2021 Service Awardees

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

2021 Service Awardees The University of Arizona 2021 ANNUAL SERVICE AWARDS List of Honorees TABLE OF CONTENTS FIFTY YEAR AWARDS 4 FORTY-FIVE YEAR AWARDS 4 THIRTY-FIVE YEAR AWARDS 7 THIRTY YEAR AWARDS 5 TWENTY-FIVE YEAR 9 TWENTY YEAR AWARDS 12 FIFTEEN YEAR AWARDS 18 TEN YEAR AWARDS 26 3 FIFTY YEAR AWARDS M Denton Theodore Laetsch Peter Strittmatter Chemistry & Biochemistry Mathematics Astronomy Theodore Downing Stephen Larson Thomas Volgy Research, Innovation & Lunar and Planetary Lab School of Government and Impact Public Policy FORTY-FIVE YEAR AWARDS Alma Enciso Stuart Hameroff William Roeske Research Administration Anesthesiology Medicine Barry Ganapol Dennis Lichtenberger Barry Schaede Aerospace and Mechanical Chemistry & Biochemistry Infrastructure and Engineering Foundational Technologies Debra Pearson V-Bar-V Ranch FORTY YEAR AWARDS Victor Baker Edna Galvez Michael Katz Hydrology and Delivery, Description, and Pharmacy Practice and Atmospheric Sciences Acquisition Science Karen Juan Garcia Georgina Lambert Blohm-Mangone History School of Plant Sciences Pharmacology and Toxicology Charles Gerba Oscar Lujan Department of SALT Center Learning Anne Cress Environmental Sciences Disabilities Cellular and Molecular Medicine Robert Grunloh Audrey Mattson Technology Strategy and Student Programs Ernest Cruz Services Facilities Management Pamela Mendel Custodial Dolores Hill Education - Dean’s Office Lunar and Planetary Lab Kevin Fitzsimmons Terry Mullin Department of Anthony Jull Southwest Institute for Environmental Science Geosciences Research on Women 4 FORTY YEAR AWARDS (continued) Alan Newell Saul Rodriguez David Venable Mathematics Student Union-Operations Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Jeanne Pemberton Timothy Secomb Chemistry & Biochemistry BIO5 Institute Melanie Wallendorf Marketing Lizabeth Petersen Robert Varady Poison Control Center Udall Center Eleanor Warder Chemistry & Biochemistry THIRTY-FIVE YEAR AWARDS Ara Arabyan Antonio Estrada Karen Kenagy Engineering Mexican American Studies Steward Observatory Administration Alice Goddard Nai-Hang Kwong Terry Badger Pediatrics James C Wyant College of College of Nursing Optical Sciences Kevin Gosner Esperanza Bejarano History Michael Leuthold Facilities Management Hydrology and Utilities D Guertin Atmospheric Sciences School of Natural Mark Borgstrom Resources and The Robert Maier Research and Discovery Environment Mathematics Technologies Lee Ann Hamilton Sallie Marston Moysey Brio Campus Health and School of Geography, Mathematics Wellness Development & Environment Patricia Broyles Humberto Hernandez Ophthalmology and Vision Yuma Agriculture Center Hubert Martin Sciences Steward Observatory Jeannette Hoit Andrew Cohen Speech Language and Fernando Martinez Geosciences Hearing Sciences Asthma and Airway Disease Research Center Glinda Davidson Sarah Holzman Lunar and Planetary Lab Poison Control Center Fred Martinez Procurement and Saumya Debray Christopher Impey Contracting Services Computer Science Astronomy 5 THIRTY-FIVE YEAR AWARDS (continued) Mitchel Mcclaran Bruce Russell Grace Wagner School of Natural Environmental Science - College of Medicine Resources and The Extension Administration Environment Henry Schrader Richard Wahl Jerome Moloney Facilities Management Pediatrics James C Wyant College of Maintenance Services Optical Sciences Jael Walker Daniel Spaite Secretary of the University Gerald Monsman Department of Emergency English Medicine Michael Wallace Parking and Jose Montante Ben Sternberg Transportation Entomology Mining and Geological Engineering James Walsh Thomas Park Ecology and Evolutionary School of Anthropology Michael Stilson Biology Campus Health and Charles Putnam Wellness Mary Wildner-Bassett Surgery German Studies Timothy Swindle Denise Roe Lunar