Wikipedia:Articles for creation/2008-03-30

You May Now Kill the Bride (CSI: Miami episode)
A young woman is shot at her own wedding ceremony right after she says, "I do." The investigation leads the team to a strip club. They find out that the groom, who is a famous baseball star, has a rather interesting past with this stripper.

Lesli Margherita
Lesli is a successful television, film and theatre actress in Los Angeles. Lesli has recently opened in the part of Inez in the new musical Zorro, after creating the role in all the US workshops for the show. She has stared in many popular TV shows such as, Charmed, The District, The King of Queens, JAG, Kristen and On the Lot.

Woodland muskox
The Woodland muskox (Bootherium bombifrons) is an extinct Bovidae from North American during the Pleistocene.

enter (band)
Enter is a three piece experimental rock band from Byron, Illinois consisting of Jeff Goldsmith, Kyle Trenholm, and Pete Cacciatore. There music is categorized as experimental indie rock with hints of psychedelic and post-rock. They've gained comparisons from Radiohead to Muse to Jeff Buckley. Currently they just finished up their debut full length album entitled "Fiction and the Streetlight Murders" which is the follow up to their widely acclaimed "The Sea" EP.

www.myspace.com/enter

Grant Stoelwinder
Grant Stoelwinder is Head Coach of the West Coast Swimming Club in Western Australia, working out of Challenge Stadium in Claremont Perth since 1997. His own career as a successful swimmer and National Gold Medalist and later as a coach working under Lyn Mackenzie, a former Olympic swimmer herself, has given Grant the experience and skill to provide a carefully structured program to enable his swimmers for success.

Grant's team has had considerable success in Australian swimming with many representatives on State and National teams, as well as four swimmers at the Athens Olympics in 2004. This success has lead to Grant being named WA Coach of the Year every year since 2004 and with his head coach, Mel Tantrum he reached the first place club point score at the Australian Age Swimming Championships in 2007.

Grant is also coach for the current World's Fastest 50m swimmer, Eamon Sullivan. With Grant's guidance and his specific high intensity program for sprints, Eamon has increased his success in the pool over the last year. At the 2008 Australian Swimming Championships held at the Australian Olympic Park Aquatic Centre, Eamon broke the long standing record of Alexander Popov for this swim twice, with a final time of 21.28 seconds. According to Grant, this was a 'perfect swim'. Eamon attributes his faster swim to a 'few words' from Grant.

Grant joined the procession of handshaking with the swimming luminaries during the highlights of Australian Olympic 2008 Beijing Swim Team on the final night of these selection trials with the team successfuls.

Maria Pia Wester Sagues
Maria Pia Wester Sagues is the proud mother of Juan C. Wester ,Founder of Center for Chilean-American Studies in Irving, Texas. Home engineer, creative artist in the home, Cook and Nurse.

Declined. This suggestion doesn't sufficiently explain the importance or significance of the subject. See the speedy deletion criteria A7 and/or guidelines on biographies. Please provide more information on why the person or group is worthy of inclusion in an encyclopedia, and cite reliable, published third-party sources, so that the information in the article is verifiable. Thank you. KTC (talk) 04:17, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
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Northwestern Connecticut Community College
Northwestern Connecticut Community College (also known as NCCC) is a public community college in Winsted, Connecticut. As measured by enrollment it is the smallest or second-smallest of the twelve colleges in the Connecticut Community Colleges system.

The school has an open admissions policy. Classes are offered in two semesters (fall and spring) as well as a summer session and a winter intersession (shorter than a full semester, usually held in January).

NCCC has about 1,600 full- and part-time students enrolled. A commuter school with no dormitories, the college's primary service area includes twenty towns in Litchfield County. Tunxis Community College in Farmington, Capital Community College in Hartford and Asnuntuck Community College in Enfield are the nearest of the state's other community colleges.

Along with credit and non credit certificates, the college grants the Associate in Arts and the Associate in Science degrees.

Dr. Barbara Douglass is president of the school.

Programs
NCCCC conducts the state’s only Veterinary Technology Program and it also runs an American Sign Language and the Deaf Studies Program. There is also a Collegiate Education for Deaf and Hard of Hearing Persons (CEDHH) program.

