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27345875_0_2
27345875
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albert%20W.%20Barney%20Jr.
Albert W. Barney Jr.
Albert W. Barney Jr.. Early life and education Barney was born in St. Johnsbury, Vermont to Albert Wilkins Barney Sr. and Marion Bisbee Barney. He graduated from St. Johnsbury Academy in 1938 and received his undergraduate degree from Yale University. During World War II, Barney served in the United States Navy. Barney owned a restaurant and received his law degree from the Harvard Law School.
27345875_1_0
27345875
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albert%20W.%20Barney%20Jr.
Albert W. Barney Jr.
Albert W. Barney Jr.. Lower courts Barney was admitted to the bar in 1949. He served in the Vermont House of Representatives in 1951. Barney became a municipal court judge in 1951 and in 1952 was appointed a superior court judge.
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27345875
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albert%20W.%20Barney%20Jr.
Albert W. Barney Jr.
Albert W. Barney Jr.. State Supreme Court In 1959, Barney was elected to the Vermont Supreme Court and in 1974, became chief justice. He retired from the bench in 1982.
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27345875
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albert%20W.%20Barney%20Jr.
Albert W. Barney Jr.
Albert W. Barney Jr.. Death penalty case When Barney was a state court judge, he presided over the trial of Donald DeMag. Convicted and given a death sentence, Demag was the last person to be executed in the electric chair before the state abolished the death penalty.
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27345875
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albert%20W.%20Barney%20Jr.
Albert W. Barney Jr.
Albert W. Barney Jr.. Advocacy Barney was active in the American Academy of Judicial Education. He was Chair, Conference of Chief Justices from 1981 to 1982 and a member of National Center for State Courts in 1981.
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27345875
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albert%20W.%20Barney%20Jr.
Albert W. Barney Jr.
Albert W. Barney Jr.. Awards In 1979, the American Judges Association presented Barney its Award of Merit which was given to a judge for outstanding contributions to the judiciary. This award is now called the Chief Justice Richard W. Holmes Award.
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27345875
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albert%20W.%20Barney%20Jr.
Albert W. Barney Jr.
Albert W. Barney Jr.. Judicial career In 1997, Barney received the Dwayne B. Sherrer Alumni Distinguished Service Award from St. Johnsbury Academy.
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27345875
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albert%20W.%20Barney%20Jr.
Albert W. Barney Jr.
Albert W. Barney Jr.. Later life In the 1980s, Barney served regularly as a retired justice. Until 2006, he also continued to serve on the state supreme court.
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27345875
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albert%20W.%20Barney%20Jr.
Albert W. Barney Jr.
Albert W. Barney Jr.. Personal life Barney was married to his wife, Helen, for over 60 years. They had three daughters. Barney died at his home in St. Johnsbury on May 10, 2010.
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27345875
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albert%20W.%20Barney%20Jr.
Albert W. Barney Jr.
Albert W. Barney Jr.. Selected quotes In making any law work, it is necessary that it be accepted by the general public that this law is fair and necessary. ... The will of the people must be mixed into every decision of the court.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albert%20W.%20Barney%20Jr.
Albert W. Barney Jr.
Albert W. Barney Jr.. Sources Vermont Supreme Court Vermont Supreme Court Retrieved: 2010-05-15.
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27345897
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catalonia%20women%27s%20national%20futsal%20team
Catalonia women's national futsal team
Catalonia women's national futsal team. The Catalonia women's national futsal team represents Catalonia in international futsal competitions organized by AMF and UEFS. It is controlled by the Catalonia Futsal Federation. They won the 2008 AMF Futsal Women's World Cup.
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27345897
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catalonia%20women%27s%20national%20futsal%20team
Catalonia women's national futsal team
Catalonia women's national futsal team. See also Catalonia men's national futsal team Futsal in Catalonia
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27345897
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catalonia%20women%27s%20national%20futsal%20team
Catalonia women's national futsal team
Catalonia women's national futsal team. Futsal in Catalonia European women's national futsal teams Futsal
27345902_0_0
27345902
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Francis%20Doyle%20Gleeson
Francis Doyle Gleeson
Francis Doyle Gleeson. Francis Doyle Gleeson, S.J. (January 17, 1895 – April 30, 1983) was an American prelate of the Catholic Church. He was the first Bishop of Fairbanks from 1962 to 1968, previously serving as Vicar Apostolic of Alaska from 1948 to 1962.
27345902_0_1
27345902
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Francis%20Doyle%20Gleeson
Francis Doyle Gleeson
Francis Doyle Gleeson. Life and church Gleeson was born in Carrollton, Missouri, to Charles and Mary (Doyle) Gleason, but later moved with his family to Yakima, Washington. He received his early education at the parochial school of St. Joseph's Church, and attended Marquette Catholic High School before studying at Gonzaga University in Spokane. He entered the Society of Jesus (more commonly known as the Jesuits) in 1912, and studied philosophy at Mount St. Michael Scholasticate in Spokane and theology at St. Francis Xavier in Oña, Spain.
