Ely Cemetery "K" Last Name First & Middle Name Section Lot Part of Lot Date of Death Age K M
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Alma's Good Trip Mikko Joensuu in Holy Water Hippie Queen of Design Frank Ocean of Love Secret Ingredients T H Is Is T H E M
FLOW MAGAZINE THIS IS THE MAGAZINE OF FLOW FESTIVAL. FESTIVAL. FLOW OF IS THE MAGAZINE THIS ALMA'S GOOD TRIP MIKKO JOENSUU IN HOLY WATER HIPPIE QUEEN OF DESIGN FRANK OCEAN OF LOVE SECRET INGREDIENTS F entrance L 7 OW F L O W the new This is 1 to 0 2 2 0 1 7 4 TABLE OF CONTENTS 6–9 12–13 18–21 36–37 Editor 7 7 W Tero Kartastenpää POOL OF ALMA Alma: ”We never really traveled when we were Art Director little. Our parents are both on disability Double Happiness pension and we didn’t IN SHORT have loads of money. Swimming with a Whenever our classmates Designers singer-songwriter. traveled to Thailand Featuring Mikko MINT MYSTERY SOLVED or Tenerife for winter Viivi Prokofjev SHH Joensuu. holidays we took a cruise AIGHT, LOOK to Tallinn. When me and Antti Grundstén 22–27 Anna turned eighteen we Frank Ocean sings about Robynne Redgrave traveled to London with love and God and God and our friends. We stayed for love. Here's what you didn’t five days, drunk.” 40–41 Subeditor know about alt-country star Ryan Adams. Aurora Rämö Alma went to L.A. and 14–15 met everybody. Publisher 34–37 O The design hippie Laura Flow Festival Ltd. 1 1 Väinölä creates a flower ALWAYS altar for yoga people. Lana Del Rey’s American Contributors nightmares, plant cutting 30–33 Hanna Anonen craze, the smallest talk etc. The most quiet places OCEAN OF TWO LOVES Maija Astikainen from abandoned villas to Pauliina Holma Balloon stage finds new UNKNOWN forgotten museums. -
No Solutions for Water-Short Area
Property of the Watertown Historical Society watertownhistoricalsociety.org Timely Coverage Of News in The Fastest Growing Community in Litehfield County Vol. 40 No. 32 SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $12.00 PER, YEAR Car. Rt. P.S. PRICE 30 CENTS August 8, 1985 v Developers Raising Dust Along Main ThoroughfareNo Solutions For Site plan renderings and specifications on, paper that went to town zoning officials last fall are bearing, fruition 'this summer through, a. host of noticeable building projects underway along Main Street. All of it has left Stanley Masayda, zoning enforcement officer, with Water-Short Area; the observation that "things sure are busy!" The largest excavation project occurring these days is next to Pizza Hut, where a large sloped lot almost has been brought down to street level. The project of Anthony Cocchiola and Raymond Brennan even- tually will see a two-story office building on the site. Wells Investigated Plans were submitted to and approved by the Planning and Zoning Residents of the Grandview and Nova Scotia Hill Pair Circuit Avenues area of town, came to Monday night's Town Council meeting hoping to find sonic solu- Lodge Park Complaints tions for their ongoing dilemma of living, without adequate .water. The vice chairman, of the Town, woman Barbara HyincI,. authoriz- ed Town Manager Robert Mid- The only cone I us ion reached was Council Monday night asked the at this moment there is none, and town manager to nave a full report daugh to look into the charges made by Joseph Zu rait is, 555 Nova officials still arc trying to come up prepared for a future Council with a plan. -
