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COVID-19 Delays Trial B Y DAV I D MART I N P.M
COVID-19 delays trial B y DAV I D MART I N p.m . was rescheduled to stipulation for a previous Publisher June 15 at 1: 3 0 p.m . incident where Setzer is Setzer was originally alleged to have phy si- COV ID- 19 isn’t j ust im pact- arrested last August cally attacked his wife. ing spring and sum m er events after he was alleged to He was later arrested throughout the Cowboy State, have tried killing his and charged with at- it’s ham pering the state’s j ustice wife. He allegedly shot tem pted first degree sy stem as well. at her through a decora- m urder and m isdem ean- The j ury trial of Bradley tive glass window in the or interference with a Setzer, originally set to take front door of the couple’s peace officer. His bond place May 11 at 9 a.m ., before Green River hom e. was set at $ 9 00,000 Third Judicial District Court A later search of Bradley cash or surety . Judge Richard Lavery , was post- Setzer’s hom e revealed He entered a not guilty poned to July 13 at 9 a.m . he had 11 firearm s at Setzer plea during an arraign- A pretrial conference, original- the property , which was m ent before Lavery in ly scheduled for April 2 2 , at 1: 3 0 a violation of a previous bond Novem ber. W ed nesd ay, April 15 , 2 0 2 0 12 9 th Y ear, 4 7 th I ssue G reen River, W Y 8 2 9 3 5 Ad d ress Service Req uested $ 1. -
A History of the California Supreme Court in Its First Three Decades, 1850–1879
BOOK SECTION A HISTORY OF THE CALIFORNIA SUPREME COURT IN ITS FIRST THREE DECADES, 1850–1879 293 A HISTORY OF THE CALIFORNIA SUPREME COURT IN ITS FIRST THREE DECADES, 1850–1879 ARNOLD ROTH* PREFACE he history of the United States has been written not merely in the “T halls of Congress, in the Executive offices, and on the battlefields, but to a great extent in the chambers of the Supreme Court of the United States.”1 It is no exaggeration to say that the Supreme Court of California holds an analogous position in the history of the Golden State. The discovery of gold made California a turbulent and volatile state during the first decades of statehood. The presence of the precious ore transformed an essentially pastoral society into an active commercial and industrial society. Drawn to what was once a relatively tranquil Mexican province was a disparate population from all sections of the United States and from many foreign nations. Helping to create order from veritable chaos was the California Supreme Court. The Court served the dual function of bringing a settled * Ph.D., University of Southern California, 1973 (see Preface for additional information). 1 Charles Warren, The Supreme Court in United States History, vol. I (2 vols.; rev. ed., Boston; Little, Brown, and Company, 1922, 1926), 1. 294 CALIFORNIA LEGAL HISTORY ✯ VOLUME 14, 2019 order of affairs to the state, and also, in a less noticeable role, of providing a sense of continuity with the rest of the nation by bringing the state into the mainstream of American law. -
Fall 1996 Gems & Gemology Gemological Abstracts
REVIEW BOARD Emmanuel Fritsch Marv L. Johnson Himiko Naka University of Nantes, France GIAG~~Trade Lab, Santa Monica Pacific Palisades, California Charles E, Ashbaugh Ill Isotope Products Laboratories Michael Gray A. A. Levinson Gary A. Roskin Burbank, California Missoula, Montana University 01 Calgary European Gemological Laboratory Calgary, Alberta, Canada Los Angeles, California Andrew Christie Patricia A, S, Gray Loretta B, Loeb James E. Shigley GIA, Santa Monica GIA, Santa Monica Missoula, Montana Visalia, California Carol M. Stockton Jo Ellen Cole Elise B. Misiorowski GIA, Santa Monica Professor R. A. Howie GIA, Santa Monica Alexandria, Virginia Royal Holloway Rolf Tatje Maha DeMaggio University of London Jana E. Miyahira Duisburg University GIA Gem Trade Lab, Santa Monica United Kingdom GIA, Santa Monica Duisburg, Germany COLORED STONES AND Townsendl. In disagreement- with traditional theories of ORGANIC MATERIALS opal formation, Len Cram offers a surprising new model, based on ion exchange, that he demonstrated by growing Cretaceous mushrooms in amber. D. S. Hibbett, D. synthetic opal out of "opal dirt" in a bottle in just three Grimaldi, and M. J. Donaghue, Nature, October 12, months. Jiirgen