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27334281_1_0 | 27334281 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miss%20USA%201978 | Miss USA 1978 | Miss USA 1978. Historical significance
Hawaii wins competition for the third time.
Massachusetts earns the 1st runner-up position for the first time.
Texas earns the 2nd runner-up position for the first time.
Indiana earns the 3rd runner-up position for the first time.
New Mexico earns the 4th runner-up position for the second time. The last time it placed this was in 1968.
States that placed in semifinals the previous year were California, Hawaii, New Mexico, Texas and Virginia.
California placed for the twenty-second consecutive year.
Texas placed for the fourth consecutive year.
New Mexico placed for the third consecutive year.
Hawaii and Virginia made their second consecutive placement.
Florida and Indiana last placed in 1975.
Alaska last placed in 1972.
Pennsylvania last placed in 1971.
Massachusetts and Utah last placed in 1966.
Oklahoma last placed in 1965.
Georgia and Minnesota break an ongoing streak of placements since 1976. |
27334281_2_0 | 27334281 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miss%20USA%201978 | Miss USA 1978 | Miss USA 1978. Alabama - Eva Jo Stancil
Alaska - Barbara Samuelson
Arizona - Jacquie Crutchfield
Arkansas - Donna Funderburk
California - Donna Adrian
Colorado - Linda Potestio
Connecticut - Martha Szabo
Delaware - Donna Lewis
District of Columbia - Wanda Clineman
Florida - April Shaw
Georgia - Larinda Matthews
Hawaii - Judi Andersen
Idaho - Suzette Sanford
Illinois - Suzanne Piche
Indiana - Jayme Buecher
Iowa - Michelle Daley
Kansas - Diddy Bell
Kentucky - Linda Woodruff
Louisiana - Tauny Hanes
Maine - Catherine Ledue
Maryland - Rhonda Koch
Massachusetts - Diane Pollard
Michigan - April Patrick
Minnesota - Janey Gohl
Mississippi - Wanda Gatlin
Missouri - Paula Taylor
Montana - Susan Riplett
Nebraska - Shari Reimers
Nevada - Rochelle Jameson
New Hampshire - Barbara Miller
New Jersey - Sheryl Ann Hoehn
New Mexico - Marlena Garland
New York - Darlene Javits
North Carolina - Kathryn Norman
North Dakota - Theresa Olson
Ohio - Sheila Anderson
Oklahoma - Nancy Lippold
Oregon - Julie Heater
Pennsylvania - Sandy Dell
Rhode Island - Sharon McGarry
South Carolina - Kathryn Threatt
South Dakota - Nadene Oppold
Tennessee - Suzanna Timberlake
Texas - Barbra Horan
Utah - Margo Flynn
Vermont - Nancy Wierzbicki
Virginia - Robin Shadle
Washington - Barbara Bogar
West Virginia - Deborah Davis
Wisconsin - Cynthia Paulson
Wyoming - Kathryn Flitner |
27334281_2_1 | 27334281 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miss%20USA%201978 | Miss USA 1978 | Miss USA 1978. Judges
LeRoy Neiman
Barbara Peterson
Theodore Bikel
Eileen Ford |
27334282_0_0 | 27334282 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Highland%20Lawn%20Cemetery | Highland Lawn Cemetery | Highland Lawn Cemetery.
Highland Lawn Cemetery is a city-owned rural cemetery in Terre Haute, Indiana. Opened in 1884, the cemetery includes . |
27334282_0_1 | 27334282 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Highland%20Lawn%20Cemetery | Highland Lawn Cemetery | Highland Lawn Cemetery.
The cemetery features a Richardsonian Romanesque chapel built by architect Jesse A. Vrydaugh in 1893 for a cost of $10,000. In the 1980s, the chapel underwent renovation which was completed in March 1988. Highland Lawn also includes a bell tower built by the Heidenreich Company in 1894, a gateway arch completed by Edward Hazledine and a Colonial rest house designed by W.H. Floyd. |
27334282_0_2 | 27334282 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Highland%20Lawn%20Cemetery | Highland Lawn Cemetery | Highland Lawn Cemetery.
Highland Lawn was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1990 for its significance in agriculture and landscaping. |
27334282_0_3 | 27334282 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Highland%20Lawn%20Cemetery | Highland Lawn Cemetery | Highland Lawn Cemetery. Folklore
The cemetery is known in local folklore including the story of Stiffy Green, a taxidermied dog buried in his owner's tomb who was said to bark periodically, and of Martin Sheets, who was convinced he would be buried alive and thus installed a telephone inside of his tomb with a direct line to the cemetery's main office. |
27334282_0_4 | 27334282 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Highland%20Lawn%20Cemetery | Highland Lawn Cemetery | Highland Lawn Cemetery. Notable burials
Everett Sanders (1882-1950), American politician and republican
Eugene Debs (1855-1926), American socialist and politician
Theodore Debs (1864-1945), Eugene's brother and socialist political activist
Max Ehrmann (1872-1945), American writer, poet, and attorney
Valeska Suratt (1882-1962), American silent film and stage actress
Eva Mozes Kor (1934-2019), Holocaust survivor and activist
Ellen Church (1904-1965), Noted aviation innovator and nurse
Bud Taylor (1903-1962), American Boxer
Allen Pence (1819-1908), American pharmacist and pioneer of spiritualism
Juliet Peddle (1899-1979), American architect
D. Omer Seamon (1911-1997), American painter |
27334282_1_0 | 27334282 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Highland%20Lawn%20Cemetery | Highland Lawn Cemetery | Highland Lawn Cemetery. External links
Highland Lawn Cemetery at Find a Grave
Historic districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Indiana
Cemeteries on the National Register of Historic Places in Indiana
1884 establishments in Indiana
Richardsonian Romanesque architecture in Indiana
Protected areas of Vigo County, Indiana
Tourist attractions in Terre Haute, Indiana
Historic districts in Terre Haute, Indiana
National Register of Historic Places in Terre Haute, Indiana
Rural cemeteries |
27334285_0_0 | 27334285 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gregg%20Fienberg | Gregg Fienberg | Gregg Fienberg.
