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54801476_0_2
54801476
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeremy%20Baumberg
Jeremy Baumberg
Jeremy Baumberg. Career and research Following his PhD, Baumberg was a visiting IBM Research fellow at the University of California, Santa Barbara (UCSB) from 1994 to 1995. He returned to the UK to work in the Hitachi Cambridge Lab from 1995 to 1998 before being appointed Professor of Nano-scale Physics at the University of Southampton from 1998 to 2007 where he co-founded Mesophotonics Limited, a Southampton University spin-off company.
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54801476
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeremy%20Baumberg
Jeremy Baumberg
Jeremy Baumberg. Baumberg's research is in nanotechnology, including nanophotonics, plasmonics, metamaterials and optical microcavities. He is interested in the development of nanostructured optical materials that undergo unusual interactions with light, and his research has various commercial applications.
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54801476
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeremy%20Baumberg
Jeremy Baumberg
Jeremy Baumberg. His early work led to the development of a number of pioneering experimental techniques. Highlights of Baumberg's research include his work on confining light to the nanoscopic scale and plasmonic interactions with metals; the ultrafast dynamics of magnetic semiconductors, which made a significant contribution to the area of spintronics; work on coherent control in solids; and studies of semiconductor microcavities. During his career he has supervised numerous PhD students and postdoctoral researchers in his laboratory and his research has been funded by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) and the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC).
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54801476
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeremy%20Baumberg
Jeremy Baumberg
Jeremy Baumberg. Baumberg holds patents on coherent control, supercontinuum generation chips, plasmon filters, photonic crystal lasers, Surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) substrates and solar cells. He appeared as himself on the documentary The Secret Life of Materials in 2015 and a Horizon documentary about Schön scandal first broadcast in 2004.
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54801476
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeremy%20Baumberg
Jeremy Baumberg
Jeremy Baumberg. Baumberg's first book The Secret Life of Science: How It Really Works and Why It Matters is scheduled for publication in May 2018.
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54801476
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeremy%20Baumberg
Jeremy Baumberg
Jeremy Baumberg. Awards and honours Baumberg has received several awards for his research including the Mullard Award in 2004 and Rumford Medal in 2014, both from the Royal Society. The Institute of Physics (IOP) awarded Baumberg with the Silver Young Medal and Prize in 2013 and the Gold Faraday Medal and Prize in 2017. Baumberg was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society (FRS) in 2011, a Fellow of The Optical Society of America in 2006 and has been a Fellow of the Institute of Physics (FInstP) since 1998.
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54801476
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeremy%20Baumberg
Jeremy Baumberg
Jeremy Baumberg. Personal life Baumberg is the son of the late Simon Baumberg OBE, a microbiologist and who served as Professor of bacterial genetics at the University of Leeds from 1996 to 2005.
54801481_0_0
54801481
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vetriyur
Vetriyur
Vetriyur. Vetriyur is a village in Sivaganga district in the Indian state of Tamil Nadu.
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54801481
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vetriyur
Vetriyur
Vetriyur. Geography Vetriyur is located at . The mean elevation is 75 metres.
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54801481
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vetriyur
Vetriyur
Vetriyur. Demographics As of the 2009 census, the total population was 1411. 45% of the population are men and 55% are woman.
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54801481
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vetriyur
Vetriyur
Vetriyur. Education Bala Bharatha Primary School was established in 1946. Government Higher Secondary School is a co-educational school in Vetriyur that was established in 1977.
54801485_0_0
54801485
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1989%E2%80%9390%20Iraq%20FA%20Cup
1989–90 Iraq FA Cup
1989–90 Iraq FA Cup. The 1989–90 Iraq FA Cup was the 14th edition of the Iraq FA Cup. The tournament was won by Al-Zawraa for the sixth time, beating Al-Shabab 2–1 on penalties in the final after a 0–0 draw. The first three rounds were between teams from the lower divisions, before the top-flight clubs began to enter at the round of 32.
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54801485
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1989%E2%80%9390%20Iraq%20FA%20Cup
1989–90 Iraq FA Cup
1989–90 Iraq FA Cup. Second preliminary round The first legs were played on 16 October 1989, and the second legs were played on 30 October 1989.
54801485_1_1
54801485
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1989%E2%80%9390%20Iraq%20FA%20Cup
1989–90 Iraq FA Cup
1989–90 Iraq FA Cup. Third preliminary round The first legs were played on 6 November 1989, and the second legs were played on 20 November 1989.
54801504_0_0
54801504
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helen%20Peterson
Helen Peterson
Helen Peterson. Helen Peterson (native name: Wa-Cinn-Ya-Win-Pi-Mi, August 3, 1915 – July 10, 2000) was a Cheyenne-Lakota activist and lobbyist. She was the first director of the Denver Commission on Human Relations. She was the second Native American woman to become director of the National Congress of American Indians at a time when the government wanted to discharge their treaty obligations to the tribes by eliminating their tribal governments through the Indian termination policy and forcing the tribe members to assimilate into the mainstream culture. She authored a resolution on Native American education, which was ratified at the second Inter-American Indian Conference, held in Cuzco, Peru. In 1986, Peterson was inducted into the Colorado Women's Hall of Fame and the following year, her papers were donated to the Smithsonian's National Anthropological Archives.
