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trevor;sabretache Turner, Trevor (2016). "'Brave Hearts and Loyal': The New South Wales Naval Artillery Volunteers 1882–1902". Sabretache. Military Historical Society of Australia. LVII (4, December): 50–57. ISSN 0048-8933. |
nalma;barstovian;miocene;serravallian;clarendonian;tortonian;hemphillian The Clarendonian North American Stage on the geologic timescale is the North American faunal stage according to the North American Land Mammal Ages chronology (NALMA), typically set from 13,600,000 to 10,300,000 years BP, a period of 3.3 million years.It is usually considered to overlap the Serravallian age of the Middle Miocene and the Tortonian age of the Late Miocene. The Clarendonian is preceded by the Barstovian and followed by the Hemphillian NALMA stages. |
clarendonian The Clarendonian can be further divided into the substages of: |
clarendonian Late/Upper Clarendonian: Lower boundary source of the base of the Clarendonian (approximate) |
clarendonian Early/Lower Clarendonian (shares lower boundary) |
bates;north dakota;jamestown;barnum;university of jamestown Floyd Bates Barnum (March 17, 1892 – February 1965) was an American football coach He was the fourth head football coach at Jamestown College—now known as the University of Jamestown—in Jamestown, North Dakota, serving for one season, in 1921, and compiling a record of 0–2–1. |
jordon Clarence Charles Lewis Jordon (31 May 1909 – 30 October 1965) was an Australian rules footballer who played with Richmond in the Victorian Football League (VFL). |
slug;stirling;ada;jordon The son of Patrick Jordon (1884-1949), and Susan Jordon (1886-1956), nee Stirling, Clarence Charles Lewis Jordon was born at Carlton, Victoria on 31 May 1909.He married Ada Walters in 1934. Their son, Raymond Clarence "Slug" Jordon (1937-2012), was a Victorian cricketer, an Australian Rules footballer, and a successful Australian Rules coach. |
bas;afl;seaford Holmesby, Russell; Main, Jim (2014). The Encyclopedia of AFL Footballers: every AFL/VFL player since 1897 (10th ed.). Seaford, Victoria: BAS Publishing. ISBN 978-1-921496-32-5. |
hogan Hogan P: The Tigers Of Old, Richmond FC, (Melbourne), 1996. ISBN 0-646-18748-1 |
veterans affairs;aircraftman;leading aircraftman;jordon World War Two Nominal Roll: Leading Aircraftman Clarence Charles Lewis Jordon (119235), Department of Veterans Affairs. |
aircraftman;leading aircraftman;jordon A9301, 119235: World War Two Service Record: Leading Aircraftman Clarence Charles Lewis Jordon (119235), National Archives of Australia. |
clarrie jordon;clarrie;jordon Clarrie Jordon at AustralianFootball.com |
afl;clarrie Clarrie Jordon's playing statistics from AFL Tables |
clarrie;vfa Clarrie Jordon's playing statistics from The VFA Project |
flexures;hepatic flexure;flexure;colic;splenic;human digestive;curvatures;colic flexures In the anatomy of the human digestive tract, there are two colic flexures, or curvatures in the transverse colon. The right colic flexure is also known as the hepatic flexure, and the left colic flexure is also known as the splenic flexure. Note that "right" refers to the patient's anatomical right, which may be depicted on the left of a diagram. |
colic;flexure Right colic flexure |
hepatic flexure;colic;flexure The right colic flexure or hepatic flexure (as it is next to the liver) is the sharp bend between the ascending colon and the transverse colon. |
mesenteric;hepatic flexure;flexure The hepatic flexure lies in the right upper quadrant of the human abdomen. It receives blood supply from the superior mesenteric artery. |
colic;flexure Left colic flexure |
mesenteric;colic;splenic;flexure The left colic flexure or splenic flexure (as it is close to the spleen) is the sharp bend between the transverse colon and the descending colon. The splenic flexure receives dual blood supply from the terminal branches of the superior mesenteric artery and the inferior mesenteric artery. |
griffith's;ibs;splenic flexure syndrome;flexure;ischemic colitis;mesenteric;splenic The splenic flexure is the last and highest positioned flexure in the colon. Gas can build up at this flexure and give abdominal pain giving rise to a condition known as splenic flexure syndrome. Splenic flexure syndrome is often found in those with irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), and is considered by some practitioners to be a type of IBS since it can also result from stress.The splenic flexure is a watershed region as it receives dual blood supply from the terminal branches of the superior mesenteric artery and the inferior mesenteric artery, thus making it prone to ischemic damage in cases of low blood pressure because it does not have its own primary source of blood. In the context of bowel ischemia in particular ischemic colitis, the splenic flexure is sometimes referred to as Griffith's point, along with the upper rectum (Sudeck's point). |