History
The Northwestern Connecticut Community College was founded in 1965 by Winsted residents, including Ralph Nader's older brother, Shafeek Nader. It started as a private institution but the state took over funding and operation by November of 1965. It occupies the original Gilbert School building. NCCC was the fourth state funded community college in Connecticut. The Northwestern Community College Foundation was incorporated in 1981 to support the mission of Northwestern Connecticut Community College to provide higher education to students pursuing post-secondary study. NCCF generates private funds for the purpose of benefiting the students attending NCCC and the community of Winsted.

Campus
The college is located on a rural twon campus in Winsted, along U.S. Route 44 and Connecticut Route 8.

The 24,000 square foot Learning Resource Center was completed in 2003. The Library in the Learning Resource Center holds 41,000 volumes and subscribes to 180 periodicals, along with various audiovisual materials. During 2006 and 2007 construction was underway on a new Arts and Science Center which will be a three-story 32,000 square foot building. This new Arts and Science Center will house Chemistry, Microbiology, Biology, Physics and General Science laboratories on the first floor. The second floor will consist of classrooms and lecture halls. On the third floor, there will be art spaces for drawing, painting, ceramics, and graphic arts.

Accreditation
The college is accredited by:
 * New England Association of Schools and Colleges
 * Connecticut Board of Governors for Higher Education

In addition specialized accreditation has been granted to programs in Veterinary Technology, Medical Assisting, and Early Childhood Education programs.

Extracurricular activities
The Alpha Nu Epsilon chapter of the Phi Theta Kappa (the academic honor society for two-year colleges) was established at NCCC in 1987. The college also has a student newspaper, The Jabberwocky. Active clubs on campus include the Animation and Video Society, Criminal Justice Association, Connecticut Association of Veterinary Technicians, Early Childhood Education Club, Fine Art Society, History Association, Health Professions Club, Northwest Deaf Club, Ski and Snowboard Club, Spanish Club, SPECTRUM: Ethnic Awareness Society, and the Visual Communications Club. There is also an active student government body, the NCCC Student Senate.

Aviva (actress)
Aviva is a popular American actress best known, among other things, for her roles in the hit Judd Aptow, Seth Rogen comedy Superbad and Down in the Valley starring Edward Norton and Evan Rachel Wood.

She was born Aviva Farber on July 10, 1984 in Santa Fe, New Mexico, USA. Her acting career began when she made her first commercial for Downy fabric softener at the age of six. It was about that time she started studying at just about every local dance school, including Aspen Santa Fe Ballet, Charisma, Moving People Dance Theatre, and Cathy Roe. She graduated from Santa Fe High School in 2001, worked with California's Oakland Ballet briefly, and then set off in 2003 for Hollywood.

After years of acting in little seen films the Santa Fe dancer turned Hollywood actress finally made a name for herself in a strong supporting role as good-time girl Nicola in the 2007 summer teen-comedy hit Superbad.

Filmography (selected)

 * 1994: The Night Before Christmas
 * 1997: Up Above the World
 * 2005: Desperate Hippies
 * 2005: Down in the Valley
 * 2007: Superbad
 * 2007: Forgiving the Franklins
 * 2008: Spring Break '83

Alameda Creek Trail

 * 1) REDIRECT Alameda Creek

Alameda Creek Regional Trail

 * 1) REDIRECT Alameda Creek

Abraham Arnold
Abraham Kerns Arnold (March 24, 1837–November 3, 1901) was a US Cavalry officer during the American Civil War and, while a captain in the 5th U.S. Cavalry, was awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor for leading a "a gallant charge against a superior force of the enemy, extricated his command from a perilous position in which it had been ordered" against Confederate forces at Davenport Bridge, Virginia on May 10, 1864.

He is the father of Colonel Percy Weir Arnold, a cavalry officer serving during the Spanish-American War, the Philippine Insurrection and the First World War.

Biography
Born in Bedford, Pennsylvania, he entered West Point and graduated from the academy in 1859 as a brevet second lieutenant in the 2nd U.S. Cavalry. Participating in campaigns against the Commanche while stationed in Fort Inge, Arnold held a distinguished service record during the American Civil War. Promoted to first lieutenant in 1861, he was cited "for gallant and meritorious services" and brevetted captain at Gaines' Mill, major at Todd's Tavern and, most notably, during the Battle of Davenport Bridge being awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor for his actions.

In 1869, he became a full major as commander the 6th U.S. Cavalry and, by early-1879, he was directing operations against the Apaches in southeastern Arizona accompanying an expedition into Mexico later that year in pursuit of renegade Apaches to Lake Guzman. As acting assistant adjutant general to General Willcox, Arnold would also take part in the Battle of Cibecue on August 30, 1881. As a lieutenant colonel in 1886, he would also fight in the expedition against the Crows of the North Plains the following year. He would hold a number of command posts with various cavalry units during the next twelve years.

