Wikipedia:Articles for creation/2006-02-28

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David Jin
David Jin is currently a junior at Washington University In St. Louis. He is studying to become a Biomedical Engineer.

Josh Appignanesi
Josh Appignanesi is a filmmaker based in London, UK. Born in London, he attended King's College Cambridge where he read anthropology. He made several award-winning short films and a TV documentary, before the release of his debut feature film as director and co-writer, Song Of Songs (2006).

Song of Songs
Song of Songs (2006) is a fiction feature film directed by Josh Appignanesi and written by Josh Appignanesi and Jay Basu. It stars Natalie Press and Joel Chalfen. Press plays a devoutly orthodox Jewish young woman who tries to bring her estranged, secular brother back into the fold.

Made in the UK, it was released there in February 2006 after winning a special commendation for Best British Film at the Edinburgh International Film Festival 2005 and a nomination for the Tiger Awards at the International Film Festival Rotterdam (2006). The film was produced by Gayle Griffiths who won the Alfred Dunhill UK Talent Film Award at the London Film Festival 2005 for the production.

Cayman Islands Investment Bureau
The Cayman Islands Investment Bureau is a government agency that was establsihed to promote investment in the Cayman Islands. The Investment Bureau offers several free services to foreign investors seeking to establish a business in the Cayman Islands. The Investment Bureau also provides assistance to local small businesses, particularly through free workshops and seminars on issues of interest to entrepreneurs.

Craig Kingsbury
{| class="navbox collapsible collapsed" style="text-align: left; border: 0px; margin-top: 0.2em;" ! |  Archived discussion follows below. Please do not modify it. 
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 * This request for creation has been reviewed. The reviewer comments appear below the article text.

Maldives Commonwealth history
When did Maldives become a part of he Commonealth? What does Maldives have in common with Australia? What are the differences beteen Maldives and Ausralia in government, economy, laws, Education, Ethnic groups and religious beliefs.

KSFX-TV
KSFX is the Fox affiliate in Springfield, Mo.

It's former call letters are KDEB-TV and KMTC-TV.

KSFX is owned by Nexstar Broadcasting, Inc.

Analog Channel 27 Digital Channel 28

Korla Pandit - aka The Godfather of Exotica
removed apparent copyvio from

Pintoid (Altoid Box Camera)
Pintoids are pinhole cameras made from Altoid containers. A piece of pop culture transformed into something useful. An instrument to view the world with a dry, distorted, sense of humor. They tend to create curiously strong images.

Shinobu Satouchi
Shinobu Satouchi is a seiyu who is best known as the voice of Fox McCloud in the Japanese versions of Nintendo's Star Fox series, and in the Super Smash Bros. series. He has also done the Japanese voice of Gill in Dragon Ball GT.

Rusty Leaved Alpenrose
The Rusty-Leaved Alpen-Rose is an evergreen plant. It can be found growing in the Swiss Alps in woodland, on mountain slopes or scrub. It likes dappled shade, shady edges, light and sandy moist soils and medium, moist soils and it flowers in June. As it prefers cool temperatures, the warmer the weather, the more shade it needs.

It can grow to a height of 1.5m and it has pink flowers and green leaves with rusty-coloured edges.

Bill Fleckenstein
Bill Fleckenstein is a hedge fund manager in Seattle. He writes a column, The Contrarian Chronicles, for MSN Money. He has a website, FleckensteinCapital.com, and you can subscribe to his newsletter.

Cytochalasins: An overview
Cytochalasins are fungal metabolites that have the ability to bind to actin filaments and block polymerization and the elongation of actin. As a result of the inhibition of actin polymerization, cytochalasins can change cellular morphology, inhibit cellular processes such as cell division, and even cause cells to undergo apoptosis (Haidle and Myers, 2004). Cytochalasins have the ability to permeate cell membranes, prevent cellular translocation and cause cells to enucleate (Cooper, 1987). Cytochalasins can also have an effect on other aspects on biological processes unrelated to actin polymerization. For example, cytochalasins A and B can also inhibit the transport of monosaccharides across the cell membrane (Cooper, 1987), cytochalasin H has been found to regulate plant growth (Cox et al., 1983), cytochalasin D inhibits protein synthesis (Ornelles et al., 1986) and cytochalasin E prevents angiogenesis (Udagawa et al., 2000).