27345902_0_2
27345902
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Francis%20Doyle%20Gleeson
Francis Doyle Gleeson
Francis Doyle Gleeson. Gleeson was ordained to the priesthood in Oña on July 29, 1926. Returning to Washington, he served as rector of Bellarmine Preparatory School in Tacoma. He then served as superior of St. Stanislaus Mission in Lewiston, Idaho; rector of the Jesuit novitiate in Sheridan, Oregon; and superior of St. Mary's Indian Mission in Omak, Washington.
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27345902
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Francis%20Doyle%20Gleeson
Francis Doyle Gleeson
Francis Doyle Gleeson. On January 8, 1948, Pope Pius XII named him Titular Bishop of Cotenna and Vicar Apostolic of Alaska. He was consecrated a bishop on April 8, 1948, by Archbishop Edward Daniel Howard of Portland. The co-consecrators were Bishops Charles Daniel White of Spokane and Martin Michael Johnson of Nelson, British Columbia, Canada. The Diocese of Juneau was established on June 23, 1951, and the area served by Bishop Gleeson was reduced to the northern part of Alaska. On August 8, 1962, Pope Blessed John XXIII named Bishop Gleeson as the first bishop of the Diocese of Fairbanks. From 1962–1965, he attended all four sessions of the Second Vatican Council. Pope Paul VI accepted his resignation as Bishop of Fairbanks on November 15, 1968, and named him Titual Bishop of Cuicul.
27345937_0_0
27345937
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teslin%20Crossing
Teslin Crossing
Teslin Crossing. Teslin Crossing is an unincorporated area in Yukon, Canada, located on the Teslin River about north-northeast of Whitehorse.
27345964_0_0
27345964
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Place%20Croix-Paquet
Place Croix-Paquet
Place Croix-Paquet. The Place Croix-Paquet is a square located in the 1st arrondissement of Lyon, in the pentes de la Croix-Rousse quarter. It is formed by the intersection of the rue du Griffon, the rue des Capucins and the montée Saint-Sébastien. The square belongs to the zone classified World Heritage Site by UNESCO.
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27345964
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Place%20Croix-Paquet
Place Croix-Paquet
Place Croix-Paquet. History A cross was erected on the square in 1628 by the merchant Jean Paquet (also spelled Pâquet), who also owned the house at the corner of the montée Saint-Sébastien and of the rue René-Laynaud. This cross replaced the Croix des Rameaux (Cross of the Palms), which had previously been cut by the Calvinists in 1562. Apart from the cross which no longer exists, the square has retained the same form since the 17th century.
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27345964
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Place%20Croix-Paquet
Place Croix-Paquet
Place Croix-Paquet. The square received different names over time: it was successively named Place des Rameaux (1745), then Place du Séminaire (1810), but also Croix du Griffon, then Place du Compère, then Place de la Croix des Rempeaux. In the early years of the eighteenth century, the penitents of Notre Dame de Lorette erected a chapel which was sold to the sculptor Chinard, then was replaced by a building. The Grand Séminaire was at the place now occupied by the garden along the rue d'Alsace-Lorraine. Part of the space was occupied by the facilities of the rack and the funicular with the time (which were revised in 1976), which leads to La Croix-Rousse. Among famous people who lived in the street are the designers Jaley (1788), Mathieu Durand (1810), and Lyon scholar Paul Saint-Olive (1872-1879).
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27345964
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Place%20Croix-Paquet
Place Croix-Paquet
Place Croix-Paquet. Description The square seems more like an intersection of streets and illustrates the very old concept platea which referred to the wide section of a street. It is frequented by pedestrians and motor vehicles of all kinds, as it is located on a major strand of access to the various quarters of the 4th arrondissement of Lyon.
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27345964
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Place%20Croix-Paquet
Place Croix-Paquet
Place Croix-Paquet. Description The square is bounded on the south by two blocks of old houses and is connected by traboules to the petite rue des Feuillants and the Place du Griffon. At No. 1, there is a corner traboule crossing two buildings, with a simple house on the ground floor, a wooden door with a knocker and a dark courtyard. The Cour du Moirage at No. 3 was an industry installed in 1753 by English John Badger at the request of the Duke of Mirepoix, Ambassador of France in London, and is now a straight traboule with a posh building. At No. 5, the traboule is long and spans three buildings. It consists of a small yard and a larger courtyard paved with cats heads, and has two side exits, and a straight exit through a massive passage with four columns in the style of the Passage Thiaffait. The No. 10 is isolated in the garden and remains of arches show that it was originally part of a block on the bottom of the montée Saint-Sébastien.
27345964_1_2
27345964
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Place%20Croix-Paquet
Place Croix-Paquet
Place Croix-Paquet. Description There are many shops on the square, including grocery stores, a hairdresser, a doctor, a psychologist, a real estate agency, a pharmacy, a restaurant, a laundromat. The site is served by the Croix-Paquet metro station on line , originally part of the Croix-Rousse-Croix-Paquet funicular railway which was inaugurated on Sunday 12 April 1891.
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27345964
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Place%20Croix-Paquet
Place Croix-Paquet
Place Croix-Paquet. Description The square has a significant vegetation, including acer cappadocicum, acer japonicum, Atlas Cedars and Honey locusts, and is the place of many activities organized by the city. Several redevelopments were undertaken in the 2000s: in 2000, the kindergarten Michel Servet was extended on the northern part of the garden of the square. Other works were planned for 2003. Above the metro station, several stairways provide access to the surrounding streets.