54801504_0_1
54801504
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helen%20Peterson
Helen Peterson
Helen Peterson. Early life Helen Louise White was born on August 3, 1915 on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in Bennett County, South Dakota to Lucy (née Henderson) and Robert B. White. She was given the native name Wa-Cinn-Ya-Win-Pi-Mi, meaning "woman to trust and depend on". The family lived in northern Nebraska and White attended Hay Springs High School, graduating in 1932. She went on to further her education at Chadron State College, studying business education. On August 29, 1935, White married Richard F. Peterson in Garden County, Nebraska and she worked at the U.S. Land Use Resettlement Administration to pay their way through school. Richard enlisted in the war effort and Peterson had their only child, R. Max, soon after. In 1942, the couple divorced and Peterson moved with her mother to Denver.
54801504_0_2
54801504
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helen%20Peterson
Helen Peterson
Helen Peterson. Career Peterson began work at the University of Denver as the executive director of the Rocky Mountain Council of Inter-American Affairs. In 1948, she was hired by the newly elected mayor, J. Quigg Newton, to work on the Commission on Community Telations. The mayor had a goal of desegregating the community and to do that, he needed voters willing to change the municipal charter. Working with Bernie Valdez, Director of the Denver Welfare Department, Peterson attempted to build bridges between the established Latin American citizens and the new migrant farm workers who had come to work on the beetroot farms. She went door to door in Hispanic neighborhoods, registering voters and organizing the community. Peterson developed cultural programs and met with city leaders to provide lecture series on issues, such as fair labor and housing laws. At the end of the year, she was made the director of the Committee on Human Relations, the first person to hold the post. In that capacity, she led a drive to hire minority workers and assisted the mayor in passing anti-discriminatory employment and housing regulations. In 1949, she was asked to go to Peru as an advisor to the United States delegation attending the Second Inter-American Indian Conference. She authored a resolution to improve education for indigenous people, which was ratified by the conference.
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54801504
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helen%20Peterson
Helen Peterson
Helen Peterson. In 1953, Peterson was urged by Eleanor Roosevelt to move to Washington, D. C. and help reorganize the National Congress of American Indians (NCAI). The organization, founded in 1944 to fight against the government's Indian termination policy was in disarray, on the verge of bankruptcy, and was facing pressure from President Dwight D. Eisenhower for its dissolution. Because of Peterson's experience in organizing minority programs, she was able to slow the assimilationist aims of Congress and assist tribes in asserting their own sovereign rights. Peterson was hired to replace Frank George, who had in turn replaced Ruth Muskrat Bronson as executive director.
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54801504
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helen%20Peterson
Helen Peterson
Helen Peterson. Early in 1954, Peterson scheduled an emergency conference with tribal leaders to discuss termination. The meeting was the largest gathering of protest that had ever been assembled by American Indians, and was scheduled in response to the passage of House concurrent resolution 108, which called for the end of federal responsibility for selected tribes, which were to be debated beginning on February 15, 1954. She and her mother prepared the materials for the conference on a hand cranked mimeograph machine in her basement. Another bill was introduced that year to eliminate competency restrictions on land transactions and required Peterson to mobilize tribal leaders to wire their congressmen to defeat the bill. At issue was whether property patents would be assigned by allotment directly to tribal members who had no real knowledge of property values or laws governing transfer, or whether the deeds to allotted property were held in trust until allottees actually had an understanding of property ownership and fair market value. Her efforts in advancing Native Americans and fighting against discriminatory legislation was recognized by the American Indian Exposition of Anadarko, Oklahoma, which named her the "Outstanding Indian of 1955".
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54801504
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helen%20Peterson
Helen Peterson
Helen Peterson. As NCAI made progress in slowing termination, Peterson helped develop new tactics to protect Native rights, such as creating a summer school program with D'Arcy McNickle in 1956 for ethnic studies and convincing NBC to air a program on the policy and its effect on the Klamath Tribes in 1957. In 1958, Peterson and NCAI president Joseph R. Garry went to Puerto Rico to study the methods of Operation Bootstrap, which had transformed the economic relationship between the island and the United States government. They were hopeful that the program could be mirrored for Native Americans to become self-sufficient, but legislators refused to act. In 1960, at the invitation of Sol Tax, an anthropologist, Peterson met with McNickle and John Rainer to prepare materials for a conference to be held in Chicago the following year. Largely drafted by McNickle the, "Declaration of Indian Purpose" for the 1961 American Indian Chicago Conference contained provisions for a reversal of the termination policy to be replaced by programs focused on development of economic, educational, social and legal nature. The declaration also called for the Commissioner of Indian Affairs to be replaced by a Commission of six members, half of whom were Native American, to evaluate issues effecting tribes. As the conference date neared in June 1961, factions emerged. Some felt that the organized NCAI operated more in the manner of a non-Indian reform association, rather than one that used traditional methods to address problems, whereas others felt that its focus did not adequately represent the issues of tribal identity and reservation realities. By August, the factionalism which had become apparent in planning the convention, created calls for restructuring the NCAI and Peterson resigned.