Schutz describes the long history of 1995, p. 487. Mexican opals, their varieties, and the present mining sit- Recently, two mushrooms were discovered in amber of uation. Jochen Knigge recounts the history and produc- Turonian age (90-94 million years old, mid-Cretaceous] in tion of opals from Pedro 11, Piaui, Brazil. Klaus Eberhard central New Jersey. One specimen is nearly complete, with Wild portrays another important locality-Kirschweiler, an intact cap, distinct gills, and a central stalk (itis the old- near Idar-Oberstein-which was (and perhaps still is] one est known such mushroom, by about 60 donyears); the of the most important centers of opal fashioning and other is a wedge-shaped fragment of a mushroom cap. -
Characterization and Grading of Natural-Color Yellow Diamonds John M
Summer 2005 VOLUME 41, NO. 2 EDITORIAL _____________ 87 The Experts behind G&G: Our Editorial Review Board Alice S. Keller FEATURE ARTICLES _____________ 88 Characterization and Grading of Natural-Color Yellow Diamonds John M. King, James E. Shigley, Thomas H. Gelb, Scott S. Guhin, Matthew Hall, and Wuyi Wang Using a sample base of more than 24,000, this article explores the color grading of natural-color yellow diamonds at the GIA Gem Laboratory and pg. 89 reports on their gemological and spectroscopic properties. 116 Emeralds from the Kafubu Area, Zambia J. C. (Hanco) Zwaan, Antonín V. Seifert, Stanislav Vrána, Brendan M. Laurs, Björn Anckar, William B. (Skip) Simmons, Alexander U. Falster, Wim J. Lustenhouwer, Sam Muhlmeister, John I. Koivula, and Héja Garcia-Guillerminet The geology, production, and gemological properties of emeralds from this, the second largest emerald-producing country in the world, are described. 150 Mt. Mica: A Renaissance in Maine’s Gem Tourmaline Production William B. (Skip) Simmons, Brendan M. Laurs, Alexander U. Falster, John I. Koivula, and Karen L. Webber This historic deposit is once again producing fine tourmalines, with both the mining area and the gems examined in this report. pg. 146 REGULAR FEATURES _____________________ 164 Lab Notes Two unusual fracture-filled diamonds • Large diamond with micro-inclusions of carbonates and solid CO2 • Light blue diamond with type IIb and IIa zones • Natural type Ib diamond with unusually high N content • Diamond with unusual laser drill holes • Yellowish orange magnesioaxinite • Cultured pearl with cul- tured-pearl nucleus • Dyed “golden” freshwater cultured pearls • More on Cu- bearing color-change tourmaline from Mozambique 176 Gem News International Demantoid from northern Pakistan • Pyrope-almandine from Ethiopia • New pg. -
Bibliography: a History of the California Supreme Court, 1850–1879 535
✯ BIBLIOGRAPHY: A HISTORY OF THE CALIFORNIA SUPREME COURT, 1850–1879 535 BIBLIOGR APHY Laws, Statutes, Court Reports, and Government Documents United States Statutes at Large. Supreme Court Reports. Circuit Court Reports. California Statutes. Supreme Court Reports. California. Legislature. Senate and Assembly Journals (1849–1850). Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court Reports. Books Angel, Myron. History of San Luis Obispo County California. Introduction by Louisiana Clayton Dart. Reproduction of Thompson and West’s 1883 edition. Berkeley: Howell-North Books, 1966. Aptheker, Herbert, ed. A Documentary History of the Negro People in the Unit- ed States. Preface by W. E. B. DuBois. New York: The Citadel Press, 1951. Ayers, James J. Gold and Sunshine; Reminiscences of Early California. Bos- ton: Richard G. Badger, 1922. Baldwin, Joseph Glover. The Flush Times of California. Edited by Richard E. Amacher and George W. Polhemus. Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1966. Bancroft, Hubert Howe. History of California. San Francisco: The History Company, 1890. 536 CALIFORNIA LEGAL HISTORY ✯ VOLUME 14, 2019 Barth, Gunther. Bitter Strength; A History of the Chinese in the United States 1850–1870. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1964. Barry, T. A., and B. A. Patten. San Francisco, California, 1850. Foreword by Joseph A. Sullivan. Oakland: Biobooks, 1947. Bates, J. C., ed. History of the Bench and Bar of California. San Francisco: Bench and Bar Publishing Company, 1912. Bean, Walton. California; An Interpretive History. New York: McGraw-Hill Book Company, 1968. Beasley, Delilah L. The Negro Trail Blazers of California. A Compilation of Records from the California Archives in the Bancroft Library at the University of California, in Berkeley; and from the Diaries, Old Papers and Conversations of Old Pioneers in the State of California. -
