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Architecture Design

Architecture Design: “

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The ”’Architecture Design Award”’ is given to an individual or firm for exceptional and exemplary work in commercial, public, or residential architecture design.

[[Architecture Design http://www.nationaldesignawards.org/2008/category/Architecture-Design/ ]]

(Via Wikipedia – New pages [en].)

Andew nairns

Andew nairns: “

Anna Lincoln: Speedy Deletion requested


{{db-bio}}

Andrew Nairns is an Australian guitarist living in Sydney.

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Rob Kauffman

Rob Kauffman: “

PAHouseGOP:


”’Rob Kauffman”’ was first elected to represent the 89th Legislative District in 2004. He currently sits on the House Agriculture and Rural Affairs, Consumer Affairs, Health and Human Services, and Game and Fisheries Committees.
{{Infobox State Representative
| image = Kauffmanport.jpg
| name = Rob Kauffman
| width =
| height =
| caption =
| state = Pennsylvania
| state_house = Pennsylvania
| district = 89th
| term_start =
| term_end = present
| predecessor =
| successor = Incumbent
| constituency =
| majority =
| birth_date =
| birth_place =
| death_date =
| death_place =
| party = [[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]]
| alma_mater =
| occupation =
| spouse =
| children =
| residence =
| religion =
| website =
}}

==Career==
Prior to his election to the House, Representative Kauffman served as vice chairman of the Greene Township Board of Supervisors.

==Personal==
Kauffman serves on many community organizations, including Pregnancy Ministries Inc. He is a member of the Greene Township Lions Club, the Shippensburg Area Chamber of Commerce, the Greater Chambersburg Chamber of Commerce, Franklin County Farm Bureau, Capitol Theatre, the Franklin County Historical Society—Kittochtinny, the Shippensburg Historical Society, the Franklin County Republican Committee and the National Rifle Association.<ref>’Representative Kauffman’s Web Profile’ http://repkauffman.com</ref>

Representative Kauffman and his wife live in Scotland with their three children.

==References==
{{reflist}}

==External Links==
*[http://repkauffman.com/ Representative Kauffman’s site] ”’Representative Rob Kauffman’s official web site”’
*[http://pahousegop.com/ Pennsylvania House Republican Caucus] ”’Pennsylvania House Republican Caucus site”’

(Via Wikipedia – New pages [en].)

Madness (Elton John song)

Madness (Elton John song): “

ThomasWL: [[WP:AES|←]]Created page with ‘{{Infobox Song <!– See Wikipedia:WikiProject_Songs –> | | Name = Madness | Type = [[Song]] | Artist = [[Elton John]] | Album = [[A Singl…’


{{Infobox Song <!– See Wikipedia:WikiProject_Songs –> |
| Name = Madness
| Type = [[Song]]
| Artist = [[Elton John]]
| Album = [[A Single Man]]
| Cover = Elton John – A Single Man.jpg
| track_no = 9
| Released = [[October 16]], [[1978 in music|1978]]
| Recorded = January-September 1978
| Genre = [[Rock music|Rock]], [[Pop music|Pop]]
| Length = 5:53
| Label = [[MCA Records|MCA]] (US/Canada)<br> [[Rocket Records]]
| Writer = [[Elton John]], [[Gary Osborne]]
| Producer = Clive Franks, Elton John
| prev = ‘[[Shooting Star (Elton John song|Shooting Star]]’
| prev_no = 8
| next = ‘[[Reverie (Elton John song)|Reverie]]’
| next_no = 10
}}
”’Madness”’ is a song by [[Elton John]] with lyrics by [[Gary Osborne]]. It is the ninth track off his 1978 album, ‘[[A Single Man]]’.

==Musical structure==
The song starts out with a piano fade-in, played in a classical manor. The rhythm section is driven by a [[Disco music|disco]]-esque 4/4 beat, and in the middle of the song, a string section is featured giving it a more modern feel. John also sings in a high [[falsetto]] range in the choruses. Towards the end of the song, the song gets more and more chaotic, fitting with the lyrics. The song fades out as John screams the lyrics.

==Lyrical meaning==
This song deals with problems of the world, and there are many references to fires and catastrophies. The chaotic orchestration and melody illustrates that very well. There are also poverty and war issues mentioned, and a world that just doesn’t understand peace.

==Personnel==
*Elton John – [[piano]], vocals
*Tim Renwick – [[Electric guitar|guitars]]
*Clive Franks – [[Bass guitar|bass]]
*Steve Holly – [[Drum kit|drums]]
*[[Ray Cooper]] – [[percussion]], [[timpani]]
*[[Paul Buckmaster]] – orchestral arrangements

[[Category:1978 songs]]
[[Category:Elton John songs]]

(Via Wikipedia – New pages [en].)