Gregg Fienberg (born September 12, 1960) is an American television producer and director. He worked on the Western drama Deadwood in both capacities and received a Directors Guild of America Award and two Emmy Award nominations for the series. He was an Emmy nominated producer for the mystery series Twin Peaks. He was also the executive producer and unit production manager for the HBO series True Blood. |
27334285_0_1 | 27334285 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gregg%20Fienberg | Gregg Fienberg | Gregg Fienberg. Biography
Fienberg was born and raised in Southern California, and is the third of four children. |
27334285_1_0 | 27334285 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gregg%20Fienberg | Gregg Fienberg | Gregg Fienberg. 1990s
He worked on several music videos in the early 1990s and worked with Madonna, Michael Jackson and U2. |
27334285_1_1 | 27334285 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gregg%20Fienberg | Gregg Fienberg | Gregg Fienberg. 1980s
He was a producer for the 1984 film Voice in Exile.
In 1990 made his television debut with the series Twin Peaks. The series was created by David Lynch and Mark Frost and focused on the investigation of the murder of a prom queen. Fienberg served as a production manager and producer for the first season. Fienberg and the production staff were nominated for an Emmy Award for Outstanding Drama Series at the 42nd Primetime Emmy Awards. He returned as a production manager and supervising producer for the second and final season in 1991. He served as unit production manager for the follow-up feature Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me in 1992. Also in 1992 Fienberg was a production manager for the pilot of Lynch and Frost's short-lived next series, On The Air. |
27334285_1_2 | 27334285 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gregg%20Fienberg | Gregg Fienberg | Gregg Fienberg. 1980s
He was a producer for the 1984 film Voice in Exile.
In 1993 Fienberg worked as a producer on the first season of submarine adventure seaQuest DSV. He was a producer for the film Dead Connection in 1994. He was producer and unit production manager for the horror sequel Candyman: Farewell to the Flesh in 1995. |
27334285_1_3 | 27334285 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gregg%20Fienberg | Gregg Fienberg | Gregg Fienberg. 1980s
He was a producer for the 1984 film Voice in Exile.
He was a co-producer for the series Fame L.A. in 1997. In 1998 Fienberg worked as a producer and unit production manager for the film Gods and Monsters. |
27334285_1_4 | 27334285 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gregg%20Fienberg | Gregg Fienberg | Gregg Fienberg. 2000s
In 2001 Fienberg began a long association with the HBO cable network. He served as a co-executive producer for the first season of the comedy The Mind of the Married Man in 2001. The series was created by and starred Mike Binder. Fienberg left the crew after the first season. Fienberg was also a co-executive producer for the first season of HBO depression era drama Carnivàle in 2003. The series was created by Daniel Knauf. The show focused on a traveling carnival and their supernatural ties to a Christian minister. Fienberg again left the crew after the first season. |
27334285_1_5 | 27334285 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gregg%20Fienberg | Gregg Fienberg | Gregg Fienberg. 1980s
He was a producer for the 1984 film Voice in Exile.
In 2004 Fienberg became a co-executive producer and unit production manager of HBO Western drama Deadwood. The series was created by David Milch and focused on a new Western town. As unit production manager Fienberg won a plaque from the Directors Guild of America at the 2004 Awards for Outstanding Directing for a Drama Series for his work on the series pilot. He shared the award with the episodes director Walter Hill and the team of assistant directors. He was promoted to executive producer for the second season in 2005. He also made his directing debut on the second season. He helmed the second season episodes "Complications" and "The Whores Can Come". He was nominated for an Emmy for Outstanding Directing for a Drama Series at the 57th Primetime Emmy Awards for his debut "Complications". At the same ceremony Fienberg and the production staff were nominated for the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Drama Series. He returned as an executive producer for the third and final season in 2006. He directed the episodes "True Colors" and "The Catbird Seat". Also in 2006 Fienberg served as a co-executive producer and unit production manager for the pilot of HBO polygamy drama Big Love. |
27334285_1_6 | 27334285 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gregg%20Fienberg | Gregg Fienberg | Gregg Fienberg. 1980s
He was a producer for the 1984 film Voice in Exile.
In 2007 Fienberg became an executive producer and director for HBO surf noir John From Cincinnati. The series was created by Milch and focuses on the arrival of a messiah like figure in a surfing community. Fienberg directed the episode "His Visit: Day Two". The series was canceled after one season. |
27334285_1_7 | 27334285 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gregg%20Fienberg | Gregg Fienberg | Gregg Fienberg. 1980s
He was a producer for the 1984 film Voice in Exile.
In 2009 Fienberg became unit production manager and executive producer for the second season of HBO supernatural drama True Blood. The series was created by Alan Ball and focuses on a small Louisiana town after vampires reveal their existence to the world. He would return as an executive producer for the third season in 2010. In September 2013, HBO officially announced that True Blood had been renewed for a seventh and final season that would premiere in Summer 2014. |
27334285_1_8 | 27334285 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gregg%20Fienberg | Gregg Fienberg | Gregg Fienberg. 1980s
He was a producer for the 1984 film Voice in Exile.
In April 2020, he co-founded the "It Takes Our Village" initiative, with Bruna Papandrea and several other Hollywood producers, to help raise money for below-the-line crews affected by the COVID-19 pandemic. |
27334304_0_0 | 27334304 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arts%20District%20%28Portland%2C%20Maine%29 | Arts District (Portland, Maine) | Arts District (Portland, Maine).