Binding to Actin Filaments
Cytochalasins are known to bind to the barbed, fast growing plus ends of microfilaments, which then blocks both the assembly and disassembly of individual actin monomers from the bound end. Once bound, cytochalasin essentially caps the end of the new actin filament. One cytochalasin will bind to one actin filament (Cooper, 1987). Studies done with Cytochalasin D (CD) have found that the formation of CD-actin dimers, contain ATP bound actin (Goddette and Frieden, 1986). These CD-actin dimers are reduced to CD-actin monomers as a result of ATP hydrolysis. The resulting CD-actin monomer can bind ATP-actin monomer to reform the CD-actin dimer (Cooper, 1987). CD is very effective; only low concentrations (0.2 μM) are needed to prevent membrane ruffling and disrupt treadmilling (Yahara et al., 1982). Yahara et al. (1982) found that higher concentrations (2-20 μM) of CD were needed to remove stress fibers. Yahara et al. (1982) analyzed the effects of many different cytochalasins had on actin filaments.

Uses and Applications of Cytochalasins
Actin microfilaments have been widely studied using cytochalasins. Due to their chemical nature, cytochalasins can help researchers understand the importance of actin in various biological processes. In addition, cytochalasins have been used as actin binding proteins. The use of cytochalasins have allowed researchers to better understand actin polymerization, cell motility, ruffling, cell division, contraction, and cell stiffness. The use of cytochalasins has been so important to understanding cytoskeletal movement and many other biological processes, researchers have created two synthetic cytochalasins (Haidle and Myers, 2004).

This link can take you to the article which shows the structures of the synthetic cytochalasins the authors synthesized and how they did it. http://www.pnas.org/cgi/reprint/101/33/12048

The MIT Muses
The MIT Muses is an all-girl acappela group who perform at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Harlo Jones
Harlo Lloyd Jones (December 29, 1923 - October 1, 2005) was a World War II bomber pilot with the RCAF (Royal Canadian Air Force).

Born in Dinsmore, Saskatchewan to a prominent family (Harlo's father Luther Jones owned several businesses, including Dinsmore's first power plant), young Harlo was known by the nickname "Squirt" because of his small stature. His older prother, RCAF pilot Dale Jones, was shot down and killed in 1940 during the Battle of Dunkirk. Undeterred, Harlo was eager to join the RCAF as soon as he was of age. Refused twice at the Saskatoon recruiting center because of his small size, he was eventually accepted with a recorded weight of 118 pounds and a height of 5 feet, 10 inches.

After training at various sites across Canada he was assigned to No. 408 Squadron of 6 RCAF Group, RAF Bomber Command at Linton-on-Ouse, Yorkshire. Harlo flew Avro Lancaster and Handley Page Halifax bombers in 32 sorties against targets in Germany and Occupied Europe. His final sortie was on December 5, 1944. Just shy of his 21st birthday, he was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross, promoted to Flight Lieutenant, and released of his duties.

He returned to Canada where he joined the GSC (Geological Survey of Canada), working with a crew in the bush north of Flin Flon, Manitoba. He married Ethel Cloake, a nurse, in 1946. He earned a bachelor of arts at the University of British Columbia and worked as a reporter for the Vancouver Sun, and later, the Edmonton Bulletin. He rejoined the RCAF in 1950 and served for another 20 years before managing a hospital in Winnipeg.

Harlo published the first of his two memoirs in 1995. O Little Town: Remembering Life in a Prairie Village detailed his childhood in Dinsmore. Bomber Pilot: A Canadian Youth's War followed in 2001, in which he recounted his days as a bomber pilot in World War II.

Harlo Jones died on October 1, 2005, in Winnipeg, Manitoba after suffering a stroke. He was 81. He was survived by son Maldwyn and daughter Kathryn, and predeceased by a son and by his wife, Ethel, who died in 2003.

repuplic health
hi iam khamees elsaidi! i have bachlori in medical labaratory technique and i have full experiance so i would like shre you in any company if you like contact me at khames1980@hotmail.com tel: 00970-599-895280

yours khamees

Dallamite
Dallamite is a blue quartz like mineral found in the Lake District of the United Kingdom. Mined locally in Milnthorpe it is prided for its brightness and multiple uses.

tab licensing
Tab licensing is a proposal by the mangeing director of mxtabs directed to sheet music companies to ensure the correct legal usage of music tabs.