Spring 2013 Kentuckykentucky Humanities Council, Inc
$5 Spring 2013 KentuckyKentucky Humanities Council, Inc. humanities American El Dorado The Great Diamond Hoax of 1872 I Page 8 INSIDE: William “Bull” Nelson I 26 COMING SOON! Trish Clark as Duane Murner as Mary Todd Lincoln Caleb Powers David Hurt as Lilley Cornett Kentucky Chautauqua® The impact is dramatic. Telling KentuckySpring 2013 Kentucky’s Story humanities Board of Directors Chair: William G. Francis, JD Prestonsburg Vice Chair: Aristofanes Cedeño, Ph.D. 14 Louisville Appalachian Toys and Games from A to Z Secretary: By Linda Hager Pack Brenda L. Wilson Dry Ridge Illustrated by Pat Banks Treasurer: Howard V. Roberts Pikeville Brian T. Burton Lexington Susan Dunlap Louisville Geoffrey A. Hall Nicholasville Mary Hammond 20 Paducah Eastern Kentucky’s Raymond E. Cox: Lynn T. Harpring POW and Unsung Hero of World War II Louisville David V. Hawpe By James M. Gifford, Ph.D. Louisville Elise H. Luckey Columbia Tori Murden McClure Louisville Nathan Mick Lancaster Minh Nguyen, Ph.D. Richmond Reed Polk 30 Lexington A Continuous Search for Equality Bill Scott By Christopher Copley Frankfort John Michael Seelig, JD Morehead Aaron Thompson, Ph.D. Richmond In this issue Jane Gentry Vance, Ph.D. Adair Hardin Mason Warren Versailles Allen Jefferson Monroe Whitley Kris Williams, Ph.D. Boyd Johnson Nelson Henderson Elaine A. Wilson Breckinridge Larue Owen Somerset Fayette Lawrence Pike Kenneth H. Wolf, Ph.D. Floyd Letcher Pulaski Murray Gallatin Lewis Staff Garrard Lincoln Virginia G. Carter, Ph.D. Greenup Madison Executive Director Kathleen Pool Associate Director © 2013 Kentucky Humanities Council ISSN 1554-6284 Marianne Stoess Kentucky Humanities is published in the spring and fall by the Kentucky Humanities Council, Inc., 206 E. -
The Panama Route in the United States Civil War
Controlling the California Gold Steamers: The Panama Route in the United States Civil War Neil P Chatelain University of Louisiana-Monroe At the outset of the United States Civil War, both sides worked to build mili- tary and naval strength. For the North and the South, hundreds of thousands of soldiers enlisted, supplies were manufactured and stockpiled, and ships were hur- riedly converted from merchantmen into gunboats. Fighting the war would take more than the men and material needed on the battlefield, however. Sufficient funding was essential to maintain flow of supplies and payment of soldiers, both North and South. Multiple avenues of financing the war emerged, ranging from cotton speculation by the Confederacy to wheat exports and public bonds issued by the Union. Hard currency, in the form of precious metals such as gold and silver, remained in high demand. The Union’s gold supply was crucial to its eventual victory and a lack of such in the treasury of the Confederacy hindered its ability to finance its own war effort. Rather quickly, the largest gold transpor- tation route became a military target of significance. For four years, both sides waged a multi-pronged campaign to control the Panama route, the collection of shipping lanes from New England to Panama to California where millions in gold was transported each year. Control of the Panama route and its flow of gold steamers held the potential to tip the financial balance of the United States Civil War, resulting in a campaign of Confederate strikes countered by Union naval and diplomatic interventions focused on protecting both the shipping lanes and the gold steamers plying them. -
DIAMONDS and MANTLE SOURCE ROCKS in the WYOMING CRATON with a DISCUSSION of OTHER U.S. OCCURRENCES by W