The Arts District is a section of downtown Portland, Maine’s designated in 1995 as to promote the cultural community and creative economy of the city. It covers a large part of upper Congress Street towards the West End. There are many art galleries, a theater company, museums, and schools in the general area. Both Maine College of Art (MECA) and Portland Museum of Art are located in the district. Congress Square Park, a small urban park across the street from the Museum of Art, often referred to as the "Heart of the Arts District," frequently hosts community-based arts and cultural events. |
27334304_0_1 | 27334304 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arts%20District%20%28Portland%2C%20Maine%29 | Arts District (Portland, Maine) | Arts District (Portland, Maine).
An event that occurs in the district is the First Friday Art Walk — a self-guided tour that takes place on the first Friday of each month from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. All of the galleries, museums, and local businesses open their doors to the public for a view of everything that is going on in the art community. Most galleries host the event with food and drink. The Portland Museum of Art opens its doors to the public free of charge. |
27334304_0_2 | 27334304 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arts%20District%20%28Portland%2C%20Maine%29 | Arts District (Portland, Maine) | Arts District (Portland, Maine).
The Arts District is home to two television stations (WCSH and WMTW) and several radio stations. It is also home to the State Theatre building and the Portland Stage Company. There are many coffee shops, bars and restaurants, such as Green Elephant Vegetarian Bistro, in the district. |
27334304_0_3 | 27334304 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arts%20District%20%28Portland%2C%20Maine%29 | Arts District (Portland, Maine) | Arts District (Portland, Maine). External links
Portland, Maine - Arts District
First Friday Art Walk - Portland, Maine |
27334318_0_0 | 27334318 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KNK | KNK | KNK. KNK may refer to:
Kara no Kyōkai, a light novel series by Kinoko Nasu
KNK (band), South Korea
Library of Congress Classification KNK for Law of Brunei
Northern Kentucky University Herbarium
Kuranko language of Sierra Leone, ISO 639 code
ISO 3166-2 code KN-K, for St. Kitts
Konferenz Nationaler Kultureinrichtungen, Conference of National Cultural Institutions, East Germany
German KNK series of breeder reactors
National Convergence "Kwa Na Kwa", Central African Republic political party
Il-Kunsill Nazzjonali tal-Ktieb, the Maltese-language name of Malta's National Book Council
Kurdistan National Congress |
27334319_0_0 | 27334319 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oliver%20Newmarch | Oliver Newmarch | Oliver Newmarch.
Major-General Sir Oliver Richardson Newmarch (1834–1920) was a senior British Indian Army officer who served as Military Secretary to the India Office. |
27334319_0_1 | 27334319 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oliver%20Newmarch | Oliver Newmarch | Oliver Newmarch. Military career
Born the son of Doctor Newmarch and Violet, daughter of Colonel Sherwood, Royal Artillery, Newmarch was educated at Charterhouse School and Merton College, Oxford. Newmarch entered the Indian Army in 1855, and was later commissioned into the Bengal Staff Corps and posted to the 44th Native Infantry. |
27334319_0_2 | 27334319 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oliver%20Newmarch | Oliver Newmarch | Oliver Newmarch.
Newmarch saw service during the Indian Mutiny and received a medal for his work during it. |
27334319_0_3 | 27334319 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oliver%20Newmarch | Oliver Newmarch | Oliver Newmarch.
Newmarch served as the Military Secretary to the Government of India from 1884 to 1887. Newmarch was appointed Military Secretary to the India Office in 1889 and served in that role until 1899. While in that role, he was appointed KCSI in 1894. |
27334319_0_4 | 27334319 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oliver%20Newmarch | Oliver Newmarch | Oliver Newmarch. Family
In 1858 he married Mary Isabella Parke and they went on to have one son and one daughter. She died in 1867 and he then married Agnes Mary Norman in 1874. |
27334319_1_0 | 27334319 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oliver%20Newmarch | Oliver Newmarch | Oliver Newmarch. 1834 births
1920 deaths
British Indian Army generals
Knights Commander of the Order of the Star of India
People educated at Charterhouse School
Alumni of Merton College, Oxford
Bengal Staff Corps officers
British military personnel of the Indian Rebellion of 1857 |
27334330_0_0 | 27334330 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artyom%20Madilov | Artyom Madilov | Artyom Madilov.
Artyom Sergeyevich Madilov (; born 1 April 1985) is a former Russian professional football player. |
27334330_0_1 | 27334330 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artyom%20Madilov | Artyom Madilov | Artyom Madilov. Club career
He made his senior debut for FC Torpedo Moscow on 20 August 2003 in a Russian Premier League Cup game against FC Zenit Saint Petersburg. |
27334330_0_2 | 27334330 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artyom%20Madilov | Artyom Madilov | Artyom Madilov.
He made his Russian Football National League debut for FC Anzhi Makhachkala on 2 September 2007 in a game against FC Zvezda Irkutsk. He also played in the FNL for Anzhi in 2008. |
27334330_0_3 | 27334330 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artyom%20Madilov | Artyom Madilov | Artyom Madilov. Personal life
His younger brother Ilya Madilov is also a professional footballer. |
27334330_1_0 | 27334330 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artyom%20Madilov | Artyom Madilov | Artyom Madilov. 1985 births
Footballers from Moscow
Living people
Russian footballers
Association football defenders
FC Torpedo Moscow players
FC Dynamo Barnaul players
FC Ural Yekaterinburg players
FC Anzhi Makhachkala players |
27334347_0_0 | 27334347 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry%20Goldman | Henry Goldman | Henry Goldman.