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54801504
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helen%20Peterson
Helen Peterson
Helen Peterson. Returning to Denver in 1962, Peterson again took up the post as the director of the Commission on Community Relations. The Indian Relocation Act of 1956 caused a large influx of Native Americans to the Denver area, but Congress had failed to sufficiently fund the program. Peterson's office tried to fill the gap by providing social and employment services, as well as job training for Denver's Native American community. Though no longer employed at the NCAI, controversy continued and her replacement, Robert Burnette, accused both Peterson and Garry of mismanagement during their tenure. The dispute between Burnette and his supporters and Peterson and hers, continued through the 1960s dividing the NCAI membership. Burnette was forced out in 1964 and replaced by Vine Deloria Jr., who had the difficult task of trying to bring the organization back to financial stability and heal the factionalism. After eight years, of directing the Commission, Peterson accepted a position with the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA), working as a field liaison officer and coordinator with the United States Customs Service in Denver. In 1971, she returned to Washington, D. C. and served as the assistant for the Commissioner of Indian Affairs. In 1978, the BIA transferred her to serve as a tribal government services officer in Portland, Oregon. Focusing on treaty obligations and Indian health, she worked to ensure that federal, state, local and tribal governments worked together in serving the American Indian community. She remained with the BIA until her retirement in 1985.
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54801504
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helen%20Peterson
Helen Peterson
Helen Peterson. The year after her retirement, Peterson was inducted into the Colorado Women's Hall of Fame. The following year, her papers were donated to the National Anthropological Archives of the Smithsonian Institution. When the National Museum of the American Indian Archive Center was created in 2007, her papers were transferred there. Upon her retirement, Peterson devoted her time to local and regional projects in and around Portland for the Episcopal Church. She remained an active member in the NCAI through the early 1990s, participating in the 1993 Albuquerque conference held at the University of New Mexico on developing inter-tribal relationships.
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54801504
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helen%20Peterson
Helen Peterson
Helen Peterson. Death and legacy Peterson died on July 10, 2000 in a nursing home in Vancouver, Washington. Peterson is credited with having led NCAI to stop, or at least slow, the termination movement while she served as director of NCAI. The ethnic studies program that she and McNickle developed for Colorado College between 1956 and 1970 became a model for universities throughout the United States.
54801504_1_0
54801504
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helen%20Peterson
Helen Peterson
Helen Peterson. 1915 births 2000 deaths Female Native American leaders People from the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, South Dakota Lakota people Cheyenne people American civil rights activists Women civil rights activists Chadron State College alumni Native American activists 20th-century Native American women 20th-century Native Americans American women activists Activists from South Dakota
54801513_0_0
54801513
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John%20Shaw%20Billings%20%28editor%29
John Shaw Billings (editor)
John Shaw Billings (editor). John Shaw Billings (1891–1975) was the first editor of Life magazine and first managing editor of Time-Life.
54801513_1_0
54801513
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John%20Shaw%20Billings%20%28editor%29
John Shaw Billings (editor)
John Shaw Billings (editor). Background Billings descended from U.S. Senator James Henry Hammond (1807-1864). His grandfather (also John Shaw Billings) was an Army medical doctor during the Civil War. After the war, he established an Army medical library with the first modern bibliographical system for medical knowledge. He later became one of the best-known, early 20th-century librarians as director of the New York Public Library.
54801513_1_1
54801513
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John%20Shaw%20Billings%20%28editor%29
John Shaw Billings (editor)
John Shaw Billings (editor). Background Billings was born at Redcliffe manor on Beech Island, South Carolina, a plantation built by his great-grandfather the senator (famed for the saying "Cotton is king").
54801513_1_2
54801513
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John%20Shaw%20Billings%20%28editor%29
John Shaw Billings (editor)
John Shaw Billings (editor). Background He left Harvard University to drive ammunition trucks for the army of France in World War I.
54801513_2_0
54801513
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John%20Shaw%20Billings%20%28editor%29
John Shaw Billings (editor)
John Shaw Billings (editor). Career After the great war, Billings became a reporter for the Bridgeport Telegram. Fired for his purple prose, he joined the Brooklyn Daily Eagle as its Washington correspondent.
54801513_2_1
54801513
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John%20Shaw%20Billings%20%28editor%29
John Shaw Billings (editor)
John Shaw Billings (editor). Career In 1928, Billings began working for Time magazine, again as Washington correspondent (and replacing Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr.). In 1929, he became National Affairs editor.
54801513_2_2
54801513
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John%20Shaw%20Billings%20%28editor%29
John Shaw Billings (editor)
John Shaw Billings (editor). Career By 1933, he became Time'''s managing editor. In 1936, Luce asked him to become the first editor of Life.
54801513_2_3
54801513
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John%20Shaw%20Billings%20%28editor%29
John Shaw Billings (editor)
John Shaw Billings (editor). Career In 1944, he became deputy editorial director under Luce for Time-Life's four publications: Time, Life, Architectural Forum, and Fortune.
54801513_3_0
54801513
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John%20Shaw%20Billings%20%28editor%29
John Shaw Billings (editor)
John Shaw Billings (editor). Personal and death In the 1930s, Billings bought and restored the Hammond family's Savannah River home "Redcliffe." After visiting him there, Henry R. Luce bought Mepkin Plantation (now Mepkin Abbey) for his wife, Claire Booth Luce.