27345982_0_0
27345982
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ghetto%20Mafia
Ghetto Mafia
Ghetto Mafia. The Ghetto Mafia is an American hip hop group from Decatur, Georgia, United States, composed of Nino and Wicked. Formed in 1993, the Ghetto Mafia signed to local hip hop label, Ichiban Records, who then released their debut album, Draw the Line on April 26, 1994. The group then released 1995's Full Blooded Niggaz through Triad Records before joining Fully Loaded Records in 1996. With Fully Loaded, Ghetto Mafia released 1997's Straight from the Dec and their most successful album to date, 1998's On da Grind, which peaked at 169 on the Billboard 200. After a seven-year hiatus, they released Da Return... of Ghetto Mafia in 2005. In 2016, Ghetto Mafia returned with a new single, "Elephant in the Room".
27345986_0_0
27345986
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gold%20to%20Go
Gold to Go
Gold to Go. Gold to Go is a product brand made by the TG Gold-Super-Markt corporation designed to dispense items made of pure gold from automated banking vending machines. The first gold-plated vending machine was located in the lobby of the Emirates Palace hotel in Abu Dhabi, dispensed 320 items made of gold, including 10-gram gold bars and customized gold coins. There are currently six vending machines installed across Europe and Peru. The first vending machine in the United States was installed in Boca Raton, Florida in December 2010. The "gold ATMs" are designed to be placed in shopping malls and airports and are meant to make ordinary people comfortable with the idea of investing in gold. The vending machines update their prices to market value every minute over an encrypted internet connection.
27345986_0_1
27345986
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gold%20to%20Go
Gold to Go
Gold to Go. History The concept was developed by Thomas Geissler, who has previously created an online platform for trading precious metals. He stated that his initial inspiration was observing the "seemingly endless" line of traditional toiletries vending machines at airports and train stations, and during his search for advertising models for an online marketplace. The initial prototype system was installed in Frankfurt in 2009, where it dispensed 1-gram pieces of gold at a 30% premium above market price.
27345986_1_0
27345986
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gold%20to%20Go
Gold to Go
Gold to Go. Machines The vending machines are covered in gold leaf, and include a touch screen, cash and credit card slots, and a lighted display showcase. Users must scan identification for purchases exceeding the money laundering limit within a given time. The machines are fitted "like an armored vehicle" and tested with explosives to prevent theft, and include surveillance cameras that record all transactions.
27345986_1_1
27345986
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gold%20to%20Go
Gold to Go
Gold to Go. Special Features of Gold ATM It has a state-of-the-art ID scanner with AssureTech validation, which determines quality and value and creates an offer within minutes. It monitors real-time prices and gives instant cash for gold, silver, and cryptocurrency. It captures and authenticates the user by examining the ID hologram. A Video Teller Agent examines each customer in real-time and helps. In the case of a technical issue, a video call will be automatically made to customer support.
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27345986
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gold%20to%20Go
Gold to Go
Gold to Go. Sale items Gold bars made of 24-carat gold are sold in 1, 5, 10, 20, 50, 100 and 250 gram and 1 oz sizes. Other items for sale include gift boxes of gold coins with symbols such as the Krugerrand, a maple leaf, or a kangaroo, and are dispensed in "handsome" boxes. Each gold bar is sealed in plastic with an anti-counterfeit hologram label, and comes with a description of its purity and price per gram, as well as information about the sale and the company's 10-day return policy.
27345986_1_3
27345986
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gold%20to%20Go
Gold to Go
Gold to Go. Distribution The German corporation planned to distribute 500 "gold ATMs" throughout airports and rail stations in Germany, Austria, and Switzerland. In the meanwhile the company FONDS-Zentrum Nürnberg in Nuremberg Germany bought the assets of the Gold ATMs to distribute the Gold vending machines to private companies or persons.
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27346012
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Detlev
Detlev
Detlev. People with this name Notable people with this name include:
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27346012
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Detlev
Detlev
Detlev. Detlev is a German given name. It is a variant of Detlef. Detlev Blanke (born 1941), interlinguistics lecturer at Humboldt University of Berlin Detlev Bronk (1897–1975), President of Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland Detlev Buchholz, theoretical physicist at Göttingen University Detlev Buck (born 1962), German film director and actor Otto Detlev Creutzfeldt (born 1927), German physiologist and neurologist Detlev Dammeier (born 1968), German football coach and a former player Wilhelm Heinrich Detlev Körner (1878–1938), illustrator of the American West Detlev Lauscher (1952–2010), German footballer who played as a striker Detlev von Liliencron (1844–1909), German lyric poet and novelist from Kiel Detlev Mehlis (born 1949), Senior Public Prosecutor in the Office of the Attorney General in Berlin Detlev F. Neufert, German author, filmmaker and current president of the German Thai Media Association Detlev Peukert (1950–1990), German historian Detlev Ploog (1920–2005), German clinical psychiatrist, primate behavior researcher and anthropologist Christian Detlev Reventlow (1671–1738), Danish diplomat and military leader Detlev Karsten Rohwedder (1932–1991), German manager and politician (Social Democratic Party)
27346023_0_0
27346023
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cypriano%20de%20Soarez
Cypriano de Soarez
Cypriano de Soarez. Cypriano de Soarez, S.J. (1524–1593) was a sixteenth-century Spanish Jesuit who wrote De Arte Rhetorica, the first Jesuit rhetoric textbook. Concerned that young students in Jesuit colleges were not ready for major rhetorical texts such as Aristotle's Rhetoric, Cicero's De Oratore, and Quintilian's Institutio Oratoria, Soarez wrote De Arte Rhetorica as digest of their work as an introduction for students still learning Latin.