Henry Goldman (September 21, 1857 – April 4, 1937) was an American heir, banker, philanthropist and art collector. A member of the Goldman–Sachs family, he was instrumental in the making of the financial conglomerate Goldman Sachs in the early twentieth century. |
27334347_0_1 | 27334347 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry%20Goldman | Henry Goldman | Henry Goldman. Early life
Henry Goldman was born on September 21, 1857 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. His father, Marcus Goldman, was a German-born banker. |
27334347_0_2 | 27334347 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry%20Goldman | Henry Goldman | Henry Goldman.
Goldman attended Harvard University but failed to graduate due to poor eyesight. Others believe this story of "poor eyesight" was family lore, and that Goldman, as a second-generation German immigrant and a Jew, did not feel welcome at Harvard. |
27334347_1_0 | 27334347 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry%20Goldman | Henry Goldman | Henry Goldman. Career
Goldman started his career at Goldman Sachs in 1884.
Goldman helped list retail companies like Sears and Woolworth, despite the firms' shortage of assets. In 1911, when the firm joined with Lehman Brothers in refinancing and incorporating Studebaker, Henry served with great dedication on the automaker's executive committee. |
27334347_1_1 | 27334347 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry%20Goldman | Henry Goldman | Henry Goldman. Career
Goldman started his career at Goldman Sachs in 1884.
Goldman broke with his brother-in-law and main partner Samuel Sachs and the bank during World War I. In 1915, as tensions rose in Europe, Goldman publicly voiced support for the Germans and refused to allow Goldman Sachs to participate in a $150 million Anglo-French bond issue arranged by J. P. Morgan. The rest of Goldman's colleagues supported the Allies. In 1917, after America entered the war, Goldman resigned as a partner from Goldman Sachs in recognition of the negative effects of this irreconcilable difference of opinion. |
27334347_2_0 | 27334347 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry%20Goldman | Henry Goldman | Henry Goldman. Goldman retired from Goldman Sachs in 1917.
Additionally, Goldman served on the Boards of Directors of the Lawyers Title and Trust Company, the Columbia Trust Company, the Commercial Investment Trust Corporation, and the Berlin-based Shrebreuger Technishe Hochschule. |
27334347_2_1 | 27334347 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry%20Goldman | Henry Goldman | Henry Goldman. Philanthropy
Goldman remained a strong supporter of Germany until 1933, when, during a yearly trip to Berlin, he witnessed firsthand the increasingly brutal and institutionalized anti-Semitism that prevailed in the country. Goldman never returned to Germany. Until his death in 1937, Goldman worked to help German Jewish intellectuals and child refugees immigrate to the U.S. to escape the Nazis. |
27334347_2_2 | 27334347 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry%20Goldman | Henry Goldman | Henry Goldman. Goldman retired from Goldman Sachs in 1917.
Goldman helped to fund the Stern–Gerlach experiment in quantum physics, and purchased a yacht for Albert Einstein (which was later confiscated by the Nazis). He also purchased a Stradivarius for Yehudi Menuhin. |
27334347_2_3 | 27334347 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry%20Goldman | Henry Goldman | Henry Goldman. Goldman retired from Goldman Sachs in 1917.
With six other New Yorkers, Goldman endowed a US$150,000 chair in German Art and Culture at his alma mater, Harvard University. |
27334347_2_4 | 27334347 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry%20Goldman | Henry Goldman | Henry Goldman. Art collection
Goldman was a significant art collector. His collection focused on "Renaissance Italian, Dutch and Flemish paintings." For example, he purchased Portrait of a Man Sitting by Frans Hals for US$175,000 in 1916. |
27334347_2_5 | 27334347 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry%20Goldman | Henry Goldman | Henry Goldman. Personal life
Goldman married Babette Kaufman Goldberg. They resided at 998 Fifth Avenue in Manhattan, New York City. They had two sons, Robert Goldman and Henry Goldman Jr., and a daughter, Florence Vogel. |
27334347_2_6 | 27334347 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry%20Goldman | Henry Goldman | Henry Goldman. Death
Goldman died on April 4, 1937 in New York City. He was 79 years old. He was buried at the Salem Fields Cemetery in Brooklyn, New York. |
27334352_0_0 | 27334352 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hohe%20Matze | Hohe Matze | Hohe Matze.
The Hohe Matze, also known as the Hohe Mätze, is a mountain in the southern part of the Fichtel Mountains of central Germany. It lies between Nagel and Tröstau, and its high summit is a jumble of oval-shaped rocks. There are numerous trails through its wooded slopes. |
27334352_0_1 | 27334352 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hohe%20Matze | Hohe Matze | Hohe Matze.
On the Hohe Matze was once supposed to have been the castle of Karlstein, but there is no record of it in historical documents. Its name, given in 1393 as mazen, and later as meze or mätze, translates into high German as Weideberg or "willow mountain". |
27334352_0_2 | 27334352 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hohe%20Matze | Hohe Matze | Hohe Matze.
The watershed between the North Sea and the Black Sea runs over the Hohe Matze, as does the 50th parallel and the Höhenweg walking trail. |
27334360_0_0 | 27334360 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christopher%20Buckley%20%28poet%29 | Christopher Buckley (poet) | Christopher Buckley (poet). Christopher Buckley (born 1948) is an American poet.
Buckley was born in Arcata, California. He graduated from St. Mary's College with a BA, San Diego State University with a MA, and University of California, Irvine with an MFA.
