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2019-20 Atlantic 10 Commissioner's Honor Roll
2019-20 Atlantic 10 Commissioner’s Honor Roll Name Sport Year Hometown Previous School Major DAVIDSON Alexa Abele Women's Tennis Senior Lakewood Ranch, FL Sycamore High School Economics Natalie Abernathy Women's Cross Country/Track & Field First Year Student Land O Lakes, FL Land O Lakes High School Undecided Cameron Abernethy Men's Soccer First Year Student Cary, NC Cary Academy Undecided Alex Ackerman Men's Cross Country/Track & Field Sophomore Princeton, NJ Princeton High School Computer Science Sophia Ackerman Women's Track & Field Sophomore Fort Myers, FL Canterbury School Undecided Nico Agosta Men's Cross Country/Track & Field Sophomore Harvard, MA F W Parker Essential School Undecided Lauryn Albold Women's Volleyball Sophomore Saint Augustine, FL Allen D Nease High School Psychology Emma Alitz Women's Soccer Junior Charlottesville, VA James I Oneill High School Psychology Mateo Alzate-Rodrigo Men's Soccer Sophomore Huntington, NY Huntington High School Undecided Dylan Ameres Men's Indoor Track First Year Student Quogue, NY Chaminade High School Undecided Iain Anderson Men's Cross Country/Track & Field Junior Helena, MT Helena High School English Bryce Anthony Men's Indoor Track First Year Student Greensboro, NC Ragsdale High School Undecided Shayne Antolini Women's Lacrosse Senior Babylon, NY Babylon Jr Sr High School Political Science Chloe Appleby Women's Field Hockey Sophomore Charlotte, NC Providence Day School English Lauren Arkell Women's Lacrosse Sophomore Brentwood, NH Phillips Exeter Academy Physics Sam Armas Women's Tennis -
Title: the Distribution of an Illustrated Timeline Wall Chart and Teacher's Guide of 20Fh Century Physics
REPORT NSF GRANT #PHY-98143318 Title: The Distribution of an Illustrated Timeline Wall Chart and Teacher’s Guide of 20fhCentury Physics DOE Patent Clearance Granted December 26,2000 Principal Investigator, Brian Schwartz, The American Physical Society 1 Physics Ellipse College Park, MD 20740 301-209-3223 [email protected] BACKGROUND The American Physi a1 Society s part of its centennial celebration in March of 1999 decided to develop a timeline wall chart on the history of 20thcentury physics. This resulted in eleven consecutive posters, which when mounted side by side, create a %foot mural. The timeline exhibits and describes the millstones of physics in images and words. The timeline functions as a chronology, a work of art, a permanent open textbook, and a gigantic photo album covering a hundred years in the life of the community of physicists and the existence of the American Physical Society . Each of the eleven posters begins with a brief essay that places a major scientific achievement of the decade in its historical context. Large portraits of the essays’ subjects include youthful photographs of Marie Curie, Albert Einstein, and Richard Feynman among others, to help put a face on science. Below the essays, a total of over 130 individual discoveries and inventions, explained in dated text boxes with accompanying images, form the backbone of the timeline. For ease of comprehension, this wealth of material is organized into five color- coded story lines the stretch horizontally across the hundred years of the 20th century. The five story lines are: Cosmic Scale, relate the story of astrophysics and cosmology; Human Scale, refers to the physics of the more familiar distances from the global to the microscopic; Atomic Scale, focuses on the submicroscopic This report was prepared as an account of work sponsored by an agency of the United States Government. -
2009 Mcdonald's All American Games Boys Nominees
