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27345277_0_0
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27345277
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TRIL%20%28gene%29
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TRIL (gene)
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TRIL (gene).
KIAA0644, also known as TRIL or TLR4 interactor with leucine rich repeats, is a protein that in humans is encoded by the KIAA0644 gene.
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27345277_0_1
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27345277
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TRIL%20%28gene%29
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TRIL (gene)
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TRIL (gene). Function
The exact function of KIAA0644 is not known. It is, however, a member of the leucine-rich repeat family of proteins, which are known to be involved in protein-protein interactions. This protein is known to interact with the TLR4 protein.
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27345277_0_2
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27345277
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TRIL%20%28gene%29
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TRIL (gene)
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TRIL (gene).
TRIL is a component of the TLR4 complex and is induced in a number of cell types by lipopolysaccharide (LPS).
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27345277_0_3
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27345277
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TRIL%20%28gene%29
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TRIL (gene)
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TRIL (gene). Protein sequence
The main isoform of the human protein is 811 amino long and is composed primarily of leucine (17%), alanine and arginine (~10%), and glycine (~ 8.5%) residues. The protein sequence is predicted to consists mostly of α-helices and a few β-sheet
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27345277_0_4
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27345277
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TRIL%20%28gene%29
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TRIL (gene)
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TRIL (gene). Homology
KIAA0644 is conserved well among mammals but can be found in all chordates with lower sequence identities.
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27345277_0_5
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27345277
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TRIL%20%28gene%29
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TRIL (gene)
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TRIL (gene). Gene neighborhood
The KIAA0644 gene is neighbors to mRNA-cAMP responsive element binding gene downstream and mRNA carboxypeptidase and serine carboxypeptidase gene upstream
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27345279_0_0
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27345279
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry%20W.%20Merriam%20House
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Henry W. Merriam House
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Henry W. Merriam House.
The Henry W. Merriam House is a historic mansion in Newton, Sussex County, New Jersey, United States. Owned by industrialist Henry Wilson Merriam (1828–1900), the owner of the Merriam Shoe Company, the house was built in 1883 and was added to the National Register of Historic Places on December 18, 1970. It is Newton's prime example of high Victorian architecture.
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27345279_0_1
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27345279
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry%20W.%20Merriam%20House
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Henry W. Merriam House
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Henry W. Merriam House. See also
National Register of Historic Places listings in Sussex County, New Jersey
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27345298_0_0
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27345298
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ku%C4%87i%C5%A1te
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Kućište
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Kućište. Kuqishtë, a village in Kosovo
Kućište, Croatia, a village in Croatia
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27345306_0_0
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27345306
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Petr%20Cig%C3%A1nek
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Petr Cigánek
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Petr Cigánek.
Petr Cigánek (born 3 September 1986) is a Czech former football player.
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27345306_0_1
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27345306
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Petr%20Cig%C3%A1nek
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Petr Cigánek
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Petr Cigánek.
Cigánek played Gambrinus liga for Baník Ostrava, where he played since the youth teams. He won the Czech Cup with Baník in 2005.
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27345306_1_0
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27345306
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Petr%20Cig%C3%A1nek
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Petr Cigánek
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Petr Cigánek. 1986 births
Living people
Czech footballers
Czech Republic youth international footballers
Czech Republic under-21 international footballers
Czech First League players
FC Baník Ostrava players
SFC Opava players
Association football defenders
People from Frýdek-Místek
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27345311_0_0
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27345311
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sardasht%20Osman
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Sardasht Osman
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Sardasht Osman.
Sardasht Osman () was an Iraqi Kurdish Journalist and Student from Erbil who was kidnapped on 4 May 2010 outside the College of Arts Building where he studied English language. On May 6, 2010 his body was found in neighbouring Mosul city. He was known in Iraqi Kurdistan for articles criticising the Kurdistan Region and Masoud Barzani. Some of his articles were published under a pseudonym on several Kurdish websites.
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27345311_0_1
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27345311
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sardasht%20Osman
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Sardasht Osman
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Sardasht Osman. Work
Osman's work was best known for being critical of the Kurdistan Regional Government; the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP), one of the two Kurdish ruling parties; and the Barzani family in charge of the KDP. Their prominent officials included Kurdistan Region President and KDP leader Massoud Barzani, KDP deputy leader and former regional PM Nechirvan Barzani, and head of the security agency Parastin, Masrur Barzani. Nechirvan is Massoud Barzani's nephew, while Masrur is his son. Osman wrote articles for independent news websites, only a few of which have been translated into English. He started writing as a journalist in 2004. in his short time of journalist, he became a well known person among liberals and critical thinkers.
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27345311_0_2
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27345311
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sardasht%20Osman
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Sardasht Osman
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Sardasht Osman. Kidnapping and assassination
Osman received death threats through e-mail and telephone almost immediately after writing an article about Massoud Barzani. The threats were aimed at Osman and his family.
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27345311_0_3
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27345311
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sardasht%20Osman
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Sardasht Osman
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Sardasht Osman.
Osman was abducted on 3 May. According to eyewitnesses and the police, an unidentified white Hyundai minibus with a concealed number plate stopped in front of the college just as Osman exited. The men then pushed him into the van and drove off. His handcuffed body was found two days later outside Mosul, Iraq, with two bullets in his head.