and Planetary Lab Marian Wiseley Epidemiology and Linguistics Biostatistics Gary Thompson Agricultural and Resource Tian-Chyi Yeh Ruby Romero Economics Hydrology and Admissions and New Atmospheric Sciences Student Enrollment Donald Uhlmann Materials Science and Rosemary Romo Engineering Disability Resource Center Cinda Van Winkle Jerzy Rozenblit Management Information Electrical and Computer Systems Engineering Rebecca Vance Rebecca Ruiz Speech Language and Rural Health Office Hearing Sciences Mary Voyatzis School of Anthropology 6 THIRTY YEAR AWARDS Maria Altbach William Canizales Mary Fox Medical Imaging Facilities Management American Indian Studies Maintenance Services Program Satheesh Aradhyula Agricultural and Resource Jeffrey Christensen Leonid Friedlander Economics Risk Management and Mathematics Safety Alex Armenta Jean-Philippe Galons Facilities Management David Christiana Medical Imaging Maintenance Services School of Art Howard Gimblett Norma Ayon Mary Conner School of Natural Resources Fine Arts Administration County Office - Maricopa and The Environment Samuel Bailey Tiburcio Contreras Rhea Gowin Arizona Space Institute Maricopa Agricultural Graduate College Center Administration Lidia Barcelo UA Library Administration Timothy Corley John Greivenkamp Hydrology and James C Wyant College of James Baygents Atmospheric Sciences Optical Sciences Engineering Administration Pia Cuneo Sarah Gutierrez School of Art University Police Achyut Bhattacharyya Department Pathology Scott Derigne BIO5 Institute Michael Hammer Gregory Bradley BIO5 Institute Animal & Comparative Nancy Driscoll Sciences Nutritional Sciences Richard Healey Philosophy Margaret Briehl Peter Ellsworth Pathology Entomology Sonia Hernandez Facilities Management Wesley Brittain Heather Enos Maintenance Services University Police Lunar and Planetary Lab Department Mariano Hernandez Rosalind Fair Narvaez Geneva Burns Family and Community School of Natural Resources College of Nursing Medicine and The Environment 7 THIRTY YEAR AWARDS (continued) Robyn Huff-Eibl Steven Mullen Charles Sanchez Access and Information Hydrology and Department of Services Atmospheric Sciences Environmental Science Lauri Johnson Martin Munro Julie Schippers School of Landscape Tree Ring Laboratory Neurosurgery Architecture Claudia Nelson Karen Schumaker David Killick Research, Innovation & School of Plant Science School of Anthropology Impact Beverly Seckinger Suzanne Knosp Marc Orbach School of Theatre Film and School of Dance School of Plant Science Television David Labiner Gillian Paine-Murrieta Christopher Shinohara Neurology Cancer Center Division Defense & Security Research Institute Feng-Hsi Liu Tao Peng East Asian Studies Valley Fever Center for Marcia Simon Excellence English Andrea Lopez COM Academic Affairs Patricia Radford Violet Siwik Andrew Weil Center for Family and Community Melissa Lowe Integrative Medicine Medicine School of Dance Bashar Rizk Marvin Slepian Raina Maier Lunar and Planetary Lab Medicine Department of Environmental Science John Ruth Celia Stenzel Orthopedic Surgery Engineering Alice Mcarthur Administration Sarver Heart Center Marek Rychlik Mathematics Carla Stoffle Joseph Miller School of Information Ophthalmology and Steven Saavedra Vision Sciences Chemistry & Biochemistry Richard Stoffle Bureau of Applied Research Barbara Mills Deborah Sakiestewa in Anthropology School of Anthropology All of Us Research Program Lynne Tomasa Katherine Morrissey Family and Community History Medicine 8 THIRTY YEAR AWARDS (continued) Ramzi Touchan Jan Wehr Craig Wissler Tree Ring Laboratory Mathematics School of Natural Resources and The Environment Christopher Walker Martin Weinand Astronomy Neurosurgery Zhongguo Xiong School of Plant Science James Warneke Cynthia White Surgery French and Italian TWENTY-FIVE YEAR AWARDS Edward Ackerley Lehman Benson Qin Chen Marketing