2009 McDonald's All American Games Boys Nominees ALASKA First Last School Name City State Eric Gross Juneau-Douglas High School Juneau AK Ryan Hanley Dimond High School Anchorage AK Mitch Swetzof Palmer High School Palmer AK ALABAMA First Last School Name City State Eric Bledsoe Parker High School Birmingham AL Herbert Brooks Eufaula High School Eufaula AL DeMarcus Cousins Le Flore High School Mobile AL Wendell Lewis Selma High School Selma AL Ronnie Mack Oak Mountain High School Birmingham AL David Murray Leeds High School Leeds AL Brandon Peterson E. B. Erwin High School Birmingham AL Joshua Pritchett Shades Valley High School Irondale AL Christian Watford Shades Valley High School Irondale AL ARKANSAS First Last School Name City State Anthony Borden West Memphis High School West Memphis AR Fred Gulley Fayetteville High School Fayetteville AR Aaron Hawley Rogers High School Rogers AR Quinton Pippen Hamburg High School Hamburg AR A.J. Walton Little Rock Hall High School Little Rock AR ARIZONA First Last School Name City State Rayvontae Adams Precision High School Phoenix AZ Michael Craig Precision High School Phoenix AZ Blake Davis St. Mary's High School Phoenix AZ Brandon Duliakas Ironwood Ridge High School Oro Valley AZ Marques Edwards Cesar Chavez High School Laveen AZ 2009 McDonald's All American Games Boys Nominees Alex Foster Thunderbird High School Phoenix AZ Byron Fulton St. Mary's High School Phoenix AZ Gus Gabel Chaparral High School Scottsdale AZ Chris Johnson Highland High School Gilbert AZ Nick Markovich Basha High School Chandler AZ Tyler Miller Basha High School Chandler AZ Nuno Muandumba Pinnacle High School Phoenix AZ Josan Nimes Westview High School Avondale AZ Marcus Ruppel Deer Valley High School Glendale AZ Mirza Sabic Deer Valley High School Glendale AZ Julian Sargent Cortez High School Phoenix AZ Greg Smith Westwind Prep Academy Phoenix AZ Demetrius Walker St. -
2019 Boys Basketball Records and History
KHS Basketball History James Naismith was credited with inventing the game of “Basket Ball” in 1891 in Massachusetts, and the great game made its way to Kokomo in the fall of 1903. Ironically, basketball started with the female gender, brought to the city by Miss Catherine Ashton Hughes, a Hanover College graduate and German teacher at Kokomo High School. Hughes had intramural leagues for the girls, and then boys started to show interest in the game as well. Toward the end of 1903, Louis Guetz was named the boy’s basketball coach in a sport just starting to gain interscholastic approval. The first boys’ basketball game in Kokomo High School history was on February 12, 1904. Kokomo hosted a team from Logansport, and the game was played in the eighth grade assembly room in the basement at the high school. Kokomo, which lost that game 23-21, had a starting five of Walter Applegate, Wayne Carr, Everett Bennett, Charles Rice, and Lee Rhodes. The first season saw a record of two wins and two losses. The Sargasso, Kokomo’s yearbook, reported that the first basketball team was “. .loyally supported by the school board, the superintendent of schools, the faculty and the students, and will no doubt remain the most popular athletic game in the school.” The nickname for Kokomo High School seemingly dates back to basketball in the 1915-16 season. A team showing great speed, agility, and a ferocious attitude led to a moniker of “The Wild Cats.” Of course, that turned into Wildcats, and in 1984, it officially became the Kokomo Wildkats. -
Description of Services Ordered and Certification Form 471 FCC
OMB 3060-0806 Approval by OMB FCC Form 471 November 2015 Description of Services Ordered and Certification Form 471 FCC Form 471 Application Information Nickname Diocese 2019 Form 471 Application Number 191021660 Funding Year 2019 Category of Service Category 1 Billed Entity Contact Information Diocese of Harrisburg Livia Riley 4800 Union Deposit Rd Harrisburg PA 17111 717-657-4804 717-657-4808 [email protected] [email protected] Billed Entity Number 17005340 FCC Registration Number 0020262820 Applicant Type Consortium Consulting Firms Name Consultant City State Zip Phone Email Registration Code Number Number James R. Beeghley, Ed.D. 16079485 Mechanicsburg PA 17055 717-467-1863 [email protected] Entity Information Consortium Entities School Entity - Details BEN Name Urban/ State State NCES Code Alternative School Attributes Endowment Rural LEA ID School ID Discount 18033 GOOD SHEPHERD Urban Survey Public School None SCHOOL 18040 TRINITY HIGH SCHOOL Urban Survey Public School None 18059 ST PATRICK ELEM SCH- Urban Survey Public School None CARLISLE 18108 ST JOAN OF ARC Urban Survey Private School None ELEMENTARY SCH 18121 LEBANON CATHOLIC Urban 2.1522 Survey Private School None SCHOOL 1513E8 18143 SACRED HEART ELEM Rural 2.1522 Survey Private School None SCH-LEWISTOWN 1513E8 18186 ST JOSEPH SCHOOL- Urban 2.1522 Survey Private School None MECHANICSBURG 1513E8 18193 SEVEN SORROWS OF Urban 2.1522 Survey Pre-K; Private School None BVM SCHOOL 1513E8 Page 1 BEN Name Urban/ State State NCES Code Alternative School Attributes Endowment Rural -