During the Spanish-American War, he accepted a field commission as brigadier general of volunteers and led 2nd U.S. Division of the 7th Army Corps in Cuba from January 16, 1898 until April 1, 1899. He retired on March 25, 1901. He died several months later in Cold Spring-On-Hudson, New York on November 23, 1901.

Crookston High School
Crookston High School



Address: 402 Fisher Ave Crookston, MN 56716 Phone: (218) 281-2144 Fax: (218) 281-4709 Office Hours: 7:30 am - 4:30 pm, Monday - Friday (regular) 7:30 am - 3:30 pm, Monday - Friday (summer) Student Hours: 8:10 am - 3:12 pm

Staff: Todd Brist PRINCIPAL

John Tufte DEAN OF STUDENTS

Don Donarski ACTIVITIES DIRECTOR

Ray Lutovsky GUIDANCE COUNSELOR

Debbie Hasbrouck ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT

Liz Rust OFFICE ED ASSISTANT

Sue Wolfe GUIDANCE SECRETARY

Joni Burris SPECIAL SERVICES DIRECTOR

General Information

Crookston High School is home of the pirates. Many athletic and extracurricular activities are enrolled at CHS.

Athletics include:

GIRLS: Fall: Tennis Swimming/Diving Volleyball Soccer

Winter: Basketball Figure Skating (Not school sponsored) Dance Team Hockey

Spring: Softball Golf Track and Field

BOYS: Fall: Football Soccer

Winter: Hockey Basketball Wrestling Swimming/Diving (Co-op with Grand Forks)

Spring: Track and Field Tennis Golf Baseball

EXTRACURRICULAR ACTIVITIES & CLUBS: Optimist (Yearbook) Speech Drama (One-Act & Three-Act) National Honor Society Student Council Knowledge Bowl Visual Arts Riverwatch Junior/Senior Prom Musical Groups (Band, Choir, Orchestra, and Jazz Band) Spanish Club Minor League LEO Club Homecoming True Players

The Bond Referendum to build Crookston High School (CHS) was passed in December of 1994 and ground was broken on the Fisher Avenue site in August of 1995. The building was completed in May of 1997 and was opened in September of 1997.

CHS is a 151,000 sq ft building with an average classroom space of 800 sq ft. Currently, CHS is a comprehensive high school with an enrollment of 656 students grades 8-12, a certified and non-certified staff of 75. CHS is also home to the District Administrative Offices.

GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS/FOUR YEAR EDUCATIONAL PLANNING GUIDE: Graduation Requirements:

Eight Semesters of English                          4 credits

Eight Semesters of History/Social Studies           4 credits

Six Semesters of Mathematics                        3 credits

Six Semesters of Science                            3 credits

Physical Education (2 Semesters)                    1.5 credits & Health (1 Semester)

Economics                                           .5 credits

Fourteen and one half Semesters of Electives        7.5 credits

TOTAL 23.5 credits

Grade 9: (2 Electives per semester Comp. I/Short Lit. Chemical Science/Physical Science Civics I/Civics II Phy. Ed./Health Mathematics - -

Grade 10: (2 Electives per semester) Communications/Comp. II World History/World History II Biology/Zoology Phy. Ed./Economics Mathematics - -

Grade 11: (3 Electives per semester) U.S. Lit. I/U.S. Lit. II U.S. History/Cont. U.S. History Mathematics Science - - -

Grade 12: (5 Electives per semester) American Gov./Economics English 12 (Senior English) - - - - -

Home of the Pirates!

Pride Individuality Respect Active Community Teamwork Equality School Spirit

Family
Alfred Edward Perlman was born November 22, 1902, in St. Paul, Minnesota, the son of Louis and Leah Perlman. He married Adele Sylvia Emrich, June 15, 1937. Together they had three children: Michael Louis; Lee Alfred; Constance.

Education
Perlman graduated from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology with a Bachelor of Science in civil engineering in 1923. He graduated from the Harvard Business School with a Masters degree in railway transportation in 1931. He was awarded honorary degress from Clarkson University and Depauw University.

Career
Perlman joined the Northern Pacific Railway in field construction in 1923. Over the next nine years he served as a track laborer, draftsman, roadmaster, and finally assistant to the vice-president.