He taught at Fresno State University, University of California, Santa Barbara, Murray State University, West Chester University, and University of California, Riverside. |
27334360_1_0 | 27334360 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christopher%20Buckley%20%28poet%29 | Christopher Buckley (poet) | Christopher Buckley (poet). Awards
2007 Guggenheim Fellowship
Fulbright Award in Creative Writing
four Pushcart Prizes
2001 and 1984 NEA grants in poetry |
27334360_1_1 | 27334360 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christopher%20Buckley%20%28poet%29 | Christopher Buckley (poet) | Christopher Buckley (poet). Works
"Sky", UPNE
Blue autumn: poems, Copper Beech Press, 1990,
Dark matter: poems, Copper Beech Press, 1993,
Star Apocrypha, Northwestern University Press, 2001,
Greatest hits, 1978-2000, Pudding House Publications, 2001,
And the sea: poems, Sheep Meadow Press, 2006,
Sleepwalk: California dreamin' and a last dance with the '60s, Eastern Washington University Press, 2006
Modern history: prose poems 1987-2007, Tupelo Press, 2008,
Rolling the Bones: poems, UT Press, 2009,
One for the Money: The Sentence as a Poetic Form, A Poetry Workshop Handbook and Anthology., Lynx House Press, 2012, |
27334360_1_2 | 27334360 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christopher%20Buckley%20%28poet%29 | Christopher Buckley (poet) | Christopher Buckley (poet). Memoir
Cruising state: growing up in southern California, University of Nevada Press, 1994, |
27334360_2_0 | 27334360 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christopher%20Buckley%20%28poet%29 | Christopher Buckley (poet) | Christopher Buckley (poet). Editor
Naming the Lost: The Fresno Poets (Interviews & Essays. edited by Christopher Buckley (Stephen F. Austin University Press, 2021) |
27334360_2_1 | 27334360 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christopher%20Buckley%20%28poet%29 | Christopher Buckley (poet) | Christopher Buckley (poet). Editor
Condition of the Spirit - The Life and Work of Larry Levis. edited by Christopher Buckley & Alexander Long (Eastern Washington University, 2004) |
27334360_2_2 | 27334360 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christopher%20Buckley%20%28poet%29 | Christopher Buckley (poet) | Christopher Buckley (poet). Editor
How much earth: the Fresno poets, Editors Christopher Buckley, David Oliveira, M. L. Williams, Heyday Books, 2001, |
27334360_2_3 | 27334360 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christopher%20Buckley%20%28poet%29 | Christopher Buckley (poet) | Christopher Buckley (poet). Editor
The geography of home: California's poetry of place, Editors Christopher Buckley, Gary Young, Heyday Books, 1999, |
27334385_0_0 | 27334385 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Los%20Angeles%20Port%20Police%20Association | Los Angeles Port Police Association | Los Angeles Port Police Association.
The Los Angeles Port Police Association, Inc (LAPPA) is the official employees organization of Port police officers. The Association was incorporated on January 5, 1993. |
27334385_0_1 | 27334385 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Los%20Angeles%20Port%20Police%20Association | Los Angeles Port Police Association | Los Angeles Port Police Association.
The purpose of the police association is to represent its active members in employment relations and matters of working conditions with the City of Los Angeles. Additionally, LAPPA is actively involved in supporting and promoting the surrounding communities of San Pedro and Wilmington. |
27334385_0_2 | 27334385 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Los%20Angeles%20Port%20Police%20Association | Los Angeles Port Police Association | Los Angeles Port Police Association.
In furtherance of its goals, the Association is an affiliate member of the International Longshore and Warehouse Union as local 65. The ILWU represents 42,000 members in over 60 local unions in the states of California, Washington, Oregon, Alaska and Hawaii. |
27334385_0_3 | 27334385 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Los%20Angeles%20Port%20Police%20Association | Los Angeles Port Police Association | Los Angeles Port Police Association.
As of December 2005, and together with the Los Angeles Police Command Officers Association, the Los Angeles Port Police Association was one of the few unions to be up-to-date with its financial reports to the State of California. |
27334385_0_4 | 27334385 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Los%20Angeles%20Port%20Police%20Association | Los Angeles Port Police Association | Los Angeles Port Police Association.
The Los Angeles Port Police Association did not file returns with the Internal Revenue Service for three years in a row, and the Internal Revenue Service revoked its 501(c)(5) tax-exempt status on October 15, 2010. |
27334391_0_0 | 27334391 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rancho%20San%20Bernardo%20%28Snook%29 | Rancho San Bernardo (Snook) | Rancho San Bernardo (Snook).
Rancho San Bernardo was a Mexican land grant in present-day San Diego County, California with two square leagues given in 1842 by Governor Juan B. Alvarado and an additional two square leagues given in 1845 by Governor Pío Pico to José Francisco Snook. The grant was between present-day Escondido and Poway, and encompassed present-day Rancho Bernardo, 4S Ranch, the San Pasqual Valley, and Lake Hodges. |
27334391_0_1 | 27334391 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rancho%20San%20Bernardo%20%28Snook%29 | Rancho San Bernardo (Snook) | Rancho San Bernardo (Snook). History
Joseph Snook (1798–1848), an Englishman, had been since 1824 a mariner along the Mexican coast, in the employ of Virmond, as master of the English brig Avacucho and later of the Mexican brig Catalina. In 1833, he became a Mexican citizen, and changed his name to Jose Francisco Snook. In 1837, Snook married Maria Antonia Alvarado (1811–), daughter of Juan Bautista Alvarado, grantee of Rancho Rincon del Diablo, which formed the north boundary of Rancho San Bernardo. In 1838, Snook and his wife took over an portion (known as the “Inverness Pocket”) of Berry’s Rancho Punta de los Reyes grant near Tomales Bay, and eventually gained title to it from Governor Alvarado. In 1839, Snook sold this land to Antonio Osio, and they returned to San Diego County. By 1842, Snook had received the two square league Rancho San Bernardo land grant from Governor Alvarado. In 1845 Snook convinced Governor Pico to add two square leagues. While Snook was away at sea, the rancho became the site of the 1846 Mexican–American War Battle of San Pasqual. Snook died in 1848 and his widow married Henry Clayton, who came to San Diego with the Mexican boundary survey. |
27334391_0_2 | 27334391 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rancho%20San%20Bernardo%20%28Snook%29 | Rancho San Bernardo (Snook) | Rancho San Bernardo (Snook).