Butler Alumnal Quarterly (1925)
Butler University Digital Commons @ Butler University Butler Alumnal Quarterly University Special Collections 1925 Butler Alumnal Quarterly (1925) Butler University Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.butler.edu/bualumnalquarterly Part of the Other History Commons Recommended Citation Butler University, "Butler Alumnal Quarterly (1925)" (1925). Butler Alumnal Quarterly. 13. https://digitalcommons.butler.edu/bualumnalquarterly/13 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the University Special Collections at Digital Commons @ Butler University. It has been accepted for inclusion in Butler Alumnal Quarterly by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ Butler University. For more information, please contact [email protected]. V i THE BUTLER ALUMNAL QUARTERLY u ^i ^u I H iBailofliniYersi APRIL, 1925 INDIANAPOLIS Entered as second-class matter March 26, 1912, at the post office at Indianapolis, Ind., under the Act of March 3, 1879. CONTENTS THE FOUNDERS' DAY ADDRESS Dr. Charles H. Judd DINNER SPEECHES Professor Johnson and Dr. Judd AN EARLY FOUNDER'S DAY SONG Lee Burns ANCIENT LIGHTS Meredith Nicholson TRIBUTE TO CATHARINE MERRILL Dr. Harvey W. Wiley COLLEGE NEWS— Editorial From the City Office Athletics Butler in Chicago Butler Publications Commencement Program Faculty Notes Alumni Mention Marriages Births Deaths Our Correspondence — Butler Alumnal Quarterly Vol. XIV INDIANAPOLIS, IND., APRIL, 1925 No. 1 Founders' Day THE ADDRESS By Charles Hubbard Judd Head of Department of Education, University of CMcago. A NEW HUMANISM SUITED TO MODERN CONDITIONS There is a passage in one of Walter Page's letters which puts very vividly the theme which I wish to discuss today. Mr. Page, writing as the American ambassador to the British Court, describes to President Wilson a royal dinner given by England to the King of Denmark and in the course of his description comments on the difference between the American attitude toward ceremonial and the attitude of the typical Englishman. -
2013 Howard Common Ground.Indd
ommon round CA Newsletter of the Community Foundation of HowardG County, Inc. Summer 2013 2013 BOARD MEMBERS Dana Davis - Chair Lilly Endowment Community Volunteer Rick Smith - Secretary/Treasurer Community Scholarships Smith Financial The Community Foundation of Howard County is pleased to honor the recipients of Mike Stegall - Past Chairman Community First Bank the 2013 Lilly Endowment Community Scholarship. Thanks to the generosity of Lilly Dr. Joanne Barnes Endowment, two Howard County students will receive full-tuition scholarships, required Indiana Wesleyan University fees, and a special allocation of up to $900 per year for required books and equipment for Nanette Bowling four years of undergraduate study at any Indiana public or private college or university. The Community Volunteer recipients are Katie Brown and Ryan Smith. Joe Dunbar Community Volunteer Katie Brown, daughter of Gary and Jennifer Brown, is a Western Melissa Ellis High School student. She is president of the National Honor Crume-Ellis Auctioneers & Appraisers Society and W-Club. Katie is the captain of the swim team, Brian Hayes editor of the yearbook, and manager of the softball and soccer Hayes Advisory Group teams. She is a member of the bowling team, Student Council, Betsy Hoshaw Best Buddies, Art Club and Fellowship of Christian Athletes. Community Volunteer Katie also is a freshman mentor. Her awards and honors include Brad Howell Most Dedicated for freshman year swimming, Girl Scout Silver Brad Howell Ford Award, First Year Academic Award and perfect attendance. Beth MacDonald Davis & MacDonald Katie plans to attend Indiana University-Purdue University Paul Manning Indianapolis to study radiation therapy. Carroll County Scott McClelland Ryan Smith, son of Kevin and Lisa Smith, is a Taylor High Katie Brown Attorney School student. -
The Visit of a Future Pope to Pittsburgh John C