54801513_4_0
54801513
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John%20Shaw%20Billings%20%28editor%29
John Shaw Billings (editor)
John Shaw Billings (editor). Legacy At time of death, Edward K. Thompson, a following Life managing editor (1949–1961) said of Billings, "He lived his entire life by what landed on his desk. He interpreted the world as something he edited, whether text or pictures. He was an editor's editor."
54801513_4_1
54801513
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John%20Shaw%20Billings%20%28editor%29
John Shaw Billings (editor)
John Shaw Billings (editor). Legacy In 1975, the Billings family gave the first major endowment for the newly expanded Thomas Cooper Library. "Funds generated by the John Shaw Billings Library Endowment have provided for the acquisition of significant materials for the Irvin Department of Rare Books and Special Collections (such as the Nuremberg Chronicle, 1493) and for other library needs." The library also houses the John Shaw Billings Papers and Collections, as well as those of his ancestor, U.S. Senator James Henry Hammond (1807-1864). A Time-Life-Fortune collection, 1886-1964, is also archived there.
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54801513
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John%20Shaw%20Billings%20%28editor%29
John Shaw Billings (editor)
John Shaw Billings (editor). External sources University of South Carolina: John Shaw Billings Library Endowment
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54801513
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John%20Shaw%20Billings%20%28editor%29
John Shaw Billings (editor)
John Shaw Billings (editor). 1891 births 1975 deaths American magazine publishers (people) American magazine editors American magazine writers People from Beech Island, South Carolina Time (magazine) people
54801517_0_0
54801517
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/K.%20Danner%20Clouser
K. Danner Clouser
K. Danner Clouser. K. Danner Clouser (26 April 1930 - 14 August 2000) was an American bioethicist.
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54801517
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/K.%20Danner%20Clouser
K. Danner Clouser
K. Danner Clouser. He gained his bachelor's degree from the Lutheran Theological Seminary at Gettysburg in 1955, then completed a PhD at Harvard University in 1961. After having taught at Dartmouth College and Carleton College, he moved to the Pennsylvania State University, where he pursued his career and became University Professor of Humanities (emeritus). In 1968, he established one of the first humanities courses at the Pennsylvania State University College of Medicine. At Dartmouth College, he meet several moral philosophers with whom he continued to collaborate: Bernard Gert, Charles M. Culver, and Ronald M. Green
54801517_0_2
54801517
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/K.%20Danner%20Clouser
K. Danner Clouser
K. Danner Clouser. As an associate editor of the Encyclopedia of Bioethics, he contributed to the development of American bioethics, where he advocated a "common morality" as opposed to classical principlism. One of his peers, Albert Jonsen, qualified him as being "the wittiest ethicist."
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54801517
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/K.%20Danner%20Clouser
K. Danner Clouser
K. Danner Clouser. See also American philosophy List of American philosophers Principlism
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54801517
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/K.%20Danner%20Clouser
K. Danner Clouser
K. Danner Clouser. 1930 births 2000 deaths American biologists Bioethicists Harvard University alumni Pennsylvania State University faculty Dartmouth College faculty Carleton College faculty 20th-century biologists
54801576_0_0
54801576
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soldier%27s%20Song%20%28disambiguation%29
Soldier's Song (disambiguation)
Soldier's Song (disambiguation). "The Soldier's Song" (Irish: ) is the Irish national anthem.
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54801576
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soldier%27s%20Song%20%28disambiguation%29
Soldier's Song (disambiguation)
Soldier's Song (disambiguation). Soldier's Song may also refer to: The Soldier's Song (novel), first in the Soldier's Song trilogy by Alan Monaghan, published in 2010 "A Soldier's Song", a poem by C. Flavell Hayward and set to music by Elgar as "A War Song" in 1884 "Soldier's Song" (Hungarian: ), a Hungarian-language choral work by Zoltán Kodály (1882–1967)
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54801576
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soldier%27s%20Song%20%28disambiguation%29
Soldier's Song (disambiguation)
Soldier's Song (disambiguation). See also Songs title "Soldier" or "Soldiers"; see War song (disambiguation)
54801583_0_0
54801583
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loch%20Loyne
Loch Loyne
Loch Loyne. Loch Loyne is a loch in the Northwest Highlands of Scotland. Loch Loyne lies between Glen Garry and Glen Cluanie. The A87 road runs beside the eastern side of the loch.
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54801583
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loch%20Loyne
Loch Loyne
Loch Loyne. Road and Dam The first proper road across the Loyne was begun in 1821 by the engineer Thomas Telford as part of the later stage of military road building. The road connected Tomdoun and Inchlaggan near the River Garry with the road and inn at Loch Cluanie to the north. The road ran across the Loyne over a stone arch bridge. Much of the original road survives either side of the loch, although the bridge across the river along with a segment of the road was flooded with the building of the dam. Occasionally the bridge has been visible when water levels are low in the loch.
54801583_0_2
54801583
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loch%20Loyne
Loch Loyne
Loch Loyne. Prior to the 1950s, the loch was originally much smaller being fed only by the naturally occurring River Loyne. However, as part of a wider Hydroelectric scheme, a dam was constructed in 1956 and completed in 1957 that increased the water level and flooded the original road built by Thomas Telford. A newer road, the current A87 was built higher up. The loch is visible to traffic on the road above. Water proceeds north from the dam via a tunnel into Loch Cluanie.