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27345311_0_4
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27345311
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sardasht%20Osman
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Sardasht Osman
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Sardasht Osman. Reaction
Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) and Kurdistan Regional Presidency (KRP): The KRG and KRP condemned the abduction and killing of Osman, claiming that it was "a crime designed to undermine the security of the region and to attack the life and liberty of the people."
Kurdistan Democratic Party: The KDP demanded the security and related foundations to shed light on the "latest events".
Jalal Talabani: In a statement, Jalal Talabani condemned the abduction and killing of Osman. He expressed his condolences to Osman's family, friends and colleagues.
Barham Salih: Barham Salih claimed that he was "dismayed" at the murder of Osman.
Massoud Barzani: Massoud Barzani urged the security forces to probe into the case and called for an independent committee to follow the investigation.
President of Iraqi Kurdistan: The Kurdistan Region Presidency issued a statement condemning Osman's murder and calling for an investigation into the incident. In its statement, the Kurdistan Region Presidency claimed that "We reiterate our gratitude to those in the free press whose role has advanced the cause of freedom in the Kurdistan Region and Iraq. We remain resolute in our efforts to ensure that all citizens of the Kurdistan Region are free to enjoy the human rights afforded to democratic citizens the world over."
Veteran journalists: Open letter to the Kurdistan Regional Government from journalists who have covered Iraqi Kurdistan for many years. At Committee to Protect Journalists:
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27345311_0_5
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27345311
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sardasht%20Osman
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Sardasht Osman
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Sardasht Osman. Aftermath
Osman's death came as a shock to most in Iraqi Kurdistan. Many independent media organisations condemned the killing and called for an independent investigation. Rallies and mass demonstrations were held inside and outside Iraqi Kurdistan, calling for those responsible to be arrested.
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27345311_1_0
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27345311
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sardasht%20Osman
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Sardasht Osman
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Sardasht Osman. 1987 births
2010 deaths
Assassinated Kurdish journalists
Assassinated Iraqi journalists
Kurdish journalists
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27345318
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C5%9E%C3%BCkr%C3%BC
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Şükrü
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Şükrü. People
Şükrü Âli Ögel (1886–1973), Turkish military officer, director of the Turkish governmental intelligence agency
Şükrü Gülesin (1922–1977), Turkish football player and sports journalist
Şükrü Kaya (1883–1959), Ottoman civil servant and Turkish politician
Şükrü Saracoğlu (1887–1953), 6th Prime Minister of Republic of Turkey
Şükrü Sina Gürel (born 1950), Turkish diplomat, Turkish foreign minister in mid-2002
M. Şükrü Hanioğlu, Turkish professor of late Ottoman history in the Department of Near Eastern Studies at Princeton University
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27345330_0_0
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27345330
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milt%20Heflin
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Milt Heflin
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Milt Heflin.
James Milton Heflin Jr. (born May 28, 1943 in Fairfax, Oklahoma) is a retired NASA official, who recently served as the associate director for technical activities at Johnson Space Center in Houston. Heflin also served as lead flight director for seven high-profile Space Shuttle missions, including the first to service and repair the Hubble Space Telescope and three that deployed inter-planetary probes.
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27345330
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milt%20Heflin
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Milt Heflin
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Milt Heflin. Personal
Heflin calls both Fairfax, Oklahoma and Edmond, Oklahoma home. He was born in Fairfax, and he moved with his family in 1956 to Edmond, where he lived from his eighth-grade year through college. He has been married to the former Sally Byler, a retired school teacher, since 1966. They have two sons – Daren and Matthew – and two granddaughters. He enjoys golf; vintage and amateur radio operating and collecting; and the Houston Texans NFL team. Heflin also plays trombone in an 18-piece big band that performs in the Houston area.
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27345330
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milt%20Heflin
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Milt Heflin
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Milt Heflin. Education
In 1966, Heflin graduated from Central State College (now known as University of Central Oklahoma) with a bachelor of science degree in physics and math.
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27345330_3_0
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27345330
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milt%20Heflin
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Milt Heflin
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Milt Heflin. NASA career
Heflin began working at Houston's Manned Spacecraft Center (now Johnson Space Center) on June 6, 1966. His initial role was as a ground test vehicle engineer and test conductor for the development and qualification of water recovery hardware and procedures for the Apollo command module. He was also a director for the command module's reaction control subsystem deactivation and pyrotechnic safing team.
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27345330_3_1
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27345330
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milt%20Heflin
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Milt Heflin
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Milt Heflin. NASA career
He was on the prime recovery ships during the splashdowns and post-landing activities of Apollo 8, Apollo 10, Apollo 16, Apollo 17, each of the three Skylab missions, and the Apollo-Soyuz Test Project. Heflin then worked as a flight controller for orbiter electrical and environmental systems for the Space Shuttle Approach and Landing Tests as well as the Shuttle's first nine missions.