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27346023
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cypriano%20de%20Soarez
Cypriano de Soarez
Cypriano de Soarez. Soarez wrote the first draft of the work around 1562; it was revised by fellow Jesuit Peter John Perpinian in about 1565.
27346023_0_2
27346023
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cypriano%20de%20Soarez
Cypriano de Soarez
Cypriano de Soarez. The De Arte Rhetorica (1568) was organized in Aristotelian form but borrowed its content heavily from Cicero. Soarez intended the De Arte as an introductory digest that would introduce students to the principles of rhetoric and oratory; though students had learned Latin grammar, he found that they were not guaranteed to have facility reading “Quintilian, Cicero, Virgil, Sallust, and the other authors."
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27346023
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cypriano%20de%20Soarez
Cypriano de Soarez
Cypriano de Soarez. Bibliography Flynn, Lawrence J., S.J. "The De Arte Rhetorica of Cyprian Soarez, S.J." Quarterly Journal of Speech, 42 (1956): 367-74. Print. Flynn, Lawrence J., S.J. "Sources and Influence of Soarez’ De Arte Rhetorica." Quarterly Journal of Speech, 43 (1957): 257-65. Print. Flynn, Lawrence J., S.J. The De Arte Rhetorica (1568) by Cyprian Soarez, S.J. A Translation with Introduction and Notes. Diss. University of Florida, 1955. Ann Arbor: UMI: 2001. Print.
27346023_1_1
27346023
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cypriano%20de%20Soarez
Cypriano de Soarez
Cypriano de Soarez. 1524 births 16th-century Spanish Jesuits 1593 deaths Rhetoric theorists
27346043_0_0
27346043
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nutritional%20muscular%20dystrophy
Nutritional muscular dystrophy
Nutritional muscular dystrophy. Nutritional Muscular Dystrophy (Nutritional Myopathy or White Muscle Disease) is a disease caused by a deficiency of selenium and vitamin E in dietary intake. Soils that contains low levels of selenium produce forages and grains that are deficient in selenium. Similarly, if the forage is of low quality or is not stored properly it may be deficient in vitamin E. If an animal consumes this type of diet without additional supplementation they become susceptible to this disease. This condition often affects young ruminants, such as calves and lambs.
27346043_0_1
27346043
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nutritional%20muscular%20dystrophy
Nutritional muscular dystrophy
Nutritional muscular dystrophy. Selenium and vitamin E are antioxidants. Therefore, deficiencies of these nutrients lead to oxidative damage to cells within the body. The muscle cells are the most vulnerable to damage in livestock species.
27346043_1_0
27346043
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nutritional%20muscular%20dystrophy
Nutritional muscular dystrophy
Nutritional muscular dystrophy. Clinical symptoms The oxidative damage causes degeneration of muscles, in particular those within the skeletal and cardiac systems. If the cardiac muscles are impaired the animal may exhibit signs of respiratory distress. While deterioration of skeletal muscles results in stiffness, weakness, and recumbency.
27346043_1_1
27346043
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nutritional%20muscular%20dystrophy
Nutritional muscular dystrophy
Nutritional muscular dystrophy. Treatment & Prevention If the diet is deficient supplement with selenium and/or vitamin E. Injections can be given to treat the condition or as a preventative measure.
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27346043
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nutritional%20muscular%20dystrophy
Nutritional muscular dystrophy
Nutritional muscular dystrophy. Horses In equids, it is most common in the first twelve months of life. Neonatal foals born to dams that are selenium-deficient often develop the condition. There are two forms: peracute, and subacute. The peracute form is characterized by recumbency, tachypnea, dyspnea, myalgia, cardiac arrhythmias, and rapid death. The subacute form causes weakness, fasciculations, cramping, and stiffness of muscles, which can lead to recumbency, as well as a stilted gait, dysphagia, ptyalism, and a weak suckle. It may be treated with selenium supplementation, but there is a 30–45% mortality rate. Other sequelae include aspiration pneumonia, failure of passive transfer, and stunting of growth.