In 1934 he joined the Reconstruction Finance Corporation as a consultant.

He joined the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad as an assistant engineer in 1935, helping reconstruct Midwestern lines hit by heavy flooding.

In 1936 he joined the Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad as engineer in charge of maintenance-of-way work; in 1941 he was promoted to become chief engineer of the Rio Grande. From 1947 to 1952 Perlman was general manager of the Rio Grande, and from 1952 to 1954, executive vice-president.

In 1954 Perlman was appointed president of the New York Central Railroad in the wake of the suicide of Robert R. Young. For the next fourteen years Perlman worked to strengthen and improve the Central in the face of ever increasing automobile, truck, and airline competition.

Within six years Perlman succeeded in reducing the Central's long-term debt by nearly $100 million; reduced its passenger service deficit from $42 to $24.8 million; and by 1959 had increased earnings to $1.29 per share, double that of 1958. Included in Perlman's efforts was the famous Jet Train of 1966, when a Budd Rail Diesel Car numbered M-497 was mated to a General Electric jet engine. Running in Ohio, it set a speed record of 183.85 miles per hour.

Perlman pushed for modernization of the Central's physical plant, which included paring down main line routes to single track with centralized traffic control, and the construction of modern freight facilities. On of the largest projects was at Selkirk Yard outside of Albany, New York. Billed as a twenty million dollar project circa 1966, the yard was rebuilt and automated, increasing capacity to handle 8,329 cars a day from 2,300. When the project was completed in 1968, the New York Central had spent $29 million, including $4 million for a diesel locomotive service facility. When opened, the rebuilt terminal was named for Alfred E. Perlman Yard.

Beginning February 1, 1968, Perlman was president, director, and chief administrative office of the Penn Central Transportation, the ill-fated merger of the New York Central with the Pennsylvania Railroad. Penn Central operated a system with 40,000 miles of track in fourteen states and two Canadian provinces. It had total assets of $6.3 billion and annual revenues of nearly $2 billion. Yet, within two years of merger, competition and a bungled integration of the merged companies resulted in the largest corporate bankruptcy in American history to that time.

Perlman, along with Stuart T. Saunders (1909-1987) and David C. Bevan, both from the Pennsylvania Railroad, were dismissed from the Penn Central on June 8, 1970. Saunders, an attorney, returned to private practice, having held onto his stock and suffered a personal loss of $700,000 (in 1970 dollars). Bevan was tried and acquitted for embezzling $4 million in Penn Central funds.

In the wake of the Penn Central debacle, however, Perlman was hired to revitalize the Western Pacific Railroad. He served as the western road's president from December 1, 1970 to January 1, 1973, and chairman from 1970 to 1978. He retired and the Western Pacific was sold to a private investment group in that year. It was merged into the Union Pacific Railroad in 1982.

Perlman died April 30, 1983 in San Francisco, California. He is remembered as one of Trains magazine's ten most prominent railroad presidents of the Twentieth century.

Other
In 1949 Perlman served as a consultant to the Korean National Railways. In 1950 Perlman served as a consultant to the Israeli State Railways. Perlman was a member of the Transporation Association of America; American Museum of Immigration; Denver University; Elmira College; Bay Area Council; Newcomen Society.

Family
John Marston Budd was born November 2, 1907, in Des Moines, Iowa. He was the son of Ralph Budd and Georianna Marshall Budd. He married Frances Bullard, January 31, 1931. They had two children: John M. Budd, Jr., and William B. Budd.

Education
Budd graduated from Yale University with a Bachelor's of Science in Civil Engineering in 1930.

Career
Budd joined the Great Northern Railway on his summers away from Yale in 1925 and 1926. Following graduation, he joined the Great Northern as assistant to the electrical engineer, a position he held from 1930 to 1932.

In 1933 he was appointed assistant trainmaster at Willmar, Minnesota]. From 1933 to 1940 he was assistant trainmaster and then trainmaster at [[Sioux City, South Dakota, Wenatchee, Washington, and Spokane, Washington.

From 1940 to 1942 he served as division superintendent at Klamath Falls, Oregon, then Whitefish, Montana.

From November, 1945, to May, 1947, Budd was assistant general manager for Lines East of Williston, North Dakota, on the Great Northern. In June, 1947, he joined the Chicago and Eastern Illinois Railroad as its president, a position he held until May, 1949. In this capacity he was the youngest president of any U.S. Class I railroad.