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27345330_3_2
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27345330
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milt%20Heflin
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Milt Heflin
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Milt Heflin. NASA career
Heflin progressed up the chain of command to work as a flight director, beginning with the April 1985 flight of STS-51D. He went on to oversee 20 Space Shuttle flights, with seven as lead flight director in charge of overall operations on the ground. Heflin was lead flight director for:
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27345330_3_3
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27345330
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milt%20Heflin
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Milt Heflin
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Milt Heflin. NASA career
STS-30 (May 1989), which deployed the Magellan planetary probe to Venus
STS-34 (October 1989), which deployed the Galileo probe to Jupiter
STS-41 (October 1990), which deployed the Ulysses probe to the sun
STS-44 (November–December 1991), a Department of Defense mission that also deployed the unclassified Defense Support Program Satellite
STS-47 (September 1992), which carried the Spacelab payload
STS-61 (December 1993), the first Hubble Space Telescope repair and servicing mission
STS-65 (July 1994), the second flight of the International Microgravity Laboratory
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27345330_3_4
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27345330
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milt%20Heflin
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Milt Heflin
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Milt Heflin. NASA career
When the Space Shuttle Columbia broke up on February 1, 2003, Heflin was serving as chief of the flight director office. That same day, he took part in an emotional press conference in which he and Shuttle Program Manager Ron Dittemore outlined the details of the accident as they knew them at that point. That job was followed by a stint as deputy director of the Mission Operations Directorate, an organization of approximately 3,000 government and contractor employees responsible for the planning, training and flying of humans in space. In 2007, he became associate director (technical) at JSC.
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27345330_3_5
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27345330
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milt%20Heflin
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Milt Heflin
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Milt Heflin. NASA career
At one time or another, Heflin has also been a charter member and deputy manager of the EVA (extravehicular activity) Project Office and served on the NASA Space Flight Safety Panel and as JSC's Ombudsman. He was also a member of the NASA Advisory Council Task Force on International Space Station Operational Readiness.
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27345330
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milt%20Heflin
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Milt Heflin
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Milt Heflin. Team name
Each NASA flight director is allowed to choose a symbol or color to represent his or her team. Heflin chose to call his team Sirius. It is the brightest star in the heavens, and is sometimes referred to as the "dog" star.
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27345330
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milt%20Heflin
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Milt Heflin
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Milt Heflin. Recognitions
Largely as a result of the successful Hubble servicing mission, Heflin was named Countdown magazine's 1993 Astronaut of the Year, despite the fact that he had never flown in space. The repair team as a whole received the nation's highest aviation award, the Robert J. Collier Trophy for "outstanding leadership, integrity and the renewal of public faith in America's space program." In 1997, Heflin was inducted into the Aviation Week & Space Technology Hall of Fame, and the following year, was named to the Oklahoma Aviation and Space Hall of Fame in Oklahoma City.
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27345330_5_1
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27345330
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milt%20Heflin
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Milt Heflin
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Milt Heflin. Recognitions
Heflin is one of a select few people whose career spanned the entirety of NASA's two well-known human spaceflight endeavors – the Apollo and Space Shuttle programs. He is the only person who was present at the final landings of both the Apollo program in 1975 and of the Space Shuttle era in 2011.
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27345330
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milt%20Heflin
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Milt Heflin
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Milt Heflin. University of Central Oklahoma
Distinguished Former Student – 1984
Broncho Award - 1990 (One of 30 former students recognized from university's first 100 years)
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27345330_7_0
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27345330
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milt%20Heflin
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Milt Heflin
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Milt Heflin. Professional
Johnson Space Center Certificate of Commendation – 1990
NASA Exceptional Service Medal - 1991 and 2006
NASA Outstanding Leadership Medal – 1993
Presidential Rank Award of Meritorious Senior Executive – 2008
"Aviation Week & Space Technology" Aerospace Laurel – 1989
"Aviation Week & Space Technology" Aerospace Laureate – 1993
"Aviation Week & Space Technology" Laureates Hall of Fame Inductee - 1997
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27345346_0_0
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27345346
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Streetfare%20Journal
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Streetfare Journal
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Streetfare Journal.
The Streetfare Journal produced in New York and San Francisco by Transportation Displays Incorporated from 1984 to 1997, was actually not a newsprint journal but "published" bus placards, eventually numbering 102 posters, "arguably the largest and most successful public art program in U.S. history, delivering striking combinations of literature and visual art to an estimated 15 million riders daily in 16 major cities, including New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, Washington D.C., Philadelphia, San Francisco, Phoenix, New Orleans, Fort Worth and Fort Lauderdale. From a layout composed of typeset words on a white background, later issues paired stanzas of verse with paintings or photographs by noted visual artists, such as American painters Kenneth Noland and Clyfford Still and the English David Hockney, as well as photographers Mary Ellen Mark and Dorothea Lange. Texts in the series featured established American poets like Charles Bukowski, Langston Hughes, Thomas McGrath, Carl Sandburg, and William Carlos Williams, as well as newcomers like Ho Xuan Huong, John Kinsella, Joaquín Pasos and Daisy Zamora.
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27345346_0_1
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27345346
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Streetfare%20Journal
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Streetfare Journal
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Streetfare Journal.
A possibly unique complete set was offered for sale by F.A. Bernet.
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27345346_0_2
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27345346
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Streetfare%20Journal
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Streetfare Journal
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Streetfare Journal.
The program inspired the similar "Poetry in Motion" arts program inaugurated in 1997.
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27345349_0_0
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27345349
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Droescher%27s%20Mill
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Droescher's Mill
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Droescher's Mill.
Droescher's Mill is located in Cranford, Union County, New Jersey, United States. The mill was added to the National Register of Historic Places on January 8, 1974. It is the oldest continuously operated commercial building in New Jersey.
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27345349_0_1
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27345349
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Droescher%27s%20Mill
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Droescher's Mill
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Droescher's Mill. History
Also known as the Williams-Droescher Mill, Droescher's Mill is the last remaining mill on the Rahway River. It was constructed in 1737 by Benjamin Williams as a saw mill alongside a dam. Williams used the flow of the river to turn an undershot water wheel to power his saws. Lumber cut here went into the construction of the first houses built in the area. Shortly before his death in 1779, Williams erected a second building only a few feet from his sawmill for the manufacture of woolens.