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27346043
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nutritional%20muscular%20dystrophy
Nutritional muscular dystrophy
Nutritional muscular dystrophy. Clinical symptoms Clinical laboratory changes include evidence of rhabdomyolysis (elevated CK and AST, myoglobinuria) and low blood selenium levels. On necropsy, muscles are pale with areas of necrosis and edema evidenced as white streaks.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nutritional%20muscular%20dystrophy
Nutritional muscular dystrophy
Nutritional muscular dystrophy. Clinical symptoms Horses may also develop a more chronic delayed form of the disease called Neuroaxonal Dystrophy (NAD) or Equine Degenerative Myeloencephalopathy (EDM). EDM is a more severe form of NAD. The diseases are characterized by the damage and degeneration of the central nervous system. This disease process is heritable in certain breed bloodlines, such as Quarter Horse, Appaloosa, Morgan, Lusitano, and Arabian. It is hypothesized that horses develop this disease continuum because they have a defect in the uptake or utilization of Vitamin E and therefore have a higher baseline requirement.
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27346043
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nutritional%20muscular%20dystrophy
Nutritional muscular dystrophy
Nutritional muscular dystrophy. Sheep (Stiff Lamb Disease) In lambs, the disease typically occurs between 3 and 8 weeks of age, but may occur in older lambs as well. Progressive paralysis occurs, which is evident through the following symptoms: arched back, difficulty moving and an open shouldered stance. Cardiac failure may occur in two forms: sudden heart failure or gradual cardiac failure characterized by lung anemia that causes death due to suffocation.
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27346043
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nutritional%20muscular%20dystrophy
Nutritional muscular dystrophy
Nutritional muscular dystrophy. Clinical symptoms Ewes may be given an injection of vitamin E/selenium prior to lambing to prevent deficiencies in lambs. In areas, such as Ontario, where lambs are highly susceptible to the condition, management practices should include vitamin E/selenium injections.
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27346043
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nutritional%20muscular%20dystrophy
Nutritional muscular dystrophy
Nutritional muscular dystrophy. Cattle In dairy breeds, the disease may occur in calves between birth and 4 months of age.  In rustic breeds or beef cattle, heifers and young steers up to 12 months of age can be affected. In calves, muscles in upper portion of the front legs and the hind legs are degraded, causing the animal to have a stiff gait and it may have difficulty standing. The disease may also present in the form of respiratory distress.
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27346051
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gabriel%20Flores
Gabriel Flores
Gabriel Flores. Gabriel Flores (February 9, 1930 – December 14, 1993) was a Mexican painter and muralist born in Guadalajara, Jalisco. Between 1956 and 1993, his murals focused on historical and universal themes, as well as the ability of art functioning as social commentary. In the 1960s, at the height of his career, he created his magnum opus Los Niños Héroes, depicting the sacrifice of six child soldiers during the Mexican-American War. Gabriel Flores described himself, saying "I do not want much; I have what I like, above all my freedom."
27346051_1_0
27346051
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gabriel%20Flores
Gabriel Flores
Gabriel Flores. Life Gabriel Flores García was born on February 8, 1930, in Guadalajara, Jalisco, although some sources mention El Arenal. He was involved in the arts since early childhood and at the age of 17, he began his formal art studies. In 1948, he entered the School of Fine Arts at the University of Guadalajara. Together with Guillermo Chávez Vega, Torreblanca, Miguel Aldana and Ignacio Martínez, they formed the Neo-realist art group, running counter to the abstract art movement at the time. His early influences included Diego Rivera and José Clemente Orozco, both members of the Mexican Mural Renaissance in the 1920s and 1930s.
27346051_1_1
27346051
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gabriel%20Flores
Gabriel Flores
Gabriel Flores. Life His first achievement came early in 1951 when the Benjamin Franklin Library of Guadalajara presented an exhibition of his works. Soon thereafter, he lived in Mexico City for a period of four years, where he worked alongside other distinguished painters. At 25 years of age, he returned to his native land of Jalisco and abandoned his brief teaching duties to focus his career as a muralist. His second exhibition in Guadalajara featured the mural, El maíz en la Colonia, now lost. With an established recognition in the region, he was selected by then governor of Jalisco Agustín Yáñez to create two murals in the Public Library of the State, La imprenta en Jalisco (The Printing Press in Jalisco) and El parnaso jalisciense (The Jaliscan Parnassus), the latter of which is one of his most representative works. In 1960, he painted Alegoria de la Guerra y la Paz in the state of Michoacán, though it was later transferred to the governmental offices in Guadalajara. Two years later, he was given the Jalisco Award in Culture, a recognition observed by the city to Jaliscans with excellence in the visual arts. The city council also declared Gabriel Flores a "favorite son" and included his name in the School of Painters near Agua Azul park.
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27346051
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gabriel%20Flores
Gabriel Flores
Gabriel Flores. Life He reached his career high point in the latter half of the 1960s. In creating La filosofía y la ciencia (Philosophy and Science) at the Salvador Allende auditorium in the University of Guadalajara, he sought to bring attention to the realities of poverty, social injustice, discrimination and consequences of industrialism and technology. Los Niños Héroes, painted in Chapultepec Castle in 1967, honors the child heroes who died in the Battle of Chapultepec during the Mexican–American War. The mural depicts a Mexican military cadet jumping from the tower of Chapultepec Castle in 1847 wrapped in the Mexican flag in order to prevent its capture by the U.S. military forces. As a presentation to tequila, one of Jalisco's largest exports, he accepted a request to paint Tahona y fiesta and Mitología e historia del tequila for Casa Sauza, a liquor factory in Tequila, Jalisco.