DOMESTIC RATS, FLEAS and NATIVE RODENTS
DOMESTIC RATS, FLEAS and NATIVE RODENTS In Relation To Plague In The United States By Entomologist Carl 0. Mohr INTRODUCTION and finally to the lungs causing pneumonic plague. ubonic plague is a rodent and rodent - Pneumonic plague is extremely fatal and flea disease caused by the plague bacil highly infectious when sputum droplets pass Blus Pasturella pest is which is transmitted direct from person to person. The death from animal to animal and thence to man by rate due to it is practically 100 percent. fleas. It is highly fatal. At least half Plague is dreaded particularly where of the human cases result in death without living conditions are such as to bring modern medication. (Table I — last two human beings into close contact with large columns). Because of their close associa* oriental-rat-flea populations, and where tion with man, domestic rats* and their crowded conditions permit rapid pneumonic fleas, especially the oriental rat flea transmission from man to man. Xenopsylla cheopis, are responsible for most human epidemics. Only occasional cases ANCIENT AMERICAN DISEASE OR RECENT are caused by bites of other fleas or by INTRODUCTION direct infection from handling rodents. Infection due to bites of fleas or due to Two widely different views exist con direct contact commonly results in swollen cerning the arrival of plague in North lymph glands, called buboes, hence the name America. The prevalent view is that it was bubonic plague. Infection may progress to introduced from the Orient into North the blood stream causing septicemic plague, America at San Francisco through ship- * Rattus rattus and Rattus norvegicus. -
Teaching the Short Story: a Guide to Using Stories from Around the World. INSTITUTION National Council of Teachers of English, Urbana
DOCUMENT RESUME ED 397 453 CS 215 435 AUTHOR Neumann, Bonnie H., Ed.; McDonnell, Helen M., Ed. TITLE Teaching the Short Story: A Guide to Using Stories from around the World. INSTITUTION National Council of Teachers of English, Urbana, REPORT NO ISBN-0-8141-1947-6 PUB DATE 96 NOTE 311p. AVAILABLE FROM National Council of Teachers of English, 1111 W. Kenyon Road, Urbana, IL 61801-1096 (Stock No. 19476: $15.95 members, $21.95 nonmembers). PUB 'TYPE Guides Classroom Use Teaching Guides (For Teacher) (052) Collected Works General (020) Books (010) EDRS PRICE MF01/PC13 Plus Postage. DESCRIPTORS Authors; Higher Education; High Schools; *Literary Criticism; Literary Devices; *Literature Appreciation; Multicultural Education; *Short Stories; *World Literature IDENTIFIERS *Comparative Literature; *Literature in Translation; Response to Literature ABSTRACT An innovative and practical resource for teachers looking to move beyond English and American works, this book explores 175 highly teachable short stories from nearly 50 countries, highlighting the work of recognized authors from practically every continent, authors such as Chinua Achebe, Anita Desai, Nadine Gordimer, Milan Kundera, Isak Dinesen, Octavio Paz, Jorge Amado, and Yukio Mishima. The stories in the book were selected and annotated by experienced teachers, and include information about the author, a synopsis of the story, and comparisons to frequently anthologized stories and readily available literary and artistic works. Also provided are six practical indexes, including those'that help teachers select short stories by title, country of origin, English-languag- source, comparison by themes, or comparison by literary devices. The final index, the cross-reference index, summarizes all the comparative material cited within the book,with the titles of annotated books appearing in capital letters. -