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27345349_0_2
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27345349
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Droescher%27s%20Mill
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Droescher's Mill
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Droescher's Mill.
In 1902, Severin R. Droescher bought the mill and renovated it into the structure as seen today. S.R. Droescher used it to run the Cranford Oil Stone Works where whetstones and oilstones were made.
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27345349
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Droescher%27s%20Mill
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Droescher's Mill
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Droescher's Mill.
Lincoln Ave East and Lincoln Ave West, the road that passes through Cranford and on which the mill sits, was originally part of the Naraticong Trail, a route to the sea of the Unami tribe of the Lenape people. Lincoln Avenue was known as the Old York Road by the 1700s, a colonial road from Elizabeth to Philadelphia.
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27345349
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Droescher%27s%20Mill
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Droescher's Mill
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Droescher's Mill.
Aside from the Naraticong Trail, the Great Minisink Trail also passed through Cranford as a traditional Lenape route to collect marine foods at the shore.
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27345349
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Droescher%27s%20Mill
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Droescher's Mill
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Droescher's Mill. Rahway River Parkway
The mill and surrounding parkland are local landmarks along the Cranford section of the Rahway River Parkway, a nearly century-old greenway of parkland that hugs the Rahway River and its tributaries throughout Union County, New Jersey. It was designed in the 1920s by the well-known Olmsted Brothers firm, sons of the eminent landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted.
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27345349
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Droescher%27s%20Mill
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Droescher's Mill
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Droescher's Mill.
The Cranford section of the parkway follows the banks of the meandering Rahway River as it flows south through Lenape Park, Nomahegan Park, Hampton Park, MacConnell Park, Girl Scout Park, the Cranford Canoe Club, Hanson Park, Sperry Park, Josiah Crane Park, Droescher's Mill Park (also known as Squire Williams Park), and Mohawk Park.
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27345349
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Droescher%27s%20Mill
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Droescher's Mill
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Droescher's Mill.
The "Friends of Rahway River Parkway," a nonprofit group, has been formed exclusively to encourage and advocate for the preservation, restoration and enhancement of the Rahway River Parkway, in accord with the Olmsted design principles inherent in its origins, and to promote appropriate public enjoyment of the Parkway.
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27345349_0_8
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27345349
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Droescher%27s%20Mill
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Droescher's Mill
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Droescher's Mill.
Alluem Yoga, a yoga studio located in the mill, has organized Rahway River Parkway clean-ups on the stretch of the Parkway at the mill.
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27345349_0_9
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27345349
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Droescher%27s%20Mill
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Droescher's Mill
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Droescher's Mill. Cranford Riverwalk
The Cranford Riverwalk and Heritage Corridor portion of the Rahway River Parkway begins at the parklands near where Orange Avenue meets Springfield at the Cranford Canoe Club and follows the Rahway River on its path southbound to the
mill.
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27345349_0_10
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27345349
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Droescher%27s%20Mill
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Droescher's Mill
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Droescher's Mill. See also
Cranford Historical Preservation Advisory Board
National Register of Historic Places listings in Union County, New Jersey
List of the oldest buildings in New Jersey
Old York Road
List of crossings of the Rahway River
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27345370_0_0
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27345370
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steven%20Sapp
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Steven Sapp
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Steven Sapp.
Steven Sapp (born and raised in the South Bronx, New York) co-founded The POINT Community Development Corporation (Hunts Point) in 1993 and Universes (poetic theatre ensemble) in 1995, both in collaboration with Mildred Ruiz-Sapp.
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27345370_0_1
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27345370
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steven%20Sapp
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Steven Sapp
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Steven Sapp. Theater credits
Purgatory
Another I Dies Slowly
Live From the Edge
Slanguage
Blue Suite
Ameriville
Rhythmicity: Flipping The Script
One Shot In Lotus Position
The Ride
The Denver Project
Spring Training
Party People
UniSon
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27345370_0_2
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27345370
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steven%20Sapp
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Steven Sapp
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Steven Sapp.
Playwright/Actor - AMERIVILLE (Director Chay Yew); The Denver Project (Curious Theater-Director Dee Covington); One Shot in Lotus Position (The War Anthology-Curious Theater-Director Bonnie Metzger); BLUE SUITE (Director-Chay Yew, previously Eyewitness Blues-NY Theatre Workshop-Director Talvin Wilks); RHYTHMICITY (Humana Festival); SLANGUAGE (NY Theater Workshop-Director Jo Bonney); Director - The Ride (playwright/Actor/Director); The Architecture of Loss (Assistant Director to Chay Yew); Will Powers’ The Seven (Director-The Univ. of Iowa); Alfred Jarry's UBU: Enchained (Director-Teatre Polski, Poland).