Huw Ellis
Huw Ellis is a funny little lad who resides in Wales. He is a bit thick and wears a Titleist hat.

Kayalpattinam

 * 1) Redirectkayalpatnam

usefulness formula
A pseudo scientific formula which expresses the general relationship between the terms it uses:

usefulness = (functionality x availability) - burden

It follows the formula that the most usefull things will be: muti-functional, portable, reliable, cheap and low-maintenance.

Elversele
The town of Elversele is a part of the municipality of Temse located in Flanders, one of the three regions of Belgium, and in the Flemish province of East Flanders.

Dan Aldrich
Dan Aldrich is a high school grade guy who is very math smart and bright. He hates cliches and has a very bad temperament. He has a younger brother who also attends school. but not as smart as Dan is.

Richard Hope, British actor
Richard Hope is a British TV actor who starred in ITV's MIT: Murder Investigation Team as DS Barry Purvis, as well in a number of other dramas like BBC1's A Touch of Frost, and ITV's Heartbeat and Poirot.

Order Tryblidiida
i think you should make an article on order tryblidiida in class monoplacophora of the mollusca phylum

Auggie Wren's Christmas Story
Auggie Wren's Christmas Story was first published on 12/25/1990 in the New York Times. It provided the basis for the movie Smoke.

RANKL
RANKL

RANKL or RANK-L is a medical abreviation for Receptor Activator of NF-κB Ligand, a substance linked to bone resorption. Also known as Osteoprotegerin ligand (OPGL).

Fast Car (magazine)
Fast Car Magazine is an UK-based woodpulp publication that has been in circulation since the mid-1980s. Up until recently, the magazine was published by Highbury Leisure, but it - and a series of other publication - was bought up by Future Publishing in mid-2005.

Fast Car Magazine is known as FC or FUK (Fastcar United Kingdom) among friends. It started off as a performance car magazine, but has been through several significant re-vamps and is currently aimed at readers interested in modified cars.

As part of the modified car culture, Fast Car magazine is a 'lads' magazine: It features highly modified vehicles, but is also taking a line involving a lot of lifestyle magazine, including up to three "honeyz" - scantily clad ladies.

Unusual in the magazine-publishing world, Fast Car's tone is very conversational. Fast Car staff are often featured in the magazine themselves, and much of the copy is interjected with comments made by the editor or other members of FC staff. The conversational tone and self-ironic image means that Fast Car is a refreshing read compared to more 'serious' publications.

Fast Car's main UK competitors are Max Power and Red Line. Circulation-wise, the Audited Bureau of Circulation reports that Fast Car sells 100,000 copies of its magazine every year - including a not insignificant international circulation.

The magazine is operating a web-site available on www.fastcar.co.uk.

Andrew Hageman (soccer)
Andrew Hageman (born 17 July,1986 in Laytown), Republic of Ireland is a professional Irish footballer who currently plays central defender for Drogheda United in the Premier Division Football League of Ireland. He has played for the East Meath Utd and at under 21 for Drogheda u-21s.

Andrew was selected player of the year and was given the award in November 2005 .He is currently under a two year contract with Drogheda United.

He is one of seven brothers who from an early age showed a great ability to play sobber. His hobbies include Snooker, Pool, Darts & Swimming.

Oven glove
An oven glove or oven mitt is a type of glove with heat insulaton. Oven gloves are used for protecting your hands from burns when handling hot objects, usually in hot ovens, hence the name.

One well-known brand of oven glove is the Ove-Glove.

__ SAFETY INFORMATION __


 * Damp or wet oven gloves should never be used until completely dry.
 * They are not designed as a permanent protection against hot objects.
 * Oven gloves should be kept away from flames and heating elements.

Langford
Langford is a village in the district of Mid Bedfordshire in Bedfordshire.

Eastern Bavaria
Eastern Bavaria means the two districts Niederbayern (Lower Bavaria) and Oberpfalz (Upper Palatinate) in the east of Bavaria, Germany.

Spelsau (Old Norwegian Short Tail Landrace)
Spelsau is a sheep race (Old Norwegian Short Tail Landrace). Ideal weight ca 65 – 70 kg.

Many consider it to be the original sheep race in Norway. It is well adapted to the clima and was a domestic animal from the iron age. The spelsau stock makes about 20% of the complete number of sheep in Norway. In Island the spelsau makes 100%

Properties
Originally it is a compact and lightly built and do not need much of concentrated food. The meat has relatively little fat. The Spelsau gives rich amount of milk, stick well together i flock and manages well outdor most of the year. But i it is more exposed to eye desease by eatin the plant Bog Asphodel (Narthecium ossifragum).