He returned to the Great Northern in May, 1949, following the death of Thomas F. Dixon to become the Great Northern's vice-president in charge of operations. He held this position until May, 1951, when he was named president, succeeding Francis J. Gavin who had been in office since 1939. John Budd's father, Ralph Budd, another civil engineer, was president of the Great Northern from 1919 to 1930, and president of the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad, a company half-owned by the Great Northern in cooperation with the Northern Pacific Railway, from 1930 until his retirement in 1949.

In 1955, Budd entered discussions with Robert Stetson Macfarlane, president of the Northern Pacific, about merger of the Great Northern, Northern Pacific, and the Burlington. The companies continued to the Interstate Commerce Commission and the U.S. Supreme Court, which resulted in the creation of the Burlington Northern Railroad in March, 1970.

Budd was chairman and chief executive officer of Burlington Northern from 1970 to 1971, chairman from 1971 to 1972, and a director from 1970 to 1977.

He died at the age of seventy-one on October 25, 1979.

Military Service
In 1942 Budd was commissioned a major in the U.S. Army's Military Railway Service. He served in Algeria, Italy, France and Germany. Promoted to lieutenant colonel, he commanded the 727th Railway Operating Battalion. He was discharged in November, 1945.

Other Service
Member of the American Association of Railroad Superintendents; Boy Scouts of America; Hamline University.

Walker D. Hines
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Family
Walker Downer Hines was born February 2, 1870, in Russellville, Kentucky, the son of James Madison Hines and Mary Walker Downer. He married Alice Clymer Macfarlane in 1900, they had one child.

Education
Ogden College, graduated 1888. University of Virginia, graduated 1891.

Career
In 1886, aged sixteen, he became stenographer, Circuit Court of Warren County. In 1890 he became secretary to the assistant chief attorney of the Louisville and Nashville Railroad at Louisville, Kentucky. He was appointed assistant attorney after graduating law school, assistant chief attorney in 1897, and vice-president in 1901. Hines spent nearly ten years fighting railroad regulation in state and federal courts.

In 1906 he joined Cravath, Henderson and de Gersdoff in New York City, becoming a partner in 1907. He was with the firm for seven more years.

Hines joined the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway as general counsel, was made chair of the executive committee in 1908 and chairman of the board in 1916.

In December, 1917, President Woodrow Wilson nationalized most U.S. railroads under the United States Railroad Administration. William G. McAdoo was made director general, Hines agreed to become assistant director general. McAdoo resigned in January, 1919, and Hines stepped in as director general for the remainder of nationalization under the Railroad Administration, which ended in May, 1920. Following the end of World War I, Hines worked and traveled extensively in Europe.

In the latter half of the 1920s, Hines was a director of the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad, a director of its subsidary, the Colorado and Southern Railway, general counsel of one of its parent companies, the Great Northern Railway, and a partner in Hines, Rearick, Dorr, Travis and Marshall, which specialized in railroad law.

Hines died of a stroke in Merano, Italy, January 14, 1934.

Other service
Vice-president, New York City Bar Association; League of Nations.

Publications
Hines, Walker D. Report on Danube Navigation for the League of Nations. 1925.

Hines, Walker D. War History of the American Railroads. 1928.

Project: Failing Flesh
Project: Failing Flesh is a three man extreme metal band formed in early 2002 by Eric Forrest (vocals), Tim Gutierrez (instruments), and Kevin 131 (instruments). Forrest is best known for his membership with sci-fi thrashers Voivod. Handling vocal and bass duties on the albums ‘Negatron’ (1995), ‘Phobos’ (1997), ‘Kronic’ (1998), and ‘Voivod Lives’ (2000). To date Project: Failing Flesh has functioned as a studio entity only as its members are based on different continents with Forrest residing in Toulouse, France while Gutierrez and Kevin 131 are based in Virginia, USA. Two albums, both recorded at the bands own Assembly Line Studios in Vienna, Virginia, have thus far been released. The sound could loosely be described as a much varied combination of thrash, death, and industrial metal with experimental elements throughout. Strings and brass even make appearances in several songs.

A debut album titled ‘A Beautiful Sickness’ surfaced in 2003. An early self-released version was apparently limited to just three hundred copies. Shortly after the band was signed by Dutch label Karmageddon Media (ex-Hammerheart Records) and the album was re-released in 2005 with new artwork. This album was distributed in North America via Candlelight Records USA. The CD included nine tracks plus a cover of the Venom song “Warhead.” Guest musicians contributing to this album include Loston Harris (ex-Wynton Marsalis Band) - keyboards, Clayton Ingerson (Dysrhythmia) – viola, and Bob Dotolo (ex-Thud) – backing vocals.