54801655_0_0
54801655
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harper%20and%20McIntire%20Company%20Warehouse
Harper and McIntire Company Warehouse
Harper and McIntire Company Warehouse. The Harper and McIntire Company Warehouse, also known as Smulekoff's Warehouse, is a historic building located in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, United States. Harper and Mcintire was a wholesale hardware business that was established in Ottumwa, Iowa in 1867. A branch warehouse in Cedar Rapids was begun in 1921. The four-story, brick, Commercial structure was designed by the Minneapolis architectural firm of Croft and Boerner. Cedar Rapids contractor Theodore Stark & Company and Ferro Concrete Construction Company of Cincinnati were responsible for construction. The building was completed in 1922 in an industrial area where spur lines connected it to the Fourth Street Railroad Corridor. It was originally designed as a seven-story building, but by the time it was put out for bid it was reduced to four-stories with a two-story tower that enclosed a water tank. Two additions were added to be building that facilitated the change to shipping by truck. The east side addition was completed in the 1940s, and the west side addition (1962) was built where the railroad spur track had been located. Smulekoffs Furniture Company took over the building in 1981 and remained until 2014 when they went out of business. The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2015.
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54801756
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daniel%20Arbess
Daniel Arbess
Daniel Arbess. Daniel J. Arbess is a professional investor, social entrepreneur, policy analyst and lawyer who focuses on macroeconomic, geopolitical and major industrial developments. He founded investment firms Xerion Capital Partners and Xerion Investments and co-founded Stratton Investments, Taiga Capital Partners and Triton Partners.
54801756_0_1
54801756
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daniel%20Arbess
Daniel Arbess
Daniel Arbess. Early life and education Arbess was born on January 23, 1961, in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, and is a United States citizen. He received a JD from Osgoode Hall Law School in Toronto, and an LLM from the Harvard Law School. He was an affiliate at the John F. Kennedy School of Government and a fellow at the New York-based World Policy Institute.
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54801756
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daniel%20Arbess
Daniel Arbess
Daniel Arbess. Career Arbess joined the international law firm White & Case in 1987, after having been in the Kremlin as a foreign observer when Mikhail Gorbachev unveiled the policies of Glasnost and Perstroika. He was the first American lawyer to re-locate to Eastern Europe, moving to Prague in early 1990. He advised the Czechoslovak (later Czech) government on its economic transition, principally involving privatization policy and transactions. In 1992, at 31, he became the youngest partner in the history of White & Case and Head of its Global Privatization Group. Arbess advised the Czechoslovak government on the restructuring of its auto industry, including the 1991 sale of Skoda Auto to Volkswagen AG for $6.4 billion (at the time, among the largest cross-border M & A transactions in European history), and the restructuring and sale of its downstream petrochemicals industry to a consortium of international oil majors. Arbess' privatization advisory work extended to Russia, Vietnam, Israel and other countries.
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54801756
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daniel%20Arbess
Daniel Arbess
Daniel Arbess. Arbess has been a principal investor since 1995, first pursuing restructuring-oriented private transactions in Europe. He is a co-founder of investment firms Taiga Capital, Stratton Investments and Triton Partners and founder, CEO and CIO of Xerion Investments., having launched Xerion Investments and Xerion Capital Partners in 2003 with the backing of S. Donald Sussman and his Paloma Partners. Arbess sold Xerion Capital Partners to Perella Weinberg Partners and became a partner of that firm in 2007. He was CIO of the $3.25 Billion Xerion Hedge Funds from 2003 to 2014. Xerion's noted investments captured the devolution of Communism and phases of China's economic reforms; the U.S. housing and financial crisis; monetary policy reflation of financial markets after the 2008 crisis; and the restructuring of the U.S. airline and auto industries. He returned investor capital in late 2014 to pursue private interests and purposeful investment opportunities through Xerion Investments and its affiliates.
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54801756
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daniel%20Arbess
Daniel Arbess
Daniel Arbess. Boards Arbess is a member of the Board of Directors of the Global Virus Network, the Corporate Advisory Board of Cancer Expert Now and the Finance Working Group of the Healthy Brains Global Initiative. He is a lifetime member of the Council on Foreign Relations, is a member of the Atlantic Council and advises the Vaclav Havel Library Foundation. He was a co-Founder of No Labels, a U.S. political organization promoting collaboration across the political spectrum.
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54801767
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caulerpa%20brachypus
Caulerpa brachypus
Caulerpa brachypus. Caulerpa brachypus is a species of seaweed in the Caulerpaceae family. It was first described in 1860 by the Irish botanist William Henry Harvey, having been collected during the North Pacific Exploring and Surveying Expedition of 1853 to 1856. It is native to the Indo-Pacific region and has spread elsewhere. It is regarded as an invasive species in the United States, Martinique and New Zealand.
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54801767
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caulerpa%20brachypus
Caulerpa brachypus
Caulerpa brachypus. Description Caulerpa brachypus is a green seaweed with a horizontal creeping stolon which sends up blade-like fronds on short rhizoids at intervals. These thalli are tongue-like or strap-like in shape, up to long and mainly green, sometimes with yellowish margins. Where they occur together, it is difficult to distinguish this species from other members of the genus Caulerpa, especially as there is considerable variation between different populations of Caulerpa brachypus growing in different habitats. Where conditions suit it, it can become very profuse and form dense stands.
