US Federal Trade Commission (FTC)

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Recent News About US Federal Trade Commission (FTC)

  • Sultana Inks Partnership with National Park Service’s Star-Spangled Banner National Historic Trail

    News Release: Chestertown, MD. -- The National Park Service's Star-Spangled Banner National Historic Trail (Trail) is proud to announce that that it has entered into a cooperative agreement with the Sultana Education Foundation (SEF) to provide students from Maryland’s Eastern Shore with educational programs that...


  • Phillips Academy

    News Release: In 1891, Phillips Academy was going through a period of expansion and reached out to Frederick Law Olmsted Sr. to develop a master plan for the campus, connecting it with the new cottage-like dormitories. It was John Charles Olmsted who would respond to that initial request, and he was joined by Olmsted Jr, and firm assistants Herbert j. Kellaway and George Gibbs.


  • Massachusetts Agricultural College

    News Release: When the Lincoln Administration passed The Morrill Act of 1862, it required all states to provide public lands for Land Grant Colleges. The Morrill Act promoted the “liberal and practical education of the industrial classes for the benefit of Agricultural & Mechanical Arts.".


  • University of California, Berkeley

    News Release: While in California managing the Mariposa Estate gold mine, Frederick Law Olmsted asked in 1865 by the trustees of the College of California to draw up a plan for a campus and residential area on grounds that were once used as a farm. After visiting the site in the foothills of San Francisco Bay, Olmsted proposed a plan where students live in cottages arranged in a picturesque style, with meandering roads and paths around them.


  • Royal Gorge Field Office rescinds stage 1 fire restrictions

    News Release: CAÑON CITY, Colo. - The Bureau of Land Management’s Royal Gorge Field Office has rescinded stage 1 fire restrictions on all BLM-administered public lands within the boundaries of Baca, Bent, Crowley, Custer, El Paso, Fremont, Huerfano, Kiowa, Las Animas, Lincoln, Otero, Park, Prowers, Pueblo, and Teller counties.


  • The Joshua Tree National Park Herbarium

    News Release: "A Collection of Plants". The first person to press plants flat, dry them, and bind the specimens in a book for future study was a 16th-century Italian botanist. The practice caught on in Europe, where the books were called “herbaria.". But the noted botanist Carl Linnaeus, working in the 1700s, found...


  • Bureau of Land Management to begin NEPA process for the Bonanza Solar Project Application

    News Release: The Bureau of Land Management has completed the variance process for the Bonanza Solar Project, a major early step in the application process for solar energy development that allows the BLM to fully consider the project under the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA). The BLM’s decision to advance the project to the next stage of review comes after close coordination with Tribal governments, appropriate Federal, State, and local agencies, and public outreach.


  • The Doll House

    News Release: This small building was called Swan Cottage when it was first built in 1935 by FDR's mother, Sara Roosevelt, for use by her grandchildren. At that time, it was located on a graveled walk about 300 yards southeast of the Big House, Springwood. New York arhitect Charles Short designed the house. The original...


  • Val-Kill Cottages

    News Release: Stopping here for a moment gives you an opportunity to view the historic core of her former property, buildings with great stories to tell!.


  • Stanford University

    News Release: When Leland Stanford Sr.’s son died of typhoid fever at the age of 15, the railroad tycoon felt the best way to honor his son would be to dedicate a new college in his honor. Stanford wanted the best, so for the grounds of his campus, he hired Frederick Law Olmsted.


  • Lake Washington Boulevard

    News Release: The longest and most significant boulevard in John Charles Olmsted’s Seattle Park System, Lake Washington Boulevard extends six miles, linking nine Olmsted Parks together. First proposed in Olmsted Brothers’ 1903 report, they recommended the Boulevard stretch beyond Seattle’s limits towards water.


  • Reclamation hosts Bring a Kid to Work Day event; showcases water, hydropower mission

    News Release: DENVER, Colo. - The Bureau of Reclamation hosted a Bring a Kid to Work Day event at the Technical Service Center, April 27, from 9 a.m.-noon.


  • University of Mississippi

    News Release: Years before Frederick Law Olmsted Sr. had even begun his career as a landscape architect, the grounds for the University of Mississippi had already been landscaped. Completed in 1848, the campus was made of a parklike octagonal green space, surrounded by institutional structures. Like many successful schools, enrollment increased, and the campus became too small to house its student body.


  • Shark Valley area will be closed May 6-23 for repaving

    News Release: From May 6 to 23, the entire Shark Valley area at Everglades National Park will be closed day and night to all visitors for repaving of the entrance road, parking lot, and 15-mile tram road. The closure is necessary to ensure public safety during construction activities with heavy equipment and to enable the road surface to cure properly.


  • The Climb to Top Cottage

    News Release: Situated at the peak of a hill, with a commanding view of Hyde Park, is Top Cottage, a modest home where kings and queens and heads of state met with the President, their discussions shaping modern history.


  • A Walk Through Time

    News Release: The naturally stony soil produces a crop of fieldstone once gathered by land dwellers to build walls that defined their fields and property lines. Today, it is a place for you to stop and consider your surroundings.


  • Tennis Court

    News Release: Earl Miller supervised the construction of the tennis court for Eleanor Roosevelt in 1950. Two courses of black top were laid over six inches of compacted gravel. The wire backstops were installed at the same time. With he picnic fireplace, doll house, swimming pool, and stables, the tennis court provided...


  • Pea Ridge National Military Park Presents Program about The Sultana Disaster

    News Release: Pea Ridge National Military Park to present a special program “The Sultana Disaster: Prisons, Greed, and Espionage" Friday, April 28, 6:00-7:15 P.M.


  • Park rangers searching for missing man near Deep Creek

    News Release: GATLINBURG, Tenn.-Great Smoky Mountains National Park rangers are searching for a 69-year-old man in the Deep Creek area of the park. Gordon Kaye from Tampa, FL was last seen in the lower loop of Deep Creek Campground on Saturday, April 22. His family reported him missing yesterday, April 26.


  • Blue Ridge Parkway begins major road project in northwest North Carolina

    News Release: LAUREL SPRINGS, N.C. - Road closures related to a major infrastructure project are set to begin May 1 in a 75-mile section of the Blue Ridge Parkway from milepost 229.6, just north of Doughton Park, to milepost 305.1, near Grandfather Mountain.