Management and Pharmacy Practice and Organizations Science Rosemary Alvarado Surgery Monica Blancarte Zhao Chen Administration and Epidemiology and Rosi Andrade Athletics Biostatistics Southwest Institute for Research on Women Robert Blew Elliott Cheu Health Promotion Sciences Science Administration Dalila Ayoun French and Italian Gary Bluemke Eric Clarkson University Animal Care Medical Imaging Arturo Baez Campus Agriculture Center Tara Bode Debra Cox-Howard Lunar and Planetary Lab Campus Health and Ralph Banks Wellness Planning, Design and Joseph Bonito Construction Communication Hope Dang Molecular and Cellular Cynthia Barlow Curtis Booth Biology Fine Arts Administration Electrical and Computer Engineering Claudia Davila Todd Bell Presidential Events & Residential Facilities Kimberly Chapman University Ceremonies Steward Observatory Paul Bennett David Dettman Law Instruction Anne Chase Geosciences Geosciences 9 TWENTY-FIVE YEAR AWARDS (continued) Robert Downs Rogelio Guzman Walter Klimecki Geosciences Facilities Management Veterinary Medicine Maintenance Services Administration Nura Dualeh STEM Learning Center Karl Harshman Christopher Kopach Lunar and Planetary Lab Facilities Management Anne-Marie Administration Engels-Brooks Victoria Healey French and Italian Pharmacology Julian Kunnie Department of Religious Suzanne Ernstein Keleen Huff Studies and Classics Maricopa Agricultural Chemistry & Biochemistry Center Cheryl Lacasse Martha Hunter College of Nursing Torsten Falk Entomology Neurology Teresa Lappin Julia Indik Steward Observatory Dawn Farmer Medicine Facilities Management Brenda Lee Maia Ingram Medicine Administration Melissa Fitch Health Promotion Sciences Spanish and Portuguese Martina Loftus Raul Islas Family and Community Tonya Fotheringham Animal & Comparative Medicine Immunobiology Sciences Gary Lotze Frank Fregoso William Jacobs Arizona Arts Live Technical Services Psychology
Recommended publications
  • Dignitatis Humanae and the Development of Moral Doctrine: Assessing Change in Catholic Social Teaching on Religious Liberty
    THE CATHOLIC UNIVERSITY OF AMERICA Dignitatis humanae and the Development of Moral Doctrine: Assessing Change in Catholic Social Teaching on Religious Liberty A DISSERTATION Submitted to the Faculty of the School of Theology and Religious Studies Of The Catholic University of America In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements For the Degree Doctor of Philosophy By Barrett Hamilton Turner Washington, D.C 2015 Dignitatis humanae and the Development of Moral Doctrine: Assessing Change in Catholic Social Teaching on Religious Liberty Barrett Hamilton Turner, Ph.D. Director: Joseph E. Capizzi, Ph.D. Vatican II’s Declaration on Religious Liberty, Dignitatis humanae (DH), poses the problem of development in Catholic moral and social doctrine. This problem is threefold, consisting in properly understanding the meaning of pre-conciliar magisterial teaching on religious liberty, the meaning of DH itself, and the Declaration’s implications for how social doctrine develops. A survey of recent scholarship reveals that scholars attend to the first two elements in contradictory ways, and that their accounts of doctrinal development are vague. The dissertation then proceeds to the threefold problematic. Chapter two outlines the general parameters of doctrinal development. The third chapter gives an interpretation of the pre- conciliar teaching from Pius IX to John XXIII. To better determine the meaning of DH, the fourth chapter examines the Declaration’s drafts and the official explanatory speeches (relationes) contained in Vatican II’s Acta synodalia. The fifth chapter discusses how experience may contribute to doctrinal development and proposes an explanation for how the doctrine on religious liberty changed, drawing upon the work of Jacques Maritain and Basile Valuet.