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54801767
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caulerpa%20brachypus
Caulerpa brachypus
Caulerpa brachypus. Distribution Caulerpa brachypus is native to the tropical and subtropical Indo-Pacific region. Its range includes East Africa, India, southeastern and eastern Asia, the Pacific Islands and Western Australia. It is found along the Western Australia coast scattered over a large area in the Pilbara region between Exmouth and Port Hedland.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caulerpa%20brachypus
Caulerpa brachypus
Caulerpa brachypus. It was first detected in the United States, in Martin County, Florida, in 1999 and had spread to the Indian River Lagoon by 2003. It was found at Great Barrier Island in New Zealand in 2021. It is considered an invasive species in the United States, Martinique (in the Caribbean) and New Zealand.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caulerpa%20brachypus
Caulerpa brachypus
Caulerpa brachypus. Ecology It is probable that sexual reproduction in this species is similar to other members of the genus. However a much more common means of dispersal involves asexual reproduction, with fragments of the plant breaking off and re-establishing themselves elsewhere. In its native surroundings, this seaweed is kept in check by herbivorous fish but in Florida, few if any fish feed on it and it can flourish on off-shore reefs, reducing biodiversity. It is intolerant of bright light, growing best in shaded positions, being mostly found in the depth range where there is less light than at the surface. Where the water is turbid, it flourishes in shallower habitats.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caulerpa%20brachypus
Caulerpa brachypus
Caulerpa brachypus. Invasiveness In Florida, this seaweed has been dubbed the "killer algae". First recorded in the state in 1999, by 2003 it had shown explosive growth and spread widely, with some near shore reefs in Palm Beach County becoming so overwhelmed that fish and lobsters were no longer present. During hurricanes in 2004, it was scoured from the rocky reefs and disappeared, but over the next few years, it became re-established, once more forming dense stands. It is thought to become so abundant on Florida's coast because of the sewage outflows which result in extra nutrients being present in the water. Such extensive algal cover is likely to kill corals, sponges and other sessile invertebrates, and force more mobile organisms to move elsewhere.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roger%20Iribarne
Roger Iribarne
Roger Iribarne. Roger Valentin Iribarne Contreras (born 2 January 1996) is a Cuban athlete specialising in the high hurdles. He represented his country at the 2017 World Championships reaching the semifinals. In addition, he won the silver medal at the 2015 Pan American Junior Championships.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roger%20Iribarne
Roger Iribarne
Roger Iribarne. His personal best in the 110 metres hurdles is 13.39 seconds (-0.1 m/s) set in Havana in 2017.
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54801784
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soldier%2C%20Soldier%20%28poem%29
Soldier, Soldier (poem)
Soldier, Soldier (poem). Soldier, Soldier is a poem by Rudyard Kipling from Barrack-Room Ballads. The lyrics of the poem are not directly related to the traditional ballad "Soldier, soldier won't you marry me" and instead begin "Soldier, soldier come from the wars, Why don't you march with my true love?"
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54801821
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KQEV-LP
KQEV-LP
KQEV-LP. KQEV-LP (104.7 MHz) is a low-power FM radio station licensed to Walnut, California. The station is owned by Chinese Sound of Oriental and West Heritage in Carson, California and airs a Chinese-language ethnic format.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KQEV-LP
KQEV-LP
KQEV-LP. QEV-LP QEV-LP Radio stations established in 2015 2015 establishments in California
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caulerpa%20brownii
Caulerpa brownii
Caulerpa brownii. Caulerpa brownii is a species of seaweed in the Caulerpaceae family.
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54801834
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caulerpa%20brownii
Caulerpa brownii
Caulerpa brownii. Distribution This species can be found along the southern North Island, the South Island, Chatham Island, Stewart Island, Snares Island of New Zealand. It is also found along the coast in a large area extending from near Karratha in the northern Pilbara region to east of Esperance in the Goldfields-Esperance region of Western Australia.
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54801840
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colegio%20El%20Camino
Colegio El Camino
Colegio El Camino. Colegio El Camino Los Cabos, BCS is a private school located at the base of Pedregal Cabo San Lucas in Los Cabos, Baja California Sur, Mexico.
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54801840
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colegio%20El%20Camino
Colegio El Camino
Colegio El Camino. It is an International Baccalaureate (IB) accredited K-12 private school and is associated with AdvancED.
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54801841
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/King%20of%20the%20Wild%20Horses%20%281933%20film%29
King of the Wild Horses (1933 film)
King of the Wild Horses (1933 film). King of the Wild Horses is a 1933 American Columbia Pictures Western film directed by Earl Haley. It was produced and released by Columbia Pictures with stunts by Yakima Canutt.