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27346051
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gabriel%20Flores
Gabriel Flores
Gabriel Flores. Life There was a change in subject matter for Flores' murals at the turn of the 1970s, shifting from historical and universal themes to works containing his own ideas and feelings on social and political events. He painted a series of murals, including Culto al Dinero (Worship of Money) and Estampas de la vida (Prints of Life), which did not garner much praise and were removed from exhibitions.
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27346051
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gabriel%20Flores
Gabriel Flores
Gabriel Flores. Life In 1984, at the age of 54, the Jalisco government awarded him the Medal of the Arts. The state governor commissioned his last work, La historia de la medicina en Guadalajara (The History of Medicine in Guadalajara), which was completed at Antiguo Hospital Civil in 1992, just one year prior to his death. In 2005, he was recognized by the University of Guadalajara and was honored by the state congress as a distinguished Jaliscan painter.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gabriel%20Flores
Gabriel Flores
Gabriel Flores. External links Gabriel Flores biography at the official website of Jalisco Gabriel Flores profile at the Museum of Claudio Jiménez Vizcarra in Jalisco
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gabriel%20Flores
Gabriel Flores
Gabriel Flores. 1930 births 1993 deaths Artists from Guadalajara, Jalisco Mexican muralists 20th-century Mexican painters 20th-century male artists Mexican male painters
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27346058
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Khanna%20rail%20disaster
Khanna rail disaster
Khanna rail disaster. The Khanna rail disaster occurred on 26 November 1998 near Khanna on the Khanna-Ludhiana section of India's Northern Railway in Punjab, at 03:15 when the Calcutta-bound Jammu Tawi-Sealdah Express collided with six derailed coaches of the Amritsar-bound "Frontier Mail" which were lying in its path. At least 212 were killed; in total the trains were estimated to be carrying 2,500 passengers. The initial derailment was caused by a broken rail.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Khanna%20rail%20disaster
Khanna rail disaster
Khanna rail disaster. See also List of train accidents by death toll List of Indian rail accidents
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27346061
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cappelli
Cappelli
Cappelli. Cappelli may refer to: Alexander Cappelli (born 1984), Australian musician and actor Dante Cappelli (1866–1948), Italian actor Elena Bianchini-Cappelli (1873–1919), Italian dramatic soprano opera singer Francesco Cappelli (born 1943), retired Italian professional football player Frank Cappelli, the star of the children's television series Cappelli & Company Gari Cappelli (born 1961), Croatian politician Giulio Cappelli (1911–1995), Italian football (soccer) player Gregory W. Cappelli (born c. 1968), American business executive Louis R. Cappelli (born 1951), American real estate developer Peter Cappelli (born 1956), American economist Raffaele Cappelli (1848–1921), Italian politician and diplomat Steven W. Cappelli, American politician
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27346061
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cappelli
Cappelli
Cappelli. See also A.F. Cappelli Block, historic site at 263 Atwells Avenue in Providence, Rhode Island Cappelli & Company, American children's television series Louis R. Cappelli Foundation, funding source designed to assist at-risk youth to reach their full potential
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27346064
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeffrey%20Reich
Jeffrey Reich
Jeffrey Reich. Jeffrey Peter Reich (born October 30, 1957) was a senior managing director and member of the board of directors of Bear Stearns Co. Inc. He retired from Bear Stearns in 1995 and has since been the CEO of Bridge Street Capital Management LLC.
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27346064
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeffrey%20Reich
Jeffrey Reich
Jeffrey Reich. Early life Reich graduated from Duke University in 1979 with a B.A. in economics. He received his M.B.A. from the University of Connecticut in 1985.
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27346064
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeffrey%20Reich
Jeffrey Reich
Jeffrey Reich. Bear Stearns Reich was one of the first mortgage derivative traders at Bear Stearns, focusing on interest only/principal only stripped mortgage backed securities. Reich masterminded the repackaging of a total of $1.6 billion of Federal National Mortgage Association strip deals in one day in March 1992.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeffrey%20Reich
Jeffrey Reich
Jeffrey Reich. Other After Bear Stearns, Reich started an investment company in Irvington, New York. This company, Bridge Street Capital Management has been instrumental in the redevelopment of Irvington's Hudson River waterfront. Reich and his partners received an award from Scenic Hudson for responsible development.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeffrey%20Reich
Jeffrey Reich
Jeffrey Reich. Reich has served on the board of directors of the National Organization on Disability (NOD) since 1990.
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27346071
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thanduyise%20Khuboni
Thanduyise Khuboni
Thanduyise Khuboni. Thanduyise Abraham Khuboni (born 22 May 1986 in Clermont, KwaZulu-Natal) is a South African footballer who currently plays for Uthongathi.
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27346071
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thanduyise%20Khuboni
Thanduyise Khuboni
Thanduyise Khuboni. Playing career Khuboni spent his youth career at a number of local amateur clubs before joining Golden Arrows in 2006. He was part of the Arrows team that won the 2009 MTN 8 Cup. Khuboni played in every minute of Arrows' 30 games in the 2011–12 season. In January 2013, Khuboni was linked with a transfer to an unnamed German Bundesliga club as his contract was expiring at the end of the season. Arrows subsequently exercised a 1-year option they had on his contract, thus tying him to the club until the end of the 2013–14 season.