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27345370_1_0
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27345370
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steven%20Sapp
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Steven Sapp
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Steven Sapp. HBO's Bored to Death
HBO's Def Poetry Jam (Season 4- Episode 9, with UNIVERSES)
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27345370
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steven%20Sapp
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Steven Sapp
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Steven Sapp. Awards/Affiliations
2008 Jazz at Lincoln Center Rhythm Road Tour
2008 TCG - Theatre Communications Group - Peter Zeisler Award
2002 TCG - Theatre Communications Group - National Directors Award
2002-2004 and 1999-2001 TCG - Theatre Communications Group, National Theater Artist Residency Program Award
1999 OBIE Award Grant (The Point CDC & Live From Theater Theater)
1999 Bessie Awards (The Point CDC)
1998 and 2002 BRIO Awards (Bronx Recognizes its own-Performance) from the Bronx Council on the Arts
1998 Union Square Award recipient
Van Lier Fellowship w/ New Dramatists
Co-Founder of The Point CDC
New York Theatre Workshop - Usual Suspect
Bard College, BA 1989
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27345370_1_2
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27345370
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steven%20Sapp
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Steven Sapp
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Steven Sapp. Publications:
UNIVERSES - THE BIG BANG (2010 release, TCG Books)
SLANGUAGE in The Fire This Time (TCG).
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27345376_0_0
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27345376
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Merchants%27%20and%20Drovers%27%20Tavern
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Merchants' and Drovers' Tavern
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Merchants' and Drovers' Tavern.
The Merchants' and Drovers' Tavern, is located in Rahway, Union County, New Jersey, United States. The tavern was added to the National Register of Historic Places on November 21, 1978.
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27345376_0_1
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27345376
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Merchants%27%20and%20Drovers%27%20Tavern
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Merchants' and Drovers' Tavern
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Merchants' and Drovers' Tavern.
The exact construction dates of the building have been the source of some historical debate. An analysis of samples of the building’s wooden frame conducted by Columbia University’s Lamont Dougherty Earth Sciences Observatory found that there were two distinct periods of construction – one in 1795-1796, then another in 1818-1819. The claim that the building did not exist until 1795 at the earliest is further supported by the fact that the first innkeeper, John Anderson, did not receive a tavern license until 1798, after the initial period of construction. It only began operation as a hotel around 1825, after the recent addition turned the two and a half story building into a three and a half story one.
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27345376
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Merchants%27%20and%20Drovers%27%20Tavern
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Merchants' and Drovers' Tavern
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Merchants' and Drovers' Tavern.
In the 1960s, the Rahway Historical Society formed and saved the historic building from destruction by purchasing it and transforming it into the center for historical interpretation that it is today. The Museum is presently looked after by The Merchants and Drovers Tavern Museum Association. Throughout most of the 2000s, the Tavern underwent significant restoration efforts. In September 2021, the Museum announced on its website that the second phase of the Restoring Our Legacy Campaign has been completed and Phase III is underway. Phase II saw the restoration of the second, third, and fourth floors of the building as well as the front facade.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Merchants%27%20and%20Drovers%27%20Tavern
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Merchants' and Drovers' Tavern
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Merchants' and Drovers' Tavern.
The tavern is adjacent to the Rahway Cemetery. The Merchants and Drovers Tavern Museum Association (MDTMA) runs historic tours and talks, including on the Victorian-era murder known as The Unknown Woman or Rahway Jane Doe.
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27345376
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Merchants%27%20and%20Drovers%27%20Tavern
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Merchants' and Drovers' Tavern
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Merchants' and Drovers' Tavern. See also
National Register of Historic Places listings in Union County, New Jersey
Rahway River Parkway
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27345376
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Merchants%27%20and%20Drovers%27%20Tavern
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Merchants' and Drovers' Tavern
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Merchants' and Drovers' Tavern. External links
The Merchants and Drovers Tavern Museum
Buildings and structures in Union County, New Jersey
Commercial buildings completed in 1773
Drinking establishments on the National Register of Historic Places in New Jersey
National Register of Historic Places in Union County, New Jersey
Rahway, New Jersey
Museums in Union County, New Jersey
New Jersey Register of Historic Places
Taverns in New Jersey
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27345391
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jamshed%20Dasti
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Jamshed Dasti
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Jamshed Dasti.
Jamshed Ahmad Khan Dasti (; born 15 February 1978) is a Pakistani politician who had been a member of the National Assembly of Pakistan between 2008 and May 2018.
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27345391
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jamshed%20Dasti
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Jamshed Dasti
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Jamshed Dasti. Political career
He was elected to the National Assembly of Pakistan on ticket of Pakistan People's Party from NA-178 Muazaffargarh-III in 2008 Pakistani general election.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jamshed%20Dasti
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Jamshed Dasti
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Jamshed Dasti. Political career
In 2010, he resigned from the National Assembly for possessing a fake BA degree after which the Supreme Court of Pakistan ordered him to present his graduation degree.
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27345391
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jamshed%20Dasti
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Jamshed Dasti
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Jamshed Dasti. Political career
He was re-elected to the National Assembly from Constituency NA-178 in a by-election held in 2010.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jamshed%20Dasti
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Jamshed Dasti
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Jamshed Dasti. In 2012, he quit PPP.
In April 2013 Dasti was sentenced to 3 years in prison and 5,000 Rupees fine for presenting a fake graduation degree during the 2008 election. Following the court verdict he was arrested from outside the courtroom. On foreseeing the court verdict he announced his decision of not contesting in the general elections of 2013 a day earlier the court announced the verdict. On 10 April 2013, the Multan bench of Lahore High Court heard Dasti's appeal and overturned his conviction of 3 years and 5000 Rs fine hence paving the way for him to contest the elections.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jamshed%20Dasti
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Jamshed Dasti
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Jamshed Dasti. In 2013, he joined Pakistan Muslim League (N).