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54801841
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/King%20of%20the%20Wild%20Horses%20%281933%20film%29
King of the Wild Horses (1933 film)
King of the Wild Horses (1933 film). Cast Rex the Wonder Horse as Rex Lady the Horse as The Mare Marquis the Horse as Rex's Rival William Janney as Two Feathers Dorothy Appleby as Napeeta Wallace MacDonald as Gorman Harry Semels as John Foster Ford West as Dr. Anderson Art Mix as Haley Charles LeMoyne as a henchman(*uncredited)
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54801841
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/King%20of%20the%20Wild%20Horses%20%281933%20film%29
King of the Wild Horses (1933 film)
King of the Wild Horses (1933 film). Preservation status A print is held in the Library of Congress collection.
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54801847
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1997%E2%80%9398%20%C3%9Arvalsdeild%20karla
1997–98 Úrvalsdeild karla
1997–98 Úrvalsdeild karla. The 1997–98 Úrvalsdeild karla was the 46th season of the Úrvalsdeild karla, the top tier men's basketball league on Iceland. The season started on October 2, 1997 and ended on April 19, 1998. Njarðvík won its fourteenth title by defeating KR 3–0 in the Finals.
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54801847
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1997%E2%80%9398%20%C3%9Arvalsdeild%20karla
1997–98 Úrvalsdeild karla
1997–98 Úrvalsdeild karla. Competition format The participating teams first played a conventional round-robin schedule with every team playing each opponent once "home" and once "away" for a total of 22 games. The top eight teams qualified for the championship playoffs whilst the bottom team was relegated to Division 1.
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54801854
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The%20Architect%20and%20His%20Office
The Architect and His Office
The Architect and His Office. The Architect and His Office was a landmark report about the state of the British architectural profession in the early 1960s. It was commissioned by the Royal Institute of British Architects in 1960 and the report was published in February 1962 with an introduction by William Holford, then President of the Institute. Running to more than 250 pages, the report examined architectural education, fees and salaries, and management and technical competence. It was based on extensive fieldwork including a questionnaire survey and visits to nearly 70 architects' offices of various kinds. Funding of slightly more than £11,000 was provided for the study by the Leverhulme Trust.
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54801854
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The%20Architect%20and%20His%20Office
The Architect and His Office
The Architect and His Office. According to Frank Duffy, in his book Architectural Knowledge: the Idea of a Profession, the study stands as one of the best studies of a profession ever carried out anywhere in the world (page 173). Duffy considers that the study did much to reform architectural practices in Britain, particularly by contributing to the development of the RIBA Plan of Work, a set of discrete stages of the architect's work from inception to completion. As well as each stage being precisely described, the stages also had a precise fraction of the total architect's fee associated with them. However, as Duffy also comments, the identification of the usual work pattern as 'normal services' also implied that many activities known as 'other services' (management, surveying, engineering) lay outside the work of the architect, and architects lost market share as a consequence of such exclusivity (page 179).
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54801856
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ouachita%20Christian%20High%20School
Ouachita Christian High School
Ouachita Christian High School. Ouachita Christian School is a private K–12 Christian school in Monroe, Louisiana.
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54801856
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ouachita%20Christian%20High%20School
Ouachita Christian High School
Ouachita Christian High School. State championships Football State-1985, 1997, 2000, 2011, 2012, 2014, 2019 Baseball State-1987, 1997, 2005, 2008, 2010, 2012, 2015, 2019 Men's Track State-2012 Women's Track State- 2009, 2011, 2012
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54801856
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ouachita%20Christian%20High%20School
Ouachita Christian High School
Ouachita Christian High School. Notable alumni Julia Letlow, member elect to the United States House of Representatives for Louisiana's 5th congressional district Luke Letlow, former member elect to the United States House of Representatives Rudy Niswanger, NFL player Shane Reynolds, MLB player Sadie Robertson, reality TV star, member of Duck Dynasty
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54801856
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ouachita%20Christian%20High%20School
Ouachita Christian High School
Ouachita Christian High School. Notable faculty Kay Robertson, mother of some of the Robertson Family from Duck Dynasty
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ouachita%20Christian%20High%20School
Ouachita Christian High School
Ouachita Christian High School. Athletics Stan Humphries, former NFL quarterback for the Washington Redskins and San Diego Chargers.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David%20M.%20Lutken
David M. Lutken
David M. Lutken. David M. Lutken (born 1957) is an American musician, actor, playwright, and director best known for work related to Woody Guthrie.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David%20M.%20Lutken
David M. Lutken
David M. Lutken. Life Lutken was born and raised in Dallas, Texas, where he attended St. Mark's School of Texas. He graduated from Duke University in 1979 with a degree in Classical Studies. He studied in London at the Royal School of Church Music, the Royal College of Music, and the Webber Douglas Academy of Dramatic Art. In addition to developing various folk music/American history lessons for school children and young adults, he has created a touring show, Woody Sez: The Life and Music of Woody Guthrie. Woody Sez premiered at the Edinburgh Festival in 2007.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David%20M.%20Lutken
David M. Lutken
David M. Lutken. Career Lutken and his company have toured Woody Sez through the United States, Europe, the Middle East, and China. Lutken has won the Helen Hayes Award and the Jeff Award for Best Actor for portrayals of Woody Guthrie.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David%20M.%20Lutken
