Melissa mercedes cardello biography template
President’s Circle
Carter A. Pottash
Northam
William Ravenel Peelle Jr.
Chair’s Circle
John S. McKinney
Jeremiah Milbank III
Andrew F. Stewart
Jarvis
Peter L. Anderson
Alfonso L. Carney Jr.
Dix Leeson Jr.
John A. Robson
Robin G. Symonds
Long Walk
Robert E. Broatch III
David A. Clayman
D. David Dershaw
Charles C. Fenwick Jr.
Geoffrey A. Frank
Alan W. Gibby
Robert K. Kaynor
Robert A. LaPorte
Ernest J. Mattei
James Lawrence Sanford
Paul H. Serafino
David W. Steuber
James H. Tonsgard
David P. Wolff
Friends of the Bishop LAWRENCE — The names of more than 6,500 graduates at the University of Kansas for summer and fall 2023 and spring 2024 have been announced by the University Registrar. Many graduates and candidates for degree celebrated by participating in KU Commencement, which took place May 12. A list of summer and fall 2023 and spring 2024 graduates from Kansas is below, listed by county, then city. Summer 2024 degrees are conferred in early fall. Note: Not all graduates have made their name and hometown information publicly available. Camp ScaticoCamp Scatico Summer of 1935. A rare day off for Yankee first baseman Lou Gehrig. He travels by car 90 miles north from his home in Larchmont to Elizaville, planning to visit fellow New York City athlete Nat Holman. Summer of 1935. A rare day off for Yankee first baseman Lou Gehrig. He travels by car 90 miles north from his home in Larchmont to Elizaville, planning to visit fellow New York City athlete Nat Holman. Nat also just happens to be the owner and director of a certain sleepaway camp in the aforementioned Elizaville. Gehrig will even get on a baseball field to play in a game with campers and, as legend has it, strike out. Fall of 2024. I speak on the phone with David Kleiner, 103 years young, who not only attended Scatico that summer as a 14-year-old, but played in the game. “Lou Gehrig was very nice.... He did strike out.” As interesting as confir- mation of the legend passed down through time, were the memories (seemingly less “grand”) from those summers more than 90 years ago. Living in tentalos at the end of the campus (where 1A-B and 2A-B are now) with canvas flaps to roll down over screens on rainy days. Swimming in the lake. Ace Goldstein (one of Nat’s City College basketball players) as an extremely kind counselor. One very specific memory about sneaking to the general store just off camp property, buy- ing a loaf of white bread and bologna, making sandwiches, and then selling those sandwiches for 10 cents each (which feels like a pretty hefty price for the middle of the Depression). David also shared memories of growing up in Crown Heights, Brooklyn. 1998 television miniseries by Allan Arkush The Temptations is a four-hour television miniseries broadcast in two-hour halves on NBC, based upon the history of one of Motown's longest-lived acts, The Temptations. Executive produced by former Motown executive Suzanne de Passe, produced by Otis Williams and Temptations manager Shelley Berger, and based upon Williams’ Temptations autobiography, the miniseries was originally broadcast on November 1 and November 2, 1998. It was filmed on location in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, in the spring of 1998. Allan Arkush directed the miniseries. The miniseries was based upon Otis Williams' book; as such, it came from his perspective: the focus of the story tended to be on Williams and Melvin Franklin, with David Ruffin and Eddie Kendricks seen as antagonists for much of the second half (although Kendricks was still given a more sympathetic portrayal than Ruffin). Dennis Edwards was not heavily focused upon, nor was much said of the problems he later had with Otis Williams. Nevertheless, the miniseries gave a general overview of both the history of the group and that of Motown, and, thanks to de Passe's connection, the film was able to use authentic props and locations. A number of liberties were taken with factual events for dramatization purposes:
Howard J. Alfred
Ralph V. Baldwin Jr.
David H. Bamberger
Joseph A. Barkley III
Steven A. Bauer
Alexander J. Belida Jr.
Robert P. Berardino
James S. Bernardoni
Fedrico O. Biven Jr.
John L. Bonee III
Grant W. Branstator
Peter A. Brinckerhoff
William Stephen J. Bush
Robert Alan Caine
Peter N. Campbell
Michael A. Chamish
John C. Chapin Jr.
James P. Cornwell
Richard Colgate Dale Jr.
Roderick Allen De Arment
Anthony Joseph DiBella
Steven Kenneth Dowinsky
Judy Dworin
Thomas B. Ewing
David W. Fentress Jr.
John E. Flaherty
Lawrence A. Fox
Samuel C. French
Alan R. Gladstone
William H. Green
Joel R. Greenspan
Stuart A. Hamilton
Norman J. Hannay
O. Joseph Harm III
Robert J. Harrity Jr.
Jennings W. Hobson III
Richard C. Hoffman IV
Howard P. James
Diane F. Jankowski
David D. Kennard
Kevin W. Kerr
Michael A. Lavorgna
Albert K. Lim
Jack A. Luxemburg
Paul Maryeski
Daniel N. Maxwell
C. Edward McConnell
Raymond W. McKee
Iradj G.
Allen CountyAnderson County
Atchison County
Winter 2024-25, Edition 104
News from Elizaville
How the corner pool hall would let him in as a young teen to read Dodger scores
off of its ticker tape. (It wasn’t until 1938 that New York baseball teams began
regularly broadcasting games on the radio.) His dad, a doctor, making neighborhood house calls. David, himself, later serving as a do The Temptations (miniseries)
Overview