Corporate Achievement

Corporate Achievement: “

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{{db-nocontext}}
The ”’Corporate Achievement Award”’ recognizes a corporation that uses design as a strategic tool of its mission and exhibits ingenuity and insight in helping to advance the relationship between design and quality of life in the United States.

[[Corporate Achievement http://www.nationaldesignawards.org/2008/category/Corporate-Achievement/]]

(Via Wikipedia – New pages [en].)

Tom gigg

Tom gigg: “

Knownot:


{{db-bio}}
”’Tom Gigg”’ is a 16 year old rugby player who currently attends [[Olchfa Comprehensive School]]. Tom currently play’s for [[Dunvant R.F.C]] and his Olchfa School 6th Form team where he plays on the wing. Tom has previously played for the Swansea School Boys and also had trials for the [[Ospreys]]. He is currently taking [[English Language & Literature]], [[Business Studies]], [[Government & Politics]], and [[Economics]].

(Via Wikipedia – New pages [en].)

John F. G. Howe

John F. G. Howe: “

21stCenturyGreenstuff:


{{Infobox Military Person
|name= John Frederick George Howe CBE AFC
|lived= 1930 – date
|placeofbirth=South Africa
|placeofdeath=
|image=
|caption=
|nickname=
|allegiance={{flag|South Africa}}<br>{{flag|United Kingdom}}
|rank= [[Air Vice Marshal]]
|branch= {{air force|United Kingdom}}
|commands= OC [[No. 74 Squadron RAF]]<br>OC [[No. 228 Operational Conversion Unit RAF]]<br>OC [[RAF Gutersloh]]<br>Commandant [[Royal Observer Corps]]<br>Commandant and Provost Marshal [[RAF Regiment]]
|unit=
|battles= [[Korean War]]<br>[[Suez Crisis|Suez]]<br>[[Cold War]]
|awards=[[Commander of the Order of the British Empire]]<br>[[Air Force Cross (United Kingdom)]]
|laterwork=
}}

[[Air Vice Marshal]] ”’John Frederick George Howe”’ [[Commander of the Order of the British Empire|CBE]] [[Air Force Cross (United Kingdom)|AFC]] [[Royal Air Force|RAF R’td]] (born 1930) was a senior [[Royal Air Force]] officer in the 1970s and 1980s, flying combat missions in the [[Korean War]] and [[North Sea]] interceptor air patrols during the [[Cold War]] finishing his distinguished career as Commandant and Provost Marshal of the [[RAF Regiment]]. Howe also served as Commandant of the [[Royal Observer Corps]] between 1977 and 1980.

Howe was born in South Africa and educated at St Andrew’s College, Grahamstown. He joined the [[South African Air Force]] immediately after leaving school. <ref>[http://samilitaryhistory.org/ross/redcoats.html South African military history]</ref>

==Flying history==
===South African Air Force===
John Howe began his military flying career in the post [[Second World War]] [[South African Air Force]], and learned to fly in [[De Havilland Tiger Moth|Tiger Moth]]s, [[T-6 Texan|Harvard]]s and [[Supermarine Spitfire|Spitfire]]s. He was posted to [[2 Squadron SAAF|No 2 Squadron SAAF]] ‘The Flying Cheetahs’ and deployed to [[Korea]] to fly combat missions as part of South Africa’s contribution to the [[Korean War]] in support of the UN forces.

During his first tour of duty in Korea he flew the [[P-51 Mustang|Mustang F-51D]] fighter-bombers in front-line action. A later second tour saw him serving with [[US Army|US Infantry]] units, as a ground based Forward Air Controller, operating in the thick of the fighting.

===The RAF===
When the political situation in South Africa became more difficult and extreme he decided to resign from the SAAF and moved to England where he joined the [[Royal Air Force]] in the rank of [[Flight Lieutenant]] to fly early types of jet fighters. He became a [[Qualified Flying Instructor|QFI]] on Vampires, later converting to the [[Hawker Hunter]] and joining the front line North Sea interceptors of [[No. 222 Squadron RAF]] at [[RAF Leuchars]].

During the [[Suez crisis]] he again operated as a Forward Ground Controller and landed with the first invasion wave on the beaches with [[40 Commando]]. Following the Suez debacle Howe was promoted to [[Squadron Leader]] in 1960 and appointed as Officer Commanding [[No. 74 Squadron RAF]] the ‘Tiger’ Squadron, to introduce the first of the supersonic [[English Electric Lightning]] interceptors into service with the RAF. <ref>[http://samilitaryhistory.org/vol011dt.html 74 Squadron history]</ref>

Howe was selected by the RAF to undertake several overseas demonstration tours where he showcased the remarkable capabilities of the new fighter in numerous displays. Promoted to [[Wing Commander (rank)|Wing Commander]] his developing career took him to a staff posting at Headquarters [[Fighter Command]], a senior instructor posting at [[Royal Air Force College Cranwell]] and later as a senior staff officer at the Joint Warfare School.