colectomy;lotti Lotti M. Anatomy in relation to left colectomy |
downstate;suny downstate medical center Anatomy photo:37:13-0102 at the SUNY Downstate Medical Center |
downstate;suny downstate medical center Anatomy image:8182 at the SUNY Downstate Medical Center |
leicestershire;loughborough;larkin;dyment;mangled;loughborough grammar school;derbyshire;philip larkin;alfreton Clifford Henry Dyment FRSL (20 January 1914 – 5 June 1971) was a British poet, literary critic, editor and journalist, best known for his poems on countryside topics. Born to Welsh parents, his mother was widowed when Dyment was four years old.Born in Alfreton, Derbyshire, he spent his early childhood in Caerleon-on-Usk but was educated at Loughborough Grammar School in Leicestershire.His poem "The Son" was occasioned by his discovery of a letter written by his conscripted father prior to his death in World War I. Another Dyment poem "From Many a Mangled Truth a War is Won" laments the tendency to invent pretexts and justifications for wars.His first published collection was First Day (1935). During the latter part of the 1930s he was a literary figure in London. During World War II he was engaged to make films, working for the British government. His poem As a boy with a richness of needs I wandered was included by Philip Larkin in The Oxford Book of Twentieth Century English Verse, in 1971. |
betty;betty roe;rockefeller foundation The poem Mouse was set to music by Betty Roe as part of her song cycle of Cat and Mouse (1987).He received a Rockefeller Foundation Atlantic Award in 1950. |
curly Straight or Curly (1937) |
thomas hood Thomas Hood, Selected Poems (1948, Grey Walls Press) editor |
collins zoo The Collins Zoo, formerly the Collins Exotic Animal Orphanage, is a zoo located in Collins, Mississippi. |
collins zoo;gus;the zoo The Collins Zoo was founded in 1986 by Gus White. The zoo has been raided several times by the Mississippi Department of Wildlife, Fisheries and Parks. MDWF&P have never won a single case against the Zoo. The last raid was ruled unconstitutional. The MDWF&P have stated that the owners did not have proper permits, but several judges ruled that the owners were exempt from permits. |
the zoo The zoo's USDA license was revoked in May, 2013. The zoo has been closed since that time. |
collins zoo African Lions, tigers, cougars, and leopards are several of the major attractions at the Collins Zoo. |
petting zoo;petting Petting zoo |
rhesus macaque;the zoo;red-eared slider In March 2010, the zoo was again raided by the Mississippi Department of Wildlife and an opossum, red-eared slider turtles, and some box turtles were taken. The zoo was issued 22 citations, many for "lack of permits for inherently violent animals."The latest raid on January 25, 2012, included three tigers, three cougars, two leopards, two wolf hybrids, and one rhesus macaque monkey. The animals are being relocated to sanctuaries in Texas and North Carolina. |
clemensia;abnormis;clemensia abnormis;erebidae;french guiana Clemensia abnormis is a moth of the family Erebidae. It is found in French Guiana. |
alps;chozas;eduardo chozas;granon;col du granon;hautes-alpes;galibier;col du galibier Col du Granon (el. 2,413 m or 7,917 ft) is a high mountain pass in the Alps in the department of Hautes-Alpes in France. A narrow tarmac road winds steeply up the southern approach. Gravel roads continue beyond the pass, in a military training zone.It hosted the highest ever mountain-top stage finish in the Tour de France—once only—in 1986, until the 2011 Tour de France, that had a finish in the Col du Galibier, at 2,645 m (8,678 ft) of altitude. Eduardo Chozas of Spain won the stage after a long lone breakaway. |
lemond;wout van aert;primoz;jonas;primoz roglic;tadej;aert;wout;wout van;laporte;roglic;christophe laporte During the 2022 Tour de France Team Jumbo-Visma launched a relentless attack against two-time defending champion Tadej Pogacar, using Wout Van Aert, Christophe Laporte and Primoz Roglic, which allowed Jonas Vingegaard to seize the yellow jersey. Like LeMond in 1986, Vingegaard would defend his lead for the rest of the race. |
saint-chaffrey;val-des-pres Two roads lead to the pass at 2,645 m (8,678 ft). The D234T climbs 11.5 kilometres (7.1 mi) with a 9% average gradient from Saint-Chaffrey at an altitude of 1,364 metres (4,475 ft). From the east a dirt road to the military pass at Val-des-Pres climbs 15.3 kilometres (9.5 mi) at almost 7% gradient. |
ouvrage col du granon;granon;col du granon;ouvrage;alpine line Ouvrage Col du Granon, part of the Alpine Line fortifications of southeastern France |
granon;col du granon Cycling Col du Granon - Elevation Profile, Map, Photos |
granon;col du granon Le col du Granon dans le Tour de France (in French) |