Utilization
It gives milk and meat of good qualiy. The wool is special. It ha two layers: An outer longhaired, glossy ondulating layer of wool protecting the undelying layer against wind and rain, an undelying layer which keeps the the sheep warm. The long, protective wool which is used for weaving as hard spun two chord strings, instead of the usual three chord type - and has a beautifukl lustre. This spelsau yarn was used in our old tapistries fro reanaissance and baroque time. The Viking ship sails was made from spelsau yarn. The wool was also in the old days used in clothing because it was leight, stable and absorbed little moisture.

Reference
Tho. B. Kielland: Norsk Billedvev (Fortids kunst i norske bygder).

Lindholt Data.

Bondevennen nr 27/28 - 12 juli 2002.

Calvin Company
Along with Jam-Handy, Wilding, and others, the Calvin Company was one of the major industrial film companies in the United States. For nearly half a century it dominated the field in terms of quantity as well as quality. Calvin handled many accounts of the Fortune 500---such companies as Du Pont, Goodyear, Caterpillar, and General Mills. It pioneered the use of 16mm sound technology, of new Kodak processing methods, and of 8mm film. It won more than its share of accolades at trade festivals. It held nationwide sales and training seminars that attracted a who's who of business. Whatever paid, it made---government films, commercials, educationals, industrials, documentaries, and every variety of short subject.

It happened to be headquartered in Kansas City, Missouri, because a married couple with energy and enterprise, F. O. Calvin and Betty Calvin, were residents there, and operating an advertising agency during the time America was mucking its way through the Depression and American movies were just beginning to talk.

Betty Calvin managed the business side; F. O. Calvin was the salesman. Together they had the idea of investing in the future of 16mm films as an in-house advertising and promotional tool. The third member of the Calvin leadership was Lloyd Thompson, F. O. Calvin's onetime University of Kansas fraternity brother, and a graduate, as so many of the Calvin higher-ups were, in journalism. Thompson and the Calvins raised the capital and in 1931 began production on a modest scale, taking advantage of Kansas City's proximity to locations, industry, and commerce. They were good at selling the Calvin concept, and they signed up accounts that would stay with the company for three decades.

They took other people's bad, amateurish films and fixed them up so they were serviceable. They made their own movies from scratch---short, inexpensive ones in the studio as well as long, big-budget ones on location in other time zones. They went further: They held entrepreneurial conferences and gave advice on how to use the 16mm medium. They also began to manufacture some equipment and boasted an excellent processing laboratory.

World War II proved a gold mine for the Calvin company. F. O. Calvin was a dollar-a-year man for the Navy in Washington, D.C., where he advised on the running of a filmmaking system similar to the Calvin Company's. The Navy wanted Calvin to move his operations to D.C., but F.O. resisted, and the Calvin personnel remained in Kansas City. In effect, Calvin became a military subcontractor, turning out Navy training films, such as informational ones about boiler-room operations on battleships, maintenance of submarine engines, or the handling of PT boats. This proved extremely lucrative for the company at the same time as it built up contacts, prestige, and goodwill for business after the armistice.

By the 1950s, the Calvin firm was a fixture in Kansas City and known as a brand name of merit across the country.

Christian Faith Center and Casey Treat Ministries
Christian Faith Center consists of two major church campuses in South Seattle and South Everett, WA, a network of Connect Groups, Dominion College, Christian Faith School and Bright Beginnings Daycare. At Christian Faith Center, our ongoing vision is to Pastor the Northwest, Teach the Nation, and Inspire the World and part of our vision for growth is reflected in the continued expansion of our facilities. The mission of Christian Faith International is to make successful Christians of all people. Our commitment is to pastor the Northwest, teach the nation and inspire the World.