Men's Soccer Page 1/1 Combined Statistics As of Apr 12, 2021 All Games
MEN’S SOCCER 2020-21 GAME NOTES » 2001 & 2011 NCAA Champions » Eight NCAA College Cups ‘20-’21 SCHEDULE/RESULTS THE MATCHUP 7-4-3 overall, 7-2-3 ACC North Carolina (7-4-3) 4-3-1 home, 3-1-2 away Head Coach: Carlos Somoano (Eckerd College, ‘92) Career Record: 135-41-29 (10th season) Fall Record at North Carolina: same Oct. 2 at Duke* (ACCNX) W, 2-0 United Soccer Coaches Rank: No. 16 Oct. 9 Clemson* (ESPNU) W, 1-0 Oct. 18 at Wake Forest* (ACCNX) L, 0-1 ot Charlotte (6-3-1) Oct. 27 at Clemson* (ACCN) T, 3-3 2ot Head Coach: Kevin Langan Nov. 1 NC State* (ACCNX) T, 0-0 2ot United Soccer Coaches Rank: No. 14 Nov. 6 Duke* (ACCN) W, 2-0 2020 ACC Tournament (Chapel Hill) Nov. 15 Clemson (ACCN) L, 0-1 ot THE KICKOFF TAR HEEL RUNDOWN Spring Feb. 25 Liberty (ACCNX) L, 0-1 Matchup: North Carolina (7-4-3) vs. Home 4-3-1 March 5 #4 Pitt* (ACCNX) W, 3-0 Charlotte (6-3-1) Away 3-1-2 March 13 #24 Virginia* (ACCNX) W, 2-0 Rankings: UNC No. 16, Charlotte No. 14 Neutral 0-0-0 March 20 at Syracuse* (ACCNX) T, 0-0 2ot (United Soccer Coaches) vs. United Soccer Coaches ranked foes 3-1-1 March 27 at Notre Dame* (ACCNX) W, 2-1 ot vs. Unranked opponents 4-3-2 Date: Sunday May 2, 2021 April 2 Virginia Tech* (ACCNX) L, 0-1 vs. ACC teams (incl. ACC Tournament) 7-3-3 April 9 at Duke* (ACCNX) W, 1-0 Site: Cary, N.C. -
Transnational Finnish Mobilities: Proceedings of Finnforum XI
Johanna Leinonen and Auvo Kostiainen (Eds.) Johanna Leinonen and Auvo Kostiainen This volume is based on a selection of papers presented at Johanna Leinonen and Auvo Kostiainen (Eds.) the conference FinnForum XI: Transnational Finnish Mobili- ties, held in Turku, Finland, in 2016. The twelve chapters dis- cuss two key issues of our time, mobility and transnational- ism, from the perspective of Finnish migration. The volume is divided into four sections. Part I, Mobile Pasts, Finland and Beyond, brings forth how Finland’s past – often imagined TRANSNATIONAL as more sedentary than today’s mobile world – was molded by various short and long-distance mobilities that occurred FINNISH MOBILITIES: both voluntarily and involuntarily. In Part II, Transnational Influences across the Atlantic, the focus is on sociocultural PROCEEDINGS OF transnationalism of Finnish migrants in the early 20th cen- tury United States. Taken together, Parts I and II show how FINNFORUM XI mobility and transnationalism are not unique features of our FINNISH MOBILITIES TRANSNATIONAL time, as scholars tend to portray them. Even before modern communication technologies and modes of transportation, migrants moved back and forth and nurtured transnational ties in various ways. Part III, Making of Contemporary Finn- ish America, examines how Finnishness is understood and maintained in North America today, focusing on the con- cepts of symbolic ethnicity and virtual villages. Part IV, Con- temporary Finnish Mobilities, centers on Finns’ present-day emigration patterns, repatriation experiences, and citizen- ship practices, illustrating how, globally speaking, Finns are privileged in their ability to be mobile and exercise transna- tionalism. Not only is the ability to move spread very uneven- ly, so is the capability to upkeep transnational connections, be they sociocultural, economic, political, or purely symbol- ic. -