WYOMING STATE GEOLOGICAL SURVEY Gary B. Glass, State Geologist DIAMONDS AND MANTLE SOURCE ROCKS IN THE WYOMING CRATON WITH A DISCUSSION OF OTHER U.S. OCCURRENCES by W. Dan Hause} Report of Investigations No. 53 1998 Laramie, Wyoming WYOMING STATE GEOLOGICAL SURVEY Lance Cook, State Geologist GEOLOGICAL SURVEY BOARD Ex Officio Jim Geringer, Governor Randi S. Martinsen, University of Wyoming Don J. Likwartz, Oil and Gas Supervisor Lance Cook, State Geologist Appointed Nancy M. Doelger, Casper Charles M. Love, Rock Springs Ronald A. Baugh, Casper Stephen L. Payne, Casper John E. Trummel, Gillette Computer Services Unit Publications Section Susan McClendon - Manager Richard W. Jones - Editor Jaime R. Bogaard - Editorial Assistant Geologic Sections Lisa J. Alexander - Sales Manager James c. Case, Staff Geologist - Geologic Hazards Fred H . Porter, III - Cartographer Rodney H . De Bruin, Staff Geologist - Oil and Gas Phyllis A. Ranz - Cartographer Ray E. Harris, Staff Geologist - Industrial Minerals Joseph M. Huss - GIS Specialist and Uranium W. Dan Hausel, Senior Economic Geologist - Metals and Precious Stones Supportive Services Unit Robert M. Lyman, Staff Geologist - Coal Susanne G. Bruhnke - Office Manager Alan J. Ver Ploeg, Senior Staff Geologist - Geologic Joan E. Binder - Administrative Assistant Mapping This and other publications available from: Wyoming State Geological Survey P.O. Box 3008 Laramie, WY 82071-3008 Phone: (307) 766-2286 Fax: (307) 766-2605 Email: [email protected] Web Page: http://wsgsweb.uwyo.edu People with disabilities who require an alternative form of communication in order to use this publication should contact the Editor, Wyoming State Geological Survey at (307) 766-2286. TTY Relay operator 1(800) 877-9975. -
Proceedings, 1980
53rd Optional Proceedings BUILDING TOMORROWS "Kansas City, "Missouri November 12-14, 1980 te*,.. ?* tf . n:v, ; :f;.v> •--•;, ., v -#v ^ . jV, ^ : u. !% M ^ I r 53RD NATIONAL FFA CONVENTION PROCEEDINGS .-4 • KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI NOVEMBER 12-14, 1980 I * % f v> v Prepared Ipo^PubliSihed oy ***** GbarterecFtey Congress AS Ai "' **"? qy n^-ucii^nSin Vocational ; in coop e ratio n^vvfth the linited States Department^ Education i(Vas h i n gtbn /fe . C . 20l02 BUILDING TOMORROWS TODAY More than 23,000 FFA members, advisors and guests demonstrated how the FFA is Building Tomorrows Today at the 53rd National FFA Convention. The convention in Kansas City, Missouri, November 12-14, seta new attendance record and saw award presentations, speakers, contests and business culminate a year of work. But the work began at the local chapter level . That's where the concept of binding together hands-on experience, leadership development and classroom instruction really proves itself. Whether it's competing in the chapter public speaking contest, starting an agricultural proficiency project or running for a Creenhand office, FFA members are building skills useful to America and its agriculture. The 53rd National FFA Convention was a climax for some — the finale of an FFA career. For others, it was just a beginning — the motivational force to do and achieve. This proceedings booklet is a record of those past achievements and an inspiration to future ones. We hope you find encouragement in its use. - / rfL&j % <^/€* Byron F. Rawls C. Coleman Harris National Advisor National Executive Secretary TABLE OF CONTENTS HIGHLIGHTS 3 National Officers' Retiring Addresses 6 Agricultural Career Show 21 COMPETITION AND RECOGNITION 23 Starts Over America 23 Public Speaking Contests 24 National Contests and Awards , 28 American Farmers 38 Special Awards 41 BUSINESS 44 Approved Amendments 44 Committee Reports 45 PEOPLE 60 Official Delegates 60 National Band, Chorus, Talent, WEA 62 National Di rectory 65 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Editors: Roni Horan, Becky Vining and Rich Bennett. -
American Mining Engineers in the US Southwest and Mexico, 1850-1914
University of New Mexico UNM Digital Repository History ETDs Electronic Theses and Dissertations 7-3-2012 Capital Mediators: American Mining Engineers in the U.S. Southwest and Mexico, 1850-1914 Sarah E.M. Grossman Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/hist_etds Part of the History Commons Recommended Citation Grossman, Sarah E.M.. "Capital Mediators: American Mining Engineers in the U.S. Southwest and Mexico, 1850-1914." (2012). https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/hist_etds/36 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the Electronic Theses and Dissertations at UNM Digital Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in History ETDs by an authorized