Guitar Samurai

 * 1) REDIRECT Yoku Hata

[Ernestina, Queensland]
[Ernestina, Queensland]

Ernestina, Queensland, seems to have been situated between Jundah (but well to the north -- beyond Stonehenge) and Longreach in the Outer Barcoo. At one time, there was a mail coach running between Ernestina and Jundah (probably between Longreach and Jundah via Ernestina). I would very much like to learn more about the history of Ernestina and specifically when the place was first settled. Apparently the settlement no longer exists.

morphers
The morphers of the Power Rangers

Calvin Company
Along with Jam-Handy, Wilding, and others, the Calvin Company was one of the major industrial film companies in the United States. For nearly half a century it dominated the field in terms of quantity as well as quality. Calvin handled many accounts of the Fortune 500---such companies as Du Pont, Goodyear, Caterpillar, and General Mills. It pioneered the use of 16mm sound technology, of new Kodak processing methods, and of 8mm film. It won more than its share of accolades at trade festivals. It held nationwide sales and training seminars that attracted a who's who of business. Whatever paid, it made---government films, commercials, educationals, industrials, documentaries, and every variety of short subject.

It happened to be headquartered in Kansas City, Missouri, because a married couple with energy and enterprise, F. O. Calvin and Betty Calvin, were residents there, and operating an advertising agency during the time America was mucking its way through the Depression and American movies were just beginning to talk.

Betty Calvin managed the business side; F. O. Calvin was the salesman. Together they had the idea of investing in the future of 16mm films as an in-house advertising and promotional tool. The third member of the Calvin leadership was Lloyd Thompson, F. O. Calvin's onetime University of Kansas fraternity brother, and a graduate, as so many of the Calvin higher-ups were, in journalism. Thompson and the Calvins raised the capital and in 1931 began production on a modest scale, taking advantage of Kansas City's proximity to locations, industry, and commerce. They were good at selling the Calvin concept, and they signed up accounts that would stay with the company for three decades.

They took other people's bad, amateurish films and fixed them up so they were serviceable. They made their own movies from scratch---short, inexpensive ones in the studio as well as long, big-budget ones on location in other time zones. They went further: They held entrepreneurial conferences and gave advice on how to use the 16mm medium. They also began to manufacture some equipment and boasted an excellent processing laboratory.

In 1935, Calvin produced their first sound film. In 1938, they produced the first industrial film in full sound and full color. In 1940, F. O. Calvin formed the Movie-Mite Corp, a subsidiary that manufactured motion picture projectors and other equipment. Movie-Mite gained prominence through a national award for the use of plastics and manufactured the first desk-sized projector. Hundreds of thousands of Movie-Mite projectors were sold during the 1940s.

World War II proved a gold mine for the Calvin company. F. O. Calvin was a dollar-a-year man for the Navy in Washington, D.C., where he advised on the running of a filmmaking system similar to the Calvin Company's. The Navy wanted Calvin to move his operations to D.C., but F.O. resisted, and the Calvin personnel remained in Kansas City. In effect, Calvin became a military subcontractor, turning out Navy training films, such as informational ones about boiler-room operations on battleships, maintenance of submarine engines, or the handling of PT boats. This proved extremely lucrative for the company at the same time as it built up contacts, prestige, and goodwill for business after the armistice.

By 1947, film equipment that was hard to come by during Calvin's first years of existence were now quite common in the industry thanks to World War II, and F.O. Calvin sensed that this could be a major industry problem. So, the Calvin Company began sponsoring annual "Calvin Workshops" in Kansas City, held to help orient, educate, and improve the work of nontheatrical filmmakers. This workshop attracted over 250 producers and technicians from all over the country every year. Films were produced specially for these workshops by the Calvin people, including "Your Name Here," an intentionally amusing spoof of the generic corporate industrial film that has now gained a devoted cult following thanks to its inclusion on Rick Prelinger's Internet Archive. These films document the culture and consciousness of this industry, about which little has been written.

By the 1950s, the Calvin firm was a fixture in Kansas City and known as a brand name of merit across the country. And the business of making films for businesses was booming. "Calvin turns out 18 million feet of film a year, or enough to make one 16-millimeter strip stretching from Key West to Seattle and part way back," reported one contemporary local newspaper.

The Calvin building was an impressive one. The old New Center Building at Fifteenth and Troost in Kansas City, just east of downtown, had been erected by Robert Altman's grandfather, Frank G. Altman Sr., back in 1907. Frank Sr. had made the mistake of presuming the downtown would spread eastward, which it never did. Consequently, it was one of the few high-rises in the area with plenty of space for a regular staff of two hundred.

