jansstudio variety in design of web, signage and print

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5.0 BRAND COMMUNICATIONS jansStudio jan shapiro Senior Designer Art Director with several years of professional creative experience in corporate identity development, brand management, print design, signage, trade show, packaging, pre-press and web site. http://www.Linkedin.com/in/JansStudio

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5.0

BRAND COMMUNICATIONS

jansStudiojan shapiro

Senior Designer ■ Art Director

with several years of professional

creative experience in corporate

identity development, brand management,

print design, signage, trade show,

packaging, pre-press and web site.

http://www.Linkedin.com/in/JansStudio

■ Timberland Signage and Display

■ Timberland Store Signage Concept. layout ad design when partnering with Smartwool socks (logo man)

■ Orange Innovation Center* Designed creative signage throughout the building using recycled scrap metal materials from the original Warehouse. OIC is being renovated for green industry and artists lofts.Inspired by Mass Moca.

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■ Orange Innovation Center Signage | Created signage, banners, logo using recycled materials from OIC warehouse

Sarah Adam Illustrator 33

Interlock Media Film and Web Design 38

Zita Rasid - Cultural Director 31

Shelter Bookworks 3C

available 1F

available 4

available

A home for services, arts & green industryA home for services, arts & green industryA home for services, arts & green industryA home for services, arts & green industryA home for services, arts & green industryORangE InnOVaTION CEnTER

Attorney Richard Bishop 11 & 13

CHD Child & Family Service 1H

Communities Collaborative (CCI) 8-10 & 12

CCI Classroom 35

CCI Workshop 29A

Environmental Science Consortium 3E

Franklin County Community Development. Corp 5

Franklin-Hampshire Career Center 2-4

Suzann Heron 23

Hilary Ince 11 & 13

Tricia McLeod 25

NElCWT 3 & 6

Orange Elementary Superintendent 1G

available

social services

Eagle Peak Fitness 21

EPF Masseuse 22

HoneyYoga 20

Orange Investment Realty 1

Railside Cafe 2

available

available

Burner Guys 1BR

Classic Garage 1N

GJ Associates 26

Hi-De Liners 1W

K & M Machine 1C

Alec MacLeod - Environmental Scientist 28

4 Seasons Foam Insulators 1D

Simon Says Booking 7

Attorney Christopher Uhl 28

available 1E

available

available

Industry and Green Business Amenit ies

ArTISANS

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BLACK

Founded in 1940 to support Dr. Schweitzer and his Hospital in Lambaréné, TheAlbert Schweitzer Fellowship (ASF) today is dedicated to promoting Dr. Schweitzer’s legacy of service, helping to reduce disparities in health and health care in the U.S. and Africa. Since 1990, ASF has selected and supported over 1,700 medical, nursing, dental, social work, and other students in health-related professional fi elds as Schweitzer Fellows in the U.S. and Africa, who follow in Dr. Schweitzer’s path of service to those most in need.

Dr. Lachlan Forrow, Director of BIDMC Ethics Programs and of BIDMC Palliative Care Programs, serves as ASF President. Dr. Mitchell T. Rabkin, CEOEmeritus of BIDMC, serves as Board Chair. The ASF National Offi ce is hosted by BIDMC, with mutually-advantageous ASF-BIDMC collaboration in Community Outreach, Communications and Public Relations and Development.

The Albert Schweitzer Fellowship (ASF)

ASF and BIDMC Historical Background

In 1913 Dr. Albert Schweitzer

and his wife Helene Bresslau

traveled to Africa to found the

Albert Schweitzer Hospital at

Lambaréné, which grew into

a world-renowned symbol of

international collaboration

addressing unmet health needs

in Africa.

At the same time in Boston,

Deaconess Hospital (founded in 1896)

and Beth Israel Hospital (founded

in 1916) were beginning their work,

each dedicated largely to helping

meet the health needs of vulnerable

and underserved individuals in the

Boston area.

Today, BIDMC is proud to serve

as the official U.S. Sister Hospital

for the Schweitzer Hospital in

Africa, and to host the offices of

The Albert Schweitzer Fellowship,

a U.S. nonprofit organization

dedicated to promoting

Dr. Schweitzer’s legacy of service

in the U.S. and the world today.