The Visit of a Future Pope to Pittsburgh John C. Bates, Esq. The canonization on October 14, 2018 of Pope Paul VI as a saint University from which he graduated in 1930, winning the univer- occasioned memories of the arrival of then-Monsignor Giovanni sity’s annual oratorical contest in his senior year.3 He undertook Battista Enrico Antonio Maria Montini to Pittsburgh in Septem- graduate studies in philosophy at the University of Fribourg in ber 1951 to visit the family and the grave of Monsignor Walter Switzerland, from which he received a doctorate in 1933. He then S. Carroll – Montini’s closest American co-worker and a highly attended the North American College in Rome, taking theology at respected Vatican diplomat. the Pontifical Gregorian University, which granted him a licenti- ate in 1936. He subsequently studied canon law at the Apollinare Montini’s Background Institute and received a doctorate in January 1940. He also un- The future pope was born in Concesio in the Diocese of Brescia dertook special studies at the Universities of Tours, Florence, and in northwestern Italy on September 26, 1897. He was ordained a Perugia, and became fluent in several languages. priest in May 1920 at age 22. In 1922, he entered the service of the Vatican’s Secretariat of State in Rome, where he would work During his studies, Walter Carroll was ordained a priest in the with American Father Francis J. Spellman. In 1937, Montini was chapel of the North American College in Rome on December 8, appointed Substitute (Sostituto) Secretary for Ordinary Affairs un- 1935 by Francesco Cardinal Marchetti-Selvaggiani, the vicar of der papal Secretary of State Eugenio Cardinal Pacelli. -
Impact Report a Message from Most Reverend Ronald W
The Diocese of Harrisburg 2019Impact Report A Message from Most Reverend Ronald W. Gainer Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ, I am pleased to present you with this Annual Impact Report for the Diocese of Harrisburg. This report demonstrates the varied and extensive ministries of the Diocese, all of which are supported by you, the faithful. I cannot thank you enough for your support for these vital ministries. Please read this report and see how your support is being used to further Catholic education, to assist with the education of our future priests, to support Parishes with sacramental preparations, to help those most in need, and to answer the call to “go and make Disciples.” This report focuses on our ministries, but I recognize the importance of full financial disclosure. Our annual financial report will be published in early 2020 in The Catholic Witness and posted to our website. Thank you for your generosity and continued support of the Diocese of Harrisburg. You and your families are in my prayers. My God bless you and may you be filled with His peace. Sincerely in Christ, Most Reverend Ronald W. Gainer, DD, JCL Bishop of the Diocese of Harrisburg Bishop Gainer travels the Diocese every year, celebrating liturgies, meeting with the faithful, and serving the people of God. During 2019, Bishop Gainer had a busy travel schedule, reaching all corners of the Diocese. Below are highlights from his events. • Hosted 9 Listening Sessions in response to the Grand disabilities. Jury Report, providing an opportunity for the faithful to • Attended the annual Fishers of Men dinner to express their hurt, concerns, and hope. -
South Floridians Get a Taste of World Youth
FLORIDAWWW.THEFLORIDACATHOLIC.ORG | September 2018 Catholic MIAMI ARCHDIOCESE FATHER CIOFFI: Death penalty inadmissible? South Floridians get a Today, yes Moral theologian taste of World Youth Day reconsiders initial reaction to papal change in catechism Editor’s note: In its August 2018 edition, the Florida Catholic published questions and answers with Father Alfred Cioffi regarding a change in the wording of the Catechism of the Catholic Church. Father Cioffi recently wrote this article, amending his initial comments about the change in the catechism. Father Cioffi has doctorates in both moral theology and genetics, and has been a priest for 33 years. He is the Blue Cross- Blue Shield Endowed Chair of Bioethics in STEM at St. Thomas University, Miami Gardens. Young people representing various archdiocesan youth groups carry the World Youth Day cross at the start of the prayer vigil Aug. 22 at St. John Vianney