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One evokes ancient Rome, with shards of masonry, sculptural fragments and embedded plaques set among perennials and tropical plants.
We're passing another landmark: a set of bronze plaques set into the sidewalk describing many of the animals — most of them hidden away in the waters and marshes of the Bay — that make the area their home.
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One of them, on which youngsters clamber happily, has a plaque set into its side honoring Cyrus Clark, affectionately known as "Father of the West Side".
A plaque set into the rotunda floor by the sisters warns that the building is to be used "solely for art purposes".
But it has at least drawn attention to a long-ignored plaque set in the marble floor at the entrance to the Comédie-Française, France's national theater.
Property markers, like a plaque set into the pavement at Lever House, are a frequent giveaway that one is about to set foot on someone else's land.
A plaque set into the cobbled square alongside commemorates Winston Churchill's speech calling for a United States of Europe, delivered here in 1946.
Property markers, like this plaque set into the pavement at Lever House, are a frequent giveaway that one is about to set foot on someone else's land: Owners close these properties annually to protect themselves against any possible claim of "adverse possession," a concept with ancient roots.
Or that, if you stand in the centre and raise your sights above the dark red Kremlin walls, there in the distance is the apartment belonging to Roman Abramovich (the very presence of which tells you something of his influence in the new faux democratic Russia), or to stand on the brass plaque set into the cobbles is to stand in the very centre of the square, the nation, the world?
Take, for example, a small unobtrusive plaque set into the trampled ground alongside Elm Street in Dallas, just in front of the Bryan Colonnade.
There is also a privately owned cemetery on the outskirts of the city, Drake Memorial Park which does not allow headstones to mark graves, but a brass plaque set into the ground.
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