He was re-elected to the National Assembly of Pakistan as an independent candidate from NA-177 Muazaffargarh-II and NA-178 Muazaffargarh-III in 2013 Pakistani general election.
In 2018 Pakistani general election he ran from NA-182 Muzaffargarh but he did not win.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jamshed%20Dasti
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Jamshed Dasti
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Jamshed Dasti. Controversies
He was nominated as accused in a murder case in 2015.
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27345391
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jamshed%20Dasti
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Jamshed Dasti
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Jamshed Dasti. In 2013, he joined Pakistan Muslim League (N).
In June 2017, Dasati was arrested while he was returning to Muzzafargarh from Islamabad, for allegedly opening a water canal forcibly in Muzzaffargarh, to irrigate the farming lands. His bail request was approved by an Anti-Terrorism Court a few days later.
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27345398
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oslo%20City%20Culture%20Award
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Oslo City Culture Award
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Oslo City Culture Award.
The Oslo City Culture Award is a Norwegian award given to a person, group or cultural activity of outstanding achievement in or long-time contribution to arts, science or other cultural work in the city of Oslo's or the country's cultural life. A bronze medal and monetary reward are included with the prize. The award is distributed alongside the Oslo City Artist Award by the city's mayor in April and May every year, at the City Hall.
The Oslo City Culture Award has been distributed annually since 1966, with the exception of 1991 for lack of funding.
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27345401
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arthur%20P.%20Shimamura
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Arthur P. Shimamura
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Arthur P. Shimamura.
Arthur Paul Shimamura (June 26, 1954 – October 6, 2020) was a professor of psychology and faculty member of the Helen Wills Neuroscience Institute at the University of California, Berkeley. His research focused on the neural basis of human memory and cognition. He received his BA in experimental psychology from the University of California, Santa Barbara in 1977 and his PhD in cognitive psychology from the University of Washington in 1982. He was a post-doctoral fellow in the laboratory of Larry Squire, where he studied amnesic patients. In 1989, Shimamura began his professorship at UC Berkeley. He has published over 100 scientific articles and chapters, was a founding member of the Cognitive Neuroscience Society, and has been science advisor for the San Francisco Exploratorium science museum.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arthur%20P.%20Shimamura
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Arthur P. Shimamura
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Arthur P. Shimamura.
In 2008, Shimamura received a John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation fellowship to explore links between art, mind, and brain. His book, Experiencing Art: In the Brain of the Beholder, explores the perceptual, conceptual, and emotional features that guide our encounters with art (e.g., paintings and photography). In 2013, Shimamura edited a volume, Psychocinematics: Exploring Cognition at the Movies, which introduces psychocinematics, the term he coined for scientific investigations of the psychological and biological features of film.
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27345401
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arthur%20P.%20Shimamura
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Arthur P. Shimamura
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Arthur P. Shimamura.
Shimamura's research explored other psychological phenomenon, such as visual illusions (The Mystery Spot), aging in UC Berkeley Professors, and emotions in facial expressions.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arthur%20P.%20Shimamura
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Arthur P. Shimamura
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Arthur P. Shimamura.
In 2017, he published Get SMART! Five Steps Toward a Healthy Brain, a self-help book that offers guidelines for healthy aging and lifelong learning.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arthur%20P.%20Shimamura
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Arthur P. Shimamura
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Arthur P. Shimamura. Theories
Shimamura developed a broad theoretical framework that integrates memory encoding, storage, and retrieval. Shimamura (2000) defined encoding in terms of dynamic filtering theory, which describes the role of the prefrontal cortex in metacognitive or executive control processes. The prefrontal cortex acts as a high-level gating or filtering mechanism that enhances goal-directed activations and inhibits irrelevant activations. This filtering mechanism guides executive control at various levels of processing, including selecting, maintaining, updating, and rerouting activations, thus allowing us to select relevant sights, sounds, and thoughts.
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27345401
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arthur%20P.%20Shimamura
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Arthur P. Shimamura
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Arthur P. Shimamura. Theories
It has long been established that the medial temporal lobe (MTL) is critical for memory storage. In 2010, Shimamura proposed hierarchical relational binding theory, which offers a new interpretation of the role of the MTL in memory storage. It is proposed that regions within the MTL conform to a hierarchical network with the hippocampus at the top of the hierarchy. Bindings that occur at the level of the hippocampus particularly strengthen memories so that strong memories get even stronger, a principle called "superadditive". Hierarchical relational binding theory explains both neuroimaging and behavior findings previously attributed to the distinction between recollection and familiarity.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arthur%20P.%20Shimamura
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Arthur P. Shimamura
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Arthur P. Shimamura. Theories
In 2011, Shimamura proposed a theory of episodic remembering called Cortical Binding of Relational Activity (or CoBRA), which defines the posterior parietal cortex (PPC) as a convergence zone that integrates or binds features of an episodic memory. Shimamura argues that this binding process is the final stage of memory consolidation such that through PPC binding, episodic memories become more fully represented and retrieved in the neocortex.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arthur%20P.%20Shimamura
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Arthur P. Shimamura
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Arthur P. Shimamura. Honors and awards
John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship (2008)
Fellow and charter member, Association for Psychological Science
Distinguished Teaching Award, Division of Social Sciences, UC Berkeley
Osher fellow and science advisor, San Francisco Exploratorium Science Museum
Ranked 9th of most-cited psychologists ("Highest Impact Authors, 1986-1990," APS Observer, November, 1992)
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27345408
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miller-Cory%20House
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Miller-Cory House
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Miller-Cory House.