The next album, ‘The Conjoined’ was released in April of 2007 by upstart label Burning Star Records. Shortly before signing on with Greece based Burning Star the band parted ways with former label Karmageddon Media under vocally acrimonious circumstances. ‘The Conjoined’ was again produced by Kevin 131 and Gutierrez. Guest contributions to this album include Loston Harris – keyboards, Allida Born – cello, and Kevin MacIntyre – additional bass on “Through The Broken Lens.” Also recorded during the same recording sessions was a cover of “The Usurper” by Swiss metal band Celtic Frost. This song was released online only.

According to metal news site Blabbermouth.net, Project: Failing Flesh is currently at work on a third album to be titled ‘Count Back From Ten.’ A release date has not been reported.

Eric Forrest is currently also the leader of his own thrash metal project E-Force. Releasing the albums ‘Evil Forces’ (2003) and ‘Modified Poison’ (2008). Former bands include Liquid Indian and Thunder Circus.

Kevin 131 is also involved in production, recording, and engineering work at his Assembly Line Studios. Past collaborations have included Raven, Deceased, Dysrhythmia, Twisted Tower Dire, Brave, While Heaven Wept, Grand Belial’s Key, and Hounds of Hasselvander.

Project: Failing Flesh use the Chaos symbol on the cover of their album ‘A Beautiful Sickness.’

Discography

 * A Beautiful Sickness - 2005
 * The Conjoined - 2007

The Girly Ghosthunters
The Girly Ghosthunters was a 30 minute Canadian paranormal TV series first broadcast on Friday January 14, 2005 on the  SPACE channel. The thirteenth and last episode was broadcast Friday April 15, 2005. It continues to air on SPACE (as of March 29, 2008) in an early morning time slot on the weekends. The show featured four young women (Dana Matthews, Jen Kieswetter, Corrie Ashton Matthews & Nicole Dobie) visiting reportedly haunted locations with modern ghost hunting equipment in an attempt to document the ghost(s) existence. A second season is reportedly in pre-production.

Episodes

 * Episode 01: 2005.Jan.14 The Grand Theatre
 * Episode 02: 2005.Jan.21 Fort George
 * Episode 03: 2005.Jan.28 Ottawa Jail Hostel
 * Episode 04: 2005.Feb.04 The Bytown Museum
 * Episode 05: 2005.Feb.11 The Masil Farmhouse
 * Episode 06: 2005.Feb.18 Drummond Hill Cemetery
 * Episode 07: 2005.Feb.25 Banting House
 * Episode 08: 2005.Mar.04 The Werx
 * Episode 09: 2005.Mar.11 The Cherry Hill House
 * Episode 10: 2005.Mar.18 Fort Henry
 * Episode 11: 2005.Apr.01 The Angel Inn
 * Episode 12: 2005.Apr.08 Cedar Island
 * Episode 13: 2005.Apr.15 The Hermitage

Dawn of War 2
==

Dawn of War 2 is a Sequel from the criticality acclaimed RTS game Dawn of War. There are significant changes to the Graphic Engine in this game, which is now called Essence 2.0, one of the notable features in Dawn of War is, it will have Havok Engine. There are more features in DOW2 which can be read here:

- Uses the Essence 2.0 engine with Havok physics, all optimised for DX10 and multicore support.

- It looks great, think of the DoW intro but with a bit less polygons here and there (in terms of lighting and all that it looks almost exactly the same).

- Units also use Company of Heroes-like unit AI for awareness and pathfinding to find cover and such.

- While DoW 2 shares the same (upgraded probably) engine as CoH it won't be "CoH in space", while soldiers in CoH will ask themselves if flanking the enemy is the right option, in DoW2 it will be more like Space Marines asking themselves if they should use their jetpacks to jump over an Ork squad to attack them in the back. Different settings, different kinds of warfare.

- Preview only showed a destroyed city landscape, akin to DoW (but more detailed), other tilesets will offer deserts, jungles, mountains and other cities.

- Only the Orkz and Space Marines were revealed, more races on the way obviously and to be to revealed later this year.

- Co-op campaign for both the Orkz and Space Marines, apparently not for the other to-be-revealed races.