    [Show full text]
  • THE SKYDMORES/ SCUDAMORES of ROWLESTONE, HEREFORDSHIRE, Including Their Descendants at KENTCHURCH, LLANCILLO, MAGOR & EWYAS HAROLD
    Rowlestone and Kentchurch Skidmore/ Scudamore One-Name Study THE SKYDMORES/ SCUDAMORES OF ROWLESTONE, HEREFORDSHIRE, including their descendants at KENTCHURCH, LLANCILLO, MAGOR & EWYAS HAROLD. edited by Linda Moffatt 2016© from the original work of Warren Skidmore CITATION Please respect the author's contribution and state where you found this information if you quote it. Suggested citation The Skydmores/ Scudamores of Rowlestone, Herefordshire, including their Descendants at Kentchurch, Llancillo, Magor & Ewyas Harold, ed. Linda Moffatt 2016, at the website of the Skidmore/ Scudamore One-Name Study www.skidmorefamilyhistory.com'. DATES • Prior to 1752 the year began on 25 March (Lady Day). In order to avoid confusion, a date which in the modern calendar would be written 2 February 1714 is written 2 February 1713/4 - i.e. the baptism, marriage or burial occurred in the 3 months (January, February and the first 3 weeks of March) of 1713 which 'rolled over' into what in a modern calendar would be 1714. • Civil registration was introduced in England and Wales in 1837 and records were archived quarterly; hence, for example, 'born in 1840Q1' the author here uses to mean that the birth took place in January, February or March of 1840. Where only a baptism date is given for an individual born after 1837, assume the birth was registered in the same quarter. BIRTHS, MARRIAGES AND DEATHS Databases of all known Skidmore and Scudamore bmds can be found at www.skidmorefamilyhistory.com PROBATE A list of all known Skidmore and Scudamore wills - many with full transcription or an abstract of its contents - can be found at www.skidmorefamilyhistory.com in the file Skidmore/Scudamore One-Name Study Probate.
    [Show full text]
  • The Structure of Industry in London: 1775-1825. Phd Thesis, University of Nottingham
    Barnett, David Colin (1996) The structure of industry in London: 1775-1825. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. Access from the University of Nottingham repository: http://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/12617/1/307810.pdf Copyright and reuse: The Nottingham ePrints service makes this work by researchers of the University of Nottingham available open access under the following conditions. · Copyright and all moral rights to the version of the paper presented here belong to the individual author(s) and/or other copyright owners. · To the extent reasonable and practicable the material made available in Nottingham ePrints has been checked for eligibility before being made available. · Copies of full items can be used for personal research or study, educational, or not- for-profit purposes without prior permission or charge provided that the authors, title and full bibliographic details are credited, a hyperlink and/or URL is given for the original metadata page and the content is not changed in any way. · Quotations or similar reproductions must be sufficiently acknowledged. Please see our full end user licence at: http://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/end_user_agreement.pdf A note on versions: The version presented here may differ from the published version or from the version of record. If you wish to cite this item you are advised to consult the publisher’s version. Please see the repository url above for details on accessing the published version and note that access may require a subscription. For more information, please contact [email protected]
    [Show full text]
  • THE COWL 9:30 A.M
    SUBSCRIBER'S ADDRESS Convocation THE COWL 9:30 a.m. PROVIDENCE Friday I COLLEGE VOL. XXXI, No. 14 PROVIDENCE COLLEGE, PROVIDENCE, R. I., MARCH 6, 1969 TEN PAGES Million Dollars Given Anonymously To College Last Sunday evening the Very Reverend William Paul Haas, O.P., president of Provi• dence College, announced the donation of one million dollars to the College by an anonymous donor. The announcement was made at the kick-off dinner inaugurat• ing the Capital Program for the Second Half Century. The gift (L.-R.) John Pollard ('71), Fr. Robert Bond, Dr. Paul Thorn- is the largest in the fifty year son, Dr. Edward Healy, Fr. Walter Hackett at open hearing of history of PC. Curriculum Study Committee. —COWLfoto hy Peter zagorzycki Senator John O. Pastore was the principal speaker at the din• ner in Raymond Hall attended Open Hearing on Curriculum by 400 guests. Senator Pastore said, "For me this has been a sentimental journey and all of us come here Cites Intensification Need tonight in admiration for the Student proposals offered at ment of an interdepartmental achievements of the good the March 3 open meeting of and multi-dimensional course Dominican Fathers during these the Curriculum Study Commit• on the history of western fifty years. We come in pride tee unanimously underscored thought. The course would sharing the Dominican am• Governor Frank Licht, Father Haas listen to Senator John the need for the intensification serve as the basic core curricu• bitions for the fifty years that O. Pastore at Kick-off Dinner. —COWLfoto by Peter Zagorzydd of course material presently lum and would be worth twelve lie ahead." covered in basic core curriculum (Continued on Page 7) He continued, "This is a time of change and challenge in all labored in love — the sacrificing courses.