Delta County Naturalization Name Index
Last Name First Name Middle Name Declaration Second Paper Kahkonen Peter Victor V16,P239 Kahllo Louis V24,P102 Kahlstrom John V7,P436 Kahra Reino V35,P36 V35,P36 Kahra Segred Mrs. V35,P36 V35,P36 Kain Francis V5,P9 1/2 Kain John V8,P101 Kain Mary V19,P165 Kainulainen Eventius B1,F4,P2930 Kainulainen Eventius (Daniel) B5,F2,P2635 B5,F1,P2635 Kaiser John V7,P434 Kaivosoja Saimi Johanna B2,F1,P3144 Kajfasz Teodozya B5,F1,P2584 Kalies John Michael V17,P63 Kalkala Matt V15,P336 Kallarson Johanna Katrina B3,F1,P2101 Kallarson Karl Sigvald V18,P83 Kallarson Karl Sigwald V36,P87 V36,P87 Kallarsson Karl Sigvald V14,P178 Kallem Goreg V7,P7 Kallen George V7,P7 Kallen John V13,P329 Kallerson August Thorwald V31,P37 V31,P37 Kallerson August Thouvald V15,P474 Kallerson Jennie Evelyn B6,F1,P6 Kallerson Karl V18,P51 Kallerson Ragnar Oswald V35,P100 V35,P100 Kallerson Ragnar Oswald V18,P52 Monday, April 01, 2002 Page 236 of 536 Last Name First Name Middle Name Declaration Second Paper Kallersson Karl V38,P6 V38,P6 Kallin John V30,P78 V30,P78 Kallin Peter V26,P55 V26,P55 Kallin Peter V12,P480 Kallio Elma Wilhelmina B1,F4,P2987 Kallio Elma Wilhemiina B4,F4,P2509 B4,F4,P2509 Kallio Johan Victor B1,F3,P2876 Kallio Johan Vihtori B4,F4,P2448 B4,F4,P2448 Kallman And V12,P168 Kallman John V12,P167 Kallman John V7,P267 Kallman John V24,P110 Kallman John V20,P185 Kallman Lars E. V12,P79 Kallorssen Johanna B3,F1,P2101 Kalorssen Karl V38,P6 V38,P6 Kalsen Johannes V11,P171 Kamarainen Seth V15,P420 Kamarainen Seth V19,P92 Kamb Andre V8,P419 kAmerson Andrew V8,P426 Kaminen Oskar V31,P93 V31,P93 Kaminen Oskar V15,P167 Kamovich Mark V17,P284 Kampe Herman V5,P31 Kampe John E. -
Last Name First Name Date of Death Date of Birth Vol.-Page
A B C D E 1 Last name First name Date of death Date of birth Vol.-Page # 2 Laajala Albert "Abbie" 1/12/1980 4/27/1933 L-421, L-535 3 Laajala Esther K 10/27/1997 2/28/1909 L-399, L-553 4 Laakaniemi Catherine V 10/21/2009 10/30/1922 L2-679 5 Laakaniemi Waino J 3/24/1992 2/22/1919 L-427, L-546 6 Laakko Emil 7/13/1983 7/11/1908 L2-178 7 Laakko Hilda 12/1/1969 11/5/1873 L-383, L-534 8 Laakko Samuel Michael 8/28/1980 8/28/1980 L-421, L-535 9 Laakko Vera M 7/6/2002 6/4/1912 L-214, L-215, L-232, L2-382 10 Laakkonen Bernice W (Stolpe) 5/23/2010 8/8/1925 L2-547 11 Laakkonen June (Kallio) 8/22/2003 1930 L-157 12 Laakonen Clarence 7/25/2014 4/26/1929 L2-474 13 Laakso Arvo Oliver 11/14/1998 9/22/1916 L-404, L-527 14 Laakso Bruce 5/6/2014 7/23/1934 L2-494 15 Laakso Edward Erik 4/24/1994 1944 L-342, L-479 16 Laakso Elvira E 6/30/1997 L-387, L-531 17 Laakso Florence 9/10/1977 8/15/1919 L-421 18 Laakso Helen Mildred 9/10/2006 2/26/1923 L2-432 19 Laakso Herbert G 6/12/2004 5/30/1917 L-85 20 Laakso Hilda 7/8/1988 4/17/1907 L-254 21 Laakso Hilma (Manninen) 4/17/2000 7/4/1900 L-273 22 Laakso Jack W 5/24/2002 2/14/1937 L-233 23 Laakso Joel 4/28/1958 2//1887 L-421, L-535 24 Laakso Kustaava 10/12/1955 10/21/1882 L-421, L-535 25 Laakso Rupert "Sam" 7//1987 5/6/1905 L-222, L-254 26 Laakso Tri William A 4/11/1995 L-328 27 Laakso Roger A 2/28/2008 10/8/1935 L-624 28 Laakso Rudolph A 6/9/1905 8/7/1914 L-648 29 Laakso Eva (Tissary) 1/7/1996 L2-84 30 Laakso Toini Perko 7/19/2004 3/12/1918 L-49 31 Laaksonen Bertha H (Nisula) 4/1/2005 1/6/1917 L-2, L-619 32 Laaksonen -