College Seminary in Miami. (PHOTOS BY ANA RODRIGUEZ SOTO | FC) FATHER ALFRED CIOFFI Special to the Florida Catholic Prayer vigil at college seminary concludes historic visit MIAMI | On Aug. 2, Cardinal Luis Ladaria, prefect of the Vati- can’s Congregation for the Doctrine of WYD cross and icon to South Florida of the Faith, declared that Pope Francis had recently amended the ANA RODRIGUEZ-SOTO Catechism of the Catholic Church of the Florida Catholic staff regarding the death penalty. The canon in question is number 2267. MIAMI | Archdiocesan Catholics got to ex- The next day, I was asked by the perience World Youth Day Aug. 22. And they Florida Catholic newspaper to com- didn’t have to fly to be there or watch through ment on the matter. -
YOUR MIAMI COMMUNITY Florida Catholic June 2020 St
WWW.THEFLORIDACATHOLIC.ORG | May 2020 | Volume 81, Number 7 ‘HURRICANE TOM,’ HAS NOT LOST HIS ENERGY TRICKY QUESTIONS FOR WHEN PUBLIC MASSES RESUME Archbishop Thomas Wenski, Florida bishops are working to ARCHBISHOP WENSKI’S 10th ANNIVERSARY — Archbishop Wenski met financial guarantee health of faithful. Archbishop Thomas Wenski prays goals, but says Church creativity will be tested by ‘new normal.’ See story on Page 1. (FILE PHOTO) over the gifts of bread and wine at the start of the Liturgy of the Eucharist. See story and Q&A on Page 2. (FILE PHOTO) Segunda época Mayo de 2020 PERIÓDICO DE LA ARQUIDIÓCESIS DE MIAMI Vol. 8 No 5 // www.miamiarch.org • Cuando la Misa nos Cuando reúna, P. 3 la Misa nos • Que el dinero se reúna convierta en esperanza, P.3 P. 4 • Con Don Shula se nos Que el dinero va un campeón, P. 5 se convierta en • San Josemaría Escrivá esperanza en Miami, P. 9 P. 4 • Mons. Thomas Wenski: 10 años como nuestro Con Don Shula se pastor, P. 10-11 nos va un campeón P. 5 San Josemaría Escrivá en Miami P. 9 Mons. Thomas Wenski: 10 años como nuestro pastor P. 10-11 Para que Cuba renazca P. 15 WWW.THEFLORIDACATHOLIC.ORG | June 2020 FLORIDACatholic MIAMI ARCHDIOCESE Class of A year for the history2 0 books 2 0 ANA RODRIGUEZ-SOTO of the Florida Catholic staff MIAMI | Prospects for the class of 2020 looked bleak in mid-March, when in-person classes were can- celed. As the coronavirus quaran- tine stretched past April and into May, the bleakness solidified: no prom, no class trips, no walk across the stage in cap and gown to receive a diploma. -
Lilly Endowment Community Scholarships
Common Ground A Newsletter of the Community Foundation of Howard County, Inc. Summer 2008 2008 BOARD MEMBERS Rick Smith - Chair LILLY ENDOWMENT Smith Financial Corporation COMMUNITY SCHOLARSHIPS Bob Hingst - Secretary/Treasurer Mid-America Beverage The Community Foundation of Howard County is pleased to honor the recipients of the 2008 Rex Gingerich - Past Chair Lilly Endowment Community Scholarship. Thanks to the generosity of Lilly Endowment, two Howard H.E. McGonigal, Inc. County students will receive full-tuition, required fees, and a special allocation of up to $800 per year Pam Beckom for required books and equipment for four years of undergraduate study at any Indiana public or private Pizza Hut college or university. The recipients are Blaire Bell and Sean Sullivan. Nanette Bowling Community Volunteer Blaire Bell is the daughter of Kim Bell and Scott Bell and is a 2008 graduate of Northwestern Darcy Burthay High School. Blaire will be attending Butler University in the fall where she will study pharmacol- St. Joseph Hospital ogy. When asked how she felt when she learned she had been selected as a Lilly Endowment Scholar, Ted Cripe Blaire responded, "I realized going into the interview that all of the candidates were equally deserving Clinton County of this prestigious award. I feel honored to have received this scholarship and am so thankful for this Dana Davis wonderful opportunity." Prior to being awarded the Community Volunteer scholarship, Blaire was unsure if she could pay for John Fell Jr. six years of post-secondary schooling at Butler. She McIntyre, Hilligoss, & Welke says that the scholarship "makes a huge difference." Bob Hayes Blaire was the co-captain of the volleyball team, Delphi Delco captain of the softball team, a member of student Betsy Hoshaw council, the secretary of the Sunshine Society, and a Community Volunteer member of S.A.D.D.