The Albert Schweitzer Fellowship at BIDMCSupporting Leaders in Service in the U.S. and Africa

The son of a

Lutheran pastor,

Albert Schweitzer

was born

January 14, 1875 in

a small village in

Alsace, then part

of Germany. By age 29,

Schweitzer had already made

landmark scholarly

contributions in the fields of

music, religion, and philosophy.

He was an acclaimed organist, a

world authority on Bach,

a church pastor, and a

university professor with two

doctoral degrees.

At the age of 30, aware of the

desperate unmet medical needs

of Africans, he decided to

become a doctor and devote the

rest of his life to direct service

in Africa. In 1913, at the age of

38, Dr. Schweitzer and his wife,

Hélène, opened their hospital in

Lambaréné, Gabon - then a

province of French Equatorial

Africa. Not even serious

setbacks of World War I, part of

which he and Hélène spent as

prisoners of war in France,

deterred him from ongoing

commitment to his mission.

In 1915, profoundly tormented

by the carnage from the raging

war in Europe, and troubled

daily by the vast numbers of

suffering patients coming to

his hospital for help,

he experienced as a revelation

“Reverence for Life” as the

elementary and universal

principle of ethics that he

had been seeking for so long.

By stressing the interdepen-

dence and unity of all life,

he was a forerunner of the

environmental and animal

welfare movements - Rachel

Carson dedicated Silent Spring

to him.

Dr. Schweitzer believed that

human beings can find the

deepest possible source of

satisfaction and harmony with

the world when they nurture

and express their native sense

of Reverence for Life through

direct service to others in need.

Schweitzer was awarded the

1952 Nobel Peace Prize for his

medical work and his ethic

of Reverence for Life. During

the last decade of his life, his

speeches and writings

emphasized the need to abolish

nuclear weapons, the greatest

threat to life on earth.

Dr. Albert Schweitzer (1875 – 1965)

“When I hear a baby’s cry of pain change into a normal cry of hunger, to my ears that is the most beautiful music–and there are those who say I have good ears for music” A.S.

On their way home after the birth of their daughter, one couple came to thank the doctor and say good-by. Schweitzer kissed the baby’s hand and said to her mother, “Tell her some day that I was her fi rst admirer. It was here that she had her fi rst night and her fi rst dreams.”A.S.

IDENTIFICATION TAG FOR PATIENT

Attention: The bearer of this is a patient of Albert Schweitzer and has had to be sent to Brazzaville Hospital for an operation. Please help him in anything he needs.

If you would like to become a supporter of The Albert Schweitzer Fellowship, please call 617-667-3180 or contact us through our website: www.schweitzerfellowship.org.

Thank you for your interest!

Albert Schweitzer Hospital Today

Since 1978, ASF has selected and supported four or fi ve senior medical students annually as Lambaréné Schweitzer Fellows, each spending three months as junior physicians at the Schweitzer Hospital. Over 100 Lambaréné Schweitzer Fellows have served to date, with many describing the experience as one of the most important and powerful in their medical training, deeply reinforcing their commitment to incorporating service to those most in need throughout their professional lives.

U.S. Schweitzer Fellows each undertake year-long, closely-mentored direct service projects in their local communities, addressing important unmet health needs, while at the same time pursuing a normal academic work-load in their health profes-sional school. Schweitzer Fellows also participate in a series of leadership development activities, preparing them as alumni to be members of the rapidly-growing network

of Schweitzer Fellows for Life (already over 1,700 strong), who support each other in continuing service as an important dimension of their lifelong careers.

This year ASF is support-ing nearly 200 U.S. Schweitzer Fellows from over 100 health-related professional schools in ten local programs: Boston, Baltimore, Chicago, Los Angeles, New Hampshire/ Vermont, New Orleans, North Carolina, Greater

Philadelphia, Pittsburgh,and San Francisco Bay Area. Possible additional new sites to be added in 2009 and beyond include Cleveland, Denver, Seattle, and Texas.

In the Boston area alone, 35 Schweitzer Fellows from 15-20 area schools provide at least 7,000 hours of direct service annually to the homeless, frail elders, at-risk teens, and many other neighbors in need.

U.S. Schweitzer Fellows Programs: Boston and Beyond

Schweitzer Fellows in Africa

Today, an international staff of Gabonese and expatriate African and non-African professionals provide skilled care for over 35,000 outpatient visits and more than 6,000 hospitalizations annually for patients from all parts of Gabon. Two surgeons and their teams carry out close to 2,200 operations annually. Most of the 160 members of the staff live in the hospital compound with their families, which gives the hospital the feel of a village.