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27346071
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thanduyise%20Khuboni
Thanduyise Khuboni
Thanduyise Khuboni. International career Khuboni made his international debut for South Africa on 27 January 2010 in a 3–0 victory against Zimbabwe in a friendly match played in Durban. He was part of the South African squad for the 2010 FIFA World Cup and played in their final group stage match against France.
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27346096
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2nd%20Street%20Tunnel
2nd Street Tunnel
2nd Street Tunnel. The 2nd Street Tunnel is a widely filmed and photographed tunnel on 2nd Street under Bunker Hill in Downtown Los Angeles, California. The Los Angeles Times described it as "the most recognizable city landmark most Americans have never heard of". It is long and lined with glossy white-glazed tiles that act similarly to a photographic light box and provide visually interesting, distorted reflections of things placed in it.
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27346096
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2nd%20Street%20Tunnel
2nd Street Tunnel
2nd Street Tunnel. The tunnel was built to relieve congestion on the earlier 3rd Street Tunnel. Construction began in 1916 and was completed in 1924, with its formal opening on July 25 of that year. The distinctive white tiles, which give the tunnel its glow, came from Germany, which caused controversy at the time due to Anti-German sentiment at the onset of World War I.
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27346096
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2nd%20Street%20Tunnel
2nd Street Tunnel
2nd Street Tunnel. The tunnel runs from South Figueroa Street at the northwest to Hill Street at the southeast. 2nd Street also runs above for two blocks at the surface from Hill Street at the southwest to South Hope Street.
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27346096
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2nd%20Street%20Tunnel
2nd Street Tunnel
2nd Street Tunnel. The two entrances are very different in character, automotive columnist Dan Neil describing the contrast of "the grittier east entrance and the glowing aperture of the west side, with flaring buttresses reminiscent of the shell of the Hollywood Bowl."
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2nd%20Street%20Tunnel
2nd Street Tunnel
2nd Street Tunnel. Traffic The tunnel has two-way traffic. It previously had four lanes (two in each direction), but in late 2013 a bike lane in each direction was added, resulting in one car lane and one bike lane in each direction.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2nd%20Street%20Tunnel
2nd Street Tunnel
2nd Street Tunnel. In popular culture The tunnel appears frequently in car advertisements from many manufacturers. Seventy-three car ads were filmed in the tunnel from 2006 to 2008, averaging more than two per month.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2nd%20Street%20Tunnel
2nd Street Tunnel
2nd Street Tunnel. The tunnel has appeared in many movies, including THX 1138 (1971), The Terminal Man (1974), The Driver (1978), Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1978), When a Stranger Calls (1979), Blade Runner (1982), Flashdance (1983), The Terminator (1984), Repo Man (1984), Rocky IV (1985) Lethal Weapon 2 (1989), Sneakers (1992), Deep Cover (1992), Demolition Man (1993), Money Talks (1997), Con Air (1997), Gattaca (1997), Enemy of the State (1998), Independence Day (1996), Kill Bill (2003), Transformers (2007), Kill Speed (2010), Black November (2012), and Knight of Cups'' (2015).
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2nd%20Street%20Tunnel
2nd Street Tunnel
2nd Street Tunnel. The 2nd Street tunnel has been featured in music videos such as "Iris" by Goo Goo Dolls, "It’s Over Now" by Neve, "We R Who We R" by Kesha, "It's My Life" by Bon Jovi, "Kings and Queens" by Thirty Seconds to Mars, "Grenade" by Bruno Mars, "Sing" by My Chemical Romance, "Protovision" by Kavinsky, "Bet" by Tinashe, "Feel Good (feat. Daya)" by Gryffin and Illenium, "Narcissist" by Halo Circus, "Please Me" by Bruno Mars and Cardi B, "You Can't Stop The Girl" by Bebe Rexha and Blinding Lights by The Weeknd.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2nd%20Street%20Tunnel
2nd Street Tunnel
2nd Street Tunnel. The tunnel has also been used for fashion shows, including the 2004 LA Fashion Week show by designer Michelle Mason, and for parties, such as the 2013 Golden Globe Awards the Art of Elysium/Audi party.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2nd%20Street%20Tunnel
2nd Street Tunnel
2nd Street Tunnel. See also 3rd Street Tunnel (Los Angeles) J. Win Austin, Los Angeles, California, City Council member, 1941–43, condemned auto-horn noise in tunnel Charles E. Downs, City Council member convicted in a bribery scheme involving a "moving sidewalk" in the tunnel
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27346109
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Myth%20of%20the%20Love%20Electrique
Myth of the Love Electrique
Myth of the Love Electrique. Myth of the Love Electrique is an album by the Acid Mothers Temple & The Melting Paraiso U.F.O., released in 2006 by Riot Season. This is the first album to feature Kitagawa Hao on vocals.