After an exchange tour posting to the [[United States]] where he flew most of the [[Century Series]] Fighters and the [[F-4 Phantom II|Phantom]] he returned to the UK as Officer Commanding [[No. 228 Operational Conversion Unit RAF]] at [[RAF Coningsby]] where he oversaw the introduction of the Phantom FGR2 into operational service with the RAF. In 1973 Howe was promoted to [[Group Captain]] and appointed Officer Commanding [[RAF Gutersloh]] on the front line of the [[Cold War]] [[Iron Curtain]] operations.

==Royal Observer Corps==
Following a tour of duty as the Operations Staff Officer at [[No. 11 Group RAF|No 11 Group, Strike Command]] at [[RAF Bentley Priory]] in 1977 Howe moved across the road on promotion to [[Air Commodore]] and took up the appointment as Commandant of the [[Royal Observer Corps]] who were also located at Bentley Priory.

Howe applied the same exacting standards to the ROC as he did to his flying. He found an organisation that was superficially sound but with an underlying air of relaxed complacency. For the first time he introduced a two pronged regime of both Annual Command Inspections and Operational Evaluations that would continue until the Corps was stood down. The Command Inspections took place in every group headquarters once every three years, with three months prior notice. Howe himself led a two man team of HQROC staff officers in a two day detailed review of adminstration and organisation of the full and part time staff.

The operation evaluations were a two day ‘No Notice’ assessment of the group’s operational performance similar to RAF station TACEVALs, from [[Transition To War]] right through to prolonged operations under nuclear attack. The OPEVAL evaluation assessors consisted of a joint six man team from HQROC and the [[United Kingdom Warning and Monitoring Organisation]] who would arrive on an irregular basis and place the whole group on a realistic but simulated war footing. The dual regime of inspections left the ROC up to date and efficient when Howe’s tenure as Commandant ended in 1980.

Howe also spearheaded the rapid improvement of inter-group communications over the coming years with the introduction of computerised message switching and modern integrated, [[Electro-magnetic pulse|EMP]] hardened telephone systems.

During his time with the ROC Howe additionally oversaw the Corps’ contributions to the [[Silver Jubilee of Elizabeth II]] celebrations and events and ensured that every advantage was taken to publicise the works of the Corps. On 30 June 1977 Howe led an ROC contingent that took part in the Royal Review of Reserve and Cadet Forces at Wembley Stadium. On 29 July 1977 the Corps he was also present when the ROC was represented in the indoor exhibition at the Royal Review of the Royal Air Force at RAF Finningley.

==Later RAF service==
Following his time in charge of the ROC he was promoted to [[Air Vice Marshal]] as AOC Southern Maritime Air Region and his final tour of duty was as Commandant and Provost Marshal of the [[RAF Regiment]].

His biography, detailing his varied and disinguished career, entitled ‘Onward and Upward’ is scheduled for publication in the late Autumn of 2008.

==References==
{{reflist}}

{{s-start}}
{{s-mil}}
{{s-bef|before= M H Miller}}
{{s-ttl|title=Commandant of the [[Royal Observer Corps]]|years=1977 – 1980}}
{{s-aft|after= R J Offord}}
{{s-end}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Howe, John Frederick George}}
[[Category:Royal Air Force officers]]
[[Category:Commanders of the Order of the British Empire]]
[[Category:Recipients of the Air Force Cross (United Kingdom)]]
[[Category:People of the Royal Observer Corps]]
[[Category:1930 births]]

(Via Wikipedia – New pages [en].)

Lifetime Achievement

Lifetime Achievement: “

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{{db-nocontext}}
The ”’Lifetime Achievement Award”’ is given in recognition of an individual who has made a profound, long-term contribution to contemporary design practice.

[[Lifetime Achievement http://www.nationaldesignawards.org/2008/category/Lifetime-Achievement/]]

(Via Wikipedia – New pages [en].)

Dan Shields

Dan Shields: “

Dsarazin:


‘The World Famous’ Dan Shields is a radio and television personality in Ottawa, ON, Canada. He is best known for his apperances on the CBC television series Living In Ottawa. He is also the host of a popular weekday morning radio show on CKCU 93.1 FM in Ottawa.’
[[Image:Example.jpg]]

(Via Wikipedia – New pages [en].)

An Inconvenient Woman

An Inconvenient Woman: “

LiteraryMaven: New article


””’An Inconvient Woman””’ is a [[1990 in literature|1990]] [[novel]] by [[Dominick Dunne]]. Its plot centers on the affair between married Jules Mendelson, an extremely influential member of [[Los Angeles]] [[Upper class|high society]], and Flo March, a [[diner]] waitress and aspiring actress whose life is transformed by the illicit relationship until she finds herself the inconvenient woman of the title.