administrator of UNM Digital Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Sarah E. M. Grossman Candidate History Department This dissertation is approved, and it is acceptable in quality and form for publication: Approved by the Dissertation Committee: Samuel Truett , Chairperson Durwood Ball Elizabeth Hutchison Ronald Kline ii CAPITAL MEDIATORS AMERICAN MINING ENGINEERS IN THE U.S. SOUTHWEST AND MEXICO, 1850-1914 by SARAH E.M. GROSSMAN A.B., History, Bryn Mawr College, 1999 M.A., History, Cornell University, 2004 DISSERTATION Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy History The University of New Mexico Albuquerque, New Mexico May, 2012 iii DEDICATION For Park iv ACKNOWLEDGMENTS I could not have asked for a more generous or engaged reader of my work than Sam Truett, who has been a wonderful advisor during my time at the University of New Mexico. Committee members Liz Hutchison and Durwood Ball are model professors and scholars, and have each provided key support at important cross-roads of my graduate career. -
Diamonds and the Accumulation of De Beers, 1935-55
A Service of Leibniz-Informationszentrum econstor Wirtschaft Leibniz Information Centre Make Your Publications Visible. zbw for Economics Cochrane, David Troy Doctoral Thesis What’s Love Got to Do with It? Diamonds and the Accumulation of De Beers, 1935-55 Provided in Cooperation with: The Bichler & Nitzan Archives Suggested Citation: Cochrane, David Troy (2015) : What’s Love Got to Do with It? Diamonds and the Accumulation of De Beers, 1935-55, The Bichler and Nitzan Archives, Toronto, http://bnarchives.yorku.ca/469/ This Version is available at: http://hdl.handle.net/10419/157995 Standard-Nutzungsbedingungen: Terms of use: Die Dokumente auf EconStor dürfen zu eigenen wissenschaftlichen Documents in EconStor may be saved and copied for your Zwecken und zum Privatgebrauch gespeichert und kopiert werden. personal and scholarly purposes. Sie dürfen die Dokumente nicht für öffentliche oder kommerzielle You are not to copy documents for public or commercial Zwecke vervielfältigen, öffentlich ausstellen, öffentlich zugänglich purposes, to exhibit the documents publicly, to make them machen, vertreiben oder anderweitig nutzen. publicly available on the internet, or to distribute or otherwise use the documents in public. Sofern die Verfasser die Dokumente unter Open-Content-Lizenzen (insbesondere CC-Lizenzen) zur Verfügung gestellt haben sollten, If the documents have been made available under an Open gelten abweichend von diesen Nutzungsbedingungen die in der dort Content Licence (especially Creative Commons Licences), you genannten Lizenz -
Colorado Collection Books Added Before 2000
Colorado Collection Books added before 2000 CC 305 Each New Day. Author: Ten Boom, Corrie. Narrator: Robinson, Ethel G. A year's calendar of short, inspirational verse. (Remastered 10/2008). (1 sound cassette) CC 798 Early Aurora Author: McFadden, Carl Vincent. Narrator: Dunlap, Kathy. History of suburb east of Denver, incorporated in 1891, and name changed to Aurora in 1907. Stories of the area which are told by pioneers have been compiled and edited by the authors. Mr McFadden is a patron of the Colorado State LBPH. 1978. (7 sound cassettes) CC 457 Early Estes Park Author: Mills, Enos A. Narrator: Wolf, Diane. Author, writer & nature guide, lived & worked in the Longs Peak Valley, near Estes Park, Colorado in 1884. Book was written in 1911. (1 sound cassette) CC 598 Earthstar Magic Author: Chew, Ruth. Narrator: Mork, Julie. Ben teaches Trudy to fly Earthstar and they steer left and right across the sky! 1979. (1 sound cassette) 1 CC 140 Eden's Angel Author: Compton, Katherine. Narrator: Roberts, Melissa. Before he vanished into the wilds of South America, Alena Sutton's scientist father left her a bizarre legacy: half of a treasure map that would lead her to indescribable wealth. But the other half belonged to archaeologist Zachariah Summerfield - a maddening, irresistible rogue whose burning gaze stripped Alena of her every defense - and whose scorching kisses betrayed a hunger impossible to deny. 1990. (2 sound cassettes) CC 2221 Edgar Cayce Revisited Author: Cerminara, Gina. Narrator: Weiss, Linda. A further study of psychic Edgar Cayce, by his definitive biographer (see also many mansions).