Annual Conference Journals Index to Memoirs
Annual Conference Journals Index to Memoirs Surname First Name Spouse/Father Death/Funeral Date Journal Page Abbott Cleon Frederick Carol 10/6/1994 DC1995 308 Abbott William B. Olive 12/27/1969DC1970 957 Ackerman C.A. UB1946 31 Ackerman Mildred Earl 11/23/1976 DC1977 931 Adams Carl G. Emma Ruth Luzzader 10/2/1981DC1982 1567 Adams Carlos L. Emma Louise Cooper; Flora 8/20/1941 DC1942 550 Kempf Adams Emma Louise Cooper Carlos L. 11/12/1913DC1914 326 Adams Flora Kempf Carlos 8/15/1962DC1963 1135 Adams Robert 12/20/1931 EV1932 55 Ainge Clement Margaret Kershaw 1/30/1948 DC1948 182 Ainge Margaret Kershaw Clement 11/12/1934 DC1935 130 Ainsworth Miriam Ada H. William P 5/28/1954 DC1954 736 Ainsworth William P. Ada; Ethel May Carefoot 10/30/1965DC1966 1046 Alabaster Harriet Ann Bemish J. 10/17/1881 DC1882 37 Albery Paul Franklin Alice Nutting; Mary Barber 11/16/2006 DC2007 219 Willoughby Albig Hattie Loose Orville M. 8/26/1938 EV1939 52 Albig Orville M. Hattie Loose; Ella 2/8/1965 EUB1965 138 Albro Addis Mary Alice Scribner 10/15/1911 DC1912 44 Albro Mary Alice Scribner Addis 8/12/1905 DC1905 184 Allen Adelaide A. Andrews C.B. 11/3/1948 DC1949 448 Allen Alfred Louisa J. Hartwell 1/29/1903 DC1903 40 Allen Bertram E. Ida E. Hunt 5/28/1925DC1925 322 Allen Charlena Letts Eugene 10/9/1947 DC1948 186 Allen Charles Bronson Blanche 3/31/1953 DC1953 462 Allen Charles Thompson Elnora Root 10/12/1904DC1905 162 Allen Eugene Minnie M. -
Business Finland Neogames Fivr Mixed Reality Report 2017
MIXED REALITY REPORT 2017 BUSINESS FINLAND NEOGAMES FIVR 2 3 BUSINESS FINLAND | NEOGAMES BUSINESS FINLAND | NEOGAMES MIXED REALITY 2017 MIXED REALITY 2017 Content 1. Introduction 1. Introduction 3 lready from the 1990’s there has been a strong will and hope towards a virtual- and augmented reality based gaming experience. For a couple of 2. Terminology of VR, AR, MR and XR 3 decades, the development of technology was quite slow, but after HTC 3. Current Status of the VR/AR field 5 AVive, and the first Oculus consumer version release in March 2016 it seemed that 3.1 Available VR & AR devices and platforms for consumers 6 the technology is finally advanced enough, and the market for B2C VR applications, 3.1.1 High-end tethered VR headsets 6 including games, is ready to open. 3.1.2 Smartphone-based mobile VR headsets 7 The Oculus and Vive releases together with available VC funding and the 3.2 Technological demands in general 7 saturation of the mobile market (resulting in some mobile developers fleeing to 3.3 User expectations 8 VR/AR development) created high hopes towards VR. Basically everything required 4. Future - Towards casual VR 8 was coming together, funding, technology, skills and companies. However, after a 4.1 Four tiers of future VR devices 9 good start and excessive hype the VR games’ B2C market didn’t develop as expected. 4.2 High-end consumer VR devices 10 One clear indicator of that was that some existing VR studios have closed and even 5. AR Devices 10 Icelandic CCP, a big advocate of VR games since 2013, announced in the end of 6. -