    [Show full text]
  • 2008 Journal of Convention
    THE DIOCESE OF RHODE ISLAND JOURNAL OF CONVENTION OCTOBER 25, 2008 REPORTS from Convention 2007 To convention 2008 Episcopal Diocese of Rhode Island JOURNAL OF CONVENTION October 25, 2008 And Reports from Convention 2007-2008 Officers and Committees of Convention...........................................................................3 Convention Roll of Clergy.................................................................................................8 Convention Roll of Delegates..........................................................................................14 Journal of Proceedings.....................................................................................................16 Bishop’s Address ............................................................................................................25 Convention Necrology.....................................................................................................29 Report of the Tellers……………………………………………………………………33 Parochial Organization for 2008......................................................................................35 Annual Reports Bishop’s Official Acts......................................................................................................43 Report of the Standing Committee...................................................................................45 Report of the Diocesan Deputies to General Convention………………………………46 Report of the Environmental Stewardship Task Force…………………………………47 Report of the Companion Diocese Committee…………………………………………49
    [Show full text]
  • Class of 2020
    Virtual Celebration and Degree Conferral for the CLASS OF 2020 Saturday, May 16, 2020 Contents Board of Visitors, 2 Administration, 3 Graduates and Degree Candidates* Graduate School of Arts & Sciences, 4 College of Arts & Sciences, 8 School of Medicine, 18 School of Law, 19 School of Engineering & Applied Science, 21 Curry School of Education and Human Development, 26 Darden Graduate School of Business Administration, 30 School of Architecture, 31 School of Nursing, 32 McIntire School of Commerce, 34 School of Continuing & Professional Studies, 36 Frank Batten School of Leadership and Public Policy, 37 School of Data Science, 37 Student and Faculty Awards, 38 Honorary Societies, 39 The Good Old Song, 42 * The degree candidates in this program were applicants for degrees as of May 1, 2020. The August 2019 and December 2019 degree recipients precede the list of May 2020 degree candidates in each section. © 2020 by the Rector and Visitors of the University of Virginia Designed by University of Virginia Printing and Copying Services University of Virginia Board of Visitors James B. Murray, Jr., Rector (Keene, VA) Whittington W. Clement, Vice Rector (Richmond, VA) Robert M. Blue (Richmond, VA) Mark T. Bowles (Goochland, VA) L.D. Britt, M.D., MPH (Suffolk, VA) Frank M. Conner III (Alexandria, VA) Elizabeth M. Cranwell (Vinton, VA) Thomas A. DePasquale (Washington, DC) Barbara J. Fried (Crozet, VA) John A. Griffin (New York, NY) Louis S. Haddad (Suffolk, VA) Robert D. Hardie (Charlottesville, VA) Maurice A. Jones (Norfolk, VA) Babur B. Lateef, M.D. (Manassas, VA) Angela Hucles Mangano (Playa del Rey, CA) C.
    [Show full text]
  • Directory of Labor Organizations in Massachusetts, 1957
    Bi jy^933I .0744 IS57-6 3^ / ^ ITT "* Public Document D^ ( ^ No. 15 Fifty-Second Directory of Labor Organizations in Massachusetts, 1957 (With Statistics of Membership, 1955-56-57) Labor Bulletin No. 200 PART I of the ANNUAL REPORT ON THE STATISTICS OF LABOR Department of Labor and Industries Publication of this Document Approved by George J. Cronin, State Purchasing Agent 1M-6-S7-920S09 Directory of Labor Organizations in Massachusetts, 1957 With Statistics of Membership 1955-56-57 INTRODUCTION The mateirial here presented constitutes the Fifty-Second Directory of Labor Organizations in Massachusetts, the first Directory of this kind having been published in August, 1902. The tenn "Labor Organizations" as used in this directory, is a group of employees or wage earners organized for the purpose of improving their status through negotiations with employers, except in the cases of employees of governmental agencies, the organization is usually a party to ei- ther a written or verbal agreement concerning wages and conditions of employment. Since the last Directory was issued, many new unions have been organized, others have become inactive or disbanded. The Department has quite complete records of unions in existence by reason of "statements" required by Chapter 618, Acts of 1916. Ihis edition consists of four divisions, as follows: I. "National and International Organizations " having one or more affil- iated local unions in the United States, (pages 3-13). II. " Delegate Organizations " consisting of organizations composed of dele- gates from local unions whose members are in trades or industries of a like character within a definite district, or of delegates from local unions in the same locality, not necessarily in similar trades, (pages llt-23J.