The first floor held a magnificent sound stage, 80 by 100 feet with a 30-foot ceiling, converted from the former New Center theatre. The second floor held offices for directors and writers, plus a recording studio. The third and fourth floors were given over to the craft departments---the laboratory, processing, which accounted for at least half of Calvins' income, and printing. The fifth floor held the executive offices. Sixth floor was animation. Seventh floor was the Movie-Mite Corp.

Calvin was also an important venue for the Kansas City arts, employing local acting talent as well as former local bigwigs such as Harry Truman and Walter Cronkite. The Calvin Company was also "home" to every film student and filmmaker in the area for more than 40 years, and many of these local filmmakers and actors went on to have successful careers in Hollywood. Calvin served as the training ground for feature film director Robert Altman, a Kansas City native who also made his first feature film, "The Delinquents," in Kansas City. Prolific television directors Richard Sarafian and Reza Badiyi also got their start at Calvin in the 1950s, as did radio broadcaster turned actor Dick Peabody, the laconic character actor Owen Bush, and Al Christy, an ex-Kansas City insurance man who later became a character actor in California as well. In the 1960s, writer Angelo Bongino, animation artist Richard Corben, and director John Altman got their starts at Calvin, too.

In 1951, Calvin was the first firm licensed by Eastman Kodak to process Kodak's color film. In the mid-1950s, Calvin pioneered the use of 8mm film as well. In the late 1950s and 1960s, Calvin pioneered the use of films in the classroom, and engaged in a pioneering association with the University of Kansas City as Calvin and the university collaborated on educational films for school classrooms, including a widely utilized series on biology in the early Sixties.

It was too good to last, and it didn't. The Calvin organization came under new management in the mid-1950s, and business began to decline thereafter. By the late Sixties, the production staff had been cut drastically. Studios in Louisville, Pittsburgh, and Detroit were sold. Longtime accounts drifted away. Finally, there was only the Calvin operations in Kansas City, where it had all begun, and in the 1980s the company formally dissolved. The seven-story building built by Robert Altman's grandfather at the corner of Truman and Troost stood empty and shimmering. There were newspapers and empty paper cups next to the editing machines, as if people had gotten up and left for a cigarette break.

George's Awkward Partner Thesis
A gentleman called Stephen George was no happy about his deteriorating marriage (and the state of the EU).

Samuel J Arnold
Born 18.9.86 in Redhill, Surrey

Samuel J Arnold is best known for having a brief stint as the boy who turned into a dog on popular children's ITV drama 'WOOF!'. After a one series trial he was not offered a new contract, but this did not phase him in his pursuit of an acting career and he featured in many scaletrix adverts in the late nineties.

He co-wrote and starred in a six part drama for channel 4s 'SAY NO TO DRUGS' campaign, which was sent to schools around the country.

Sam is currently studying history at the University of Leeds after obtaining three As at A-Level. He has been applauded for charity work in his home town of Horley, including one 'fun-run' back in 2002 which he did with his friend Oliver Brown. Sam raised thirty six pounds and ninety one pence for a children's hospice in Tadworth.

He also worked on the new Arsenal stadium development back in January 2006.

Hazel Wolf
Hazel Wolf (born March 10, 1898), (died January 19, 2000) was an environmentalist and activist.

Wolf was born in Victoria, British Columbia but moved to Seattle in 1923. During the Great Depression in the United States, Wolf unionized workers, as an employee of the Works Project Administration. In 1949 she became a US citizen.

In 1979, she helped organize the Indian Conservationist Conference. In 1990, Wolf met a Soviet delegation and held discussions that led to the founding of the Leningrad Audubon Society in Russia. Like former President Jimmy Carter and Senator Dan Evans (Washington), she was sent as an observer to the 1990 Nicaraguan elections.

She was co-founder of the Seattle Audubon Society and helped organize 21 other chapters in the region. In 1997 she was awarded the National Audubon Society's Medal of Excellence.

Until she retired, at the age of 67, Wolf worked for Seattle civil rights attorney John Caughlan.

Wolf is remembered in, "Coming of Age: The Story of Our Century by Those Who've Lived It," 1995, by Studs Terkel and the subject of, "Hazel Wolf: Fighting the Establishment," 2002, by Susan Starbuck.

Hazel Wolf High School is a private Waldorf Education high school named after her. It opened in 1999 in Seattle, Washington.

A2070
The A2070 is an important road in Kent in spite of being only thirteen miles long. It forms the easternmost section of the South Coast Trunk Road, taking over from the A259 at the Romney Marsh hamlet of Brenzett.