The hardcover edition (ISBN 0-517-57763-1) was released by [[Crown Publishing Group|Crown Publishers]]. The paperback (ISBN 0-345-43053-0) was published by [[Ballantine Books]].

==Plot synopsis==
Characters include the incredibly rich and famous, those who are desperate to share their spotlight, and the underlings who cater to their every need. Chief among them are billionaire Jules Mendelson, a confidant of the President who is on the verge of being offered a prime political position in [[Brussels]], as long as the story about a girl who plunged from the balcony of his [[Chicago]] hotel room in 1953 remains the deep secret he has harbored all these years; Flo March ([[Married and maiden names|née]] Fleurette Houlihan), his considerably younger lover, who slowly sheds her coarse exterior as Jules introduces her to the finer things in life; Pauline Mendelson, Jules’ devoted wife who presides over Clouds, their mountaintop estate overlooking LA, and one of the most admired hostesses in their social circle, whose errant son Kippie by a former marriage proves to be the bane of her elegant existence; [[New York City]] writer Philip Quennell, author of a bestselling book about a leveraged buyout, who’s brought to Hollywood to write a [[documentary film]] about drug abuse in the film industry by [[cocaine]]-snorting producer Casper Stieglitz; young widow Camilla Ebury, Philip’s lover and the niece of Hector Paradiso, a [[closeted]] [[homosexual]] whose alleged [[suicide]] raises the suspicions of those who believe he really was murdered; gossip columnist Cyril Rathbone, who thrives on the secrets of the rich and powerful; [[Male prostitution|hustler]] and sometime [[Pornographic actor|porn actor]] Lonny Edge, who has in his possession the long-missing completed manuscript of the final book by dissolute author Basil Plant (a thinly-disguised version of [[Truman Capote]]) but doesn’t realize its importance to the literary world; and gangster Arnie Zwillman, who knows enough about Jules Mendelson’s past to put an end to his political ambitions.

Behind-the-scenes Hollywood intrigue, the underworld of [[Money laundering|laundered money]], illegal drugs, and [[prostitution]], and the foibles of the extremely wealthy and those who serve them, serve as the background for a tale of murder, the abuse of power, and the destruction of several lives when revenge enters the picture.

==Critical reception==
In the ”[[New York Times]]”, Jill Robinson observed, ‘This is a smart novel because Dominick Dunne understands the distance between Los Angeles society and the spicy bazaars of Hollywood. And what makes Mr. Dunne not only first-rate, but also different from other writers who write about the very rich in late 20th-century America, is his knowledge that there’s more to it than getting the labels and the street names right. He shows he knows by the way he tells you how his people feel, the way they listen, the things they cover up and the things they don’t. He’s lived in L.A. and gets it right, but he has the perspective you only get when you leave. He knows every story there is to tell, precisely how it happened and why it happened. He also knows there’s nothing up there in society to envy.’ <ref>[http://www.times.com/books/97/11/30/home/dunne-inconvenient.html ”New York Times”, June 10, 1990]</ref>

L.S. Klepp of ”[[Entertainment Weekly]]” graded the book B and commented, ‘Dunne does a good job of making his make-believe gossip believable, even riveting, in spite of some wooden dialogue, fiberboard characters, and the constant adjustment of the plot by the long, lazy arm of coincidence . . . Considered as unpretentious entertainment, the novel, with its baroque plot and telltale details, is good unclean fun.’ <ref>[http://www.ew.com/ew/article/0,,317511,00.html ”Entertainment Weekly”, June 1, 1990]</ref>

==Television adaptation==
[[John Pielmeier]] adapted the novel for a [[May]] [[1991 in television|1991]] [[American Broadcasting Company|ABC]] [[miniseries]] directed by Larry Elikann. It starred [[Jason Robards]] as Jules, [[Rebecca De Mornay]] as Flo, [[Jill Eikenberry]] as Pauline, [[Peter Gallagher]] as Philip, [[Joseph Bologna]] as Arnie, [[Grant Cramer]] as Lonny, [[Chad Lowe]] as Kippie, and [[Roddy McDowall]] as Cyril.

==References==
{{reflist}}

==External links==
*[http://search.barnesandnoble.com/An-Inconvenient-Woman/Dominick-Dunne/e/9780345430533 ”An Inconvenient Woman” at BarnesAndNoble.com]
*[http://www.amazon.com/Inconvenient-Woman-Dominick-Dunne/dp/0345430530 ”An Inconvenient Woman” at Amazon.com]
*[http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0101126/ ”An Inconvenient Woman” at the Internet Movie Database]

[[Category:1990 novels]]
[[Category:American novels]]

(Via Wikipedia – New pages [en].)

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