Carlson V Summary Minus Report D
8/31/2009 STATE OF ALASKA Commercial Fisheries Entry Commission Carlson Summary Only those with a Negative Balance as of 31 March 2009 Page 1 of 139 Non-Resident Over/Under Balance Fee Differential Interest as of Name Paid Allowance Amount 31Mar2009 Obs —————————————————————————————— —————————————— —————————————— —————————————— —————————————— 1 AABERG, RACHEL M. $355.00 $-110.00 $-87.49 $-197.49 2 AADSEN, KENNETH $480.00 $-713.09 $-4,954.05 $-5,667.14 3 AADSEN, VALERIE S. $3,750.00 $-24.78 $-553.53 $-578.31 4 AAKER, KRIS L. $2,310.00 $10.83 $-1,594.05 $-1,583.22 5 ABAD, JOSE L. $150.00 $-115.97 $-974.02 $-1,089.99 6 ABALAMA, VERA E. $297.00 $-341.76 $-226.50 $-568.26 7 ABART, LEONARD L. (ESTATE) $1,200.00 $-916.84 $-6,935.25 $-7,852.09 8 ABBOTT, STEVE $150.00 $-143.39 $-1,091.22 $-1,234.61 9 ABE, YASUO $540.00 $-213.72 $-1,343.55 $-1,557.27 10 ABELLA, DAREN M. $5,755.00 $311.28 $-5,043.11 $-4,731.83 11 ABERNATHY, STEVEN L. $1,410.00 $-721.26 $-2,914.79 $-3,636.05 12 ABFALTER, BEATRICE $2,100.00 $-77.42 $-961.33 $-1,038.75 13 ABFALTER, FRANCIS K. $240.00 $-232.55 $-2,037.60 $-2,270.15 14 ABFALTER, WILLIAM F. $1,710.00 $-548.66 $-1,151.06 $-1,699.72 15 ABRAMSON, MARKUS W. $1,615.00 $-1,446.22 $-7,296.06 $-8,742.28 16 ACKARET, JOHN $240.00 $-300.79 $-1,744.89 $-2,045.68 17 ACKER, N.MICHAEL $150.00 $-149.66 $-751.56 $-901.22 18 ACKERMAN, JIMMIE G. -
Deceased Section Block Plot Birth Death AASEN, ISABEL DUNLOP SUMAC F 1 2001 AASEN, NORMAN GEORGE FAIRVIEW 17 F3 1932 2013 ABEL
Deceased Section Block Plot Birth Death AASEN, ISABEL DUNLOP SUMAC F 1 2001 AASEN, NORMAN GEORGE FAIRVIEW 17 F3 1932 2013 ABEL, JOSEPH SAGE J 40 1963 ABRAHAM, ERIC AUGUST FAIRVIEW 26 G2 2002 ABRAHAM, LOUISE ELIZABETH FAIRVIEW 26 G3 1927 2018 ACKERMANN, MARGOT FAIRVIEW 26 D9 1998 ACKERMANN, WILLIAM FAIRVIEW 26 D8 1930 2008 ADAMSON, CHARLES ARNOLD SC GARDEN ADAMSON, GLADYS EDITH SC GARDEN 2004 AITCHISON, CATHERINE MARGARET FAIRVIEW C 9 1922 2010 AKEY, BRIAN KENNETH MEMORIAL H 22 1949 2020 ALARIC, ALBERT (PETER) FAIRVIEW 14 1 1951 2010 ALARIC, BABY FAIRVIEW 13 7 1934 1934 ALARIC, DOROTHY EDNA PINE E 15 1916 1967 ALARIC, GLADYS MAY PINE 51 22 1922 1981 ALARIC, GLENN THOMAS PINE 51 80 1979 ALARIC, HARRY PAUL PINE 51 21 2000 ALARIC, ISABELL FRANCES OKANAGAN Q 7 1888 1981 ALARIC, JOSEPH MICHAEL PINE 51 21 1943 2014 ALARIC, LESLIE PINE 53 79 1984 ALARIC, MARGARET A.M. FAIRVIEW 14 2 1914 1971 ALARIC, MARK RAYMOND OKANAGAN Q 10 1953 1956 ALARIC, STANLEY JAMES OKANAGAN Q 8 1956 ALARIC, STEVEN FAIRVIEW 13 7 1934 ALARIC, WALTER E. OKANAGAN Q 6 1877 1959 ALARIC, WALTER JAMES FAIRVIEW 14 1 1911 1969 ALARIC, WILFRED FRANKLIN SR. PINE 51 70 2001 ALARIC, WILFRED X. JR. PINE 51 70 1980 ALBERT, ANN PINE 50 21 1936 2019 ALBERT, BARBARA PINE 50 21 2006 ALBERT, GEORGE PINE 50 20 1912 1980 ALBERT, MARY HELEN SUMAC B 84 2000 ALBERT, WILLIAM WENZEL (BILL) SUMAC B 84 1996 ALENTEJANO, MARIE THERESA PINE 51 2 1909 1980 ALEXANDER, COURTH FREDERIC PINE XY 9B 1900 1970 ALEXANDER, ROBERT LESLIE SC GARDEN 1942 2015 ALF, AGNES PINE H 11 1886 1969 ALF, AXEL OKANAGAN A15