With the cession of California to the United States following the Mexican-American War, the 1848 Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo provided that the land grants would be honored. As required by the Land Act of 1851, a claim for Rancho San Bernardo was filed with the Public Land Commission in 1852, and the grant was patented to María Antonia Alvarado de Snook in 1874. |
27334391_0_3 | 27334391 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rancho%20San%20Bernardo%20%28Snook%29 | Rancho San Bernardo (Snook) | Rancho San Bernardo (Snook).
In 1867, Snook's heirs sold Rancho San Bernardo to Thomas Fox acting for James McCoy, sheriff and state senator in 1868. McCoy had come to San Diego in 1850 as a soldier, and become one of the most influential citizens of the early American days. McCoy sold to Charles Wetmore, Sylvester Lyman and Omar Oaks. In 1886, Charles Snook of England sued Wetmore, Lyman and Oaks to recover a 2/9 interest in Rancho San Bernardo. |
27334391_0_4 | 27334391 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rancho%20San%20Bernardo%20%28Snook%29 | Rancho San Bernardo (Snook) | Rancho San Bernardo (Snook). See also
Ranchos of California
List of Ranchos of California |
27334408_0_0 | 27334408 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mission%3A%20Impossible%20vs.%20the%20Mob | Mission: Impossible vs. the Mob | Mission: Impossible vs. the Mob.
Mission: Impossible vs. the Mob is a 1968 American spy film. It is the first film based on the television series Mission: Impossible, consisting of a compilation of a two-part episode of the original series from 1967 called "The Council". |
27334408_0_1 | 27334408 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mission%3A%20Impossible%20vs.%20the%20Mob | Mission: Impossible vs. the Mob | Mission: Impossible vs. the Mob.
The film was released in parts of Europe and Australia. Theatrical posters were released for its screening in Australia. |
27334408_1_0 | 27334408 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mission%3A%20Impossible%20vs.%20the%20Mob | Mission: Impossible vs. the Mob | Mission: Impossible vs. the Mob. See also
To Trap a Spy, The Spy with My Face, One Spy Too Many, One of Our Spies Is Missing, The Spy in the Green Hat, The Karate Killers, The Helicopter Spies, and How to Steal the World-similar movies made up of episodes from the TV series The Man from U.N.C.L.E. |
27334425_0_0 | 27334425 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aleksandar%20Dubljevi%C4%87 | Aleksandar Dubljević | Aleksandar Dubljević.
Aleksandar Dubljević (Cyrillic: Александар Дубљeвић; born 9 March 1985) is a Montenegrin retired football defender. |
27334425_0_1 | 27334425 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aleksandar%20Dubljevi%C4%87 | Aleksandar Dubljević | Aleksandar Dubljević. Club career
Born in Nikšić, he made his senior debut with FK Sutjeska Nikšić in the First League of Serbia and Montenegro in 2003. He had a short spell with another local club, FK Čelik Nikšić, playing in the Second League group South, before rejoining Sutjeska where he would stay the following six seasons. |
27334425_0_2 | 27334425 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aleksandar%20Dubljevi%C4%87 | Aleksandar Dubljević | Aleksandar Dubljević.
In summer 2010 he moved to FK Inđija, a newly promoted side in the Serbian SuperLiga, but in the following winter he was back with Sutjeska. In 2011 after a short spell with his former club FK Čelik Nikšić in the Montenegrin Second League, he joined Azerbaijani side Turan Tovuz PFC in the Azerbaijan Premier League. In summer 2012 he was back with now promoted FK Čelik Nikšić having come in time to play in the 2011–12 Montenegrin Cup final in which Čelik has won Rudar by 2–1 with Dubljević scoring the first goal of his team. |
27334425_0_3 | 27334425 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aleksandar%20Dubljevi%C4%87 | Aleksandar Dubljević | Aleksandar Dubljević. Honours
Čelik Nikšić
Montenegrin Second League: 2011–12
Montenegrin Cup: 2012 |
27334425_1_0 | 27334425 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aleksandar%20Dubljevi%C4%87 | Aleksandar Dubljević | Aleksandar Dubljević. 1985 births
Living people
Sportspeople from Nikšić
Association football defenders
Serbia and Montenegro footballers
Montenegrin footballers
FK Sutjeska Nikšić players
FK Čelik Nikšić players
FK Inđija players
Turan-Tovuz IK players
FK Mornar players
FK Rudar Pljevlja players
Montenegrin First League players
Azerbaijan Premier League players
Serbian SuperLiga players
Montenegrin expatriate footballers
Expatriate footballers in Serbia
Montenegrin expatriate sportspeople in Serbia
Expatriate footballers in Azerbaijan
Montenegrin expatriate sportspeople in Azerbaijan |
27334452_0_0 | 27334452 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help%20Me%20%28House%29 | Help Me (House) | Help Me (House).