billie dove;walter catlett;luis alberni;chester;alberni;cock;charles lederer;buckingham;lederer;chester morris;tom buckingham;cock of the air;catlett Cock of the Air is a 1932 American pre-Code aviation comedy film directed by Tom Buckingham and written by Charles Lederer and Robert E. Sherwood. The film stars Chester Morris, Billie Dove, Matt Moore, Walter Catlett and Luis Alberni. Cock of the Air was released on January 23, 1932, by United Artists.The film was restored by the Academy Film Archive in 2016. |
billie dove;luis alberni;chester;rousseau;alberni;d'arc;chester morris;lilli Parisian cabaret performer Lilli de Rousseau (Billie Dove), performing as Jean d'Arc on stage, is asked to leave the country by several diplomats as she is a distraction to high-ranking officers. She is set up with a villa in Italy, and Captain Tonnino (Luis Alberni) as her guardian. Lilli is also smitten by Lieutenant Roger Craig (Chester Morris) who has a reputation as a "Don Juan". She keeps her identity a secret from Roger, and begins to woo him, but remains elusive. |
ritz;mps;lilli When her understudy in Paris begins getting accolades, Lilli presses Roger to take her there for a drink at the Ritz, although she has been forbidden to return. Roger risks arrest and his military career to fly her and his mechanic, Terry (Matt Moore), to Paris. After a night on the town, Roger is afraid he will be picked up by the MPs, as he is absent without leave. |
roger's;mps;d'arc;lilli Terry is arrested for disorderly conduct and impersonating an officer, but is released and learns that the MPS will also drop charges against Roger. Lilli performs again as Jean d'Arc and tells Roger to join her at the theater. After she receives an ovation, she admits she promised to return to Italy in exchange for keeping Roger out of jail, and accepts Roger's marriage proposal. |
billie dove;van nuys;cock;sky devils;clarke's;hell's;cock of the air;nuys;hell's angels Principal photography for Cock of the Air took place first from mid-September to early October 1931. The primary location for the production was the Metropolitan Airport in Van Nuys, California where the remaining aircraft from the earlier Hell's Angels (1930), a total of 14 World War I-era and later aircraft, were assembled.In order to recoup some of the investment made in Hell's Angels, Howard Hughes decided to recycle some of the sequences and unused footage for a pair of comedies set in the air, Sky Devils (1932) and the Cock of the Air. "The picture contained little air action ..." During production, Hughes and his chief pilot, Frank Clarke were at odds over Clarke's romantic involvement on the set with Billie Dove, a former flame of Hughes. The resulting friction between Hughes and Clarke, and later all the pilots in the film, led to the formation of Association of Motion Picture Pilots Union that campaigned for improved working conditions.Final release of the film was held up with re-editing scenes to comply with violations of the Motion Picture Production Code. Ultimately, changes were made, although the suggestive title was left intact. |
billie dove;mordaunt;chester;mordaunt hall;syphon;lilli;charles lederer;buckingham;lederer;chester morris;merriment;tom buckingham;hell's;willat;craig's;hell's angels Reviewer Mordaunt Hall at The New York Times, described the film as "This wild tale springs from the pens of Robert E. Sherwood and Charles Lederer, with some jabs of fun inserted by Tom Buckingham, the director. Howard Hughes, producer of "Hell's Angels," is chiefly responsible for the offering, which stirred up many a hearty laugh from an audience yesterday afternoon. There was a loud outburst of mirth when Craig, played by Chester Morris, squirts a seltzer syphon at Lilli, impersonated by Billie Dove. A second or so later further merriment was elicited when Lilli slaps Craig's face with a most convenient pancake. Assuredly it is a film which conveys surprises, for the unexpected invariably happens."The review in the TV Guide noted: "Pleasant romantic comedy that uses its nationality-bonding thematics in a heartfelt way. Dove, who had had a brief affair with millionaire producer Hughes –he had even paid for her divorce from director Irving Willat in 1931 – was rewarded for her affections with a lead in this film |
cock of the air;cock;tcm Cock of the Air at the TCM Movie Database |
cock of the air;cock Cock of the Air at IMDb |
clarkson college;episcopal church;nebraska;meliora;robert clarkson Clarkson College is a private college in Omaha, Nebraska focused on the health sciences. The institution was founded in 1888 by Meliora Clarkson following the death of her husband Bishop Robert Clarkson of the Episcopal Church. It is affiliated with Nebraska Medicine. Total student enrollment was 1,178 in fall 2018. |