The Miller-Cory House is located in Westfield, Union County, New Jersey, United States. The house was built in 1740 and was added to the National Register of Historic Places on November 3, 1972.
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27345408
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miller-Cory%20House
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Miller-Cory House
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Miller-Cory House. See also
National Register of Historic Places listings in Union County, New Jersey
List of museums in New Jersey
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27345446
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scotch%20Plains%20School
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Scotch Plains School
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Scotch Plains School.
The Scotch Plains School, or School #1, was located in Scotch Plains, Union County, New Jersey, United States. The school was built in 1890 and was added to the National Register of Historic Places on December 12, 1978.
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27345446
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scotch%20Plains%20School
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Scotch Plains School
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Scotch Plains School.
Originally designed by Stanford White as an elementary school, it was repurposed as a high school within ten years of its opening. School One reverted to being an elementary school in 1926 and continued as such until its closing in 1974.
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27345446
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scotch%20Plains%20School
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Scotch Plains School
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Scotch Plains School.
The school was burned down by an arsonist in 1984. It has since been demolished.
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27345446
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scotch%20Plains%20School
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Scotch Plains School
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Scotch Plains School. See also
National Register of Historic Places listings in Union County, New Jersey
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27345447
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List%20of%20metropolitan%20areas%20of%20Louisiana
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List of metropolitan areas of Louisiana
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List of metropolitan areas of Louisiana. See also
Table of United States Metropolitan Statistical Areas
Table of United States Combined Statistical Areas
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27345448_0_0
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27345448
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Millennium%20Film%20Workshop
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Millennium Film Workshop
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Millennium Film Workshop.
The Millennium Film Workshop is a non-profit media arts center located in New York City. It is dedicated to the exhibition, study, and practice of avant-garde and experimental cinema. It was also where the St. Mark's Poetry Project began. Ken Jacobs stated in 2013 that he chose the name Millennium "...because it would have to be that to actually give out equipment, education, space to work in, etc. for free. Dictionary definition: 'A hoped for period of joy, serenity, prosperity and justice.' "
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27345448
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Millennium%20Film%20Workshop
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Millennium Film Workshop
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Millennium Film Workshop. History
The Millennium Film Workshop was one of a group of arts workshops set up from 1965-66 on the Lower East Side by St. Marks Church and the New School as part of the federal government’s anti-poverty program. Filmmaker Ken Jacobs was chosen as the first director, and in 1966, he set up Sunday afternoon showings at the church – mostly one-person programs open to any filmmaker with a body of work. Jacobs also launched “open screenings,” where he led discussions between filmmakers and the audience.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Millennium%20Film%20Workshop
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Millennium Film Workshop
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Millennium Film Workshop.
In May 1967, the organization became independent, incorporating as Millennium Film Workshop, Inc. and moved to a building now used by Anthology Film Archives. At the time, the building was an old courthouse. Classes in cinematography, sound, and editing were taught. Following the move to the old courthouse, the organization moved to various locations in lower Manhattan, including a loft space on Great Jones Street, but it finally found a home at 66 East 4th Street in 1974. It remained at that location for 39 years, before leaving in June 2013 due to rising rent. Since then, Millennium has offered classes and screenings in collaboration with various non-profits, in venues around Manhattan and Brooklyn.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Millennium%20Film%20Workshop
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Millennium Film Workshop
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Millennium Film Workshop.
In 1971, filmmaker Howard Guttenplan took the role of Executive Director and held the position until 2011. Guttenplan broadened the workshop's field by inviting foreign filmmakers from Britain, Germany, France, Hungary, Poland, Japan, and other regions to make their American debuts at Millennium.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Millennium%20Film%20Workshop
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Millennium Film Workshop
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Millennium Film Workshop. Programs
The Millennium Film Workshop offers five major programs and services, including the Personal Cinema Series, the Workshop Program, Equipment Access Service, the Millennium Film Journal, and the Millennium Gallery.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Millennium%20Film%20Workshop
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Millennium Film Workshop
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Millennium Film Workshop. Personal Cinema Series
Most shows in the Personal Cinema Series are one-person programs where the artist discusses his work with the audience. This "film-talk" format is also applied to group programs, shows featuring various pieces of media, and open screenings that operate as a part of the Series. The latter format has been a regular part of the series since the founding of the organization.
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27345448
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Millennium%20Film%20Workshop
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Millennium Film Workshop
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Millennium Film Workshop.
Artists who were given the opportunity to mount their first one-person shows at Millennium include Hollis Frampton, Clayton Patterson, Jennifer Reeves, Donna Cameron, Bill Morrison, Fred Worden, M.M. Serra, Todd Haynes, Vivienne Dick, Holly Fisher, Sharon Greytak, Lewis Klahr, and Su Friedrich.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Millennium%20Film%20Workshop
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Millennium Film Workshop
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Millennium Film Workshop.