- More focus on making units and squads unique; every unit has got a name (at least in the campaign it seems), more details and more animations.

- Relic wants to give players rewards at the end of a mission like wargear (armor, weapons, rare objects); "Let's pimp out squads with cool stuff!", you will see these items in-game as well of course.

- You'll fight your way through the campaign with the same squads.

- You can't control more than six squads

- The squads are going to be a lot more interesting than before.

- A squad leader (one or several?) will need to survive if you want to complete a mission; you really have to look out for your squads and don't treat them like cannon fodder.

- There is a lot more interesting commentary from the units as well; if your SM commander is holding a Thunder Hammer f.e. then the opponent will specifically comment on that, Ork Warchief saying something like "Ooh, nice hammer, but mine is bigger!". The warchief will say something else if the commander doesn't have the hammer.

- The campaign lets Space Marines operate from a spaceship, you'll get a view of an underlying planet and you'll be able to choose from different missions (which are tagged with difficulty colours, green, blue and red).

- Certain reward items won't be useable at once in the campaign, so they'll be taken back to the Space Marine spaceship for research.

- Dreadnought can now also trample Orkz.

- No sea or air units (though jetpacks are still in of course).

- Development team of 55 people has been working on it since September 2005.

- Release in early 2009 or later -- Of course there are some small other facts notable:

Buildings can be occupied (like in Company of Heroes)

-Environment completely destructable

-Vehicles are bigger

-Over the top finishing animations

-when units are in melee, pieces of battle armor can be chopped off in the action

The reception of the news that DOW2 is in the making was met with large positive reception, but there were some speculations that you can only control 6 six squads and you have to keep them alive, while back the old DOW and it's expansion packs you could train many you could and send'em to they're graves.

Raju (character)
Raju is the central protagonist of HERA PHERI SERIES. His dream was to be a man in a big industry but he lost his mother for he was poor.

Declined. Your article appears to be a joke. Wikipedia only contains factual entries, so your comedic efforts cannot be rewarded here. KTC (talk) 13:44, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
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HERA PHERI
Declined. We cannot accept blank suggestions. Please consider submitting to Requested articles instead. KTC (talk) 13:43, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
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Richard Cuffari
Richard Cuffari was born on March 2, 1925 to immigrant parents in Brooklyn, N.Y. Both parents worked during the Depression to support Cuffari and his mentally handicapped brother. There was not much money to support Cuffari's artistic talents. However, as a student at Madison High School, Cuffari won numerous awards for his art work.

From 1943 to 1946, he served in the U.S. Army. After World War II, Cuffari enrolled at Pratt Institute graduating in 1949. While attending Pratt, he met fellow art student, Phyllis Klie. They married in 1950, and the first of four children was born the following year.

Having begun his career as a commercial graphic artist, Cuffari began freelancing as a children's book illustrator in 1966 with his first book, The Wind in the Willows. He went on to illustrate over 200 books for children, specializing in historical, non-fiction books: "I have always been fascinated by things historical; events, personalities, how people lived and how they looked. I believe that the study of these things help provide insight into the present." For his work, Cuffari was awarded the Citation of Merit from the New York Society of Children's Illustrators in 1969 and 1970 and the Christopher Award in 1973.

Cuffari who once said "I think that working with or for children in any way is a privilege" died in 1978 at the age of fifty-three.

Andrias
Andrias scheuchzeri is is an extinct genus of giant salamander.

Mourasuchus
Mourasuchus amazonensis is is an extinct genus of giant crocodile from South America.

Orodus
Orodus is is an extinct genus of cartilaginous fish from the Pennsylvanian.

Robbins theorem
In graph theory, the Robbins theorem, named after Herbert Robbins, states that a connected graph G has a strongly connected orientation if and only if G has no bridge.

Amphibamus
Amphibamus is is an extinct genus of dissorophidae.

Early Years
It all started when the band was formed by three talented individuals, all living in Florida. The three founders of The Contaminated consisted of Kevin Schechter (guitar), Matt Firestone (ukulele, bass guitar), and Sasan Peimani (drums, percussion). The band was first conceived when Kevin and Matt were composing songs in Kevin's room. The next day, Sasan proposed to them to form a band, an offer to which they both graciously accepted. Later on, in their search for a keyboardist, they found Or Bazini (keyboards), who was very enthusiastic about the invitation to join the band. Soon after, they found a vocalist, Amiel Abir (vocals), who was willing to join the band in their journey to create music. The band aims to create and spread music that people all around the globe can enjoy and appreciate, as said Sasan Peimani: "We just want to make the best music we can, to make everyone happy, and to fulfill our goals and dreams."