Through support from the Gabonese government and Schweitzer organizations around the world, patients today fi nd a modern medical facility that includes two operating rooms, a dental clinic, and inpatient wards for pediatric, adult medicine, surgical, and obstetrical patients.

The U.S. National Institute of Health has recognized the Hospital’s research laboratory as one of fi ve leading facili-ties in Africa engaged in scientifi c studies of malaria, the greatest killer on the African continent with more than 1,000,000 deaths per year. Children with severe malaria at the Schweitzer Hospital have the lowest documented mortality rate anywhere on the continent. In 1999, the Hospital’s Community Health Outreach Program serving surrounding villages was launched, beginning from an initial planning meeting at Beth Israel Hospital of U.S. and Gabonese public health leaders. This Program hasbeen called “a school for our country” by the Director-General of the Gabonese National Ministry of Health.

■ The Albert Schweitzer Fellowship at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center Displayed in Lobby

BLACK

Founded in 1940 to support Dr. Schweitzer and his Hospital in Lambaréné, TheAlbert Schweitzer Fellowship (ASF) today is dedicated to promoting Dr. Schweitzer’s legacy of service, helping to reduce disparities in health and health care in the U.S. and Africa. Since 1990, ASF has selected and supported over 1,700 medical, nursing, dental, social work, and other students in health-related professional fi elds as Schweitzer Fellows in the U.S. and Africa, who follow in Dr. Schweitzer’s path of service to those most in need.

Dr. Lachlan Forrow, Director of BIDMC Ethics Programs and of BIDMC Palliative Care Programs, serves as ASF President. Dr. Mitchell T. Rabkin, CEOEmeritus of BIDMC, serves as Board Chair. The ASF National Offi ce is hosted by BIDMC, with mutually-advantageous ASF-BIDMC collaboration in Community Outreach, Communications and Public Relations and Development.

The Albert Schweitzer Fellowship (ASF)

ASF and BIDMC Historical Background

In 1913 Dr. Albert Schweitzer

and his wife Helene Bresslau

traveled to Africa to found the

Albert Schweitzer Hospital at

Lambaréné, which grew into

a world-renowned symbol of

international collaboration

addressing unmet health needs

in Africa.

At the same time in Boston,

Deaconess Hospital (founded in 1896)

and Beth Israel Hospital (founded

in 1916) were beginning their work,

each dedicated largely to helping

meet the health needs of vulnerable

and underserved individuals in the

Boston area.

Today, BIDMC is proud to serve

as the official U.S. Sister Hospital

for the Schweitzer Hospital in

Africa, and to host the offices of

The Albert Schweitzer Fellowship,

a U.S. nonprofit organization

dedicated to promoting

Dr. Schweitzer’s legacy of service

in the U.S. and the world today.

The Albert Schweitzer Fellowship at BIDMCSupporting Leaders in Service in the U.S. and Africa

The son of a

Lutheran pastor,

Albert Schweitzer

was born

January 14, 1875 in

a small village in

Alsace, then part

of Germany. By age 29,

Schweitzer had already made

landmark scholarly

contributions in the fields of

music, religion, and philosophy.

He was an acclaimed organist, a

world authority on Bach,

a church pastor, and a

university professor with two

doctoral degrees.

At the age of 30, aware of the

desperate unmet medical needs

of Africans, he decided to

become a doctor and devote the

rest of his life to direct service

in Africa. In 1913, at the age of

38, Dr. Schweitzer and his wife,

Hélène, opened their hospital in

Lambaréné, Gabon - then a

province of French Equatorial

Africa. Not even serious

setbacks of World War I, part of

which he and Hélène spent as

prisoners of war in France,

deterred him from ongoing

commitment to his mission.

In 1915, profoundly tormented

by the carnage from the raging

war in Europe, and troubled

daily by the vast numbers of

suffering patients coming to

his hospital for help,

he experienced as a revelation

“Reverence for Life” as the

elementary and universal

principle of ethics that he

had been seeking for so long.

By stressing the interdepen-

dence and unity of all life,

he was a forerunner of the

environmental and animal

welfare movements - Rachel

Carson dedicated Silent Spring

to him.

Dr. Schweitzer believed that

human beings can find the

deepest possible source of

satisfaction and harmony with

the world when they nurture

and express their native sense

of Reverence for Life through

direct service to others in need.