"Help Me" is Episode 22, the season finale of the sixth season of the American medical drama House. It first aired on May 17, 2010. The episode covers a crane collapse in which House tries to save one of the victims, Hanna, who is trapped in rubble. "Help Me" was positively received by critics. |
27334452_0_1 | 27334452 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help%20Me%20%28House%29 | Help Me (House) | Help Me (House). Plot
House (Hugh Laurie), gives Cuddy a book written by her great-grandfather as a housewarming present. He then arrives at a downtown building, where a crane collapsed and caused an accident that injured numerous people. House, Cuddy, and House's team roam the area diagnosing and treating victims, until they come across the crane operator, who ostensibly fell asleep despite being overloaded with caffeine. House deduces the operator must have passed out and sends him to Princeton-Plainsboro to be diagnosed. He attempts to go with him, but is held back by Cuddy. |
27334452_0_2 | 27334452 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help%20Me%20%28House%29 | Help Me (House) | Help Me (House).
While taking a break, House hears a sound similar to that of a person banging on a steel pipe. He informs the emergency officials, who attempt to communicate with anyone possibly trapped beneath the rubble, but they give up after receiving no response. House decides to go looking himself, and crawls under the mountain of rubble until he reaches a deep cavity and finds a trapped woman named Hanna (China Shavers). |
27334452_0_3 | 27334452 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help%20Me%20%28House%29 | Help Me (House) | Help Me (House).
As House treats Hanna while waiting for reinforcements, he also begins the differential on the crane operator through the phone and speaks with Cuddy, who reveals that she has gotten engaged to Lucas. House suggests that the crane operator has a brain lesion and orders an MRI. The situation is exacerbated when the emergency official realizes the support beam pinning Hanna, the trapped woman, is also under a mountain of rubble that could collapse. The equipment that can free her is hours away from arriving, so the official suggests amputation. Both Hanna and House refuse. |
27334452_0_4 | 27334452 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help%20Me%20%28House%29 | Help Me (House) | Help Me (House).
The crane operator begins bleeding from the eyes during the MRI and House attempts to return to Princeton-Plainsboro to diagnose him, but without his presence Hanna suffers a panic attack. Too much time has now passed and Hanna is at severe risk for crush syndrome. |
27334452_0_5 | 27334452 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help%20Me%20%28House%29 | Help Me (House) | Help Me (House).
House then gets into an argument with Cuddy. Cuddy claims House is only refusing amputation to oppose her, bitter over her engagement with Lucas, at which point House calls her a pathetic narcissist. Cuddy then tells House to move on with his life, and insults House further by telling him that she and Wilson are moving on with their own lives and the only one left behind is House, who has nothing. |
27334452_0_6 | 27334452 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help%20Me%20%28House%29 | Help Me (House) | Help Me (House).
Hanna refuses the amputation, listening to House's earlier advice, but House soon arrives. To Cuddy's surprise, House tells Hanna she should amputate. He then answers her earlier question of what had happened to his own leg, by telling the story of his infarction and his own refusal of the suggested amputation. |
27334452_0_7 | 27334452 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help%20Me%20%28House%29 | Help Me (House) | Help Me (House).
House brings the electric saw and a scalpel to the scene, and explains that he cannot give her anesthesia, since it is too risky, forcing him to amputate the leg with her awake, followed by her screams. She is immediately taken to an ambulance, which then departs for Princeton-Plainsboro. On the ride back, House continues the differential on the crane operator through the phone and deduces that he has a spinal cyst. Hanna suddenly has trouble breathing. House realizes she has a fat embolism, caused by the amputation. Impossible to treat, she dies before arriving at Princeton-Plainsboro. |
27334452_0_8 | 27334452 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help%20Me%20%28House%29 | Help Me (House) | Help Me (House).
At the hospital, House encounters Foreman, who tries to lend support about what happened with Hanna. He doesn't accept the offer and leaves the hospital. While Thirteen leaves a leave request letter in front of Taub, House arrives home. |
27334452_0_9 | 27334452 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help%20Me%20%28House%29 | Help Me (House) | Help Me (House).
In pain from his leg, various wounds, Hanna's death, and Cuddy's earlier comment, he rips his bathroom mirror out of the wall revealing a hidden cavity behind it, where he had a final stash of Vicodin. Collapsing, he opens a bottle and takes out two pills, thinking that Vicodin is his only way of feeling better. As he is getting ready to take them, Cuddy arrives. She reveals that she ended the relationship with Lucas, because she realized that she truly loves House. Despite having a new fiancé, all she can think about is House, and couldn't live in peace without knowing if they could ever work as a couple. House stands up and walks over to Cuddy and then they share in a tender kiss. House stops and asks if he is hallucinating this and she asks if he took the Vicodin. Realizing it was still in his hand, House drops the pills on the floor. They both smile at each other, sharing another kiss and joining hands. |
27334452_1_0 | 27334452 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help%20Me%20%28House%29 | Help Me (House) | Help Me (House). Filming
This episode was shot entirely using Canon EOS 5D Mark II cameras.
These digital SLR cameras are primarily designed for still-picture photographs, but are one of the first to include high-definition video recording capability. These allowed the production team to work in very tight spaces, using minimal lighting, while also offering a very shallow depth of field putting the backgrounds out of focus, and making the work very challenging for the focus pullers. Original plans only included some scenes to be shot digitally, but eventually the Canon 5D cameras were used for the entire episode.