    [Show full text]
  • Somerset Parish Registers. Marriages
    942.38019 W!E^ Aalp V.6 1379239 GENEALOGY eOL LECTION ALLEN COUNTY PUBLIC LIBRARY 3 1833 00676 1198 ) SOMERSET PARISH REGISTERS. nDarriagee, VI. PHILLIMORE S PARISH RKGISTER SERIES. VOL. VI. (SOMERSET, VOL. LIV. (Jni- hundred and fifty only printed. O. (P'^ : Somerset I ^ Parish Registers. ilDarriages. Edited by W. P. W. PHILLIMORE, M.A., B.C.L., AND W. A. BELL, Rector of Chavlynch, AND C. W. WHISTLER, M.R.C.S., Vicay of Stockland. VOL. VI. 5o XonDon Issued to the Subscribers by Phillimore & Co., 124, Chancery Lane, 1905. ^ — ^^ i s PREFACE. A sixth volume of Somerset Marriage Registers is now completed, making the total number of parishes dealt with to be forty-nine. JL37^9^39 As before, contractions have been made use of w.—widower or widow. dioc.—in the diocese of. b.—bachelor co.—in the county of. s. —spinster, single woman. lie. —marriage licence, d. —daughter. y.—yeoman, p.—of the parish of. c.—carpenter. The reader must remember that the printed volumes are not " evidence " in the legal sense. Certificates must be obtained from the local clergy in charge of the Registers. The Editors have to acknowledge the ready willingness of the Clergy in affording facilities for making the needful transcripts for the printers. Their names are given under the respective parishes. They will gladly welcome the assistance of others who may be willing to aid in transcribing Registers, for it is only by volunteer work that it is possible to print our Parish Registers. They would gladly issue two volumes in each year, and this they can do if those who have the opportunity will supply them with the needful transcriptions of the Registers.
    [Show full text]
  • MAROON Ex Librnis the MAROON and GOLD
    1935 MAROON Ex Librnis The MAROON AND GOLD Published by the ANNUAL STAFF or the GRADUATING CLASS or JOHN ADAMS HIGH SCHOOL in JUNE 1935 DEDICATION TN this, the year of our Lord nine­ teen hundred and thirty-Five, in which we celebrate the three hun­ dredth anniversary of the founding of the First American High School, we humbly dedicate this book, the MAROON AND GOLD, to the pioneer spirit of progress and enlightenment which has characterized the history of the secondary school in America, and to E. E. Butterfield, principal, who has so admirably typified this spirit in his administration at John Adams High School. ^i^ p*^\A-'" ^- . > E. E. BUTTERFIELD, Principal ASSISTANT PRINCIPALS AND SENIOR CLASS ADVISERS TOP PANEL Dwight W. Lott, Miss Lillian Niebes, Assistant Principals LOWER PANEL Miss Florence Stehn, Mark D. Gordon, Miss Verda Evans, Senior Class Advisers four MAROON AND GOLD STAFF TOP PANEL Chairmen: Sophia Kolodziej Robert J. Hrabak LOWER PANEL Richard James Baumgartl, Dan Vincent Carducci, Carolyn Giallombardo, Gladys Carolyn Hanningan, Theda Kirk, Ethel May Lister, Alfred London, Hyman Joseph Nathanson, Emil Matthew Ozimec, Helen E. Sekerak, Jack Baxter Williams, Anne Woldman hve CLASS OFFICERS SOLOMON ALLAN LAME 12A President ROBERT J. HRABAK 12B President ROBERT CARL STREETER Vice President MARY ANGELA VINCI Secretary WILLIAM A. DENBROCK Treasu rer PRESENTING MAROON AND GOLD Abela, Micheal Frank Abela, Marie Violet "The world knows nothing of its "Her friendship is a sheltering tree- greatest men." Merit Roll. Intramural Athletics. Allenick, Minnie- "Her smile was sweetened by her grav­ Alosi, Mary Ann ity." Choral Club.