Schweitzer was awarded the

1952 Nobel Peace Prize for his

medical work and his ethic

of Reverence for Life. During

the last decade of his life, his

speeches and writings

emphasized the need to abolish

nuclear weapons, the greatest

threat to life on earth.

Dr. Albert Schweitzer (1875 – 1965)

“When I hear a baby’s cry of pain change into a normal cry of hunger, to my ears that is the most beautiful music–and there are those who say I have good ears for music” A.S.

On their way home after the birth of their daughter, one couple came to thank the doctor and say good-by. Schweitzer kissed the baby’s hand and said to her mother, “Tell her some day that I was her fi rst admirer. It was here that she had her fi rst night and her fi rst dreams.”A.S.

IDENTIFICATION TAG FOR PATIENT

Attention: The bearer of this is a patient of Albert Schweitzer and has had to be sent to Brazzaville Hospital for an operation. Please help him in anything he needs.

If you would like to become a supporter of The Albert Schweitzer Fellowship, please call 617-667-3180 or contact us through our website: www.schweitzerfellowship.org.

Thank you for your interest!

Albert Schweitzer Hospital Today

Since 1978, ASF has selected and supported four or fi ve senior medical students annually as Lambaréné Schweitzer Fellows, each spending three months as junior physicians at the Schweitzer Hospital. Over 100 Lambaréné Schweitzer Fellows have served to date, with many describing the experience as one of the most important and powerful in their medical training, deeply reinforcing their commitment to incorporating service to those most in need throughout their professional lives.

U.S. Schweitzer Fellows each undertake year-long, closely-mentored direct service projects in their local communities, addressing important unmet health needs, while at the same time pursuing a normal academic work-load in their health profes-sional school. Schweitzer Fellows also participate in a series of leadership development activities, preparing them as alumni to be members of the rapidly-growing network

of Schweitzer Fellows for Life (already over 1,700 strong), who support each other in continuing service as an important dimension of their lifelong careers.

This year ASF is support-ing nearly 200 U.S. Schweitzer Fellows from over 100 health-related professional schools in ten local programs: Boston, Baltimore, Chicago, Los Angeles, New Hampshire/ Vermont, New Orleans, North Carolina, Greater

Philadelphia, Pittsburgh,and San Francisco Bay Area. Possible additional new sites to be added in 2009 and beyond include Cleveland, Denver, Seattle, and Texas.

In the Boston area alone, 35 Schweitzer Fellows from 15-20 area schools provide at least 7,000 hours of direct service annually to the homeless, frail elders, at-risk teens, and many other neighbors in need.

U.S. Schweitzer Fellows Programs: Boston and Beyond

Schweitzer Fellows in Africa

Today, an international staff of Gabonese and expatriate African and non-African professionals provide skilled care for over 35,000 outpatient visits and more than 6,000 hospitalizations annually for patients from all parts of Gabon. Two surgeons and their teams carry out close to 2,200 operations annually. Most of the 160 members of the staff live in the hospital compound with their families, which gives the hospital the feel of a village.

Through support from the Gabonese government and Schweitzer organizations around the world, patients today fi nd a modern medical facility that includes two operating rooms, a dental clinic, and inpatient wards for pediatric, adult medicine, surgical, and obstetrical patients.

The U.S. National Institute of Health has recognized the Hospital’s research laboratory as one of fi ve leading facili-ties in Africa engaged in scientifi c studies of malaria, the greatest killer on the African continent with more than 1,000,000 deaths per year. Children with severe malaria at the Schweitzer Hospital have the lowest documented mortality rate anywhere on the continent. In 1999, the Hospital’s Community Health Outreach Program serving surrounding villages was launched, beginning from an initial planning meeting at Beth Israel Hospital of U.S. and Gabonese public health leaders. This Program hasbeen called “a school for our country” by the Director-General of the Gabonese National Ministry of Health.

■ ■ BMES | Biomedical Engineering Society | Concept Design for web and trade show

jan shapiroSenior Designer ■ Art Director

with several years of professional creative

experience in corporate identity develop-

ment,

brand management, print design, publishing,

packaging, pre-press and web site.

617.571.0292

5.0

BRAND COMMUNICATIONS

jansStudiojan shapiro

Senior Designer ■ Art Director

Trade Show

Environmental Projects

Medical Web Seminars

Publishing

Packaging

Signage

Creative Concepting

http://www.Linkedin.com/in/JansStudio