After successfully using the cameras for scenes on the episode "Lockdown" director of photography Gale Tattersall convinced producers to film an entire episode using the cameras. The episode was filmed using a wide variety of lenses, on loan from Canon. Motion stabilization rigs were also used to make the cameras more like motion picture cameras. |
27334452_2_0 | 27334452 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help%20Me%20%28House%29 | Help Me (House) | Help Me (House). Ratings and viewership
The episode was watched by 11.06 million American viewers, the 17th highest watched program of the week. Between the 18–49 category, the show received 5.6 million viewers and was the 9th most watched program within the 18–49 viewers. The program, broadcast by Global Total, was watched by 2.55 million Canadians, making it the 4th highest watched program of the week in Canada. |
27334452_2_1 | 27334452 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help%20Me%20%28House%29 | Help Me (House) | Help Me (House). Critical response
The critical response to the episode was highly positive. |
27334452_2_2 | 27334452 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help%20Me%20%28House%29 | Help Me (House) | Help Me (House). Reception
Jonah Krakow of IGN gave the episode an "Incredible" rating of 9.5 out of 10, calling it "fantastic". Jonah Krakow praised the episode's pacing by saying: "This episode didn't let up for one minute, because even while House was trying to save Hannah under threat of the building shifting and crushing him, he had to deal with his personal feelings for Cuddy (who had just gotten engaged to Lucas) while also trying to diagnose the crane operator (at the hospital with his team) via cellphone. In a way, this episode reminded me of one of my favorites from this season, "5 to 9", where Cuddy's jam-packed day at the hospital was spotlighted. Like that episode, just when you thought House and his team were in the clear, there was another speed bump in the road. For example, that amputation was as riveting and horrifying a scene as I can remember... and there were still 20 minutes and plenty of brutal twists and turns left in the episode. |
27334452_2_3 | 27334452 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help%20Me%20%28House%29 | Help Me (House) | Help Me (House). Reception
Unrealityshout.com praised the episode and said that: "...it must be said, Hugh Laurie acts his socks off in this episode. I think this is one of the few times another human being has seen House at his most vulnerable. He develops an attachment to Hannah, and I think a lot hinges on his ability to save her. In a series where House has virtually phoned in his diagnoses, here he is with his sleeves rolled up amputating a woman's leg. And still he can't save her. And Hugh Laurie had sheer desperation in his eyes throughout those scenes which actually connected with me as a viewer." |
27334452_2_4 | 27334452 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help%20Me%20%28House%29 | Help Me (House) | Help Me (House). Reception
Zack Handlen of The A.V. Club gave the episode a B rating. Handlen wrote: "Help Me" is strong, no question. I cared about the Patient Of The Week for the first time in a very long while (I'm talking about Hanna, not the crane operator, who was only there to give Coke Zero something to do), and while it was easy to predict at the outset she wasn't going to make it, I was still upset when she died. Partly that's because, once she was rescued from under the building, I assumed she was going to be okay—it's an obvious fake out, but an effective one. Plus, as familiar as so much of this was (how many medical dramas have had an episode with a patient trapped under rubble?), it was done well, and Hugh Laurie was so strong, that it really made Hanna's fate matter." |
27334452_2_5 | 27334452 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help%20Me%20%28House%29 | Help Me (House) | Help Me (House). Reception
TVFantatic.com gave the episode a 4.6/5.0 and said that "...after Cuddy's cutting diatribe on "Help Me" ("You're gonna risk her life just to save her leg? Really worked out well for you, didn't it?"), House finally realised... he's miserable and alone, no matter how he tries to analyze it... this vulnerability didn't just guarantee Hugh Laurie an Emmy, it made Cuddy fans around the globe celebrate." |
27334452_2_6 | 27334452 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help%20Me%20%28House%29 | Help Me (House) | Help Me (House). Reception
Screenrant.com reviewed the episode very positively saying: "Tonight's season finale of House however, was not only beautiful masterpiece in both acting and writing, but also a refreshing return to basics. It included so many jaw-dropping, heart stopping moments that this episode could easily be considered one of the best episodes of House to date because it not only gave fans what they've always wanted (House and Cuddy – together), but it also provides an amazing platform to start off the seventh season." |
27334454_0_0 | 27334454 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Job%20Ross%20House | Job Ross House | Job Ross House.
Job Ross House at 817 Exchange Street is a historic house in Astoria in the U.S. state of Oregon. The house was built by Job Ross about 1860. The one-and-half story home was also known as Klamath House and is not listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The address of the house was 361 Astor using the street names in force until the late 1890s. Then it became 361 Exchange, until the change in numbering in the 1955, when it assumed its current number. Job Ross lived in the house until his death on April 11, 1895, and his son George W. Ross lived there in 1896. |
27334454_0_1 | 27334454 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Job%20Ross%20House | Job Ross House | Job Ross House.
The Loyal Order of Moose acquired the building in 1925 for use as a lodge, and dedicated it for this purpose on July 1 of that year. The Moose Order moved to a new lodge in 1948. It was used as a Mormon meetinghouse from 1950 to 1966. |
27334455_0_0 | 27334455 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ball-in-a-maze%20puzzle | Ball-in-a-maze puzzle | Ball-in-a-maze puzzle.
Ball-in-a-maze puzzles are dexterity puzzles which involve manipulating either a maze (or labyrinth) or one or several balls so that the ball or balls are manoeuvered towards a goal. Toys like this have been popular since "Pigs in Clover" was invented by Charles Martin Crandall in the 1880s, with the patent being applied for in 1889. |
27334455_0_1 | 27334455 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ball-in-a-maze%20puzzle | Ball-in-a-maze puzzle | Ball-in-a-maze puzzle.
In some versions a wooden labyrinth is tilted using two knobs and the ball has to be navigated past a series of holes and obstacles. A magnet is used in other versions where the balls have to be manipulated rather than the maze. |
27334455_0_2 | 27334455 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ball-in-a-maze%20puzzle | Ball-in-a-maze puzzle | Ball-in-a-maze puzzle.
Another version, usually molded in transparent plastic, uses the ball as a key to opening an internal compartment by manipulating the ball into position, and then operating a sliding mechanism that releases an access door. They are sometimes called "Money Maze" banks or puzzle boxes. |
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