    [Show full text]
  • Edward Hasted the History and Topographical Survey of the County
    Edward Hasted The history and topographical survey of the county of Kent, second edition, volume 5 Canterbury 1798 <i> THE HISTORY AND TOPOGRAPHICAL SURVEY OF THE COUNTY OF KENT. CONTAINING THE ANTIENT AND PRESENT STATE OF IT, CIVIL AND ECCLESIASTICAL; COLLECTED FROM PUBLIC RECORDS, AND OTHER AUTHORITIES: ILLUSTRATED WITH MAPS, VIEWS, ANTIQUITIES, &c. THE SECOND EDITION, IMPROVED, CORRECTED, AND CONTINUED TO THE PRESENT TIME. By EDWARD HASTED, Esq. F. R. S. and S. A. LATE OF CANTERBURY. Ex his omnibus, longe sunt humanissimi qui Cantium incolunt. Fortes creantur fortibus et bonis, Nec imbellem feroces progenerant. VOLUME V. CANTERBURY: PRINTED BY W. BRISTOW, ON THE PARADE. M.DCC.XCVIII. <ii> <blank> <iii> TO CHARLES SMALL PYBUS, Esq. ONE OF THE RIGHT HONORABLE THE LORDS COMMISSIONERS OF HIS MAJESTY’s TREASURY, AND MEMBER OF PARLIAMENT FOR THE TOWN AND PORT OF DOVER, &c. &c. SIR, YOUR partiality to a county, of which this is a History, has given me hopes, that the Dedication of this part of it to you will not be looked upon in an unacceptable light. The continued assistance and li= beral encouragement which you have favored me with in the progress of my larger History, and the many other essential marks of friendship which you iv have honored me with, cannot but flatter me with those hopes. You are besides, Sir, materially con= nected with the county, by the important station which you have so long held in representing the town and port of Dover, to the universal satisfaction of your constituents, who, confident of your attachment to the best of kings, and the happy constitution of this country, (an attachment which you have perse= vered in with unabated constancy) have continued their approbation of your conduct by repeatedly chusing you, with the same fervent zeal, in two suc= cessive parliaments.
    [Show full text]
  • Somerset Parish Registers. Marriages. IX
    S o m e rse t a ri s h e i s t R g e rs . "m a rria ges. ED ITED BY W . PH LL MOR E . I I M A. P W , . , A ND E M E . TC H . W . SEAGER, . , , O R mell Tamni n um o . f , I X VOL. I oubou SS U ED TO THE S U BS CR I BER S BY PHILLIMOR E Co . I , 1 HAN CER Y LANE . 24, C 1 907 . R P E F A C E . This ninth volume of Somerset Marriage Registers in clude s the first portion of the Registers of the important ’ parish of St . Mary s , Taunton , but the number of Marriages recorded in it are so numerous that it has been found t requisite to divide it into two por ions. The remaining l l X portion will fo low immediately in Vo ume . c For its trans ription , Mr . Seager has been responsible . c c s of As before, ontra tion have been made use = = f he r sh o f. w o . o t w idow e r or wid w . p pa i = = f in he o nt o . o m n o . t u s . s inste r s n e c c p , i gl w a , y = f. n f dio c . in the o ce se o or so o . di ' = Z = r e n e . o r e a n . z m r ia e . b b a che l or s n m c.
    [Show full text]
  • James and Susanna Pollard
    James and Susanna Pollard James and Susanna Pollard Benjamin S. Beck Privately printed in 2000 by the author, 72 Milton Court Road, LONDON SE14 6JJ All rights reserved. © Benjamin S. Beck Contents Beginnings ..............................................................7 Early childhood .........................................................11 Schooldays ............................................................. 13 From schooldays to marriage ...............................................23 Marriage, and a new family ................................................29 Horsham ............................................................... 41 In the cold ............................................................. 45 Change of direction ......................................................57 Park Farm .............................................................. 73 Final years .............................................................79 Afterword: What became of James and Susanna’s children and grandchildren ........85 Appendix: Five-generation Outline Pedigree of the Pollard family ................ A1 5 6 Beginnings James Pollard’s paternal grandfather James Pollard, a shopkeeper in Horsham, Sussex, died six years before James was born, but his paternal grandmother, Mary (née Hall), lived well into James’s lifetime, so I will have more to say of her here.1 His maternal grandfather, Thomas Hughesdon, a blacksmith from Deptford, Kent, also died before James was born. Though his maternal grandmother, Grace Hughesdon (her maiden
    [Show full text]