The road bypasses the village of Hamstreet and climbs the ridge of clay hills to follow the Marshlink Line to Ashford, where it becomes a dual carriageway until it reaches the M20 motorway at Willesborough.

Beyond this, tha A2070 is an unimproved urban link road to Kennington where it meets the A28. The most modern section fo the road south of Ashford opened in 1994.

Ron Wright
Ron Wright, born 1959, was a founder member (along with Mark Albrow, Alan Fish and Alan Watt) of the Sheffield experimental band, Hula. His role in the band, formed in 1980, was as guitarist and tape manipulator. Hula's sound was a manic mix of funk and punk. They were known for their pyrotechnical live performances, as much a spectacle as an aural experience.

Hula supported Depeche Mode at Wembley arena in 1986, during the Black Celebration tour. Wright said in an interview that the two bands and their roadcrew would relax by playing football against each other in day.

Ron Wright is now a film sound recordist and sound editor based in Sheffield, and he teaches at the Northern Media School. Short films worked on include Bedhead (1999), directed by Susannah Gent and Jelly Dolly (2003), also directed by Susannah Gent.

Chesterfield Elementary School
Chesterfield School is a small school on the outskirts of Keene, NH, and Brattleboro, VT. A K-8 school, containing about 350 people.

I've removed a list of current and recent 8th graders that is probably better not be published online. ×Meegs 00:11, 28 February 2006 (UTC)

Wikigovernment
The purpose of this page is to explore the possibility of using tools such as Wikipedia to come together to govern in a more democratic fashion. Wikipedia offers avenues for political exploration that have not been utilized. The question remains how and if it can be used as a viable means to propose and to pass legislature.

How can Wikipedia be used to promote a more democratic society?

James Ross
British orchestral conductor Dr James Ross was a finalist in the 1998 BBC Philharmonic Conducting Competition, and since then has worked in thirteen countries in Europe, Asia and North America. He is currently conductor of Oxford University Sinfonietta, St Albans Symphony Orchestra and several other UK ensembles.

Training initially as a violinist, he gained extensive orchestral and chamber music experience before working as an assistant for Bernard Haitink's recording of Verdi's 'Don Carlos' with the Royal Opera, London. His repertoire includes over 500 works from the Baroque, through symphonies by Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven, Schubert, Mendelssohn, Brahms, Bruckner, Dvořák, Mahler, Sibelius and Shostakovich, 20th-century scores including Stravinsky, 'The Rite of Spring'; Schoenberg, 'Pierrot Lunaire' and Béla Bartók, 'Music for Strings, Percussion and Celesta', to contemporary music by Boulez, Knussen, Ligeti and Stockhausen. Television credits include ITV1, BBC2 and Channel 4 (UK), TF2 (France) and Maharajah TV (Sri Lanka). Publications include essays and reviews in 'Music and Letters', 'English Historical Review', 'Opera', and book chapters in 'French Music from the Death of Berlioz', published by Ashgate Press in 2006, 'Vincent d'Indy et son temps' (2006) and Nationalism and Identity in Third Republic France (2006).

Parramatta Marist High School
This school is located in Westmead New South Wales

Strictly Taboo
Strictly Taboo is a classic 1995 comedy with a star powered cast. The movie won that year's Best Picture Oscar as well as 8 additional oscars including Best Screenplay, Best Supporting Actor, Best Actress and Best Director. It's star filled cast includes Jack Nicholson, Robert De Niro, Annette Bening, Jimmy Stewart, Jack Lemmon, Jodie Foster, Walter Matthau, Marlon Brando, Gregory Peck and many, many more!


 * Decline. No such film exists. ×Meegs 00:08, 28 February 2006 (UTC)

Andreas Nachama
Andreas Nachama is a leading voice in debates concerning German-Jewish relations after the Shoah. Since 1994, he has been the Business Director for the German endowment "Topography of Terror".

Since 2005, he holds a professorship at the Lander Institute for Communication about the Holocaust and Tolerance at Touro College in Berlin and New York.

He also works as a rabbi at the Hüttenweg synagogue, reopened in 1999, formerly the Chaplain Center of the U.S. Army.

From 1997-2001 he was the Chairman of the Jewish Community of Berlin, member of the Directory of the Central Council of Jews in Germany, and Governor of the World Union for Progressive Judaim.