David M. Lutken
David M. Lutken. Credits Lutken's Broadway credits include Inherit the Wind, Ring of Fire, The Civil War and The Will Rogers Follies.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Croft%20%26%20Boerner
Croft & Boerner
Croft & Boerner. Croft & Boerner was an architectural and engineering firm based in Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States. It was a partnership of Francis Boerner (1889–1936) and Ernest Croft (1889–1959). Several of their works are listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places for their architecture.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Croft%20%26%20Boerner
Croft & Boerner
Croft & Boerner. Both Boerner and Croft studied at the University of Minnesota, completing degrees in engineering. One or both then spent three years in New York City working for Turner Construction Company, a firm then known for its use of reinforced concrete.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Croft%20%26%20Boerner
Croft & Boerner
Croft & Boerner. Works Works include: Northwestern Terminal complex of buildings (c.1919), Minneapolis, Minnesota Harper and McIntire Company Warehouse (1921), Cedar Rapids, Iowa, NRHP-listed St. Louis County District Courthouse (1921 addition), 300 S. Fifth Ave., Virginia, Minnesota, NRHP-listed Ottumwa High School (1923), Ottumwa, Iowa Mille Lacs County Courthouse (1923), 635 2nd St. SE, Milaca, Minnesota, NRHP-listed Ottumwa Young Women's Christian Association (1924), 133 W. Second St., Ottumwa, Iowa, NRHP-listed Franklin Junior High School (1932), 1001 Kingwood St., Brainerd, Minnesota, NRHP-listed
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54801888
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brayati%20FC
Brayati FC
Brayati FC. Brayati Sport club (), is an Iraqi sport club based in Erbil, Iraq that plays in the Iraq Division One, the second-tier of Iraqi football. The club is also known as Yaney Brayati. The name Brayati is a Kurdish term meaning “Brotherhood”.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brayati%20FC
Brayati FC
Brayati FC. Kits and crest Since its establishment Brayati football club has been mainly using green home kits (with white trimmings) and white away kits (with green trimmings) which remain the club's main colours to this day.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brayati%20FC
Brayati FC
Brayati FC. Brayati football club's logo is also made green and white, with images of the historic and world famous Erbil Citadel and also the Mudhafaria Minare
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brayati%20FC
Brayati FC
Brayati FC. Yousef Kaki Adel Khudhair
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54801901
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rivelin%20Valley%20artists
Rivelin Valley artists
Rivelin Valley artists. The Rivelin Valley artists were a group of professional and amateur landscape artists in the early 1920s, based in the Rivelin Valley, Sheffield. The most prominent was Robert Scott-Temple. Others were William WE Goodrich, Ben Baines, Charles Edwin Dyson, Vernon Edwards and Charles Pigott.
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54801901
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rivelin%20Valley%20artists
Rivelin Valley artists
Rivelin Valley artists. Their work was shown and celebrated at Sheffield's Weston Park Gallery in July 2017.
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54801928
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giovanni%20Furno
Giovanni Furno
Giovanni Furno. Giovanni Furno (Capua, January 1, 1748 – Naples , June 20, 1837) was an Italian composer and famous music teacher. Among his students were Vincenzo Bellini and Saverio Mercadante. He was unanimously considered the best teacher in Naples. His primer on partimenti, called Easy, short, and plain method of the first and essential rules for the accompaniment of unfigured partimenti was an extremely popular textbook and was reprinted many times.
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54801928
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giovanni%20Furno
Giovanni Furno
Giovanni Furno. He composed two operas, a Miserere, a symphony and other works for orchestra.
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54801959
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ann%20Marie%20Sastry
Ann Marie Sastry
Ann Marie Sastry. Ann Marie Sastry is an American engineer, educator, and businessperson. She was President of Sakti3, a solid-state battery company based in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Sastry was the Arthur F. Thurnau Professor of Mechanical, Biomedical and Materials Science and Engineering at the University of Michigan from 1995 to 2012.
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54801959
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ann%20Marie%20Sastry
Ann Marie Sastry
Ann Marie Sastry. Biography Sastry got her bachelor's degree in mechanical engineering from the University of Delaware as a Eugene I. DuPont Scholar. She later received a PhD degree in mechanical engineering from Cornell University. She joined the University of Michigan as a faculty member in 1995. While at the University of Michigan, she founded and directed GM/UM Advanced Battery Coalition for Drivetrains and Energy Systems Engineering graduate program.
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54801959
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ann%20Marie%20Sastry
Ann Marie Sastry
Ann Marie Sastry. Research Sastry has worked in a variety of fields, including composite materials, percolation phenomena, diabetes, and battery materials, design and optimization. Her work has been cited over 6400 times.
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54801959
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ann%20Marie%20Sastry
Ann Marie Sastry
Ann Marie Sastry. Rise and Fall of Sakti3 Sastry co-founded the solid-state battery company Sakti3 in 2008 as a spin-out of her university lab, with several of her students. The company was headquartered in Michigan, a state in financial peril, marked by deep budget deficits. Despite Michigan's multi-billion dollar budget deficit, the State of Michigan, through the Michigan Economic Development Council (MEDC) gave Sakti3 a no-strings grant of $3 million, in addition to other tax credit incentives issued directly through the State of Michigan, in the hopes it could develop a viable technology that could create permanent, Michigan-based jobs. Sakti3 also received $1 million in funding from the federal government, administered through the Advanced Battery Consortium (USABC). Sakti3 at one time claimed an intellectual property portfolio of 94 patents and patents pending.