Band Name Decision
The band had many creative and ear-catching prospective names with which to label themselves. They went through many names, contemplating each and every one. Their best and most renowned names included:

The Contaminated, The Ear-Artists, Maximum Capacity, Alien Fire, A Day at the Beach, Frostbite, The Surfboards, Plain Blue T's, etc...

In the end, after many polls and surveys, they decided to go with the striking name of "The Contaminated".

"I would much rather buy an album from an artist called "The Contaminated" than from any other choices you've shown me.." -Matthew Jacoby

Influences
Anything they've ever listened to. Mainly rock (all genres of rock)

Baurusuchus
Baurusuchus is is an extinct genus of crurotarsi.

Axelrodichthys
Axelrodichthys is is an extinct genus of Latimeriidae.

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Uberabasuchus
Uberabasuchus is an extinct genus of Crocodylomorpha.

Itasuchus
Itasuchus is an extinct genus of Crocodylomorpha.

Uruguaysuchus
Uruguaysuchus is an extinct genus of Crocodylomorpha.

Adamantinasuchus
Adamantinasuchus is an extinct genus of Crocodylomorpha.

Sichuanosuchus
Sichuanosuchus is an extinct genus of Crocodylomorpha from China.

Pseudotribos
Pseudotribos is an extinct genus of mammal from the Middle Jurassic of China.

Phillip Cooley
Phillip (Pip) Cooley is the first monarch of Cooleyville a small kingdom in the municipality of Detroit.

Declined. We cannot accept unsourced suggestions or sources that are not reliable per the verifiability policy. Please provide reputable, third-party sources with your suggestions. Third party sources are needed both to establish the verifiability of the submission as well as its notability. Acer (talk) 20:07, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
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Watsonisuchus
Watsonisuchus is an extinct genus of Temnospondyli from the Triassic of Madagascar.
 * Dragons in the Dust: The Paleobiology of the Giant Monitor Lizard Megalania by Ralph E. Molnar (Pg. 39)

Wetlugasaurus
Wetlugasaurus is an extinct genus of Temnospondyli from the Triassic of Northern Russia.

Eryosuchus
Eryosuchus is an extinct genus of Temnospondyli from the Triassic of Northern Russia.

Dolichuranus
Dolichuranus is an extinct genus of Dicynodontia from the Triassic.

Macrocnemus
Macrocnemus is an extinct genus of Prolacertiformes from the Triassic of Europe.

Qianosuchus
Qianosuchus is an extinct genus of Archosaur from the Triassic of China.

Miodentosaurus
Miodentosaurus is an extinct genus of Thalattosauria from the Triassic of China.

Proterochampsa
Proterochampsa is an extinct genus of Thalattosauria from the Triassic of China.

Ege Bamyası
89.176.252.135 (talk) 20:15, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
 * 1) REDIRECT Ege Bamyasi

Declined. This article already exists in Wikipedia. That redirect already exists.. Acer (talk) 21:09, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
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Limnoscelis
Limnoscelis is an extinct genus of Diadectomorpha from the Permian of North America.

Eodicynodon
Eodicynodon is an extinct genus of Dicynodontia from the Permian of North America.

Tokosaurus
Tokosaurus is an extinct genus of Reptiliomorpha from the Permian of Russia.

Eomys
Eomys quercyi is an extinct genus of Eomyidae from the Oligocene of Europe.

Humphrey the M5 Camel
This fibre-glass Camel is seen on the northbound M5 near Bridgewater.

Currently Humphrey is missing - 31-March-08

Humphrey the M5 Camel
This fibre-glass Camel is seen on the northbound M5 near Bridgwater.

Currently Humphrey is missing - 31-March-08

Humphrey the M5 Camel
This fibre-glass Camel is seen on the northbound M5 motorway near Bridgwater.

Currently Humphrey is missing - 31-March-08

Icarus (band)
Icarus is the collective name used by electronic musicians Sam Britton and Ollie Bown to perform and release music together. Icarus formed in 1995 and released their first EP entitled 'Moth' in 1997. To date, the duo have released 7 LPs and 3 EPs on various record labels and continue to perform live throughout the UK and Europe. They have also remixed The Creatures, Murcof and Four tet. Since 2002 they have been closely associated with the Not Applicable record label and group of artists, which they founded.