good samaritan;neb;good samaritan hospital;nebraska;samaritan;meliora;clarkson memorial In 1869, the Omaha Good Samaritan Hospital opened in Omaha, Neb. and seven months later, the hospital was transferred to the care of Bishop Clarkson. After his death in 1884, his wife, Meliora, worked with deaconesses of the Trinity Episcopal Cathedral to establish a training school for nurses within the hospital. The Bishop Clarkson Memorial School of Nursing was established in 1888 as the first training school for nurses in the state of Nebraska with its first class graduating in 1890. In 1902, the Bishop Clarkson Memorial School of Nursing began offering a three-year program, which it maintained for the first half of the twentieth century. |
perry;kiewitt;clarkson college After briefly closing in the 1950s due to budget concerns, the school reopened following a donation from Peter and Evelyn Kiewitt. In 1982, the school changed its name to Bishop Clarkson College and began offering its first four-year degree option: a bachelor's degree in Nursing. In 1987, the institution appointed Dr. Patricia Book Perry as its first President and established its first board of directors. The institution expanded its health care education offerings in the early 1990s and changed its name to Clarkson College in 1992. Today, the school offers undergraduate, graduate and certificate programs in the health sciences. |
clarkson college Clarkson College is accredited by the Higher Learning Commission and offers certificate, undergraduate, graduate, and post-graduate options in healthcare fields. |
la martiniere;martiniere;bermen Claude-Antoine de Bermen de La Martiniere (12 July 1700 – 24 December 1761) was a Quebec-born son of Claude de Bermen de la Martiniere. |
baye;fort la baye;beausejour;fort beausejour;bermen de Bermen became an officer in the colonial regular troops. He enjoyed a career marked by important assignment and recognition of his efforts were marked by his receipt of the Order of Saint-Louis. Two important assignments highlighted his career. In 1737, he was appointed commander of Fort La Baye, (now Green Bay, Wisconsin). In 1751, he commanded Fort Beausejour during its construction. |
halpenny;la martiniere;francess;martiniere;bermen Borins, Edward H. (1974). "Bermen de La Martiniere, Claude-Antoine de". In Halpenny, Francess G (ed.). Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Vol. III (1741–1770) (online ed.). University of Toronto Press. |
alberta;alberta park Alberta Park Reservoir State Wildlife Area |
alma Alma State Wildlife Area |
almont Almont Triangle State Wildlife Area |
apishapa Apishapa State Wildlife Area |
arkansas river;arkansas Arkansas River (Holly) State Wildlife Area |
arkansas river;arkansas Arkansas River/Big Bend State Wildlife Area |
atwood Atwood State Wildlife Area |
badger Badger Basin State Wildlife Area |
bellaire Bellaire Lake State Wildlife Area |
fish hatchery Bellvue-Watson State Fish Unit (state fish hatchery) |
bergen Bergen Peak State Wildlife Area |
big meadows Big Meadows Reservoir State Wildlife Area |
blacktail;conservation easement Blacktail Conservation easement |
roaring fork;terrell;roaring;koziel Bob Terrell State Wildlife Area (formerly the Roaring Fork State Wildlife Area - Koziel Parcel) |
bodo Bodo State Wildlife Area |
boedecker Boedecker Reservoir State Wildlife Area |
oso;del oso;bosque del;bosque Bosque Del Oso State Wildlife Area |
brower Brower State Wildlife Area |
calloway Brown's Park State Wildlife Area - Calloway Unit |
wiggins Brown's Park State Wildlife Area - Wiggins Unit |
platte;north platte river;brownlee;platte river Brownlee State Wildlife Area (fishing lease on the North Platte River) |
hollow state Brush Hollow State Wildlife Area |
buena vista;buena Buena Vista State Wildlife Area |
burchfield Burchfield State Wildlife Area |
fish hatchery Chalk Cliffs State Fish Unit (state fish hatchery) |
meyers Charlie Meyers State Wildlife Area |
cherokee;lone Cherokee State Wildlife Area - Lone Pine Unit |
cherokee;rabbit creek Cherokee State Wildlife Area - Rabbit Creek Unit |
cherokee Cherokee State Wildlife Area - Middle Unit |
cherokee Cherokee State Wildlife Area - Upper Unit |
cherokee Cherokee State Wildlife Area - Lower Unit |
chipeta Chipeta Lake State Wildlife Area |
chubb Chubb Park Ranch State Wildlife Area |
cimarron Cimarron State Wildlife Area |
clear creek reservoir Clear Creek Reservoir State Wildlife Area |
cline Cline Ranch State Wildlife Area |
coalbed Coalbed Canyon State Wildlife Area |
cochetopa Cochetopa State Wildlife Area |
coller Coller State Wildlife Area |
columbine Columbine State Wildlife Area |
conejos;conejos river Conejos River State Wildlife Area (fishing easements) |
cottonwood creek;cottonwood;marquard Cottonwood Creek State Wildlife Area (Marquard fishing easement) |
cottonwood Cottonwood State Wildlife Area |