Jon Jost, Kenneth Anger, Carolee Schneeman, Valie Export, Paul Sharits, Michael Snow, Malcolm Le Grice, Yvonne Rainer, Bruce Conner, Coleen Fitzgibbon, Robert Breer, Birgit Hein, Ernie Gehr, Abigail Child, Amy Greenfield, James Benning, Rudy Burckhardt, and others have premiered their newest work at the Millennium, and the organization worked closely with the late Jack Smith. The legendary Stan Brakhage was a passionate supporter of the organization for thirty years, and he premiered many of his films in the cinema. In addition, Millennium has provided space for experimental theater works, including Charles Ludlam, Allen Ginsberg, Stuart Sherman, Tony Conrad, Jackson MacLow, and others. In 1991, The Museum of Modern Art celebrated its 25th Anniversary by presenting a 13-show program of films that had premiered at the Millennium over the years.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Millennium%20Film%20Workshop
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Millennium Film Workshop
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Millennium Film Workshop.
Workshop Program & Equipment Access Service
The Workshop Program features classes in film and video production. Past and present instructors include Alan Berliner, Su Friedrich, Barbara Hammer, Paul Sharits, Jud Yalkut, Ross McLaren, Jennifer Reeves, Kelly Spivey, Noël Carroll, Nisi Jacobs, Rachel Shuman, and Jon Jost. Workshop topics include optical printing, Final Cut Pro editing, Steenbeck editing, 16mm, Super 8mm film gauges, and digital video. The organization is one of the only remaining establishments in New York City that provides classes, facilities, and equipment rental for optical printing and Super 8 mm film. The Millennium also provides access to screening rooms, editing facilities, and film/video production equipment. Oliver Stone, Joie Lee, Jim Jarmusch, and Susan Seidelman were members and equipment users. Andy Warhol used the editing rooms in the 1960s, and Jean-Luc Godard used the screening room services to view a film by Amos Poe in the 1980s.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Millennium%20Film%20Workshop
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Millennium Film Workshop
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Millennium Film Workshop. The Millennium Film Journal
The Millennium Film Journal was established in 1978 by Howard Guttenplan, Alister Sanderson, Vicki Peterson, and David Shapiro. Dedicated to avant-garde cinema, theory, and practice, it provides a forum for discussion and debate on issues in the field. Each issue focuses on a particular theme or subject, with topics ranging from artistic practice, to social and political issues, to individual filmmakers or regions. The Journal has traced the evolving practices of artists' moving image from analog film to video, digital, and even VR, serving as a primary source document for an ever-changing field. MFJ is published biannually.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Millennium%20Film%20Workshop
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Millennium Film Workshop
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Millennium Film Workshop.
The journal is currently overseen by senior editor Grahame Weinbren and editors Rachel Stevens, Kim Knowles, Jonathan Ellis, Nicky Hamlyn, and Nicholas Gamso. Notable authors from the Journal's history include Paul Arthur, Mike Hoolbloom, J. Hoberman, Fred Camper, Joan Copjec, David James, A. L. Rees, Mary Ann Doane, Birgit Hein, Chris Hill, Vivian Sobchack, Scott MacDonald, Amy Taubin, Noël Carroll, P. Adams Sitney, Barbara Hammer, Giuliana Bruno, Peter Wollen, and Hollis Frampton.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Millennium%20Film%20Workshop
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Millennium Film Workshop
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Millennium Film Workshop. References
Ken Jacobs, personal communication to P. Kingsbury, August 2013)
Davis, Glyn, Superstar: The Karen Carpenter Story (Wallflower Press, 2008)
Galm, R., “The Millennium Film Workshop in Love” in Patterson, Clayton (Ed.), Captured: A Film & Video History of the Lower East Side (New York: Seven Stories Press, 2005) pp 113–116,
Morgan, S., "Kodak, Don't Take My Kodachrome", The New York Times, May 31, 2005. Accessed June 17, 2010.
Sitney, P. Adams, Visionary Film: The American Avant Garde, (New York: Oxford University Press, 1974)
Weinbren, G., “25 Years, 26 Books: The Millennium Film Journal” in Patterson, Clayton (Ed.), Captured: A Film & Video History of the Lower East Side (New York: Seven Stories Press, 2005) pp 117–118,
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27345448
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Millennium%20Film%20Workshop
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Millennium Film Workshop
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Millennium Film Workshop. External links
Millennium Film Workshop website
Millennium Film Journal website
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27345448
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Millennium%20Film%20Workshop
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Millennium Film Workshop
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Millennium Film Workshop. Experimental film
1960 establishments in New York City
Culture of Manhattan
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27345453
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marjory
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Marjory
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Marjory.
Marjory is a variant spelling of Marjorie or Margery. Notable people with the name include:
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marjory
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Marjory
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Marjory.
Marjory Allen, Lady Allen of Hurtwood (1897–1976)
Marjery Bryce (1891–1973), British suffragette and actor
Marjory Cobbe, English midwife granted a pension in 1469 for attending the wife of Edward IV
Marjory Gengler, American tennis player
Marjory Gordon, emeritus professor of nursing at Boston College, Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts
Marjory Kennedy-Fraser (1857–1930), Scottish singer, composer and arranger
Marjory LeBreton (born 1940), Leader of the Government in the Canadian Senate
Marjory Mecklenburg (born 1935), American government administrator and activist opposed to legal abortion
Marjory Mills (1896–1987), New Zealand embroiderer and businesswoman
Marjory Newbold (1883 -1926), Scottish socialist and communist
Marjory Saunders (1913–2010), Canadian archer
Marjory Shedd (1926–2008), former world-class Canadian badminton player
Marjory Stephenson (1885–1948), British biochemist
Marjory Stoneman Douglas (1890–1998), American journalist, writer, feminist and environmentalist
Marjory Wardrop (1869–1909), English scholar and translator of Georgian literature
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