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27346109
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Myth%20of%20the%20Love%20Electrique
Myth of the Love Electrique
Myth of the Love Electrique. Kitagawa Hao - voice Tsuyama Atsushi - monster bass, acoustic guitar, voice, one-legged flute, sopranino recorder Higashi Hiroshi - synthesizer Shimura Koji - drums Kawabata Makoto - electric guitar, bouzouki, electric bouzouki, hurdy-gurdy, organ, synthesizer, electronics, tambura, sitar, percussion
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27346109
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Myth%20of%20the%20Love%20Electrique
Myth of the Love Electrique
Myth of the Love Electrique. Technical personnel Kawabata Makoto - Production and Engineering Yoshida Tatsuya - Digital Mastering Kawabata Sachiko - Artwork
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27346110
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jan%20Bury%C3%A1n
Jan Buryán
Jan Buryán. Jan Buryán (born 17 February 1977) is a Czech football player.
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27346110
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jan%20Bury%C3%A1n
Jan Buryán
Jan Buryán. Buryán played over 200 matches in the Gambrinus liga, playing mostly for Viktoria Žižkov. He most recently played for Polish side Piast Gliwice.
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27346112
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carl%20Albert%20%28musician%29
Carl Albert (musician)
Carl Albert (musician). Carl Spencer Albert (1962–1995), simply known as Carl Albert, was an American musician, the lead singer of the band Vicious Rumors from late 1986 until 1995. He was a 1975 graduate of Columbia Elementary School in Columbia, Tuolumne County, California, and a 1979 graduate of Sonora High School, Sonora, California, also in Tuolumne County. He played lead guitar in local bands in Tuolumne County for several years, notably in Crossfire, a hard-rock band, Chaser, another hard-rock band, and Uncle Fester (with bandmate Shon Snyder), a hard-rock band.
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27346112
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carl%20Albert%20%28musician%29
Carl Albert (musician)
Carl Albert (musician). He died on April 22, 1995 as a result of a car accident and is buried in the Sonora, California, Catholic Cemetery.
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27346112
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carl%20Albert%20%28musician%29
Carl Albert (musician)
Carl Albert (musician). Before joining Vicious Rumors, Carl Albert played with the bands Ruffians, Villain, and Scratch.
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27346112
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carl%20Albert%20%28musician%29
Carl Albert (musician)
Carl Albert (musician). In memory of Carl Albert, Vicious Rumors released the CD A tribute to Carl Albert (including bootleg recordings taken from the last European tour they did together) and the home-video The First Ten Years.
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27346112
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carl%20Albert%20%28musician%29
Carl Albert (musician)
Carl Albert (musician). The Vicious Rumors song "Perpetual", included on the Something Burning album (and sung by the leader of the band Geoff Thorpe because "there is no one who can take Carl's place"), was the last track written by Carl Albert.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carl%20Albert%20%28musician%29
Carl Albert (musician)
Carl Albert (musician). The guitarist Mark McGee, for one of his solo projects (actually unpublished), composed and recorded the song "Find Your Way Home" dedicated to the memory of his lost friend.
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27346112
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carl%20Albert%20%28musician%29
Carl Albert (musician)
Carl Albert (musician). Original VR Bassist Dave Starr's new band WildeStarr, has a song called "Voice in the Silence" dedicated to Carl on their 2010 debut CD "ARRIVAL"
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27346112
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carl%20Albert%20%28musician%29
Carl Albert (musician)
Carl Albert (musician). with Vicious Rumors 1988 - Digital Dictator 1990 - Vicious Rumors 1991 - Welcome to the Ball 1992 - Plug In and Hang On [Live] 1994 - Word of Mouth 1994 - The Voice [EP] 1995 - A Tribute to Carl Albert [Live]
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carl%20Albert%20%28musician%29
Carl Albert (musician)
Carl Albert (musician). with Ruffians 1984 - Demo [Demo tape] 1985 - Ruffians [EP] 2004 - 85 & Live [Best of/Compilation] 2005 - There & Back [Best of/Compilation]
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27346121
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CPC%20Bears
CPC Bears
CPC Bears. CPC Bears were a rugby league club based in Carmarthen and are the regional side for Carmarthenshire, Pembrokeshire and Ceredigion. They played in the Welsh Premier Division of the Rugby League Conference.
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27346121
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CPC%20Bears
CPC Bears
CPC Bears. History West Wales Sharks were formed in the spring of 2006 and joined the Rugby League Conference. They became the Dinefwr Sharks for the 2009 season. West Wales Wild Boars joined the Conference in 2009.
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27346121
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CPC%20Bears
CPC Bears
CPC Bears. CPC Bears RL was formed in 2010, as the regional side for Carmarthenshire, Pembrokeshire and Ceredigion in the Welsh Premier Division with Dinefwr Sharks and West Wales Wild Boars competing in the Championship.
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27346121
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CPC%20Bears
CPC Bears
CPC Bears. CPC Bears failed to complete the 2011 season in the Welsh Premier division.
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27346121
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CPC%20Bears
CPC Bears
CPC Bears. Juniors CPC Bears' junior teams take part in the Welsh Conference Junior League and Gillette National Youth League.
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27346121
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CPC%20Bears
CPC Bears
CPC Bears. External links West Wales Rugby League Official Wales Rugby League Website