan with flying metal fragments and mortally wounding six other officers.
Etching of the Haymarket Affair (Wikimedia, via Atlas Obscura)
Immediately after the bomb blast, gunshots were exchanged between police and demonstrators. Accounts vary widely as to who fired first and whether any of the crowd fired at the police. Historian Paul Avrich maintains that the police fired on the fleeing demonstrators, reloaded and then fired again, killing four and wounding as many as 70 people. An anonymous police official told the Chicago Tribune:
A very large number of the police were wounded by each other’s revolvers. … It was every man for himself, and while some got two or three squares away, the rest emptied their revolvers, mainly into each other.
In all, seven policemen and at least four workers were killed. Another policeman died two years after the incident from complications related to injuries received on that day. About 60 policemen were wounded in the incident. They were carried, along with some other wounded people, into a nearby police station. Police captain Michael Schaack later admitted that the number of wounded workers was “largely in excess of that on the side of the police”. The Chicago Herald described a scene of “wild carnage” and estimated at least fifty dead or wounded civilians lay in the streets. It is unclear how many civilians were wounded since many were afraid to seek medical attention, fearing arrest.
A harsh anti-union clampdown followed the Haymarket incident. Anarchism became synonymous with bomb throwing and socialism became un-American. The entire labor and immigrant community, particularly Germans and Bohemians, came under suspicion. Casting legal requirements such as search warrants aside, Chicago police squads subjected the labor activists of Chicago to an eight-week shakedown, ransacking their meeting halls and places of business. Newspaper reports declared that anarchist agitators were to blame for the “riot”, a view adopted by an alarmed public. Many workers, on the other hand, believed that men of the Pinkerton agency were responsible because of the agency’s tactic of secretly infiltrating labor groups and its sometimes violent methods of strike breaking. However, this contradicts the statements of several activists who said the bomber was one of their own.
The Trial
Eight prominent anarchists were arrested. In the ensuing trial, the prosecution argued that one of the defendants may have built the bomb, even though none of those on trial had thrown it; indeed, only two were at Haymarket Square. The trial was conducted in an atmosphere of extreme prejudice by both public and media toward the defendants. It was presided over by Judge Joseph Gary, who displayed open hostility to the defendants, consistently ruled for the prosecution, and failed to maintain decorum. Selection of the jury was extraordinarily difficult, lasting three weeks, and nearly one thousand people called. All union members and anyone who expressed sympathy toward socialism were dismissed. In the end, a jury of 12 was seated, most of whom confessed prejudice towards the defendants.
So, no one was surprised when the jury returned guilty verdicts for all eight defendants. Seven were sentenced to death and one to a term of 15 years in prison. The sentencing provoked outrage from labor and workers’ movements and their supporters, resulting in protests around the world, and elevating the defendants to the status of martyrs, especially abroad. Portrayals of anarchists as bloodthirsty foreign fanatics in the press, on the other hand, inspired widespread public fear and revulsion against the strikers and general anti-immigrant feeling, polarizing public opinion. Notwithstanding the convictions for conspiracy, no actual bomber was ever brought to trial, and no lawyerly explanation could ever make a conspiracy trial without the main perpetrator in the conspiracy seem completely legitimate.
The death sentences of two of the defendants were commuted by Illinois governor Oglesby to life in prison, and another committed suicide in jail rather than face the gallows. The other four were hanged on November 11, 1887. In 1893, Illinois’ new governor Altgeld pardoned the remaining defendants and criticized the trial.
The site of the incident was designated a Chicago Landmark in 1992 and a public sculpture was dedicated there in 2004. In addition, the Haymarket Martyrs’ Memorial at the defendants’ burial site in nearby Forest Park was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1997.
#gallery-0-7 { margin: auto; } #gallery-0-7 .gallery-item { float: left; margin-top: 10px; text-align: center; width: 50%; } #gallery-0-7 img { border: 2px solid #cfcfcf; } #gallery-0-7 .gallery-caption { margin-left: 0; } /* see gallery_shortcode() in wp-includes/media.php */
Haymarket Martyr’s Memorial (photo: ZoI87, Wikipedia)
Haymarket Monument (photo: Victor Grigas, Wikipedia)
The Aftermath
Despite the polarizing political climate, popular pressure continued for the establishment of the 8-hour day. At the convention of the American Federation of Labor (AFL) in 1888, the union decided to campaign for the shorter workday again. May 1, 1890, was agreed upon as the date on which workers would strike for an eight-hour work day and the first international May Day was a spectacular success. The front page of the New York World on May 2, 1890, was devoted to coverage of the event. Demonstrations took place in two dozen European cities and rallies were held in Cuba, Peru, and Chile. Commemoration of May Day became an annual event the following year.
Despite all this, the States have ever since had a mixed reaction to May Day’s political meaning, with the left celebrating it as a rightful strive for workers’ rights. In response, as the Cold War was getting started, Eisenhower declared in 1958 May 1st as “Law and Order Day” to celebrate laws made to ensure freedom. Every year since then, American presidents have declared May 1st a holiday.
[tweetthis]The May Day’s Revolutionary Past[/tweetthis]
The May Day’s Revolutionary Past May Day is an official holiday in 66 countries and unofficially celebrated in many more. In Greece, it is celebrated as a…
0 notes
full-imagination · 8 years ago
Text
Betty L. Whitaker Horne
Betty L. Whitaker Horne, 82, of Cowpens, SC, passed away on Thursday, February 9, 2017, at Peachtree Centre, Gaffney, SC. Born June 17, 1934, in Chester County, SC, she was the daughter of the late Clyde and Lovie Turner Whitaker and wife, of 55 years, to the late Dewey A. Horne. A graduate of Cowpens High School, Mrs. Horne was a member of Westside Baptist Church in Cowpens and retired from Progress Lighting. Survivors include her children, Bobby Dean Horne Sr. (Rhonda) of Cowpens, Jackie Goble (Don) of Gaffney, and Tami Gary (Ross) of Morganton, NC; grandsons, Dean Horne (Amy) of Chesnee and Lee Goble of Columbia; granddaughters, Kellie Horne of Cowpens and Carly Goble of Gaffney; great-grandsons, Kasen and Kane Horne; great-granddaughter, Brooke Wilson; brother, Clyde Joe Whitaker of Cowpens; and sister, Jean Mabry of Cowpens. In addition to her parents and husband, she was predeceased by a brother, Charles “Apple” Whitaker; and sister, Loree Oglesby. Visitation will be 2:45-3:45 PM Saturday, February 11, 2017, at Floyd’s Greenlawn Chapel, 2075 E. Main St., Spartanburg, SC 29307. Funeral services will follow at 4:00 PM, at the Chapel, conducted by the Rev. Todd Lyda. Burial will be in Daniel Morgan Memorial Gardens Mausoleum, 175 Cemetery Street, Cowpens, SC 29330. In lieu of flowers, memorials may be made, with all funds going to the children at Palmetto Health Children’s Hospital, to: USC Dance Marathon, 1400 Greene Street Suite 115, Columbia, SC 29201 - online at http://bit.ly/2lpgVPM The family will be at their respective homes. Floyd’s Greenlawn Chapel from The JF Floyd Mortuary Crematory & Cemeteries via Spartanburg Funeral
0 notes
Text
Illinois Bulletin Board | News - Agri News
Illinois Bulletin Board | News – Agri News
Illinois Bulletin Board | News  Agri News
OGLESBY, Ill. – Gary Schnitkey, University of Illinois Extension farm management specialist, will cover ag leases and marketing opportunities at the 2019 Ag …
View On WordPress
0 notes